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  1. The Red Book (Jung) The Red Book: Liber Novus is a folio manuscript so named due to its original red leather binding. The work was crafted by the Swiss psychiatrist Carl Gustav Jung between 1914 [1] : 40 (ft.124) and about 1930.

  2. Features the preeminent psychoanalyst Carl G. Jungs famous Red Book , which records the creation of the seminal theories that Jung developed after his 1913 split with Sigmund Freud, and explores its place in Jung’s work through related items from the Library’s collections.

  3. Apr 9, 2021 · Collection. opensource. The red book by Jung. Addeddate. 2021-04-09 00:21:37. Identifier. carl-gustav-jung-the-red-book-liber-novu. Identifier-ark. ark:/13960/t62624w82.

  4. Oct 19, 2009 · View Kindle Edition. The most influential unpublished work in the history of psychology. When Carl Jung embarked on an extended self-exploration he called his “confrontation with the unconscious,” the heart of it was The Red Book, a large, illuminated volume he created between 1914 and 1930.

  5. A BEGINNER’S GUIDE TO C.G. JUNGS RED BOOK By Mathew V. Spano, Ph.D. Overview: The old expression “When falling, dive!” might best express the sentiments of Carl Jung as he decided to turn a near psychotic breakdown he was experiencing in late 1913 into an opportunity for self-analysis and self-therapy.

  6. Nov 11, 2009 · The first words of Carl Gustav Jung's Red Book are "The way of what is to come." What follows is 16 years of the psychoanalyst's dive into the unconscious mind, a challenge to what he...

  7. Swiss psychiatrist Carl Gustav Jung (1875–1961) created the Red Book, an account of what he called his “confrontation with the unconscious” in the first decades of the twentieth century. The Red Book contains the raw material from which Jung refined his distinctive theories and concepts.

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