This book provides a very accessible general introduction to the Jungian concept of ego development and Jung's theory of personality structurethe collective unconscious, anima, animus, shadow, archetypes.
Worth the read and pretty cohesive, but the sexism cannot be overlooked. I thought this was written by a man, to be honest, and, to my astonishment, it was not. Welp. Read at your own risk.
It is relatively enlightening and an easy guide, but, again, the sexism. Yikes. Should've expected it, though, with the whole animism making the animus/anima the inferior animal within one individual --- doesn't account for hermaphrodites, either, and also glosses over homosexuality really badly. The religion aspect with the whole 'us' was weird, too.
Come to think of it, I'm not sure it's worth the read, and I'm not even going to touch the author's "Women's Mysteries" book, but it was an interesting experience nonetheless and I am glad I've read this now. If you decide to read, great, but look out for the conditioned thinking.
A useful and accessible introduction to a lot of Jungian terms and thoughts that I know, but don't 'know'. Not all of the concepts fit into place, but that may be inevitable when condensing a man's life work. Altogether a book that is helpful to one interested in understanding both the concepts and underlying structure Jung saw in the world and within us.
There's some pretty dated passages about gender and sexual orientation, but they are brief and imo don't sink the whole book, which has some very clear and valuable explanations of the Jungian view of psychological projection.
I couldn't get used to the messy writing style. May be a good read if you already know the concepts and would like to have a deeper understanding of it.