The first English translation of Jung’s landmark lecture on
Nerval’s hallucinatory memoir In 1945, at the end of the Second
World War and after a long illness, C. G. Jung delivered a lecture in
Zürich on the French Romantic poet Gérard de Nerval. The lecture
focused on Nerval's visionary memoir, Aurélia, which the poet wrote
in an ambivalent attempt to emerge from madness. Published here for
the first time, Jung’s lecture is both a cautionary psychological
tale and a validation of Nerval’s visionary experience as a genuine
encounter. Nerval explored the irrational with lucidity and exquisite
craft. He privileged the subjective imagination as a way of fathoming
the divine to reconnect with what the Romantics called the life
principle. During the years of his greatest creativity, he suffered
from madness and was institutionalized eight times. Contrasting an
orthodox psychoanalytic interpretation with his own synthetic approach
to the unconscious, Jung explains why Nerval was unable to make use of
his visionary experiences in his own life. At the same time, Jung
emphasizes the validity of Nerval’s visions, differentiating the
psychology of a work of art from the psychology of the artist. The
lecture suggests how Jung’s own experiments with active imagination
influenced his reading of Nerval’s Aurélia as a parallel text to
his own Red Book. With Craig Stephenson’s authoritative
introduction, Richard Sieburth’s award-winning translation of
Aurélia, and Alfred Kubin’s haunting illustrations to the text, and
featuring Jung’s reading marginalia, preliminary notes, and
revisions to a 1942 lecture, On Psychological and Visionary Art
documents the stages of Jung’s creative process as he responds to an
essential Romantic text.
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Notes from C. G. Jung’s Lecture on Gérard de Nerval's Aurélia
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781400873470
Publisert
2015
Utgiver
Princeton University Press
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Antall sider
240
Forfatter