The Many Faces of the Creative - Admissions Webinar
July 16, 2026
A Free Online Admissions Webinar for Pacifica's M.A. in Depth Psychology and Creativity with Emphasis in the Arts and Humanities | Offered Live via Zoom
Program Description
The Many Faces of the Creative
Join us for a special admissions webinar for the M.A. in Depth Psychology and Creativity with Emphasis in the Arts and Humanities
What does it mean to live a creative life with depth, purpose, and service to the world around us? How can Pacifica’s M.A. in Depth Psychology & Creativity with Emphasis in the Arts and Humanities help you to make this a reality?
Graduates from our program learn to engage the creative powers of the unconscious, not just as artists, writers, and performers, but in the many other ways creativity manifests in the modern world. They bring creative tools and depth psychological insights to fields such as social activism, entrepreneurship, teaching, corporate leadership, healing arts, coaching and mentoring, spiritual ministry, and other forms of cultural transformation. Join us for a conversation with alumni who are actively applying the tools, practices, and perspectives they developed at Pacifica to build meaningful, imaginative, and satisfying lives and careers.
Program Details
Dates
July 16, 2026, 5:00pm PT, online on Zoom
Admissions Webinar with Dr. Nick Literski & Dr. Susan Rowland
Registration
- Free
About the Teachers
Nicholas (Nick) S. Literski, JD, PhD (they/them) served as a juvenile probation officer before earning their Juris Doctor and working as an attorney in private practice. Dissatisfaction with that career, together with the experience of coming out as part of the LGBTQ+ community, led them to rebuild their life and pursue their passion for the intersection of spirituality and psychology. After three years of training as a shamanic practitioner, Nick’s desire to help facilitate the spiritual journey of others led them to earn a master’s degree in Spiritual Guidance at Sofia University. This work, in turn, inspired Nick to pursue their PhD in the DJA program at Pacifica Graduate Institute. Their dissertation work involved a depth psychological analysis of Paleolithic cave art, through Jung’s technique of active imagination, with an eye toward what these images could reveal about the human religious instinct. Nick has published in Psychological Perspectives: A Quarterly Journal of Jungian Thought; Immanence: The Journal of Applied Mythology, Legend, and Folklore; and Somatics Magazine-Journal of the Mind-Body Arts and Sciences. Nick’s article, “Declining Divisions: Non-binary Gender Identities and American Cultural Consciousness,” was included in Thomas Singer & Andrew Samuels’ compilation, The Reality of Fragmentation and the Yearning for Healing: Jungian Perspectives on Democracy, Power, and Illusion in Contemporary Politics. Nick also co-authored Method Infinite: Freemasonry and the Mormon Restoration, published in 2022 by Greg Kofford Books. Nick also served briefly as Assistant Editor of the journal, Anthropology of Consciousness. Nick’s research interests include spirituality, LGBTQ+ studies, anthropology, magic, and the work of C. G. Jung.
Susan Rowland (PhD) is Core Faculty, and Advisor in Research and the Humanities in MA Depth Psychology and Creativity, as well as teaching in the Doctoral Program in Jungian and Archetypal Studies. She earned her Ph.D. from the University of Newcastle and her MAs from the Universities of London and Oxford. In 2003 Susan became the first Chair of the International Association of Jungian Studies (IAJS). She is author of many studies of Jung, literary theory, the arts and gender including Jung: A Feminist Revision (2002), Jung as a Writer (2005), and also edited Psyche and the Arts (2008). Another recent book is C.G. Jung and the Humanities (2010), showing how Jung’s work is a response to the creative, psychological, spiritual, philosophical and ecological crises of our age. In 2012 her book, The Ecocritical Psyche: Literature, Complexity Evolution and Jung was published by Routledge, followed by Remembering Dionysus (2017) and Jungian Literary Criticism: the Essential Guide (2019). Particularly important is Susan’s exposition with Joel Weishaus in Jungian Arts-Based Research and the Nuclear Enchantment of New Mexico. Here Susan shows that depth psychology animates art into providing therapy with the world. Her own work in JABR is represented by her first mystery novel, The Sacred Well Murders (Chiron 2022). See her website: www.susanrowland-books.com
General Information
Hosted Online
Registration Details
July 16, 2026
- Number of Classes: 1 Class
- Class Length: 1.5 hours
- Class Time: 5:00 – 6:30 PM PT
- CECs: 0


