The red book = Liber novus / C.G. Jung ; edited by Sonu Shamdasani ; preface by Ulrich Hoerni
Image Count:
1
Abstract:
When Carl Jung embarked on an extended self-exploration, the result was "The Red Book," a large, illuminated volume he created between 1914 and 1930. However, only a handful of people have ever seen it. Now, in a complete facsimile and translation, it is available to scholars and the general public.
Alternative Title:
Die gabe der magie
Subject (Name):
Jung, C. G. (Carl Gustav), 1875-1961. Philemon series
Bound with Harring, Harro. Historisches Fragment über die Entstehung der Arbeiter-Vereine und ihren Verfall in communistische Speculation. London, 1852.
Chronological designation dropped after Apr. 22, 1926 issue; issues for Jan. 1925-Apr. 1926 also called 4. Jahrg.; issues after Apr. 22, 1926 called 5. Jahrg., Nr. 8-5. Jahrg., Nr. 26 and published May-Dec. 1926?, Feb.-Dec. 1926, IV. Jahrg., Nr. 3 (1. Januar 1925)-V. Jahrgang, 26 Nr. ([1926]), Semimonthly,, Title from cover., and Two issues for Mar.; no issue for Sept. 1925.
Publisher:
Neuer Deutscher Verlag,
Subject (Topic):
Communism--Periodicals., Labor movement--Germany--Periodicals., Labor--Germany--Periodicals., and Working class--Germany--Periodicals.
Six autograph letters (1853-1856) from August Scharf and his wife to her parents in Hermann [Missouri?] written after their arrival in California. The letters discuss their ranch, August's work in the mines, trouble with Elisabeth's brothers, financial difficulties, and Elisabeth's death. One letter contains an addendum by August's friend Jakob Schneider and wife. The Scharf letters are accompanied by three autograph letters dated 1860-1863, one from Alwine Scharf Weber to her brother from Naumburg, Germany containing family news, another from Gottlob Sachse Shuhmacher to his friend August Scharf from Nebra, near Naumburg, asking for news of his brother-in-law, and a third from Charles Robert Kleine to [August?] Scharf from San Francisco mentioning that he had visited Scharf's little son.
Description:
August Scharf, his wife Elisabeth, and her three brothers made an overland journey to California in 1853 from Hermann (possibly Hermann, Missouri, a German settlement). The Scharfs lived in Grizzly Flat, where they had a farm and had shares in a gold mill. Elisabeth died in August 1856, two months after having a third child, their first girl. and Purchased from Charles Apfelbaum on the Arthur Corbitt Hoskins Memorial Fund, 2000.
Subject (Geographic):
California--Gold discoveries and Hermann (Mo.)
Subject (Name):
Scharf, August and Scharf, Elisabeth
Subject (Topic):
German Americans--California and Gold mines and mining--California--El Dorado County