Free Online Books, Journals, and Papers
Free Book Downloads direct from Inner City Books:
Jung Lexicon, A Primer of Terms and Concepts, by Daryl Sharp
Chicken Little, The Inside Story: A Jungian Romance by Daryl Sharp
Digesting Jung: Food for the Journey, by Daryl Sharp
http://www.innercitybooks.net/freedownloads.html
Daryl Sharp is a Jungian Analyst in Toronto and also the Publisher and General Editor of Inner City Books which is also located in Toronto.
For Daryl Sharp’s description of the creation of Inner City Books, go to:
http://www.innercitybooks.net/story.html
Free from The Journal of Jungian Theory and Practice
Archive Issues of The Journal of Jungian Theory and Practice, from its inception in 1999 through 2007, are available for viewing, for free, online at:
http://www.junginstitute.org/index.php/PageId/127/ParentPageId/9
The 2008 issues are available, for free, at:
http://www.junginstitute.org/index.php/PageId/79/ParentPageId/9
A free online subscription is available at:
http://www.junginstitute.org/listmessenger/public/listmessenger.php
“The Journal of Jungian Theory and Practice is one of the most widely read and respected journals of the international Jungian community.”
Edward Edinger Interview
Edward Edinger’s final interview, conducted by Lawrence Jaffe on May 15, 1998, and published in
The Journal of Jungian Theory and Practice
is available free for viewing (and printing) from the
C.G. Jung Institute of New York.
It’s ten pages.
Edinger describes how, by 1998, Jung had became less understood than he was at his death in 1961, how post-Jungians are better described as pre-Jungians, why Jung invokes intense projections, why he considers “Anatomy of the Psyche” his “most substantial sustained and fully organized contribution,” and he offers thoughts about Theodor Abt and James Hillman, the future of Jungian psychology, personalistic approaches to Jung, why Jung’s vision of the psyche is incompatible with that of personalistic theories, Eastern religion as often embraced in the west, the Book of Job, “life’s intention,” death, aging and the afterlife, the “Not Yet Transformed God,” the “offended God-image,” wrestling with the “onslaught of instinct,” seeing the reality of the psyche, the effect on him of his parents’ religion, his lack of interest in computers, how entertainment is “an infantilizing of the sacred drama and the function that it used to serve,” how sports are disconnected from their origin as sacred games, and why modern music fails to touch the depths.
“There will probably be little enclaves, little oases of small groups that try to hold onto the authentic Jung and they may not be fully professional groups either. But that’s just a guess.”
Edward Edinger, May 15, 1998