Jung on War, Politics and Nazi Germany Exploring the Theory of Archetypes and the Collective Unconscious Nicholas Adam Lewin BSc (Econ), MA, PhD First published 2009 by Karnac Books Ltd. 118 Finchley Road London NW3 5HT © Nicholas Adam Lewin The moral right of the author has been asserted. All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or utilised in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, without permission in writing from the publisher. Excerpts and diagrams from the following works are reproduced by permission of Taylor & Francis Books UK: The Organism of the Mind by Gustav Heyer © 1933 Kegan Paul, Trench, Trubner & Co., Ltd.; The Psychology of C.G. Jung by Jolande Jacobi © 1950 Routledge & Kegan Paul; ABC of Jung's Psychology by J. Corrie © 1927 Kegan Paul; The Seminars - Volume 3: Analytical Psychology by C.G. Jung, ed. W. McGuire © 1990 Routledge; Nietzsche’s Zarathustra Notes of the Seminar (in two volumes) by C.G. Jung, ed. J. Jarrett © 1989 Routledge & Kegan Paul; Visions: Notes of the Seminar Given in 1930-1934 by C.G. Jung, ed. Claire Douglas © 1998 Routledge; Collected Works, vols. 4, 5, 7, 9i, 10, 11, 15, 17, 18 by C.G. Jung, trans. R.F.C. Hull © 1953-1978 Routledge & Kegan Paul. Excerpts from Jung, My Mother and I by J. Cabot Reid © 2001 are reproduced by permission of Daimon Verlag, Einsiedeln. British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data A C.I.P. is available for this book from the British Library. ISBN-13: 978-1-85575-457-7 Printed and bound in Great Britain. www.karnacbooks.com C ONTENTS Acknowledgements.................................................................................5 Introduction..............................................................................................9 1. Concerning Freud and Jung on International Politics and War..19 2. Jung and His Politics.........................................................................30 3. Jung on International Politics and the Causes of War..................72 4. From the Individual to ‘The Collective’: Examining Jung’s Progression from Clinician to Grand Theorist..99 5. The Layered Model of the Collective Unconscious.....................110 6. Archetypes: ‘Towards the Distant Goal of a Genetic Psychology’......................161 7. The Effect of the Archetypes in the Political Arena.....................196 8. The Test Case: Wotan and Nazi Germany.....................................211 9. Jung on Hitler: A Case Study for Archetypal or Typology Theory?........................288 10. Post-Jungian Archetypal Theory and International Politics....306 Appendix A The Question of Anti-Semitism in the Zofingia Lectures...............324 Appendix B The Freudians and Collective Theory...............................................326 Appendix C Jung’s Perspective on International Politics After 1945..................329 Appendix D Adolf Bastian and Elementargedanken................................................338 Appendix E Key Dates For Jung During the Nazi Seizure of Power.................340 Notes......................................................................................................342 Bibliography.........................................................................................376 Index......................................................................................................405 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS W riting a book is in many ways a journey of discovery on which one learns both something of a subject and maybe more than one had bargained for about oneself! Many people have helped me along the way and it is a pleasure to remember all those who have contributed. Firstly I would like to thank my parents for without their sup- port this book would not have been possible. Not only have they provided endless practical assistance but also they have been brave enough to read the manuscript and my father has provided invalu- able IT support. For this I also have to thank my late aunt, Gill Rickayzen, for her gift of a scanner and Mr and Mrs Benson who very generously provided my present PC. At the beginning of these acknowledgements I must express deep gratitude to the late Venerable Myokyo-ni Sama who started my interest in Jungian psychology and over the years laboured to develop my education. Among the staff at Essex University I gratefully recall how my supervisor, Professor Renos Papadopoulos showed great humour and hospitality and continually strove to broaden my focus and improve my writing style. From the other staff I must also thank Professors Robert Hinshelwood and Joan Raphael-Leff for excellent fortnightly doctoral seminars in my first year and the suggestions provided at the annual supervision board by Professors Karl Figlio, Renos Papadopoulos, Andrew Samuels and the late Ian Craib. I would also like to express my gratitude to the departmental secret- 5 6 JUNG ON WAR, POLITICS AND NAZI GERMANY ary Mrs Marilyn Ward, whose patience, humour and help were in- valuable during my time at Essex. In the course of the work many people have been exceptionally kind in the help that they have given. I cannot give too many thanks to Andrew Burniston, a scholar and teacher of rare quality who was always willing to give advice, help with queries and offer suggestions. I also derived much benefit from his reading groups at the C.G. Jung Analytical Psychology Club. From the Club I must also express my thanks to Ann Colcord for her willingness to let me use the library at inconvenient times and for her unfailing hos- pitality to our reading group. Friends and scholars have been very generous with their time and help so it is a great pleasure to thank Andrea Cone-Farran, Dr Gottfried Hauer and Harriet Cookson for reading through the manuscript and offering comments. I would also like to thank Pro- fessor Paul Bishop for his encouragement, Dr Sonu Shamdasani for his help and advice and Professor Sir Bernard Crick who was kind enough to make time and shared his thoughts on an early draft. Nor can I forget the late Nicholas Battye for all his help on tracing sources. For the undercurrents of war that run through the book I re- main deeply grateful to all my teachers at Aberystwyth Depart- ment of International Politics and Kings College Department of War Studies. From the former, I would especially like to thank Pro- fessor Booth who began my interest in the psychological dimen- sion of strategy and, from the latter, Professor Bond who was a great role-model for me of methodical scholarship and encouraged my wider reading on the German Resistance that provided a basis for the part of the book on Nazi Germany. While working on the book it was necessary to undertake as much study as possible to broaden my psychological understand- ing. In my first year some tutorials with Peter Berry provided an eloquent guide to Klein and Freud. I was also lucky enough to be- nefit from Dr Desmond Biddulph’s Jung course at Birkbeck Uni- versity; various reading groups of Molly Tuby; the IAAP confer- ence at Cambridge in 2002 and Dr Martin Liebscher’s courses at the German Institute on Jung and Nietzsche was useful back- ground and he has continued to offer help and advice along the way. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS 7 Many people have helped and encouraged me with the book. While it is not possible individually to thank thank them all, I must express my great debt to Dr Fritz Böbel and his wife Eva for their continued hospitality, Wagnerian encouragement, and invaluable advice, and to this add equal thanks to Dr Fredrick Böbel and his wife Heike for the time I stayed with them and all their help. In England I would especially like to thank again my fellow students Dr Gottfried Heuer and Dr Mary Addenbrooke for their advice and support and it is with pleasure that I recall my stays with Mr and Mrs Tokeley in Wivenhoe and Mr and Mrs Hadley in Cam- bridge. I must also thank the late Sylvia Swain for her encourage- ment, and remember Colonel Sylvia Quayle who gave me invalu- able support at a difficult time. Lastly may I add my thanks to Mrs Marie Salter for her IT sup- port and conclude with a pleasant duty of acknowledgement of the vital role librarians play in any research project. I would like to ex- tend especial thanks to the library and interlibrary desk of Essex University, the library at The Goethe Institute and the Libraries at the Wellcome Institute and the Analytical Psychology Club Lon- don. Many people have helped me along the way with advice and information that I have tried to learn from, but any errors that may have occurred are my own and I beg the reader’s indulgence. INTRODUCTION M any people know that C.G. Jung was one of the key psycho- analytic innovators in the twentieth century, but what has often been underestimated is how international politics impacted on his life and how he came to devote a significant part of his work trying to understand wider events. In old age, Jung recalled in his biography how before the outbreak of the First World War he had suffered from apocalyptic dreams that showed Europe almost sub- merged in a sea of blood (Jung, 1963 [1961], p169). As events unfol- ded, Switzerland was spared the horrors of war, though Jung found himself directly involved on the sidelines as a commandant of an internment camp for enemy soldiers. Once the dust of battle settled Jung began to look for ways he could use his clinical work and theories to explore how irrational emotions had driven the conflict. Later, in the thirties, Jung was to make increasing use of these theories to try to explain what was happening in Europe and Nazi Germany as the continent drifted again towards war. This evolution of Jung’s ideas came to fruition in the 1936 essay on ‘Wotan’ where he used his theory and eloquence to try to convey to the reader the danger of the times. HOW TO GET THE MOST FROM THIS BOOK. This book covers a range of topics to appeal to different audiences. Some readers will be drawn to look at how Jung applied his theory to Nazi Germany. Others are interested in the issue of war and 9
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