The Collected Works
Volume |
Title |
Pages |
Sales Rank |
Description |
Volume 1 |
288 |
1,382,698 |
This first volume of Jung's Collected Works contains papers that appeared between 1902 and 1905. |
|
Volume 2 |
664 |
1,170,380 |
Includes Jung's famous word-association studies in normal and abnormal psychology, two lectures on the association method given in 1909 at Clark University, and three articles on psychophysical researches from American and English journals in 1907 and 1908. |
|
Volume 3 |
316 |
1,065,119 |
Papers on psychopathology and schizophrenia revealing Jung's original thinking in this area and providing valuable insight into the development of his later concepts such as the archetypes and the collective unconscious. |
|
Volume 4 |
392 |
1,705,750 |
This book gives the substance of Jung's published writings on Freud and psychoanalysis between 1906 and 1916, with two later papers. |
|
Volume 5 |
590 |
71,324 |
A complete revision of Psychology of the Unconscious (orig. 1911-12), Jung's first important statement of his independent position. |
|
Volume 6 |
608 |
38,777 |
One of the most important of Jung's longer works, and probably the most famous of his books. The extended chapters that give general descriptions of the types and definitions of Jung's principal psychological concepts are key documents in analytical psychology. |
|
Volume 7 |
369 |
71,806 |
This volume has become known as perhaps the best introduction to Jung's work. In these famous essays. "The Relations between the Ego and the Unconscious" and "On the Psychology of the Unconscious," he presented the essential core of his system. |
|
Volume 8 |
608 |
349,160 |
A revised translation of one of the most important of Jung's longer works. The volume also contains an appendix of four shorter papers on psychological typology, published between 1913 and 1935. |
|
Volume 9 (Part 1) |
470 |
10,659 |
Essays which state the fundamentals of Jung's psychological system. |
|
Volume 9 (Part 2) |
353 |
24,732 |
Aion, originally published in German in 1951, is one of the major works of Jung's later years. The central theme of the volume is the symbolic representation of the psychic totality through the concept of the Self, whose traditional historical equivalent is the figure of Christ. |
|
Volume 10 |
632 |
424,411 |
Essays bearing on the contemporary scene and on the relation of the individual to society, including papers written during the 1920s and 1930s focusing on the upheaval in Germany, and two major works of Jung's last years, The Undiscovered Self and Flying Saucers. |
|
Volume 11 |
699 |
467,857 |
Sixteen studies in religious phenomena, including Psychology and Religion and Answer to Job. |
|
Volume 12 |
467 |
21,869 |
A study of the analogies between alchemy, Christian dogma, and psychological symbolism. |
|
Volume 13 |
524 |
118,999 |
Five long essays that trace Jung's developing interest in alchemy from 1929 onward. |
|
Volume 14 |
430 |
123,902 |
Jung's last major work, completed in his 81st year, on the synthesis of the opposites in alchemy and psychology. |
|
Volume 15 |
178 |
320,937 |
Nine essays, written between 1922 and 1941, on Paracelsus, Freud, Picasso, the sinologist Richard Wilhelm, Joyce's Ulysses, artistic creativity generally, and the source of artistic creativity in archetypal structures. |
|
Volume 16 |
416 |
143,642 |
Essays on aspects of analytical therapy, specifically the transference, abreaction, and dream analysis. Contains an additional essay, "The Realities of Practical Psychotherapy," found among Jung's posthumous papers. |
|
Volume 17 |
241 |
155,893 |
Papers on child psychology, education, and individuation, underlining the overwhelming importance of parents and teachers in the genesis of the intellectual, feeling, and emotional disorders of childhood. The final paper deals with marriage as an aid or obstacle to self-realization. |
|
Volume 18 |
936 |
1,724,448 |
This volume is a miscellany of writings that Jung published after the Collected Works had been planned, minor and fugitive works that he wished to assign to a special volume, and early writings that came to light in the course of research. |
|
Volume 19 |
280 |
1,534,083 |
There are indexes of all publications, personal names, organizations and societies, and periodicals. |
|
Volume 20 |
751 |
946,461 |
An exceptionally comprehensive index by paragraph numbers. |
Letters & Correspondence
Title |
Pages |
Sales Rank |
Description |
625 |
911,904 |
From some 1,600 letters written by Jung between the years 1906-1961, Vol. 1, contains those letters written between 1906 and 1950 |
|
764 |
1,239,052 |
Vol. 2 contains 460 letters written between 1951 and 1961, during the last years of Jung's life. |
|
328 |
379,895 |
It compiles the 360 letters that psychoanalysts Sigmund Freud and Carl Jung wrote to each other from 1906 until their break in 1914. |
|
320 |
191,852 |
Jung's Correspondence with world-renowned physicist Wolfgang Pauli |
|
496 |
690,748 |
The correspondence of Erich Neumann and C. G. Jung which lasted from 1933 to 1959. |
|
320 |
278,395 |
Jung's correspondence with one of the twentieth century's leading theologians and ecumenicists [A tendency towards co-operation with other denominations] |
|
416 |
2,018,727 |
Jung's 32-year correspondence with James Kirsch, a German-Jewish psychiatrist who founded Jungian communities in Berlin, Tel Aviv, London, and Los Angeles |
|
200 |
1,363,822 |
Jung's correspondence with his psychiatrist colleague Hans Schmid-Guisan. |
|
416 |
2,018,727 |
The Jung-White Letters charts fifteen years of correspondence between C. G. Jung and Victor White, an English Dominican priest and theologian. |
Lectures & Seminars
Year |
Title |
Pages |
Description |
1934-1939 |
1,616 |
Jung was fascinated and disturbed by tales of Nietzsche's brilliance, eccentricity, and eventual decline into permanent psychosis. These volumes, the transcript of a previously unpublished private seminar, reveal the fruits of his initial curiosity. |
|
1930-1934 |
1,500 |
Here the careful transcriptions of the seminar notes about the visions of Christiana Morgan, offering an unprecedented view of Jung as a teacher and as a man. |
|
1928-30 |
784 |
Provides clarification of Jung's method of dream analysis. Based upon a previously unpublished series of dreams of one of Jung's patients. |
|
1936-1940 |
536 |
In the 1930s C. G. Jung embarked upon a bold investigation into childhood dreams as remembered by adults to better understand their significance to the lives of the dreamers. The seminar series fills a critical gap in Jung's collected works. |
|
1925 |
280 |
In 1925 C. G. Jung delivered a series of seminars in English in which he gives an introductory overview of his ideas about psychological typology and the archetypes of the collective unconscious, illustrated with case material and discussions concerning contemporary art. |
|
1932 |
176 |
Jung's seminar on Kundalini yoga, presented to the Psychological Club in Zurich in 1932, has been widely regarded as a milestone in the psychological understanding of Eastern thought and of the symbolic transformations of inner experience |
|
1933-1934 |
256 |
Jung’s lectures on the history of psychology. |
|
1936-1941 |
320 |
Presents the sessions devoted to dream interpretation and its history. This book examines a long dream series from the Renaissance physician Girolamo Cardano. |
|
1896-1899 |
160 |
During his undergraduate years (1896-1899) at Basel University, Jung delivered lectures to his student fraternity, the Zofingia. Dwelling on theology, psychology, spiritism, and philosophy, the Zofingia Lectures illuminate Jung's later thought. |
|
1912 |
136 |
n the autumn of 1912, C. G. Jung, then president of the International Psychoanalytic Association, set out his critique and reformulation of the theory of psychoanalysis in a series of lectures in New York, ideas that were to prove unacceptable to Freud, thus creating a schism in the Freudian school. |
|
1936-1937 |
376 |
The dreams presented here are those of Nobel Prize–winning physicist Wolfgang Pauli, who turned to Jung for therapeutic help because of troubling personal events, emotional turmoil, and depression. |
|
1943 |
200 |
C.G. Jung held an extemporaneous seminar on "The Solar Myths and Opicinus de Canistris" at the 1943 Eranos Conference |
|
1945 |
240 |
Jung's landmark lecture on Nerval's hallucinatory memoir |
Other Works
Title |
Value |
Sales Rank |
Description |
256 |
12,101 |
Considered by many to be one of the most important books in the field of psychology, Modern Man in Search of a Soul is a comprehensive introduction to the thought of Carl Gustav Jung. |
|
600 |
3,874 |
The most influential unpublished work in the history of psychology. |
|
430 |
9,466 |
An eye-opening biography of one of the most influential psychiatrists of the modern age, drawing from his lectures, conversations, and own writings. |
|
1648 |
Publication date 09 Jun 2020 |
In 1913, C.G. Jung started a self-experiment that he called his "confrontation with the unconscious": an engagement with his fantasies, which he charted in a series of notebooks referred to as The Black Books. |
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