In the autumn of 1912, C. G. Jung, then president of the
International Psychoanalytic Association, set out his critique and
reformulation of the theory of psychoanalysis in a series of
lectures in New York, ideas that were to prove unacceptable to
Freud, thus creating a schism in the Freudian school. Jung
challenged Freud's understandings of sexuality, the origins of
neuroses, dream interpretation, and the unconscious, and Jung also
became the first to argue that every analyst should themselves be
analyzed. Seen in the light of the subsequent reception and
development of psychoanalysis, Jung's critiques appear to be
strikingly prescient, while also laying the basis for his own
school of analytical psychology.
This volume of Jung's lectures includes an introduction by Sonu
Shamdasani, Philemon Professor of Jung History at University
College London, and editor of "Jung's Red Book."
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