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The Wounded Jung

Effects of Jung's Relationships on His Life and Work

by Robert C. Smith


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Editions of The Wounded Jung

9780810112704
ISBN

Binding/Format

Hardcover
Publisher

Northwestern Univ Pr
Date

1996
Price

$2.90
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New
9780810115767
ISBN

Binding/Format

Paperback
Publisher

Northwestern Univ Pr
Date

1997
Price

£12.00
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Publisher Notes

Carl Jung, the founder of analytical psychology, is widely considered an intuitive genius with a profound understanding of the peculiar spiritual dilemmas of modern man. In this book, Robert C. Smith shows how Jung's interest in the healing of the psyche was rooted in the conflicts of his own childhood. Smith begins by exploring Jung's formative and transformative life experience, including his relationships with a deeply troubled mother and despairing father, with Sigmund Freud, and with the various women in his life. The relationships to his parents, in particular, have been remarkably unexplored by scholars. Smith then shows how these experiences shaped Jung's thoughts and writing -including his reassessment of religion as inner process - as well as his fascination with gnosticism and alchemy; the attention Jung gives to psychology as myth and the realization of selfhood; and his reinterpretation of evil as a process to be integrated into the proper sphere of human existence. Smith's findings are based on the unprecedented number of primary sources to which he had access, including archival research, his own interviews with many of Jung's intimates, and personal correspondence with Jung himself, as well as on the synthesis of a wide range of recent scholarship on Jung. The culmination of many years of scholarship and reflection, this book should be read by anyone interested in spiritual healing or the connection between psychology and religion.

Media Reviews

"The greatest contribution of Smith's book may be to underscore the spiritual lesson that even Jungian psychotherapy--let alone the wider popular culture of personal growth--is often tempted to ignore: no loss, no gain."

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