Many of these can be found on Academia.com
Landau, R., Brooke, R., Lampe, A., and Stich, B. (2023). Dreaming for the world: a Jungian study of dreams during the COVID-19 pandemic. Journal of Analytical Psychology, 68(2), 348-468. Link: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/share/author/YKKYPPIGRMFK3DQ85CMJ?target=10.1111/1468-5922.12905
Brooke, R. (2019). Jung’s fantasies of Africa and Africa’s healing of analytical psychology. International Journal of Jungian Studies, 11, 140-159. DOI:10.1163/19409060-1101003.
Brooke, R. (2019). Veterans’ PTSD: moral injury and nightmares of the dead. The GPPA Report: the official newsletter of the Greater Pittsburgh Psychological Association. Spring, 2019.
Brooke, R. (2019). A fundamental reframing of combat PTSD. The Pennsylvania Psychologist, 79(3), p. 35.
Brooke, R. (2018). Descartes’ dualism and the phenomenological tradition. a response to Elizabeth Urban’s ‘On matters of mind and body: regarding Descartes. Journal of Analytical Psychology, 63, 5, 656-660.
Brooke, R. (2017). An archetypal approach to treating combat posttraumatic stress disorder. In D. Downing and J. Mills (Eds). Outpatient treatment of psychosis: psychodynamic approaches to evidence based practice, pp. 171-195. London: Karnac Books.
Brooke, R. (2016). Some common themes of psychology as a human science. In C. Fischer, L. Laubscher, & R. Brooke ( Eds.). The qualitative vision for psychology: invitation to a human science approach, pp. 17-30. Pittsburgh: Duquesne University Press.
Brooke, R. (2016). Jung, Carl Gustav, and phenomenology. Encyclopedia of Psychology and Religion. D. A. Leeming, (Ed.). Berlin-Heidelberg: Springer-Verlag, DOI 10.1007/978-3-642-27771-9_365-4.
Brooke, R. (2016). Phenomenology of the transference. In J. McCurry (Ed.). The radically human world, pp. 3-12. Pittsburgh: Duquesne University Press.
Brooke, R. (2015). Jung and phenomenology. Classic edition. London and New York: Routledge. This is a republication, with minor changes, of the 1991 original edition.
Brooke, R. (2015). An honored guest in the iMfolozi and the possibility of homecoming. In M. Sipiora (Ed.). Imagining psychological life: philosophical, psychological, & poetic reflections, pp. 69-75. Pittsburgh: Trivium Publications.
Brooke, R. (2014). “The upright posture” revisited: Introduction to four papers in critical philosophical anthropology. The Humanistic Psychologist, 42: 80-82.
Brooke, R. (2013). Brooke, R. And Axelrad, J. (2013). Cost-effectiveness of psychological services. Brief summary in The Pennsylvania Psychologist, 73(6), pp. 13-14. Extended version (+20 pages) here: www.duq.edu/Documents/psychology/Cost effectiveness of Psychological Services copy.pdf
Brooke, R. (2012). An archetypal perspective for combat trauma. Bulletin of the American Academy of Clinical Psychology, 13 (1), 2-7.
Brooke, R. (2012). Notes on the phenomenology of interiority. International Journal of Jungian Studies, 5, (1), 1-16.
Brooke, R. (2012). Unusual treatment: a personal memory of helping people with PTSD in South Africa. The Specialist: Newsletter of the American Board of Professional Psychology. Summer 2012, 51-53.
Brooke, R. (2009). Jung and phenomenology. 5000 word entry in Encyclopedia of Psychology and Religion. Managing editor, David Leeming. Springer Pubs.
Brooke, R. (2009). The self, the psyche, and the world: a phenomenological interpretation. Journal of Analytical Psychology, 601-618.
Brooke, R. (2008). Ubuntu and the individuation process: toward a multicultural analytical psychology. Psychological Perspectives, 51: 36-53.
Brooke, R. (2006). The return of expertise in clinical practice. Psychologist/Psychoanalyst, 21, 2, pp. 26-28. Slightly modified version of The fall and rise of expertise (ref. below).
Brooke, R. (2006). The fall and rise of expertise. Bulletin of the American Academy of Clinical Psychology, 10, 1, Fall ’05/Winter, 8-11.
Brooke, R. (2002). Humanistic sensibilities in the assessment of dementia patients. The Humanistic Psychologist, 30, 136-149.
Brooke, R. (2000). Emissaries from the underworld: psychotherapy’s challenge to Christian fundamentalism. In P. Young-Eisendrath and M. Miller (Eds), The Psychology of Mature Spirituality,145-159. London and Philadelphia: Routledge.
Brooke, R. (1999). Pathways into the Jungian World. Edited and introduced. London and Philadelphia: Routledge.
Brooke, R. (1997). Phenomenologists reading Jung. The San Fransisco Jung Institute Library Journal, 16, 1, 25-28.
Brooke, R. (1997). Jung in the academy: a reply to Tacey. The Journal of Analytical Psychology, 42, 2, 285-296.
Brooke, R. (1996). Analytical psychology and existential phenomenology: an integration and a clinical study. The Psychoanalytic Review, 83, 4, 525-545.
Brooke, R. (1995). Jung’s recollection of the life-world. Harvest, 41, 1, 26-37.
Brooke, R. (1994). Assessment for psychotherapy: clinical indicators of self-cohesion and self-pathology. The British Journal of Psychotherapy, 10, 3, 317-330.
Brooke, R. (1993). A Coyote barks at Prometheus: archetypal images of the therapeutic stance. The Humanistic Psychologist, 21, 1, 58-64.
Brooke, R. (1992). Phenomenological analytical psychology: a clinical study. Harvest, 37, pp. 88-100. Reprinted in: R. Papadopoulos (Ed.). Carl Gustav Jung: Critical Assessments. 4 Vols. Routledge, 1992.
Brooke, R. (1991). Jung and Phenomenology. London and New York: Routledge.
Brooke, R. (1991). Psychic complexity and human existence. The Journal of Analytical Psychology, 36, 4, 505-518.
Brooke, R. (1991). Hermeneutic keys to the therapeutic moment: a Jungian phenomenological perspective. In R van Vuuren (Ed). Dialogue beyond Polemics, pp. 83-94. Pretoria, H.S.R.C.
Brooke, R. (1990). Reflections on Jung’s Experience in Africa. In G. Saayman (Ed.) Modern South Africa in Search of a Soul, pp 81-95. Boston: Sigo Press.
Brooke, R. (1986). Merleau-Ponty’s conception of the unconscious. The South African Journal of Psychology, 16, 4, 126-130.
Brooke, R. (1986). What is guilt? The Journal of Phenomenological Psychology, 16, 2, 31-46.
Brooke, R. (1985). Jung and the phenomenology of guilt. The Journal of Analytical Psychology, Vol. 30, 2, 165-184.
(This photograph was taken at dusk at an estuary on the Transkei coast. Color unaltered.)