Bibliographic Information

Answer to Job

Carl Gustav Jung ; translated by R.F.C. Hull

(Routledge classics)

Routledge, 2002

  • : hbk
  • pbk

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Note

First published: London : Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1954

Translated from the German

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Of all the books of the Bible few have had more resonance for modern readers than the Book of Job. For a world that has witnessed great horrors, Job's cries of despair and incomprehension are all too recognizable. The visionary psychotherapist Carl Gustav Jung understood this and responded with this remarkable book, in which he set himself face-to-face with 'the unvarnished spectacle of divine savagery and ruthlessness'. Jung perceived in the hidden recesses of the human psyche the cause of a crisis that plagues modern humanity and leaves the individual, like Job, isolated and bewildered in the face of impenetrable fortune. By correlating the transcendental with the unconscious, Jung, writing not as a biblical scholar but 'as a layman and physician who has been privileged to see deeply into the psychic life of many people', offers a way for every reader to come to terms with the divine darkness which confronts each individual.

Table of Contents

  • Introduction
  • Chapter 1 I
  • Chapter 2 II
  • Chapter 3 III
  • Chapter 4 IV
  • Chapter 5 V
  • Chapter 6 VI
  • Chapter 7 VII
  • Chapter 8 VIII
  • Chapter 9 IX
  • Chapter 10 X
  • Chapter 11 XI
  • Chapter 12 XII
  • Chapter 13 XIII
  • Chapter 14 XIV
  • Chapter 15 XV
  • Chapter 16 XVI
  • Chapter 17 XVII
  • Chapter 18 XVIII
  • Chapter 19 XIX
  • Chapter 20 XX

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