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Jung'S Nietzsche: Zarathustra, the red Book, and "Visionary" Works
Gaia Domenici
(Autor)
·
Palgrave MacMillan
· Tapa Blanda
Jung'S Nietzsche: Zarathustra, the red Book, and "Visionary" Works - Domenici, Gaia
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Reseña del libro "Jung'S Nietzsche: Zarathustra, the red Book, and "Visionary" Works"
Introduction 1. A Life-Long Confrontation 1.1. Jungʼs Educational Background 1.2 Nietzscheʼs Presence In The Evolving Of Jungʼs Thinking 2. Jungʼs Psychological Understanding Of Nietzsche 2. 1. Jungʼs Seminar On Zarathustra: A Problematic Reading 2.2. The ʻRed Bookʼ Liber Novus 2.3. Jungʼs Zarathustra Or Nietzscheʼs Liber Novus? 3. Misreading Or ʻRevaluationʼ? 3.1. The Unconscious As A Perspective 3.2. Structure Of The Work Chapter 1 ʻVisionaryʼ Works And Liber Novus 1.1 ʻVisionaryʼ Works 1.1.1 Jungʼs Definition And Characterisation 1.1.2 Return To Mythology 1.2 ʻVisionaryʼ Authors 1.2.1 Theology 1.2.2 Basel and its Environment 1.2.3 Liber Novus as Jungʼs ʻVisionaryʼ Experience Chapter 2 Nietzsche In Liber Novus 2.1 Nietzsche And The Style Of Liber Novus 2.1.1 Introductory Remarks 2.2 Similar Symbology: Nietzscheʼs Hidden Presence 2.2.1 Desert, Lion and Transformation 2.2.2 Poisonous Serpents, Riddles, Dwarfs 2.2.3 Sun, Sunset And Eastern Wisdom 2.3 Nietzscheʼs Explicit Presence: Overcoming Rationalism 2.3.1 Folly As The Other Side Of Life 2.3.2 Teaching, Mocking And Imitating: The Process Of Self-Becoming 2.3.3 Death And Rebirth Of God Chapter 3 Liber Novus In Nietzsche: Jungʼs Seminar On Zarathustra 3.1 Jungʼs Interpretation of Zarathustra 3.1.1 Introductory Remarks 3.2 Zarathustra As Nietzscheʼs Failed Individuation 3.2.1 The Old Wise Man: Zarathustra And Philemon 3.2.2 Intoxication, Inflation, The Übermensch And The Übersinn 3.2.3 Isolated Suns, The Island Of The Dead And The ʻWheel of Creationʼ 3.3 Animals 3.3.1 Serpent, Bird And Black Scarab 3.3.2 Frogs And Swamp 3.3.3 Doves, Feminine And Jungʼs ʻSoulʼ Conclusion 1. Introductory Remarks 2. The ʻDeath Of Godʼ And The Meaning Of ʻChristianityʼ 2.1 Philological Experiments And Empiricist Revelations 2.2 Nietzsche And The Issue Of Imitation: Socrates, Wagner, Christ 2.3 Jung And Christʼs Archetypal Nature 3. Self-Overcoming