Thinkers, scholars, and Jungian analysts are increasingly looking to C.G. Jung's monu mental oeuvre, The Red Book, as a source for guidance to re-enchant the world and to find a new and deeper under standing of the homo religiosus. The essays in this series on Jung's Red Book for Our Time: Searching for Soul under Postmodern Conditions circle around this objective and offer countless points of entry into this inspiring work.
This is the fourth volume of a multi-volume series set up on a global and multicultural level and includes essays from the following distinguished Jungian analysts and scholars:
Murray Stein and Thomas Arzt: Introduction
Robert M. Mercurio: The Red Book and our Contemporary Crises: Active Imagination, Mass Migration and Climate Change
Heike Weis Hyder: The Burning Urgency of Psychodynamic Discoveries in The Red Book for Psychiatry and Psycho therapy: A Key for Healing-Resonance of Soul, Love and Life
Maria Helena R. Mandacaru Guerra: Jung's Red Book as a Healing Symbol for Our Time
Thomas Moore: A Book of Magic: Jung's Red Book and the Tradition of Natural Magic
Bruce MacLennan: Liber Novus sed non Ultimus: Neoplatonic Theurgy for Our Time
Gary Clark: Integrating the Archaic and the Modern: The Red Book, Visual Cognitive Modali ties and the Neuro science of Altered States of Consciousness
John Merchant: The Red Book as Jung's Asclepiadean
John Ryan Haule: Jung comes back to Himself
Henning Weyerstrass: C.G. Jung and the Creative Unconscious
Becca Tarnas: The Participatory Imagination
Dale Kushner: In Extremis: Jung's Descent into the Language of the Self
Karin Jironet: On the Divine and Eternal Solitude of the Star: Jung's Seven Sermons Mirrored to Sufi Mysticism
Katie Givens Kime: "So Long As We Are Not Mystics" What the Personal Art of William James and C.G. Jung Give Us Now
Christian Gaillard: The Red Book in Venice
Kiley Q. Laughlin: The Red Book: A Premodern Graphic Novelty
Mark Winborn: Liber Novus and the Metaphorical Psyche: Revisioning The Red Book
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