Hey /lit/
Got a kindle for Christmas, and enough gift cards for a couple books.
Have read about many of Carl Jung's theories, and am captivated by them. Want to read all of his books. I understand his writing style makes for a pretty tough read, though, and the passages from his books that I've read so far seem to confirm that. Which ones should I start with?
>Which ones should I start with?
the greeks
>>7531326
His ideas are old and dumb
So
Before you do that read The Man Who Was Thursday b/c it's free on kindle
>>7531326
I'm reading The Portable Jung right now because someone else recommended it to me. So really I'm just repeating someone else's recommendation.
>>7531326
This is THE best place to start anon. After that you will absolutely want to read The Red Book.
>>7531326
mobilism.org
http://gen.lib.rus.ec/
you're welcome.
>>7531333
Trips don't lie. Everyone recommends Portable Jung because it's literally the best place to start with Jung. Joseph Campbell did a god-tier job of compiling and arranging his work.
>>7531329
>>7531329
>hating on based Jung
>>7531326
Man and His Symbols might be the best place to start. It was written in english for a general audience right before Jung's death.
So it's his only work written for non-academics, it was written in what I assume is your native tongue, it was his last work so it his completed thought in some sense, and it was written to introduce the common man to his theories.
It is a collection of essays, main one by him and others by his trusted students.
>>7531519
I hate that new age shitters misunderstand Jung