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C.G. Jung's letters to the artist and analysand Hedy Wyss, published here for the first time, are a unique testimony to Jung's vivid and sparkling spirit. Here we encounter the lively, compassionate and deeply human side of Jung's nature. He writes neither scientifically nor cautiously, but quite spontaneously out of his respective state of mind. He mentions his suffering from various physical ailments to Hedy Wyss, such as heart troubles and rheumatism. At the same time he struggles for the integrity of the analytical relationship and the veracity of love.Jung wrote his most important works during the twenty years of their correspondence, concluding with Mysterium Coniunctionis. Accordingly, in many of his letters to Hedy Wyss, hidden references to the problems he wrestled with at any given time can be found throughout these works. As a result, the content of Jung's letters required a comprehensive commentary. Alongside Jung's works, a private manuscript written by Hedy Wyss, in which, years after his death, she looked back on her encounters with "C.G." or the "Old Sage" as she liked to call him, furthered understanding of many details in the letters. These sources give us a unique insight into C.G. Jung's singular approach as a researcher and analyst.
This unique book impressively illustrates how the mother complexfunctions both in the world and in the human psyche. On the basisof classic fairy tales - Snow White, Hansel and Gretel, SleepingBeauty and others - the positive and negative aspects of the mothercomplex are described and provided with context. This is the first publication in English of thismaterial in its original unabridged form."This book ... compares processes in the unconscious with mythic images in fairy tales in order to bringclarity to what is obscure. It is the distillation of many years of experience and concern with psychicissues and ... [offers] both men and women an illuminating perspective on their personal problems... For many it will serve to bring light in to the dark area so full of vague promise and peril, whichconfronts us again and again from the 'realm of the mothers.'- From the Foreword by Marie-Louise von FranzSybille Birkhäuser-Oeri was a prominent Jungian analyst in Basel until her death in 1971.She was the wife of painter-illustrator Peter Birkhäuser.
The true story of four young Hungarians seeking inner direction at a time of outer upheaval, the holocaust. The intense experience depicted in this book provides them with new direction and hope.In the darkest hours of World War II, these friends, three of them Jewish, seek orientation and meaning in their shattered lives. During seventeen months, one of them, Hanna Dallos, delivers oral messages which Gitta Mallasz and Lili Strausz record in their notebooks. These messages, or teachings as they came to be known, end abruptly with the deportation of Hanna and Lili to Ravensbrück in December of 1944.Gitta Mallasz, the only survivor of the quartet, first published the notes in France in 1976. The dialogues document an extraordinary light-filled spiritual resistance in the midst of Nazi darkness and barbarous cruelty.
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