Jung's Family
Jung in Europe
Jung in Maine
Theories and Concepts
Miscellaneous
100

C. G. Jung married her in 1903.

Emma Rauschenbach

100

C. G. Jung was born here in 1875. 

Kesswil, Switzerland (Just Switzerland is okay)

100

The year our Center, the C. G. Jung Center for Studies in Analytical Psychology (Maine Jung Center), was founded.

1988

100

"The ______ are the numinous, structural elements of the psyche and possess a certain autonomy and specific energy which enables them to attract, out of the conscious mind, those contents which are best suited to themselves."

Archetypes

100

Jung coined this term for his school of Psychology in order to distinguish it from Freud's theories of psychoanalysis after their seven years of collaboration were drawing to a close. 

Analytical Psychology (Complex Psychology also okay. Depth Psychology was not coined by Jung and applies to various psychologies of the unconscious) 

200

C. G. Jung had this many siblings. 

One, a sister named Johanna Gertrud (Technically two if you count the first child of his parents, a boy named Paul who lived only a couple days) 

200

After his residency at the University of Zürich under the direction Dr. Eugen Bleuler, Jung went to this Western European capital to study theoretical psychopathology with Dr. Pierre Janet. 

Paris

200

Our benefactress Mildred Harris met Jung at this building on an island in Maine during a seminar in 1936. 

The Bailey Island Library Hall

200

"_______ are in truth the living units of the unconscious psyche, and it is only through them that we are able to deduce its existence and its constitution. The unconscious would in fact be nothing but a vestige of dim or “obscure” representations, or a “fringe of consciousness,” were it not for their existence... The via regia to the unconscious, however, is not the dream, but the ______ which is the architect of dreams and of symptoms. Nor is this via so very “royal,” either, since the way pointed out is more like a rough and uncommonly devious footpath that often loses itself in the undergrowth and generally leads not into the heart of the unconscious but past it." (One word)

Complex(es)

200

Patients of Jung helped to found this organization, inspired by the belief in an evangelic cure of alcoholism.

Alcoholics Anonymous

300

Jung grew up in a time when Spiritualism was very popular, and many in his family were drawn to it. At the age of 20, his grandmother Augusta Preiswerk fell into a three-day trance, during which she communicated with spirits of the dead and gave prophecies. Jung's mother, who was actively engaged in Jung's early Spiritualistic experiments, also purportedly had this gift, which allowed her to "see" beyond what ordinary people could.  

Second Sight, or Clairvoyance

300

Jung was a core participant of this interdisciplinary conference which has met annually in Ascona, Switzerland since 1933. Its name comes from the ancient Greek language and refers to a "no-host banquet, both spiritual and material, which lasts thanks to the contributions each participant makes." 

Eranos

300

The 1936 Bailey Island Seminar, "Dream Symbols of the Individuation Process" was one of Jung's most extensive presentations in America. In this seminar, Jung went into great detail concerning the dreams of this famous physicist. 

Wolfgang Pauli

300

"The concept of ________ says that a connection exists which is not of a causal nature. The connection consists firstly in the fact of coincidence and secondly in the fact of parallel meaning. It is a question of meaningful coincidences."

Synchronicity

300

This 'Heroic' mythologist was deeply inspired and influenced by Jung's work (though he would later distance himself), applying much of the framework of Jungian dream analysis to myth interpretation. He wrote, “Dream is the personalized myth, myth is the depersonalized dream; both myth and dream are symbolic in the same general way of the dynamics of the psyche. But in the dream the forms are quirked by the peculiar troubles of the dreamer, whereas in myth the problems and solutions shown are directly valid for all mankind.” 

Joseph Campbell

400

C. G. Jung's wife passed away from a recurrence of this ailment in 1955.

Cancer

400

After his mother passed away, Jung purchased land on the shore of Lake Zürich and began construction of this small stone castle with four towers.

Bollingen Tower

400

The Second Bailey Island Conference of 1968 was held in honor of this Maine analyst's 80th birthday. 

Esther Harding

400

"Out of the collision of opposites the unconscious psyche always creates/reveals a ______ of an irrational nature, which the conscious mind neither expects nor understands. It presents itself in a form that is neither a straight “yes” nor a straight “no.” "

Third // Transcendent Third

400

This personality test is based off of one of Jung's theories.

Myers-Briggs (MBTI)

500

C. G. Jung passed away in his home in Kusnacht in this year, 10 days after completing his last work, “Approaching the Unconscious”. (Bonus for month and day)

1961 (June 6)

500

On Jung's 75th birthday, he positioned a stone cube outside his home on Lake Zurich and carved into three sides. On one side, this god is carved into the middle, bearing a lantern and wearing a hooded cape. It is surrounded by an inscription in Greek: "Time is a child — playing like a child — playing a board game — the kingdom of the child. This is Telesphoros, who roams through the dark regions of this cosmos and glows like a star out of the depths. He points the way to the gates of the sun and to the land of dreams."

Telesphoros

500

These three Jungian analysts would regularly summer together at "The Inner Ledge" on Bailey Island, ancestral summer home of the Mann family, and were integral in convincing Jung to visit Maine for the first part of his two-part Dream Symbols Seminar. 

Kristine Mann, Eleanor Bertine, Esther Harding

500

"Every psychological extreme secretly contains its own opposite or stands in some sort of intimate and essential relation to it. Indeed, it is from this tension that it derives its peculiar dynamism. There is no hallowed custom that cannot on occasion turn into its opposite, and the more extreme a position is, the more easily may we expect an ________, a conversion of something into its opposite."

Enantiodromia

500

Jung carved this Latin inscription above the door of his house in Kusnacht, Switzerland. (Latin or English translation both acceptable)

"VOCATUS ATQUE NON VOCATUS DEUS ADERIT." In English translation, the inscription reads: "Called or not called, god is present."

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