The Red Book

E683518

The Red Book is Carl Jung’s richly illustrated, posthumously published manuscript in which he recorded and explored his visionary experiences that later shaped many of his key psychological theories.

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The Red Book canonical 1

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Predicate Object
instanceOf book
manuscript
psychological work
alsoKnownAs Liber Novus NERFINISHED
author Carl Gustav Jung NERFINISHED
began 1913
compiledDuring 1913–1930
completedSubstantiallyBy circa 1930
contains calligraphic text
illuminated paintings
mandalas
visionary narratives
editor Sonu Shamdasani NERFINISHED
format facsimile edition
oversized hardcover
genre autobiographical psychological document
visionary literature
hasPart The Red Book: Liber Novus (facsimile and translation) NERFINISHED
footnotes and annotations
historical introduction
scholarly apparatus
influenced Jung’s concept of the collective unconscious
Jung’s later psychological writings
Jung’s method of active imagination
Jung’s theory of archetypes
Jung’s theory of individuation
inLanguage German
language German
originalMedium gouache paintings
handwritten calligraphy
large red leather‑bound folio
pageCountApproximate 600
posthumouslyPublished true
publicationDate 2009
publisher W. W. Norton & Company NERFINISHED
relatedWork Black Books (Jung’s private journals) NERFINISHED
Memories, Dreams, Reflections NERFINISHED
repository Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zurich (ETH Zurich) archives NERFINISHED
settingOfComposition Zurich NERFINISHED
subject Jungian psychology
active imagination
analytical psychology
archetypes
individuation
mythology
personal visions
religious symbolism
the unconscious
timePeriodDescribed Jung’s confrontation with the unconscious
translatedInto English

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