C.G. Jung’s published writings can be studied as documents in the history of psychoanalysis, as works of literature, as depth psychological theory, as existential commentaries about the times in which they were composed, and as autobiographical markers in the author’s own individuation process. The Red Book: Liber Novus combines all of these genres. Essays in this volume are reflections on the many features of Jung’s oeuvre.
Inside this Volume:
-Jung’s Vision of the Human Psyche and Analytic Practice
-C.G. Jung as Writer in Dialogue
-Of Texts and Contexts
-“Divinity expresses the self…”—An Investigation
-C.G. Jung, Richard Wilhelm and I Ching
-Creative Powers and Personalities
-Mysterium Coniunctionis – The Mystery of Individuation
-In Friendship
-Red Book Papers
-The Red Book
-What Is The Red Book for Analytical Psychology?
-How to Read The Red Book, and Why: The Story of a Modern Man’s Search for His Soul
-Systema munditotius: A Psychogram
-The Red Book as a Journey to Individuation
-Acts of Imagination: Creation of the (Inner) World
-References
-Index