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New release recognizes Red Book as meaningful gift to the contemporary world
Jung's Red Book For Our Time: Searching for Soul Under Postmodern Conditions.
Our apologies for yesterdays email blast with the incorrect description. Please see the updated text below.
Edited by Murray Stein and Thomas Arzt, the essays in Jung's Red Book for Our Time: Searching for Soul under Postmodern Conditions are geared to the recognition that the posthumous publication of The Red Book: Liber Novus by C. G. Jung in 2009 was a meaningful gift to our contemporary world.
Similar to the volatile times Jung found himself in when he created this work a century ago, we today too are confronted with highly turbulent and uncertain conditions of world affairs that threaten any sense of coherent meaning, personally and collectively. The Red Book promises to become an epochal opus for the 21st century in that it offers us guidance for finding soul under postmodern conditions.
This is the first volume of a three-volume series set up on a global and multicultural level and includes essays from many distinguished Jungian analysts and scholars who are listed below in the table of contents.
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| Table of Contents and Contributors
- Murray
Stein: Introduction
- Thomas
Arzt: “The Way of What Is to Come”: Searching for Soul under Postmodern
Conditions
- Ashok
Bedi: Jung’s Red Book: A Compensatory Image for Our Contemporary Culture: A
Hindu Perspective
- Paul
Bishop: In a World That Has Gone Mad, Is What We Really Need … A Red Book?
Plato, Goethe, Schelling, Nietzsche and Jung
- Ann
Casement: “O tempora! O mores!”
- Josephine
Evetts-Secker: “The Incandescent Matter”: Shudder, Shimmer, Stammer, Solitude
- Nancy Swift
Furlotti: Encounters with the Animal Soul: A Voice of Hope for Our Precarious
World
- Liz
Greene: “The Way of What Is to Come”: Jung’s Vision of the Aquarian Age
- John Hill:
Confronting Jung: The Red Book Speaks to Our Time
- Stephan A.
Hoeller: Abraxas: Jung’s Gnostic Demiurge in Liber Novus
- Russell A.
Lockhart: Appassionato for the Imagination
- Lance S.
Owens: C.G. Jung and the Prophet Puzzle
- Dariane
Pictet: Movements of Soul in The Red Book
- Susan
Rowland: The Red Book for Dionysus: A Literary and Transdisciplinary
Interpretation
- Andreas
Schweizer: Encountering the Spirit of the Depths and the Divine Child
- Heyong
Shen: Why Is The Red Book “Red”? – A Chinese Reader’s Reflections
- Marvin
Spiegelman: On the Impact of Jung and his Red Book: A Personal Story
- Liliana
Liviano Wahba: Imagination for Evil
- John C.
Woodcock: The Red Book and the Posthuman
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