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B**3
Wow
This book is absolutely amazing. For anyone that wants to understand Jung's ideas on archetypes and their connection to libido, this book is essential.I have to admit, this is not an easy read. Jung himself says in the preface that he was never really happy with the book, which is why he revised it heavily. He wrote it originally at a time when his ideas still hadn't been fully formed (1912).Personally, I feel that the book was still a little "messy", despite its revision, and sometimes a little too lost in the weeds. Despite these flaws I still gained so much insights from this book.For anyone wanting to understand Jung, this book is an absolute must read.
E**D
Classic Jung
Jung's intention behind writing this book and otherwise investigating this field was to expand the symbolic expressions that arise from the unconscious beyond the scope of Freud's pansexualism. For the most part Jung deferred to Freud's interpretation of dreams, but radically opposed Freud's exclusive reliance on sexuality as the sole cause of unconscious impulses. "Symbols of Transformation" is Jung's attempt at explaining a variety of other-than-sexual causes for the symbols and impulses that arise from the unconscious. By discussing these unconscious forces, Jung relies upon his theory of the collective unconscious and the archetypes, which he deals with more explicitly in volume 9/1.Jung begins with a short chapter on two modes of thinking which explain the means through which unconscious archetypes can intrude upon conscious. The first mode of thinking he mentions is directed thinking, which is defined by taking thoughts and ideas meaningful to the individual and translating them into objectively relay-able symbols, or in our case, words. This type of thought he claims is discursive and tends to be quite exhausting. The applications and merits of this type of thought are self-evident. The next form of thinking he addresses is dreaming or fantasy-thinking. In this type of thought, images come and go as they please. The verbal constraints found in directed thinking vanish and instead, images and feelings. This form of thinking is effortless, spontaneous and seemingly guided by unconscious motives (18). Jung writes that the advantages modern man has over his ancestors is that he has learned to focus his energies onto directed thinking, while the earlier humans who had the same intellectual capacities (although less material knowledge) emphasized this fantasy-thinking. It was this early preponderance on fantasy-thinking that caused early humans to invest so heavily in mythology. Their myths were the living manifestations of the societies focus on fantasy thinking. Whatever it was that pre-occupied the unconscious of the early society quickly manifested itself in the sphere of mythology. These unconscious motivations are what Jung will call archetypes. He finds that the same archetypes that can be inferred from mythology are the exact same archetypes found in the psyche of people today. Just as their motivations crafted myths, Jung believes they still influence us today.Jung later picks up on the archetype of sexuality, which he believed Freud used so nebulously that it lost all meaning (135). Jung does to a degree recognize that sexual energy or more generally as he used the term, libido had overtly sexual sources. He writes that music most assuredly had sexual origins, but to place music in the same category as sex today would be absurd. Jung writes that the sexual energy was divorced from the physiologically act and applied to secondary sexual situations. In the case of music, one's dance or drumming could secure them a mate. Jung also suggests that reinvested energy may be what causes animals to build nests and care for their young. As the original energy caused the production of ova and spermatozoa, animals that could direct their energy to safe-guarding the environment of their offspring led to advantages in child production. I am not sure how well these theories mesh up with evolutionary biology, but this is how Jung understood it.This reallocation of sexual energy Jung also attributes to the origin of art. This freed energy simply sought a abstract expression beyond its original biological intention. In this sense, Jung is expanding Freud's definition of libido beyond its strictly sexual origin to account for any bodily impulse that encourages the individual to act.Such impulses Jung identified as the source of neurotic behavior. Spontaneous rhythmic behavior Jung (as well as Freud) attributed to rhythmic suckling of children that finds other applications upon sexual maturity. Jung mentions a case of a young girl beset by such an affliction coupled with sexual compulsions. Jung explained it as sexual energy redirecting itself though rhythmic behavior, which he finds to be a common means of dissipating energy (but in the case of the girl, the rhythm could not fully release her energy). He goes on to write that a dog scratching at a locked door or a man stroking his beard when thinking are both ways of expressing energy when the individual's intended object cannot be achieved. When the expression of libido is completely blocked, Jung claims that all manner of aberrant behavior manifests unconsciously. If this energy is not properly released, neuroses arise.The remainder of the book addresses various examples of archetypal images found in mythology and the unconscious impulses associated with them, such as the hero as a manifestation of the idealized unconscious, the voyage as roughly spiritual awakening and water as the unconscious. I feel that many of these examples are difficult to follow due to their seemingly esoteric nature. If one is well versed in obscure Greek mythology, perhaps they would read a bit more easily, but I found that his sometimes brainy, abstract meanderings ultimately detracted from his argument. Regardless, by thus juxtaposing the impulses and archetypes of the unconscious, Jung allows his reader to draw his/her own conclusions about how well mythology is a symbolic expression for the yearnings of the unconscious. By following the myths, we can see how earlier thinkers mapped out the unconscious mind, letting us know what to seek and what to avoid in getting to know the Self. As is a common critique of Jung, I wished he would have been more explicit with his correlations rather than leaving the actual connecting of the dots up to the reader.
D**F
Symbols of Transformation
This is not an easy read, but it is worth the time and effort. I have a link to Dictionary.com and purchased a Latin translation program to help me through. I have notes all over the margins and have to read and reread and reread paragraphs to follow Jung's train of thought. The book is a lot of work, but it is fascinating, and nothing this good ought to be easy. You will get back everything you put in, but it requires committment.
A**W
Great buy
Honestly, I am too intimidated to begin the book but it did come in excellent condition :0
M**.
One of C. G. Jung's hardest volumes! Very challenging even for a Jungian PhD student...
One of Jung's hardest books to understand and I don't think I still fully get it. It is dense with symbolic references. I am in a Jungian PhD program and this text was required but I had to reread it several times to get it.
C**N
A very challenging classic.
Historically, Symbols of Transformation was not only the book in which Jung delcared his split with Freud but also became later a sort of litmus test to see just how well people could deal with the depth psychology literature--which is to say, Symbols of Transformation is a very overwhelming read. Jung's ideas are brilliant but the volume could use significant editing or perhaps reduce more of his page long excercizes in etymology or other mental wanderings to footnotes (as though there were not already pages upon pages of footnotes!) It is tempting to think that Jung is showing off however one must remember the challenge he felt himself under and the certainty with which his peers would reject him. I cannot think of a book that more deserves cliff notes, and yet, when it is all said and done, his premise is staggering and no less elegant than Darwin's theory of species diversification. The notion that those energies which feed the libido and spirituality flow from the same pool or are perhaps the same thing altogether, comes as startling but is only the beginning of a long narrative Jung unravels that leaves mankind forever linked with his mythic past, spirituality recognized as an essential part of the human psychology. But this is where cliff notes would make a nice addition (or some sort of chapter summary) because the implications go on and on and on and on. I don't think you can read this and be unchanged because so many ideas are raised that the creative mind is at once set in motion, and soon you'll find new ideas creeping into your awareness that were never there before, and are not really contained within this book either.Although I would not suggest Transformations to any and everyone, it is as important as any other critical landmark in the development of modern psychology and even the philosophy of our entire species. If you are a person who wishes to confront those ideas of what it means to be a human being and who wishes to meet one of the great 20th century intellectuals in his own territory (instead of all those 2nd and 3rd hand sources), I strongly recommend giving this book a try. Just don't expect an easy or even agreeable read; Jung is if nothing else always challenging.
M**Y
Great
I have read many books by Jung and someone recommended this book to me. All of Jung's books are deep and insightful.
B**E
If you're interested in learning the keys to understanding how ...
If you're interested in learning the keys to understanding how the mind communicates to us through symbols, this is where to start.
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