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1. Response to Erik Goodwyn's paper 'Phenotypic plasticity and archetype: a response to common objections to the biological theory of archetype and instinct'.

2. Editorial.

3. Reconstitutive process in the psychopathology of the self1 : The following paper by J.W. Perry is published with permission from the Annals of the New York Academy of the Sciences where it was first published in January 1962. It was later republished by the San Francisco Jung Institute in 1971. For some readers the paper is an enlightening foray into the depth and breadth of Perry's original research carried out in San Francisco. It offers a significant analytical perspective on the psychotic process and schizophrenia, built on Jung's early work at the Burghölzli. For others, who are already familiar with Perry's work, the editors view its republication in this Journal as furthering the historical continuity of the important thread of research and clinical thought on psychosis and schizophrenia in analytical psychology. https://nyaspubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1749-6632.1962.tb50168.x.

4. An introduction Two papers by M. Fordham: An Introduction by James Astor Papers by Michael Fordham.

5. Transforming Infantile Trauma in Analytic Work with Children and Adults. The Clinical Writings of Alessandra Cavalli.

6. RESPONSE TO AIMÉ AGNEL'S PAPER.

7. Call for Papers.

8. ‘What works?’ Response to the paper by James Astor.

9. Editorial.

10. Editorial.

11. Introduction to three clinical papers.

12. Editorial.

14. Editorial.

15. Editorial.

17. Editorial.

18. A word of introduction to the papers from the Basel Conference.

19. Brogan, C. (2018). 'Donald Winnicott's unique view of depression with particular reference to his 1963 paper on the value of depression'. British Journal of Psychotherapy, 34:358-375.

21. Editorial.

22. To(o) Queer the Analyst: Lesbiana, Junguiana and Sudamericana. Towards Woven Onto‐Epistemologies1.

23. To(o) Queer the Analyst: Lesbiana, Junguiana and Sudamericana. Towards Woven Onto‐Epistemologies1.

25. Editor's Comments.

26. Seduction, deception and technology.

27. Editorial.

28. A typology of small‐ and medium‐sized supplier approaches to social responsibility.

29. Metaphor, mysticism and madness. A response to the three papers on 'Is analytical psychology a religion?'.

30. Editorial.

31. Untitled.

32. Editor's Comments.

33. Bicorporates: Decoding the origin and spread of the enigmatic images.

34. Like the Belly of a Bird Breathing: On Winnicott's 'Mind and its Relation to the Psyche‐Soma,'.

35. Editorial.

37. Editorial.

40. Michael Fordham and the Journal of Analytical Psychology: the view from Hangman's Hill.

41. Power Dynamics in Discussions of Contemporary Jungian Theory and Practice.

42. Transforming Infantile Trauma in Analytic Work with Children and Adults: The Clinical Writings of Alessandra Cavalli.

43. COMMENT ON PAPER BY DAVID H. ROSEN ET AL.

44. A preliminary sketch of a Jungian socioanalysis - an emerging theory combining analytical psychology, complexity theories, sociological theories, socio- and psycho-analysis, group analysis and affect theories1.

45. Implicit States of Connectivity in the Clinical Practice of Jungian Psychoanalysis and Andean Shamanism.

46. Call For Papers.

47. Call For Papers.

48. Obituary: Giles Clark.

49. The analytic setting today: using the couch or the chair?

50. Editorial.