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"This book became a landmark, set up on the spot where two ways
divided. Because of its imperfections and its incompleteness it
laid down the program to be followed for the next few decades of my
life." Thus wrote C. G. Jung about his most famous and influential
work, the one that marked the beginning of his divergence from the
psychoanalytic school of Freud. In this book Jung explores the
fantasy system of Frank Miller, the young American woman whose
account of her poetic and vivid mental images helped lead him to
his redefinition of libido while encouraging his explorations in
mythology. Published in 1912 as "Wandlungen und Symbole der
Libido," this is a key text for the study of the formation of
Jung's ideas and for understanding his personal and psychological
condition during this crucial time. Miller's fantasies, with their
mythological implications, supported Jung's notion that libido is
not primarily sexual energy, as Freud had described it, but rather
psychic energy in general, which springs from the unconscious and
appears in consciousness as symbols. Jung shows how libido
organizes itself as a metaphorical "hero," who first battles for
deliverance from the "mother," the symbol of the unconscious, in
order to become conscious, then returns to the unconscious for
renewal. Jung's analytical commentary on these fantasies is a
complex study of symbolic parallels derived from mythology,
religion, ethnology, art, literature, and psychiatry, and
foreshadows his fundamental concept of the collective unconscious
and its contents, the archetypes.
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