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- Title
Anti‐semitism and analytical psychology: Jung, politics and culture.
- Abstract
By carrying forward themes of religious thought into the Freud-Jung split, Burston is able to show how Jung's ideas about Jews were entangled with his shifting use of Christian, pagan, and mystical elements for his analysis of human history. But Burston is careful to avoid the conclusion that "Jung was a Nazi", while showing, as many others have, that Jung expressed völkisch and racial ideas consistent with Nazi ideology, and spoke approvingly and publicly of the possibilities for German renewal through Nazism. The discussion of Jung's antisemitism began with Freud's (1914) coded reference to "certain race prejudices" that Jung had "permitted himself to indulge.".
- Subjects
JUNG, C. G. (Carl Gustav), 1875-1961; JUNGIAN psychology; POLITICS &; culture; ANTISEMITISM; AMERICAN Jewish history
- Publication
Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences, 2022, Vol 58, Issue 2, p252
- ISSN
0022-5061
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1002/jhbs.22164