![]() ![]() ![]() It was only in 1995 that the German Collected Works, the preparation of which was supported by the family, was finished, and it was only in 1993 that a complete listing of Jung’s manuscripts at the ETH had been prepared. In reading Bair’s book in the light of my researches on Jung, this impression of mistaken identities remained with me throughout. His lifelong friend, Albert Oeri later recalled, “Carl-or the ‘Walze’, as his old friends still call him with the nickname from that time”. However, this figure turns out to be none other than Jung himself. Near the beginning of the book, Bair referred to Jung’s attendance during his student days of seances at the home of a figure known only as “Walze”. Given its scale, it deserves to be looked at in more detail than the previous works. In this chapter, I plan to look at some of the claims made in it, and examine the evidence for them. This is the longest and most detailed to date. We come now to the most recent biography of Jung, Jung: A Biography, by Deirdre Bair (the title being the same as the English edition of Wehr’s biography). ![]() ![]() Jung Stripped Bare: By His Biographers, EvenĪnn Lammers’ Review of Deidre Bair’s “Jung: A Biography” ![]()
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