The Collected Works of C. G. Jung is a multi-volume work containing the writings of psychiatrist Carl Jung.
Volume 1: Psychiatric Studies
Volume 2: Experimental Researches
Volume 3: Psychogenesis of Mental Disease
Volume 4: Freud and Psychoanalysis
Volume 5: Symbols of Transformation
Volume 6: Psychological Types
Volume 7: Two Essays on Analytical Psychology
Volume 8: Structure and Dynamics of the Psyche
Volume 9/1: The Archetypes and the Collective Unconscious
Volume 9/2: Aion
Volume 10: Civilisation in Transition
Volume 11: Psychology and Religion
Volume 12: Psychology and Alchemy
Volume 13: Alchemical Studies
Volume 14: Mysterium Coniunctionis
Volume 15: The Spirit of Man in Art and Literature
Volume 16: The Practice of Psychotherapy
Volume 17: The Development of Personality
Volume 18: The Symbolic Life
Volume 19: Bibliography
Volume 20: Index
The Zofingia Lectures
Psychology of the Unconscious
By C.G. Jung, Gerhard Adler, Michael Fordham, Herbert Read
January 29, 2016
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 transference is illustrated and interpreted by means of a ...
By C.G. Jung
November 24, 2015
Aion is one of a number of major works that Jung wrote during his seventies that were concerned with the relations between psychology, alchemy and religion. He is particularly concerned in this volume with the rise of Christianity and with the figure of Christ. He explores how Christianity came ...
By C. G. Jung
September 29, 2015
Alchemy is central to Jung's hypothesis of the collective unconscious. In this volume he begins with an outline of the process and aims of psychotherapy, and then moves on to work out the analogies between alchemy, Christian dogma and symbolism and his own understanding of the analytic process. ...
By C.G. Jung, Gerhard Adler
December 18, 2014
At the turn of the last century C.G. Jung began his career as a psychiatrist. During the next decade, three men whose names are famous in the annals of medical psychology influenced his professional development: Pierre Janet, under whom he studied at the Sappetriere Hospital in Paris; Eugen Bleuler...
By C. G. Jung
December 18, 2014
Alchemy is central to Jung's hypothesis of the collective unconscious. In this volume he begins with an outline of the process and aims of psychotherapy, and then moves on to work out the analogies between alchemy, Christian dogma and symbolism and his own understanding of the analytic process. ...