Sylvia Brinton Perera


Sylvia Brinton Perera is an author and a Jungian analyst.

Life and career

Professional

Qualified as a Jungian analyst, Perera is in private practice, counseling as a psychotherapist. Her earlier training included an MA in psychology; her undergraduate focus at Radcliffe was in art history. At the , she became recognized as a training analyst and is a member of the faculty. She also served on its board of directors. In addition to her articles, Perera has authored four books on Jungian psychology, and is co-author of another. She also has located her practice in Vermont.

Personal

The eldest of five children of a Quaker family, Perera came of age in Scarsdale, New York. She has two children by her former husband, political scientist Gregory James Massell. Jungian analyst and author Edward Christopher Whitmont became her partner until his death in 1998.

Commentary

In general

discusses Perera in terms of the developing feminist perspective on Jung's psychology. He proposes three such groups: first, those working with Eros and "psychic relatedness" ; second, those who view a woman not as one who relates, but "as she is, in her own right" ; and third, those most compatible with contemporary feminism. Samuels later adds that Perera wrote of finding a nascent therapy, a "wisdom in change" embedded in an ancient goddess myth. Such myths were often overlooked by the prevailing patriarchal view.

''Descent to the Goddess''

Perera's 1981 book Descent to the Goddess concerns the commanding Inanna of Sumer who presides over the avenues of "destiny". More terrifying is her underworld sister Ereshkigal with the "eye of death". Edward C. Whitmont compares Perera's description here of the yin of 'feminine consciousness' to that of Erich Neumann's. As portrayed by Perera, under the sway of Ereshkigal a woman may become familiar with impersonal energies that can inflict a pitiless pain on other people, yet be part of a healing process and a stage of psychological growth. Inanna's "descent into the underworld presages a renewal of life."
Susan Rowland also discusses Perera's 1981 book, which she calls "popular and influential". The shadow-sister Ereshkigal holds archetypes of great pain, but also of healing. "his goddess myth of an underworld journey and return enables Perera to shape depressive mental states as potentially empowering women."

''The Scapegoat Complex''

See the Scapegoating article for an abstract of Perera's book, regarding her discussion of its archetype in the individual.

Selected works