Philemon_Foundation
The Philemon Foundation is a non-profit organization that exists to prepare for publication the Complete Works of Carl Gustav Jung,[1] beginning with the previously unpublished manuscripts, seminars and correspondences.[2] It is estimated that an additional 30 volumes of work will be published and that the work will take three decades to complete.
Founded | 2003 |
---|---|
Founder | Sonu Shamdasani, Stephen Martin |
Type | Nonprofit organization |
Focus | Complete Works of Carl Gustav Jung |
Location | |
Website | Official Website |
The Foundation was established in 2003 to support the work of Sonu Shamdasani,[1] a London-based historian, in his then ongoing work of preparing Jung's Red Book for publication. Shamdasani is the co-founder of the Philemon Foundation with American Jungian analyst Stephen A. Martin.[3]
The works to date constitute the Philemon series. Several translators and editors have contributed within the series, developing a few topical sub-series on dreams, psychology, correspondence, lectures.
Many publications currently comprise the published work of the Foundation, including Jung's internationally recognized Red Book.
The various individual works within the Philemon series have been published by different publishers, including Princeton University Press[4] and W. W. Norton & Company.[5]
In addition to the Red Book, the Philemon Series includes:
- The Jung-White Letters, 2007[upper-roman 1]
- Children's Dreams, 2007[upper-roman 2]
- Jung Contra Freud, 2012[upper-roman 3]
- Introduction to Jungian psychology, 2012[upper-roman 4]
- Analytical Psychology in Exile, 2015[upper-roman 5]
- The Question of Psychological Types, 2015[upper-roman 6]
- On Psychological and Visionary Art, 2015[upper-roman 7]
- Dream Interpretation Ancient and Modern, 2016, (updated edition)[upper-roman 8]
- Dream Symbols of the Individuation Process, 2019[upper-roman 9]
- On Theology and Psychology, 2020[upper-roman 10]
- History of Modern Psychology, 2020[upper-roman 11]
- The Black Books, 2020[upper-roman 12]
- Psychology of Yoga and Meditation, 2021[upper-roman 13]
- Consciousness and the Unconscious, 2022[upper-roman 14]
- Jung on Ignatius of Loyola’s Spiritual Exercises, 2023[upper-roman 15]
- On Dreams and the East: Notes of the 1933 Berlin Seminar. C. G. Jung and Heinrich Zimmer (2024)[6][7]
- Jung’s Unpublished Lectures at Polzeath on the Technique of Analysis and the Historical and Psychological Effects of Christianity (1923)[8]
- Jung’s Unpublished Book on Alchemy and Individuation (1937)[9]
- The Original Protocols for Memories, Dreams, Reflections[10]
- Jung and the Indologists[11]
- On Active Imagination: Jung’s 1931 German Seminar[12]
- ETH Lectures (1933-1941)[13]
- The A. E. Letters: A Novella by C.G. Jung[14][15]
- Jung’s 1925 Swanage Seminar and 1927 Zurich Seminar[16]
Published full titles
- Lewin, Nicholas (27 May 2009). "New Horizons for Jungian Scholars: The Work of the Philemon Foundation". Psychological Perspectives. 52 (2): 219–224. doi:10.1080/00332920902880812. S2CID 145117775.
- Casement, Ann (24 May 2007). Who Owns Jung?. Karnac Books. p. 165. ISBN 9781780494623.
- Corbett, Sara (16 September 2009). "The Holy Grail of the Unconscious". The New York Times. Retrieved 30 September 2009.