Readings Newsletter
Become a Readings Member to make your shopping experience even easier.
Sign in or sign up for free!
You’re not far away from qualifying for FREE standard shipping within Australia
You’ve qualified for FREE standard shipping within Australia
The cart is loading…
Offering a novel conceptual methodology where Jungian psychology is used to analyse Jung's own architecture, this book offers an innovative reading of Jung's Bollingen Tower in order to explore a Jungian sense of place, situating it within a wider examination of the psychic places that influenced his work.
Representing the first comprehensive study of Jung's building activities, chapters illuminate the wider purpose of architecture as a reflection of self and a means to 'belong' in the world. Using , the author's own fieldwork, interviews with descendants, and detailed analysis of Jung's autobiography and copious writings drawn from his own imagination and psyche, chapters explore themes such as the relationship between psyche and geometry, the idea of psychic place, and 'inner' and 'outer' in analytical psychology. In discussing the legacy and the predominance of Bollingen Tower as the defining spatial motif of Jung's psychological system, chapters also cover comparisons with Marie-Louise von Franz's Tower, and Christiana Morgan's Tower. The author's own background as an award-winning architect alongside a lifelong study of analytical psychology make him uniquely placed to shed light on this as-yet underexplored area of study.
The book opens up interdisciplinary dialogues and provides a broader context for understanding the relationship between environment and the psyche. It will therefore be of interest to scholars and postgraduate students in the fields of Jungian and analytical psychology, and architecture.
$9.00 standard shipping within Australia
FREE standard shipping within Australia for orders over $100.00
Express & International shipping calculated at checkout
Offering a novel conceptual methodology where Jungian psychology is used to analyse Jung's own architecture, this book offers an innovative reading of Jung's Bollingen Tower in order to explore a Jungian sense of place, situating it within a wider examination of the psychic places that influenced his work.
Representing the first comprehensive study of Jung's building activities, chapters illuminate the wider purpose of architecture as a reflection of self and a means to 'belong' in the world. Using , the author's own fieldwork, interviews with descendants, and detailed analysis of Jung's autobiography and copious writings drawn from his own imagination and psyche, chapters explore themes such as the relationship between psyche and geometry, the idea of psychic place, and 'inner' and 'outer' in analytical psychology. In discussing the legacy and the predominance of Bollingen Tower as the defining spatial motif of Jung's psychological system, chapters also cover comparisons with Marie-Louise von Franz's Tower, and Christiana Morgan's Tower. The author's own background as an award-winning architect alongside a lifelong study of analytical psychology make him uniquely placed to shed light on this as-yet underexplored area of study.
The book opens up interdisciplinary dialogues and provides a broader context for understanding the relationship between environment and the psyche. It will therefore be of interest to scholars and postgraduate students in the fields of Jungian and analytical psychology, and architecture.