Subtitle:
Notes of the seminar given in 1934-1939 by C.G. Jung
Series Title:
Bollingen Series XCIX [99]
Edition:
First edition (1988); Later printing (date not specified)
Volume / Part:
Volume 2 of 2
Editor:
Jarrett, James L. (James Louis) 1917-2015
Place of Publication:
Princeton, New Jersey
Publisher:
Princeton University Press
Copyright Date:
1988
ISBN / SBN / ISSN:
9780691099538 / 0691099537
Media Type:
Print (Non-Serial)
Media Sub-type:
Book
LoC Call Number:
B 3313 .A44 J85 1988 v.2
Accession Number:
068807
Keyword Subject Headings:
Nietzsche, Friedrich Wilhelm, 1844-1900
Also Sprach Zarathustra--Nietzsche--Exegesis--Psychological
Philosophy--Psychological aspects
Analytical psychology--Seminars
Also Sprach Zarathustra--Nietzsche--Exegesis--Psychological
Philosophy--Psychological aspects
Analytical psychology--Seminars
User Notes:
Hardbound; vi + 814 pp.
The material for "Nietzsche's Zarathustra" is divided into two volumes as follows:
• Volume 1: Pages 1-764: Spring 1934 - Autumn 1935.
• Volume 2: Pages 765-1578: Winter 1936 - Winter 1939
also including "References to the Psychological Analysis of
'Thus Spake Zarathustra'" and an index.
From the publication history printed on the verso of the title page:
"The text here published is that of the multigraphed version which
Mary Foote, its editor, issued privately in ten volumes from approximately
1934 to 1940 (specific dates of issue are lacking). Volumes 1 to 3, for
the meetings from May 1934 to March 1935, were originally issued in
double-spaced typing, and when depleted were reissued, with minor
corrections, in single-spaced format. The latter version and the
remaining (single-spaced) volumes are the source of the present text."
From the Introduction by James L. Jarrett:
"The last question Nietzsche put in the last of his books was simply:
'Have I been understood?' Now Nietzsche or, more likely, a Nietzschean,
might well add, 'Does Jung finally do justice to the greatness of Nietzsche
as philosopher, as writer?' And (again with presumption) one might imagine
the Geist of Jung answering, 'Is not the question rather, "Have we, by way of
our analysis of your text and what it tells us about your life, better understood
the human condition?"'
"This seminar, like all of Jung's seminars, is about Analytical Psychology."
Contents of Volume 2:
Winter 1936
[7 sessions]
Spring 1936
[8 sessions]
Spring 1937
[9 sessions]
Spring 1938
[7 sessions]
Autumn 1938
[7 sessions]
Winter 1939
[5 sessions]
References to the Psychological Analysis of "Thus Spake Zarathustra"
Index
