In The Undiscovered Self Jung explains the essence of his teaching for a readership unfamiliar with his ideas. He highlights the importance of individual responsibility and freedom in the context of today's mass society, and argues that individuals...
The concept of masculinity was crucial not only to Jung's revolutionary theories of the human psyche, but also to his own personal development. This selection is an attempt to provide some ideas of Jung's thinking on this important part of his...
The concepts of the archetype is crucial to Jung's radical interpretation of the human mind. Here he considers the archetypes he considered fundamental to every living individual: mother, rebirth, spirit and trickster.
A comprehensive compilation of Jung's work on dreams, this book is without parallel and provides the perfect introduction to his concepts to those unfamiliar with Jung's work.
Nietzscheâs infamous work Thus Spake Zarathustra is filled with a strange sense of religiosity that seems to run counter to the philosopherâs usual polemics against religious faith. For some scholars, this book marks...
"In the spring of 1957, when he was eighty-one years old, C. G. Jung undertook the telling of his life story. At regular intervals he had conversations with his colleague and friend Aniela Jaffé, and collaborated with her in the preparation...
This is one of a number of major works which Jung wrote during his seventies that was concerned with the relationship between psychology, alchemy and religion. He is particularly concerned in this volume with the rise of Christianity and with the figure...
The archetypes of human experience which derive from the deepest unconscious mind and reveal themselves in the universal symbols of art and religion as well as in the individual symbolic creations of particular people are, for C. G. Jung, the key to the...
Nine essays, written between 1922 and 1941, on Paracelsus, Freud, Picasso, the sinologist Richard Wilhelm, Joyceâs Ulysses, artistic creativity generally, and the source of artistic creativity in archetypal structures.
The concept of "archetypes" and the hypothesis of "a collective unconscious" are two of Jung's better known ideas. In this volume, taken from the "Collected Works", Jung describes and elaborates the two concepts. Three...