2023年2月20日 星期一

Bollingen Series......容格對羅耀拉“神操”的演講


容格對羅耀拉“神操”的演講
Olive background with blue & black circles & cover of Jung on Ignatius of Loyola’s Spiritual Exercises. Jung’s lectures on the psychology of Jesuit spiritual practice—unabridged in English.
The latest in our Philemon Foundation Series, Jung on Ignatius of Loyola’s Spiritual Exercises: Lectures Delivered at ETH Zurich, Volume 7: 1939–1940 publishes on January 31st. Pre-order your copy of this first ever English translation: https://hubs.ly/Q01zwfsS0


美國這套叢書Bollingen Series 品質很高

Carl Jung 的買/看最多
The Collected Works of Paul Valéry  15本
只買看過2本
Bollingen Series XLV. 7 THE ART OF POETRY

 Poetry: Prose:: Dancing: Walking (or Running)

Bollingen Series XLV.12 DEGAS. MANET. MI


****https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bollingen_Foundation

Bollingen Foundation
Formation1945
HeadquartersPrinceton, New JerseyUnited States
Revenue (2015)
$102[1]
Expenses (2015)$68[1]

The Bollingen Foundation was an educational foundation set up along the lines of a university press in 1945. It was named after Bollingen TowerCarl Jung's country home in Bollingen, Switzerland. Funding was provided by Paul Mellon and his wife Mary Conover Mellon. The Foundation became inactive in 1968, and its publications were later re-issued by Princeton University Press.

History[edit]

The foundation was named after Bollingen Tower (pictured), Switzerland.

Initially the foundation was dedicated to the dissemination of Jung's work, which was a particular interest of Mary Conover Mellon.[2][3] The Bollingen Series of books that it sponsored now includes more than 250 related volumes.[4] The Bollingen Foundation also awarded more than 300 fellowships.[5] These fellowships were an important, continuing source of funding for poets like Alexis Leger and Marianne Moore, scholars like Károly Kerényi and Mircea Eliade, artists like Isamu Noguchi, among many others.[2] The Foundation also sponsored the A. W. Mellon lectures at the National Gallery of Art.

In 1948, the foundation donated $10,000 to the Library of Congress to be used toward a $1,000 Bollingen Prize for the best poetry each year. The Library of Congress fellows, who in that year included T. S. EliotW. H. Auden and Conrad Aiken, gave the 1949 prize to Ezra Pound for his 1948 Pisan Cantos.[6] Their choice was highly controversial, in particular because of Pound's fascist and anti-Semitic politics. Following the publication of two highly negative articles by Robert Hillyer in the Saturday Review of Literature, the United States Congress passed a resolution that effectively discontinued the involvement of the Library of Congress with the prize. The remaining funds were returned to the Foundation.[7] In 1950, the Bollingen Prize was continued under the auspices of the Yale University Library, which awarded the 1950 prize to Wallace Stevens.

In 1968, the Foundation became inactive. It was largely subsumed into the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, which continued funding of the Bollingen Prize. The Bollingen Series was given to Princeton University Press to carry on and complete. Over its lifetime, the Bollingen Foundation had expended about $20 million. Thomas Bender has written,[3]

When Paul Mellon decided in 1963 to dissolve the Bollingen Foundation, he said that the founding generation was reaching the age of retirement, and it would be hard for others to maintain the original mission and standards. What he might have said was that the Bollingen Foundation was the work of a single generation. For two decades its concerns had been at the center of Western intellectual life, but the 1960s saw a shift in the cultural preoccupations and critical concerns of intellect in the United States and Europe.

Bollingen Series[edit]

A great many texts that were issued in the original Pantheon Books version of the Bollingen Series and in early editions by Princeton University Press are now out of print. The Princeton Press site does not provide a comprehensive list, and is missing some of the key texts in the series and some of the grandest in vision, e.g. The Egyptian Religious Texts series. A list of the works in the series, complete to 1982, appears as an appendix to William McGuire's book, pp. 295–309. The list below is based on McGuire's list and information appearing in the individual volumes, with help from the Princeton site and from The Library Congress Online Catalog.





Bollingen Foundation

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The Bollingen Foundation was an educational foundation set up along the lines of a university press in 1945. It was named for Bollingen Tower, Carl Jung's country home in Bollingen, Switzerland. Funding was provided by Paul Mellon and his wife Mary Conover Mellon. The Foundation became inactive in 1968.
Initially the foundation was dedicated to the dissemination of Jung's work, which was a particular interest of Mary Conover Mellon.[1][2] The Bollingen Series of books that it sponsored now includes more than 250 related volumes.[3] The Bollingen Foundation also awarded more than 300 fellowships.[4] These fellowships were an important, continuing source of funding for poets like Alexis Leger and Marianne Moore, scientists like Károly Kerényi and artists like Isamu Noguchi, among many others.[1] The Foundation also sponsored the A.W. Mellon Lectures at the National Gallery of Art.
In 1948, the foundation donated $10,000 to the Library of Congress to be used toward a $1000 Bollingen Prize for the best poetry each year. The Library of Congress fellows, who in that year included T. S. Eliot, W. H. Auden and Conrad Aiken, gave the 1949 prize to Ezra Pound for his 1948 Pisan Cantos.[5] Their choice was highly controversial, in particular because of Pound's Fascist and anti-Semitic politics. Following the publication of two highly negative articles by Robert Hillyer in the Saturday Review of Literature, the United States Congress passed a resolution that effectively discontinued the involvement of the Library of Congress with the prize. The remaining funds were returned to the Foundation.[6] In 1950, the Bollingen Prize was continued under the auspices of the Yale University Library, which awarded the 1950 prize to Wallace Stevens.
In 1968, the Foundation became inactive. It was largely subsumed into the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, which continued funding of the Bollingen Prize. The Bollingen Series was given to Princeton University Press to carry on and complete. Over its lifetime, the Bollingen Foundation had expended about $20 million. As Thomas Bender has written,[2]
"When Paul Mellon decided in 1963 to dissolve the Bollingen Foundation, he said that the founding generation was reaching the age of retirement, and it would be hard for others to maintain the original mission and standards. What he might have said was that the Bollingen Foundation was the work of a single generation. For two decades its concerns had been at the center of Western intellectual life, but the 1960's saw a shift in the cultural preoccupations and critical concerns of intellect in the United States and Europe."

The Bollingen Series

A great many texts that were issued in the original Pantheon Books version of the Bollingen Series and in early editions by Princeton University Press are now out of print, and the Princeton Press site does not provide a comprehensive list, missing some of the key texts in the series and some of the grandest in vision, e.g. The Egyptian Religious Texts series. The list below is partial and contains only those currently listed on the Princeton Site (http://press.princeton.edu/catalogs/series/bs.html) and some from LibraryThing (http://www.librarything.com/series/Bollingen+Series).
TODO: Convert this list to a table by series number and provide other bibliographic information.

References

  1. ^ a b McGuire, William (1982). Bollingen: An Adventure in Collecting the Past (Princeton University Press:Bollingen Series, New Jersey).
  2. ^ a b Bender, Thomas (1982). "With Love and Money," review of Bollingen: An Adventure in Collecting the Past in The New York Times November 14, 1982. Online version retrieved November 10, 2007.
  3. ^ "Bollingen Series (General)," webpage maintained by Princeton University Press. Retrieved November 10, 2007.
  4. ^ McGuire, pp. 311-328. McGuire gives a complete, alphabetical list of the Fellows including the year of the Fellowship and a condensed description of the project.
  5. ^ "The Bollingen Prize for Poetry at Yale," webpage maintained by Yale University. Retrieved Nov. 9, 2007.
  6. ^ McGuire, William (1988). "Ezra Pound and Bollingen Prize controversy," in Poetry's Catbird Seat (the consultantship in poetry in the English language at the Library of Congress, 1937-1987) (Library of Congress, Washington, D. C.). ISBN 0-8444-0586-8 . Online version retrieved November 10, 2007.
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    Bollingen Series (General)

    Go to Listing by Title
  12. Aristotle; Barnes, J., ed. Complete Works of Aristotle, Volume 1: The Revised Oxford Translation.
  13. Aristotle; Barnes, J., ed. Complete Works of Aristotle, Volume 2: The Revised Oxford Translation.
  14. Auerbach, E.; Manheim, R., trans. Literary Language and Its Public in Late Latin Antiquity and in the Middle Ages.
  15. Babinger, F. Mehmed the Conqueror and His Time.
  16. Bachofen, J.J.; Manheim, R., trans. Myth, Religion, and Mother Right: Selected Writings of Johann Jakob Bachofen.
  17. Barzun, J. The Use and Abuse of Art.
  18. Berlin, I.; Hardy, H., ed. The Roots of Romanticism.
  19. Campbell, J. The Mythic Image.
  20. Clark, K. The Nude: A Study in Ideal Form.
  21. Coleridge, S.T.; Jackson, J.R.D.J., ed. The Collected Works of Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Volume 8: Lectures 1818-1819: On the History of Philosophy.
  22. Coleridge, S.T.; Jackson, H.J. and Whalley, G., eds. The Collected Works of Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Volume 12: Marginalia: Part 5. Sherlock to Unidentified.
  23. Coleridge, S.T.; McFarland, T., ed. The Collected Works of Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Volume 15: Opus Maximum.
  24. Coleridge, S.T.; Coburn, K. and Harding, A.J., eds. The Notebooks of Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Volume 5: 1827-1834.
  25. Coomaraswamy, A.K.; Coomaraswamy, R.P., ed. The Door in the Sky: Coomaraswamy on Myth and Meaning.
  26. Corbin, H.; Manheim, R., trans. Alone with the Alone: Creative Imagination in the Sufism of Ibn 'Arabi.
  27. Corbin, H.; Pearson, N., trans. Spiritual Body and Celestial Earth: From Mazdean Iran to Shi'ite Iran.
  28. Curtius, E.R.; Trask, W.R., trans. European Literature and the Latin Middle Ages: (With a new epilogue by Peter Godman).
  29. Danto, A.C. After the End of Art: Contemporary Art and the Pale of History.
  30. Douglas, C., ed. Visions: Notes of the Seminar Given in 1930-1934 by C. G. Jung.
  31. Smith, J.; Trask, W.R., trans. The Myth of the Eternal Return: Cosmos and History.
  32. Doniger, W.; Trask, W.R., trans. Shamanism: Archaic Techniques of Ecstasy.
  33. Freud, S. and Jung, C.G.; McGuire, W., ed. The Freud/Jung Letters: The Correspondence between Sigmund Freud and C. G. Jung.
  34. Freud, S. and Jung, C.G.; McGuire, W., ed.; Hull, R.F.C. and Manheim, R., trans. The Freud/Jung Letters: The Correspondence between Sigmund Freud and C. G. Jung. (Abridged edition).
  35. Golding, J. Paths to the Absolute: Mondrian, Malevich, Kandinsky, Pollock, Newman, Rothko, and Still.
  36. Gombrich, E.H. Art and Illusion: A Study in the Psychology of Pictorial Representation.
  37. Harding, M.E. The I and the Not-I: A Study in the Development of Consciousness.
  38. Harding, M.E.; Jung, C.G., ed. Psychic Energy: Its Source and Its Transformation.
  39. Hiscox, M.J.; Sze, M., ed. and trans. The Mustard Seed Garden Manual of Painting: A Facsimile of the 1887-1888 Shanghai Edition.
  40. Wills, G.; Nicoll, A., ed.; Chapman, G., trans. Chapman's Homer: The Odyssey.
  41. Wills, G.; Nicoll, A., ed.; Chapman, G., trans. Chapman's Homer: The Iliad.
  42. Scully, S.; Chapman, G., trans. Chapman's Homeric Hymns and Other Homerica.
  43. Ibn Khaldûn; Rosenthal, F., trans. The Muqaddimah: An Introduction to History.
  44. Lawrence, B.; Dawood, N.J., ed.; Rosenthal, F., trans. The Muqaddimah: An Introduction to History. (Abridged Edition).
  45. Jacobi, J.; Manheim, R., trans. Complex/Archetype/Symbol in the Psychology of C.G. Jung.
  46. Jarrett, J.L., ed. Jung's Seminar on Nietzsche's Zarathustra: (Abridged edition).
  47. Jung, C.G.; de Laszlo, V.S., ed.; Hull, R.F.C., trans. The Basic Writings of C.G. Jung: (Revised R.F.C. Hull translation).
  48. Jung, C.G.; Adler, G. and Jaffé, A., eds.; Hull, R.F.C., trans. C.G. Jung Letters, Volume 1.
  49. Jung, C.G.; Adler, G., ed.; Hulen, J., trans. C.G. Jung Letters, Volume 2: 1951-1961.
  50. Jung, C.G.; Jacobi, J., ed. and trans.; Hull, R.F.C., trans. C.G. Jung: Psychological Reflections. A New Anthology of His Writings, 1905-1961.
  51. Jung, C.G.; Hull, R.F.C., ed. C.G. Jung Speaking: Interviews and Encounters.
  52. Jung, C.G. and Kerényi, C. Essays on a Science of Mythology: The Myth of the Divine Child and the Mysteries of Eleusis.
  53. Jung, C.G. and Freud, S.; McGuire, W., ed. The Freud/Jung Letters: The Correspondence between Sigmund Freud and C. G. Jung.
  54. Jung, C.G. and Freud, S.; McGuire, W., ed.; Hull, R.F.C. and Manheim, R., trans. The Freud/Jung Letters: The Correspondence between Sigmund Freud and C. G. Jung. (Abridged edition).
  55. Jung, C.G.; McGuire, W., ed.; Hull, R.F.C., trans. Introduction to Jungian Psychology: Notes of the Seminar on Analytical Psychology Given in 1925.
  56. Shamdasani, S.; Hull, R.F.C., trans. Jung contra Freud: The 1912 New York Lectures on the Theory of Psychoanalysis.
  57. Jung, C.G.; de Laszlo, V.S., ed.; Hull, R.F.C., trans. Psyche and Symbol: A Selection from the Writings of C.G. Jung.
  58. Jung, C.G.; Shamdasani, S., ed. The Psychology of Kundalini Yoga: Notes of the Seminar Given in 1932.
  59. Kerényi, C.; Manheim, R., trans. Dionysos: Archetypal Image of Indestructible Life.
  60. Kerényi, C.; Manheim, R., trans. Eleusis: Archetypal Image of Mother and Daughter.
  61. Kerényi, C. and Jung, C.G. Essays on a Science of Mythology: The Myth of the Divine Child and the Mysteries of Eleusis.
  62. Kerényi, C.; Manheim, R., trans. Prometheus: Archetypal Image of Human Existence.
  63. Ledderose, L. Ten Thousand Things: Module and Mass Production in Chinese Art.
  64. Malraux, A.; Gilbert, S., trans. The Voices of Silence: Man and his Art. (Abridged from The Psychology of Art).
  65. Massignon, L.; Mason, H., ed. and trans. Hallaj: Mystic and Martyr.
  66. McGuire, W. Bollingen: An Adventure in Collecting the Past. (With a new preface).
  67. Neumann, E. The Fear of the Feminine: And Other Essays on Feminine Psychology.
  68. Jung, C.G.; Hull, R.F.C., trans. The Origins and History of Consciousness.
  69. Niliacus, H.; Boas, G., trans. The Hieroglyphics of Horapollo.
  70. Paracelsus; Jacobi, J., ed.; Guterman, N., trans. Paracelsus: Selected Writings.
  71. Herrin, J. Imago Dei: The Byzantine Apologia for Icons (New in Paper).
  72. Pevsner, N. A History of Building Types.
  73. Plato; Hamilton, E. and Cairns, H., eds.; Cooper, L., trans. The Collected Dialogues of Plato.
  74. Pushkin, A.S.; Nabokov, V., trans. Eugene Onegin: A Novel in Verse: Text.
  75. Pushkin, A.S.; Nabokov, V., trans. Eugene Onegin: A Novel in Verse: Commentary.
  76. Radin, P. The Road of Life and Death: A Ritual Drama of the American Indians.
  77. Rosenberg, P. From Drawing to Painting: Poussin, Watteau, Fragonard, David, and Ingres.
  78. Saunders, E.D. Mudra: A Study of Symbolic Gestures in Japanese Buddhist Sculpture.
  79. Scholem, G.G.; Werblowsky, R.J.Z., trans. Sabbatai Sevi: The Mystical Messiah, 1626-1676.
  80. Seznec, J.; Sessions, B.F., trans. The Survival of the Pagan Gods: The Mythological Tradition and Its Place in Renaissance Humanism and Art.
  81. Powell, E., III. Pictures of Nothing: Abstract Art since Pollock.
  82. Von Simson, O.G. The Gothic Cathedral: Origins of Gothic Architecture and the Medieval Concept of Order. Expanded Edition.
  83. Wilhelm, H., ed.; Baynes, C.F., trans. The I Ching or Book of Changes.
  84. Wilhelm, H. and Wilhelm, R.; Baynes, C.F. and Eber, I., trans. Understanding the I Ching: The Wilhelm Lectures on the Book of Changes.
  85. Wilhelm, R. and Wilhelm, H.; Baynes, C.F. and Eber, I., trans. Understanding the I Ching: The Wilhelm Lectures on the Book of Changes.
  86. Zuckerkandl, V.; Trask, W.R., trans. Sound and Symbol, Volume 1: Music and the External World.
  87.  

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