'Psychotic contents, especially in paranoid cases, show close analogies
with the type of dream that the primitive aptly calls a 'big dream'.
Unlike ordinary dreams, such a dream is highly impressive, numinous, and
its imagery frequently makes use of motifs analagous to or even
identical with those of mythology. I call these structures archetypes
because they function in a way similar to instinctual patterns of
behaviour.'
The importance of this volume of Jung's writings on psychosis can
scarcely be overrated both in historical terms and for the understanding
of Jung's psychology. It begins with his famous work, 'The Psychology of
Dementia Praecox'. It was this work that established his reputation as a
psychiatric investigator of the first rank and it was this work also
that engaged Freud's interest and led to their eventual famous meeting.
The research in this work contains the seed of his theoretica divergence
form psychoanalysis.
Following on from this are a further nine papers on psychopathology and
schizophrenia revealing Jung's original thinking in this area and
providing valuable insight into the development of his later concepts
such as the archetypes and the collective unconscious.