Night Sea Journey

nekyia · katabasis

The Night Sea Journey — indexed in Jung’s own works under both ‘night sea journey’ and ‘nekyia,’ with the classical term ‘katabasis’ functioning as a near-synonym across the wider corpus — stands as one of the central mythological templates through which depth psychology articulates the dynamics of psychological transformation. Jung’s ‘Symbols of Transformation’ establishes the pattern most fully: the hero swallowed by a sea monster, the fire kindled in its belly, and the eventual emergence constitute a mythic grammar for the ego’s descent into unconscious depths and its hard-won return. The term draws simultaneously on comparative mythology (Frobenius’s solar hero, Homer’s Odysseus in Book XI), alchemical symbolism (the sea as prima materia and synonym for the unconscious), and clinical phenomenology (regression as necessary precondition for renewal). Robert Bly imports the structural logic of katabasis into men’s psychology, reading the ‘drop through the floor’ as initiatory wound-work. Hajo Banzhaf maps the trajectory onto the Tarot’s ‘night cards.’ Hillman’s post-Jungian revisioning reframes the nekyia not as a detour but as an autonomous underworld reality irreducible to ego goals. Across this range of voices the conceptual tension is consistent: whether the descent serves the ego’s eventual strengthening (Jung, Bly) or constitutes an end in itself demanding a genuinely chthonic imagination (Hillman) remains the corpus’s defining fault line.

In the library

It is easy to see what the battle with the sea monster means: it is the attempt to free the ego-consciousness from the deadly grip of the unconscious.

Jung identifies the night sea journey’s central combat as a psychic event — the struggle of ego-consciousness to extricate itself from unconscious engulfment — establishing the mythologem’s psychological referent.

Jung, Carl Gustav, Symbols of Transformation, 1952thesis

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The motif of the journey to the other world, the sea journey at night, is not only familiar in all the religious traditions of the nations of both East and West, but also agrees without exception on each of the essential points.

Banzhaf argues for the universal cross-cultural consistency of the night sea journey motif, situating it within the Tarot’s ‘night cards’ as a coherent archetypal sequence from Death through The Moon.

Banzhaf, Hajo, Tarot and the Journey of the Hero, 2000thesis

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Katabasis also carries with it the whole concept of disaster, perhaps bringing it into the man’s life for the first time.

Bly reads katabasis as an involuntary catastrophic inversion of the life-boat, framing the descent as the moment when ordinary compensatory strategies are stripped away and genuine initiation begins.

Bly, Robert, Iron John: A Book About Men, 1990thesis

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sea journey: fragment of sun-myth, 198; and sun-heroes, 209; see also night sea journey; nekyia

The ‘Symbols of Transformation’ index cross-references night sea journey with the solar myth and sun-heroes, confirming that the motif is structurally embedded in Jung’s broader libido theory as the nocturnal arc of the sun’s passage.

Jung, Carl Gustav, Symbols of Transformation, 1952supporting

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Katabasis and ashes are a little different. We could say that a man finds katabasis only through dropping, poverty, abrupt change in social class.

Bly differentiates katabasis from the related initiatory state of ‘ashes,’ arguing that the descent is specifically precipitated by acute social and existential rupture rather than voluntary inwardness alone.

Bly, Robert, Iron John: A Book About Men, 1990supporting

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The Katabasis plays a very important role in the Middle Ages and the old masters conceived of the rising sun in this Katabasis as of a new light, the lux moderna, the jewel, the lapis.

A footnote in the ‘Red Book’ edition connects Jung’s personal katabasis to the alchemical tradition, identifying the descent’s luminous yield as the lapis — the philosopher’s stone — and linking it to his own confrontation with the unconscious.

Jung, Carl Gustav, The Red Book: Liber Novus, 2009supporting

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A nekyia journey, like a near-death experience, involves decay — the dissolution of the self; a distillation — celestial feelings of ascent found in surrender, chaos, and death.

Keltner’s contemporary account reclaims nekyia as a phenomenological structure present in near-death experience and religious pilgrimage, translating the mythological template into empirical psychology of awe and self-dissolution.

Keltner, Dacher, Awe The New Science of Everyday Wonder and How It Can, 2023supporting

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Essential motifs of the hero’s journey were apparently read from the heavens. Above all, the movements of the two great lights, the sun and the moon, have served as models.

Banzhaf grounds the night sea journey in archaic astronomical observation, arguing that the solar arc — particularly the sun’s invisible nocturnal transit — provided the original cosmological template for the hero’s descent.

Banzhaf, Hajo, Tarot and the Journey of the Hero, 2000supporting

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Carrying wood and water, working in the basement of the castle — where the kitchen is — stands for the Drop Through the Floor, the Descent, the humiliation, the ‘way down and out.’

Bly translates the night sea journey’s logic into the fairy-tale motif of the prince become kitchen-servant, reading social humiliation and underground labor as the contemporary face of mythological descent.

Bly, Robert, Iron John: A Book About Men, 1990supporting

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The wound a man receives from his father, or from life, or from contact with the Wild Man, first turned up in our story when the boy pinched his finger. Through that hurt, his way of dealing with the world was damaged.

Bly argues that the wound functions as the initiatory portal of katabasis, the psychic injury through which the descender exits ordinary life and enters the underground work of transformation.

Bly, Robert, Iron John: A Book About Men, 1990supporting

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The experience of the crossing is a familiar one to all who have made the journey into self-realization. The mystics called it the ‘Dark Night of the Soul.’

Nichols assimilates the night sea journey to the mystical tradition’s Dark Night of the Soul, presenting the Tarot Moon card as the archetypal image of the hero’s moment of maximum terror and dissolution at the threshold of transformation.

Nichols, Sallie, Jung and Tarot: An Archetypal Journey, 1980supporting

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We do not descend to the bottom of the hill merely by seeing the dark side of ourself, or our friends, difficult as that is.

Bly insists that descent is not accomplished through mere shadow recognition but requires a complete inversion of the primal eros, a total displacement of the infantile security that must be relinquished before the underworld yields its gifts.

Bly, Robert, Iron John: A Book About Men, 1990supporting

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These are able to carry on some functions made possible only by blood in Od. 11 (the First Nekyia).

Sullivan’s philological analysis of the Odyssey’s two nekyiai documents the graduated capacity of the shades — enhanced by blood sacrifice — providing the classical textual foundation on which Jung’s psychological appropriation of the nekyia rests.

Sullivan, Shirley Darcus, Psychological and Ethical Ideas What Early Greeks Say, 1995aside

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Dig a pit of about a cubit in each direction, and pour it full of drink offerings for all the dead, first honey mixed with milk, then a second pouring of sweet wine, and the third, water.

Circe’s instructions to Odysseus for the nekyia ritual in Book XI of the Odyssey constitute the primary classical source text from which the depth-psychological concept of the descent to the dead draws its mythological authority.

Lattimore, Richmond, Odyssey of Homer, 2009aside

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Regression leads to the necessity of adapting to the inner world of the psyche.

Jung’s theoretical account of regression as a compelled reorientation toward the inner world provides the clinical-theoretical substructure underlying the night sea journey’s psychological meaning as a necessary introversion.

Jung, Carl Gustav, The Structure and Dynamics of the Psyche, 1960aside

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Related terms