The seminal text is Anti-Oedipus (Deleuze and Guattari) for a general approach they take to psychoanalysis.
In A Thousand Plateaus there are areas that seem to describe something that's comparable to a Jungian collective unconscious or archetypal resemblances. But the mixture of "becomings" are a combination of Nietzsche and parts of what is philosophically grounded in Jung, perhaps. Freud figures as a central figure in both texts.
Thank you! Yes, both Deleuze and Guattari do seem to invoke concepts that strongly suggest both archetypal psychology and the collective unconscious. "Anti-Oedipus" is robustly anti-Freudian as is "Masochism" where Deleuze clearly sides with Jiung against Freud. Best, Eric
Despite my limited background knowledge of psychology I can venture to claim that Deleuze and Guattari rhizomatic philosophy is to some extent reminiscent of Jung's psychoanalysis.
Thank you! Yes, I agree with this, meaning that if post-Jungianism is to develop, Deleuze (and Guattari) are viable sources for constructive engagement. Best, Eric