Series Title:
Bollingen Series LVII (57)
Edition:
First Princeton/Bollingen paperback edition, 1971; third printing 1974
Translator:
Manheim, Ralph 1907-1992
Place of Publication:
Princeton, New Jersey
Publisher:
Princeton University Press
Digital Platform for this Publication:
EBSCO
Copyright Date:
1959
ISBN / SBN / ISSN:
9780691213262
Media Type:
Print (Non-Serial)
Media Sub-type:
eBook
LoC Call Number:
BF 173 .J85 J293 1959b eb
Accession Number:
079912
Keyword Subject Headings:
Archetype (Jungian Psychology)
Complex (Jungian Psychology)
Symbol--Psychological aspects
Dreams--Imagery--Analysis of
Alchemy--Imagery--in Dreams and Myths
Complex (Jungian Psychology)
Symbol--Psychological aspects
Dreams--Imagery--Analysis of
Alchemy--Imagery--in Dreams and Myths
User Notes:
This digital publication is provided to active members of
Oregon Friends of Jung in accordance with OFJ's Fair Use Policy here.
eBook in PDF and ePub format; xii + 244 pp., including black-and-white illustrations, bibliographic references in footnotes, a bibliography, and an index.
Publisher Permissions: Print/Save 40 pages; Copy/Paste Restricted
Available for download: Yes
Originally published in German as "Komplex / Archetypus / Symbol
in der Psychologie C. G. Jungs" by Rascher Verlag, Zürich and
Stuttgart, 1957.
Contents:
Illustrations
Foreword / C.G. Jung
Editorial note
I. Complex / Archetype / Symbol
Introduction
Complex
The feeling-toned groups of representations in the unconscious
Autonomy of the complexes
On the phenomenology of the complex
The difference between the conceptions of Jung and of Freud
The two kinds of complexes
Complexes belong to the basic structure of the psyche
Neurosis and psychosis
Archetype
Of the nature of the archetype
The historical development of the concept of the archeytpe
in the work of Jung
Archetype, instinct, and brain structure
The biological aspect of the archetype
Realistic and symbolic understanding
Archetype and Platonic idea
The archetypes are not inherited images
Archetype and gestalt
The hierarchy of the archetypes
On the collective unconscious
Archetype and synchronicity
Archetype and the consciousness
An example from the world of dreams
Symbol
Archetype and symbol
What is a symbol?
Symbol and sign
The symbol in Freud and Jung
The symbol as a mediator
The symbol as a transformer of energy
Individual and collective symbols
The ego between the collective consciousness
and the collective unconscious
The symbols of the individuation process
The psyche's capacity for symbol transformation
Summary
II. Archetype and dream
Introduction
The dream of the bad animal
The hermaphrodite aspect of the animal
Dragon and snake
The horn
The horned serpent
Impaling ("spiking up") and devouring
The dual psychological aspect of the animal
The little animals
The blue fog or vapor
The four
One and four
The rebirth
The night sea journey
Conclusion
List of works cited
Index
The Collected Works of C.G. Jung
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