Aniela Jaffé (February 20, 1903 – October 30, 1991) was a Swiss analyst who for many years was a co-worker of Carl Gustav Jung.
Jaffé was born on 20 February 1903[1] to Jewish parents in Berlin, Germany, where she studied psychology at Hamburg, before fleeing the Nazis in the thirties to Switzerland.
[6] On November 27, 2024, the Philemon Foundation announced via social media Bluesky and X that Jung's Life and Work: Interviews for Memories, Dreams, Reflections with Aniela Jaffé would be published by Princeton University Press in 2025 with no confirmed date.
[7][8] It would be edited by Sonu Shamdasani, with Thomas Fischer as consulting editor, and translated by Heather McCartney and John Peck.
[9][10][11] Jaffé wrote on symbolism in modern art,[12] and explored parapsychological phenomena using Jung's concept of synchronicity as an interpretative tool.