Forfatter fødeår: 1875-1961
Unavailable for many years, this edition presents the original English translation of Jung's most famous and influential work. A key text for understanding the formation of Jung's ideas.
This volume contains essays bearing on the contemporary scene and, in particular, on the relation of the individual to society.
A unique contribution to the psychology of childhood in which Jung outlined his theory of child development and individuation, stressing the importance of the psychology of parents and teachers in a child's development.
The Practice of Psychotherapy brings together Jung's essays on general questions of analytic therapy and dream analysis. It also contains his profoundly interesting parallel between the transference phenomena and alchemical processes.
The General Bibliography lists the contents of the respective volumes of the Collected Works (of which this is Volume 19) and the Gesammelte Werke, published in Switzerland, and shows the interrelation of the two editions.
The Zofingia Club was a discussion group to which C.G. Jung belonged as a medical student: in 1897 he became Chairman, and gave five lectures. These have survived and are published here in a supplementary volume to the Collected Works.
The psychological and religious implications of alchemy were Jung's major preoccupation during the last thirty years of his life. This collection of shorter Alchemial Studies has special value as an introduction to Jung's work on alchemy.
The influence of Bleuler, and to a lesser extent Janet, is to be found in the descriptive experimental psychiatry composing Volume I of the Collected Works.
In Psychology and Alchemy Jung works out in detail the analogies between alchemy, Christian dogma and symbolism in relation to alchemy, focusing on the mandala in particular.
A collection of Jung's word-association tests for studying normal and abnormal psychology whilst working at the Burgholzli Mental Hospital in 1900.