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Carl Jung's Red Book + Astrology

Carl Jung's Red Book + Astrology

Satya Doyle Byock and Carol Ferris 30 Episodes Nov 19, 2025

Exploring Carl Jung's magnum opus, The Red Book, chapter-by-chapter. In each episode, Salome Institute director, Satya Doyle Byock, and Astrologer Carol Ferris discuss C.G. Jung's vast work while reflecting on Jungian psychology and history, the astrology of Jung's time and ours, and the political, social, feminist, and anti-racist relevance of this work today. C.G. Jung's journey into the unconscious began in 1913, just months before the sudden beginning of WWI. It was this descent, laboriously documented in a large red leather book that has come to be known as "The Red Book" that underlies all of Analytical Psychology, also known as Jungian Psychology. You do not need to be steeped in Jungian Psychology or in astrology to enjoy this Jungian Podcast.

Episodes

Bonus - School of Jungian Psychology and Myth Nov 19, 2025 01:34 The Salome Institute provides touchstones for the re-ensoulment of everyday life through graduate-level instruction, expert guest speakers, and a community of like-minded humans. Visit salomeinstitute.com to learn more
Bonus - Quarterlife: The Search for Self in Early Adulthood Jul 18, 2022 08:07 Satya Doyle Byock, co-host of this podcast, has a new book out with Random House, Quarterlife: The Search for Self in Early Adulthood. In this Bonus episode, Satya introduces the book to listeners and reads a short excerpt from Chapter 2.  Quarterlife is the book that Satya needed in her 20s and that she's been looking for since for her clients. As a psychotherapist, Satya has focused on the stage
Jung's Epilogue, Scrutinies, and the Seven Sermons of the Dead - Ep. 28 Dec 1, 2020 01:18:57 In this final episode of our journey, Satya begins by reading Jung's Epilogue to the Red Book from 1959.  Satya and Carol discuss Scrutinies, which Sonu Shamdasani considers the third book of "The Red Book." They talk about the recent synchronistic publication of "The Black Books." Satya breaks down the history of Scrutinies and The Seven Sermons of the Dead. Satya explores Richard Wilhelm and the
Toni Wolff, The Black Books, and The Magician - Ep 27 Dec 1, 2020 51:19 As The Red Book nears conclusion, Satya & Carol explore the second half of "The Magician." Satya reflects on the origins of this podcast and its synchronistic ending with the release of The Black Books. Carol reflects on the beginnings of Jung's journey with the horoscope of October 13th, 1913, highlighting the explosive energy of Jupiter in both our time and Jung's. Carol explores the image of
Together like Philemon and Baucis in the Age of Aquarius - Ep. 26 Oct 31, 2020 01:05:59 Carol Ferris read's from "the Magician" and illuminates the intersection of healing, time, and space, weaving in the mythology of Philemon and Baucis as she and Satya explore the union of opposites with Philemon and Baucis, and Elijah and Salome. Satya tracks the feminine in Jung's "Red Book" as Baucis stands in the kitchen. Carol discusses the coming into form of the yin yang pair of opposites. J
Nothing Matches the Torment of One's Own Way - Ep. 25 Oct 31, 2020 01:14:10 This episode follows the news of the White House super spreader event and the president and white house staffers testing positive for COVID-19. As Jung arrives at the "portal of a great mystery" our hosts explore the various definitions of magic in Jung's Red Book, Satya speaks to Jung's notion of individuation, the need to relinquish will power in favor of psyche, and the pain of going one's own
Carl Jung and Rilke on the Future and Fate - Ep. 24 Oct 31, 2020 01:01:20 In this episode, Carl Jung is in conversation with his Soul about the gift of magic. Satya Doyle Byock reflects on the uncanny similarity between Jung and Rilke on fate and future, she explores the meaning of Shuddering and Jung's journey into embodiment through the Grimms' fairy tale "The Youth Who Goes off in Search of Fear." Carol Ferris explores Jung's many paintings in this section, hexagram
Prophecy & The Coming New Religion - Ep. 23 Oct 6, 2020 01:04:43 Satya Doyle Byock & Carol Ferris read this chapter in call and response fashion. Carol discusses the similarity of our time to Jung's and reads from Paul Shepard's "Nature and Madness." Both accompany Jung into the complexities of maturation and psychological adulthood. Satya discusses her manuscript on Quarterlife, and Jungian psychology for younger adults. She also reads Max Zeller's dream of th
Parsifal Got Out of the Wasteland by Uniting Left and Right - Ep. 22 Oct 6, 2020 01:12:52 Satya Doyle Byock & Carol Ferris discuss the Union of the Opposites within Jungian Psychology. Carol explores Parsifal and the Wasteland at length and how it relates to Jung's journey. Ann Carroll explores the gender translation in this chapter. The image of Atmaviktu shows up, a many-armed dragon creature and symbol of God. Carol discusses the 12th house and Jupiter. Q&A explores racism, projecti
Madness, Neptune, Nietzsche & The Collective Unconscious - Ep. 21 Oct 6, 2020 59:36 Satya Doyle Byock and Carol Ferris discuss the union of the opposites within Jungian Psychology. Carol explores Parsifal and the Wasteland at length and how it relates to Jung's journey. Ann Carroll explores the way gender is translated in this chapter. The image of Atmaviktu shows up, a many-armed dragon creature and symbol of God. Carol discusses the 12th house and Jupiter. Q&A explores racism,
The Serpentine Path to Wholeness - Ep 20 Oct 6, 2020 01:09:51 Satya & Carol discuss C.G. Jung's "Red Book" and its social relevance for our times. In this episode, Jung enters through the left door and deconstructs man's prejudice toward animals. Satya discusses the "serpentine path to wholeness" and how to reclaim one's embodied self from the projection onto animals. Carol reminds us the Zodiac is not an idle abstraction. Ann Carroll illuminates the image o
The Imitation of Christ, Nietzsche, and Jung - Ep 19 Sep 17, 2020 01:14:19 Satya Doyle Byock & Carol Ferris enter a series of more playful Red Book chapters, beginning with "Divine Folly" in which Jung departs from his own religiosity to express the critical importance of living one's own existence. Jung picks up a copy of "The Imitation of Christ" by Thomas a Kempis and starts a dialogue with the work of Friedrich Nietzsche. Carol illuminates the astrology of January 14

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