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Get it between 2025-03-04 to 2025-03-11. Additional 3 business days for provincial shipping.
Product Description The spiritual malaise regnant in today’s disenchanted world presents a picture of “a polar night of icy darkness,” as Max Weber wrote already a century ago. This collective dark night of the soul is driven by climate change-related disasters, rapid technological innovations, and opaque geostrategic realignments. In the wake of what policy analysts refer to as “Westlessness,” the postmodern age is characterized by incessant distractions, urgent calls to responsibility, and in-humanly short deadlines, which result in a general state of exhaustion and burnout. The hovering sense of living in a time frame that is post-histoire induces states of confusion on a personal level as well as in the realm of politics. Totally missing is a grand narrative to guide humanity’s vision.Thinkers, scholars, and Jungian analysts are increasingly looking to C.G. Jung’s monumental oeuvre, The Red Book, as a source for guidance to re-enchant the world and to find a new and deeper understanding 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: IntroductionRobert M. Mercurio: The Red Book and our Contemporary Crises: Active Imagination, Mass Migration and Climate ChangeHeike Weis Hyder: The Burning Urgency of Psychodynamic Discoveries in The Red Book for Psychiatry and Psychotherapy: A Key for Healing-Resonance of Soul, Love and LifeMaria Helena R. Mandacarú Guerra: Jung’s Red Book as a Healing Symbol for Our TimeThomas Moore: A Book of Magic: Jung’s Red Book and the Tradition of Natural MagicBruce MacLennan: Liber Novus sed non Ultimus: Neoplatonic Theurgy for Our TimeGary Clark: Integrating the Archaic and the Modern: The Red Book, Visual Cognitive Modalities and the Neuroscience of Altered States of ConsciousnessJohn Merchant: The Red Book as Jung’s AsclepiadeanJohn Ryan Haule: Jung comes back to HimselfHenning Weyerstrass: C.G. Jung and the Creative UnconsciousBecca Tarnas: The Participatory ImaginationDale 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 VeniceKiley Q. Laughlin: The Red Book: A Premodern Graphic NoveltyMark Winborn: Liber Novus and the Metaphorical Psyche: Revisioning The Red Book About the Author Murray Stein, Ph.D., studied as an undergraduate at Yale University (B.A. in English) and attended graduate school at Yale Divinity School (M.Div.) and the University of Chicago (Ph.D. in Religion and Psychological Studies). He trained as a Jungian psychoanalyst at the C.G. Jung Institute of Zurich. From 1976 to 2003 he was a training analyst at the C.G. Jung Institute of Chicago, of which he was a founding member and President from 1980 to 1985. In 1989, he joined the Executive Committee of IAAP as Honorary Secretary for Dr. Thomas Kirsch as President (1989-1995) and served as President of the IAAP from 2001 to 2004. He was president of ISAP Zurich 2008-2012 and is currently a training and supervising analyst there. He resides in Goldiwil (Thun), Switzerland. His special interests are psychotherapy and spirituality, methods of Jungian psychoanalytic treatment, and the individuation process. Major publications: In Midlife, Jung's Map of the Soul, Minding the Self, Soul: Retrieval and Treatment, Transformation: Emergence of the Self, and Outside, Inside and All Around. Web page: www.murraystein.com; contact email: [email protected]