Career
She spent part of her life in Budapest (until 1919), part in Vienna (until 1938) and part in Zurich. Jacobi met Jung in 1927, and later was influential in the establishment of the C.G. Jung Institute for Analytical Psychology in Zurich in 1948, where she was nicknamed "The Locomotive" for her extraversion and administrative drive. Her students at the C.G. Jung Institute included Wallace Clift.
She died in Zurich, leaving one new book (entitled: "The tree as a symbol") uncompleted.
In the sixties, Jacobi was involved in a controversy at the Zurich Institute involving the question of boundary violations with a patient on the part of the analyst James Hillman, something Jacobi took strong exception to The result was a firmer policy on, and greater explication of the need to avoid such violations at the Institute.
Jacobi"s exposition of Jungianism is open to criticism for over-simplification and reification of Jung"s more amorphous concepts of the unconscious. Her belief that “The course of individuation exhibits a certain formal regularity..this absolute order of the unconscious” laid her open to the charge of an over-literal interpretation of Jung.
While her diagrams of the psyche – one with the ego at the centre, one with it at the periphery – inevitably provided only one-dimensional snapshots of the richness of psychic experience.