The Jung Red Book N° 134, 2011/2 - 174 pagesPages 5 to 6Editorial. Inédito de C. JungBy Leslie de Galbert, Dominique Guilbault, Laurent MeyerPages 7 to 19The search for the lost soulBy Robert S. HendersonPages 21 to 35Gestation, Realization and Publication of the Red BookBy Leslie de GalbertPages 37 to 43Stops on imagesBy Dominique GuilbaultPages 45 to 60The Red Book, between a fascination with the abyss and art as a will to liveBy Laurent MeyerPages 61 to 90Transcendence and belief in Jungian psychoanalysis in the light of the Red BookBy Christian GaillardPages 91 to 117The mark of one who has seen chaosBy Nathan Schwartz-SalantPages 119 to 131“The way of the be-coming”By Christine MaillardPages 133 to 136Encounter with the Red Book, a founder unpublishedPages 137 to 164The psychology of modern manBy Carl Gustav JungPages 152 to 157The text and the context. Seizing “the evil of the European soul”By Florent SerinaPages 158 to 164Jung 1928. Between courtyard and garden, the perspectiveBy Christian GaillardPages 165 to 170NotepadPages 171 to 172Review