Subtitles:
1913 - 1932
Notebooks of transformation
Notebooks of transformation
Series Title:
Philemon Series; The Black Books; Volume 7
Volume / Part:
Volume 7 of 7
Editor:
Shamdasani, Sonu 1962-
Translators:
Liebscher, Martin
Peck, John 1941-
Shamdasani, Sonu 1962-
Peck, John 1941-
Shamdasani, Sonu 1962-
Place of Publication:
New York, New York
Publisher:
W.W. Norton & Company, Inc. (for the Philemon Foundation and The Foundation of the Works of C.G. Jung)
Copyright Date:
2020
ISBN / SBN / ISSN:
9780393088649
Media Type:
Print (Non-Serial)
Media Sub-type:
Book
Copy:
2
LoC Call Number:
BF 109 .J6826 2020 v.7 c.2
Accession Number:
070038
Keyword Subject Headings:
Jung, C.G. (Carl Gustav)--Biography
Psychoanalysis--Jungian--Manuscripts
Psychoanalysis--Jungian--History
Unconscious--Personal narrative
Dreams--Personal narrative
Active imagination--Personal narrative
Psychoanalysis--Jungian--Manuscripts
Psychoanalysis--Jungian--History
Unconscious--Personal narrative
Dreams--Personal narrative
Active imagination--Personal narrative
User Notes:
Hardbound; 249 pp., including bibliographic references in footnotes
and black-and-white text figures.
From the publisher:
"In 1913, C.G. Jung started a unique self-experiment that he called his
'confrontation with the unconscious': an engagement with his fantasies
in a waking state, which he charted in a series of notebooks referred
to as 'The Black Books.' These intimate writings shed light on the further
elaboration of Jung's personal cosmology and his attempts to embody
insights from his self-investigation into his life and personal relationships.
'The Red Book' drew on material recorded from 1913 to 1916, but Jung
actively kept the notebooks for many more decades."
Note that the journals that have been published as "The Black Books"
include volumes 2-7 of Jung's original series of seven notebooks.
The material in Jung's first notebook has not been included.
A "Note to the Reader" in Volume 7 states:
"The facsimilie and translation [of notebook 7] end with page 135,
which marks the end of the sequence that commenced in 1913.
After a lengthy interval of more than a decade, Jung took up
Book 7 for notes of a different kind. Hence these have not been
reproduced here."
Contents of the 7 volumes of "The Black Books":
• Book 1: Introductory material by Sonu Shamdasani, Martin Liebscher, and John Peck
• Book 2: Facsimile and translation of entries from Nov. 12, 1913 through Dec. 29, 1913 (Notebook 2)
• Book 3: Facsimile and translation of entries from Dec. 30, 1913 through Jan. 14, 1914 (Notebook 3)
• Book 4: Facsimile and translation of entries from Jan. 14, 1914 through Mar. 9, 1914 (Notebook 4)
• Book 5: Facsimile and translation of entries from Mar. 13, 1914 through Jan. 30, 1916 (Notebook 5)
• Book 6: Facsimile and translation of entries from Jan. 30, 1916 through May 21, 1917 (Notebook 6)
• Book 7: Facsimile and translation of entries from May 21, 1917 through Dec. 15, 1932 (Notebook 7)
Contents of Book 7 (Notebook 7):
Facsimile pages for the seventh notebook [pp. 5-145]
Translation pages for the seventh notebook [pp. 147-249]
