Neumann Writes

At first sight, it may appear that the shadow is no more than a problem of secondary interest and importance, since it is gener-ally regarded as a figure belonging to the personal unconscious -that is to say, to the uppermost layer of those deep uncon-scious processes which analytical psychology has selected as its special field of study. The object of this paper, however, is to establish that the problem of the shadow is a central concern of modern psychology as such, and that the range of subjects which it involves are among the profoundest questions which ana-lytical psychology has attempted to answer. It is not our pur-pose to recapitulate here what Jung has said about the shadow in many passages in his writings ;? it must suffice to recall that the shadow is the unknown side of the personality, and that it normally encounters the ego, the centre and representative of the light side and of consciousness, in the form of a dark, uncanny figure of evil -to confront whom is always a fateful experience for the individual.

— Erich Neumann

Neumann's opening move here is a rescue operation. The shadow had already been domesticated — filed under personal unconscious, treated as the uppermost sediment of repressed material, manageable with enough introspection and goodwill. His claim is that this tidying-up is precisely what makes the shadow dangerous. The personal framing flatters the ego: if the shadow is merely what I have not yet examined about myself, then examination is the cure, and the cure is available. Look harder, own more, integrate further. The logic underneath that confidence is worth sitting with — it is the pneumatic move in psychological clothing, the conviction that if I become conscious enough, the darkness will not find me.

What Neumann wants to say instead is that the shadow's claim is not personal. It belongs to the structure of consciousness itself, to the way the ego necessarily constitutes its light by generating a counter-figure it cannot see. That makes integration not a personal achievement but a permanent condition of having a perspective at all. The confrontation he calls fateful is not resolved by meeting it once. It returns because it is structural. The ego that believes it has finally befriended its shadow has simply generated a new one — the shadow of a fully integrated person.


Erich Neumann·Depth Psychology and a New Ethic·1949