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Tarot Psychology

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This illustrated companion to The Jungian Tarot deck applies Jungian principles of active imagination to the tarot archetypes, providing a meditative and self-explorative approach to tarot.

Paperback

First published January 1, 1985

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Robert Wang

37 books28 followers

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5 stars
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17 (34%)
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14 (28%)
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3 (6%)
Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews
Profile Image for ✨Bean's Books✨.
648 reviews9 followers
July 21, 2021
Not what I was expecting. This book belongs to a certain tarot deck. It goes into the psychology of THAT deck, not the Tarot in general.
Profile Image for Tony Lucas.
2 reviews
December 17, 2016
I read tarot cards. Some of these definitions are flat out wrong. The eight, nine, and ten of swords are all negative yet here they are considered almost love cards. The royal arcana have their elemental natures all mixed about as well. Good intention but seems more about the author than the subject matter.
31 reviews1 follower
January 8, 2025
This is a very good introduction to a Jungian approach to Tarot cards—each of the cards of the Jungian tarot deck are described succinctly and with clear language. Wang did well in making hard abstract concepts in each of these cards digestible to the novice. What I most took away from it Jungian wise is that beyond facing our own Shadow what’s even scarier is facing the opposite sex with in us and to not let repression of the unconscious lead it to becoming a monstrous force.

There is a lot of value in studying astrology though an understand why St Augustine (although Ironically, Protestantism was born out of elites transactional indulgences) hated it because many people used astrology transactional though I am of a confident view that if you come to it with the intention to better the spiritual trial of taming your mind to be able to help people to your highest capacity, the. it’s not a pretentious waste of time. It is also cool there’s a course outline at the end of the book to really study the cards in depth.
Profile Image for Elaine.
59 reviews17 followers
April 17, 2026
A fascinating interpretation of the Tarot based on Jungian archetypes. You can benefit from the book even if you don't own the companion Jungian Tarot Deck. There are some interesting correspondences with other decks (RWS for example) but also unique insights that are vastly different from more traditionally accepted meanings of the cards.
Profile Image for Jennifer Sullivan.
39 reviews11 followers
October 15, 2018
I got this as part of a 3 book set years ago....my only regret is waiting this long to get stuck in!

This is the first book in a trilogy based on the Jungian Tarot Deck. Jungian Psychology focuses on the archetypes (anima/animus), the collective unconscious, cell memory and the "shadow self". This book helps us to understand the principles and deeper meanings of each Tarot card and how the apply to the querent's situation. While it's definitely suited to (and created for) the Jungian Tarot Deck specifically, you could easily apply the knowledge and lessons to ANY deck!

This is a MUST read for all Tarot buffs! I can't wait to get started on book 2 :-)
Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews