The Jung Cult received great attention for its revisionist opinions about C.G. Jung and the origins of depth psychology. Young Carl Jung offers a more balanced view with rare glimpses into Carl Jung's formative years.
In a masterful telling of Jung's childhood, Brockway provides a clear perspective on the impact young Carl's experiences played in forming his later theories. Jung himself attributed his discovery of the collective unconscious to early childhood experiences beginning with a particularly vivid dream.
From Brockway's on-site research in Switzerland to his analysis of Jung's octogenarian biography, Memories, Dreams, Reflections, the historical geographical, and intellectual influences that also impacted Jung are woven into this engrossing picture of his ancestry, birth, and school years.
Robert W. Brockway, Ph.D., is professor emeritus of religion at Brandon University in Canada. After growing up on the Hawaiian Islands, he served as a Unitarian minister before getting his Ph.D. in religion. Brockway spent forty years at Brandon as a professor of history, religion, and philosophy. He is the author of Myth from the Ice Age to Mickey Mouse as well as numerous articles and research reports.
Table of Contents:
C.G. Jung's World
Explorer of the Human Soul
The Manikin in the Pencil Box
God Defecates on Basel Cathedral
Barrel
The Zofingian Papers