(2019-08-11, 06:32 AM)Laird Wrote: Though I have not digested any of the above resources, and know very little about Jung in general, I thought it was worth adding these two resources which deal in an aspect of Jung which is less pleasant.
First, the 1988 paper by Farhad Dalal in the British Journal of Psychotherapy titled Jung: A Racist, or, alternatively in a copy I have, The Racism of Jung. Several months back I read approximately the first two fifths of this paper, and it is very cogent. I might yet finish it. I am unable to locate from where I first downloaded it but an equivalent free copy (though whether it is a violation of copyright I am not sure) seems at present to be available from here: https://jungstudies.net/wp-content/uploa...Racist.pdf
Thanks for posting that link. It's interesting, and I don't say there's no truth at all in it, but it strikes me as polemic rather objective scholarship. It seems obvious that many of what the author portrays as distinctions between races are essentially distinctions between cultures, particularly between "civilised" and "primitive" cultures. Even in what the author quotes there are several indications of this - the example of a modern Swiss man behaving in a primitive way by enacting Easter rituals, the description of Africans being "just about in the Homeric age," the concept of a white man "going black" when in Africa, "even though the best blood may run in his veins," and this passage:
"... somewhere you are the same as the negro or the Chinese or whoever you live with, you are all just human beings. In the collective unconscious you are the same as a man of another race, you have the same archetypes, just as you have, like him, eyes, a heart, a liver, and so on. It does not matter that his skin is black. It matters to a certain extent, sure enough -he probably has a whole historical layer less than you. The different strata of the mind correspond to the history of the races."
From which it seems clear enough that he is talking about the influence of history, not biology as the author claims on the previous page. There's a more objective and nuanced discussion of Jung's thinking about race and the psyche here, which reaches very different conclusions from Dalal's:
https://books.google.com/books?id=ObZeDwAAQBAJ&pg=PT86