Mircea Eliade (1907-1986) was a Romanian-born historian of religions and a novelist whose works were known in translation the world over.
Mircea Eliade began his life in Bucharest March 9, 1907. While still studying in the lycée he wrote numerous articles in a popular vein on entomology, the history of alchemy, Orientalism, the history of religions, impressions of his travels, stories, and literary criticism. In 1925 he entered the University of Bucharest, where he pursued the study of Renaissance philosophy. Thus began a life-long preoccupation with the great creative epochs in Western history and with the puzzle of human, especially literary, creativity itself. Eliade had seen, for example, how the Rumanian poets, writers, and historians he admired had drawn material and inspiration from folk sources, and he was fascinated to see an analogous process at work in the Italian Renaissance.
For Eliade, the rediscovery of Greek philosophy, exemplified in Marsilio Ficino's Latin translations of the Corpus hermeticum and the founding by Ficino of the Platonic Academies in Florence, meant "a breakthrough toward the East, toward Europe and Persia." But as he later understood, it was not a simple reacquaintance with the classical heritage that made the Renaissance such a creative period; instead, the strange "new" occult elements which Renaissance thinkers encountered in their discoveries actually represented "the fund of Neolithic culture that is the matrix of all the urban cultures of the ancient Near East and the Mediterranean world."
In 1928, while in Rome to research his degree thesis on "Italian Philosophy, from Marsilio Ficino to Giordano Bruno," Eliade wrote to Professor Surendranath Dasgupta expressing a desire to study under his direction at the University of Calcutta--which he did, thanks to a scholarship offered him by the Maharajah Manindra Chandra Mandy of Kassimbazar. Eliade's stay in India lasted three years. In 1933 he received his doctorate with a dissertation on yoga, later published in French under the title Yoga: Essai sur les origines de las mystique indienne (1936), and began teaching at the University of Bucharest that same year.
Shortly after his return from India, in the midst of a busy schedule that included university teaching and many commitments to write and lecture, Eliade's novel, Maitreyi, was released to great critical and popular acclaim. Born into a tradition which saw no incompatibility between scientific and literary occupations, Eliade, the historian of religions, continued to produce novels, stories, essays, and a travel book. Today, especially in Rumania and Germany, he is known primarily as a writer of fiction; and his popularity continues to grow as more and more of his works appear in translation.
During World War II Eliade served as cultural attaché to the Rumanian legations in London and Lisbon. After the war he elected to remain in exile in Paris where he could complete work on a number of manuscripts which had taken shape during the war years, notably Patterns in Comparative Religion and The Myth of the Eternal Return, both of which came to print in 1949. The years 1951 to 1955 saw the publication of several more volumes for which Eliade is well known: Shamanism, Images and Symbols, Yoga, The Forge and the Crucible, and The Forbidden Forest. Many regard the last title as his most important work of fiction.
Eliade travelled to the United States to deliver the 1956 Haskell Lectures at the University of Chicago, and a year later he was offered the post of professor and chairman of the History of Religions Department and professor in the Committee on Social Thought at the university. Almost 30 years later, he was professor emeritus at this same institution with the title Sewell Avery Distinguished Service Professor.
Eliade's scholarly output continued unabated. Volume I of A History of Religious Ideas appeared in 1974, and three of its four projected volumes had been published by 1985. A History of Religious Ideas marked something of a departure from his previous theoretical work. As in his sourcebook, From Primitives to Zen, Eliade presented the "creative moments" of the world's religious traditions in more or less chronological order, treating them in a way one might call more historical and less thematic. In addition to his scholarly writing, Eliade served as editor-in-chief of a massive encyclopedia of religion until his death in 1986.
While the differences between homo reliosus and nonreligious people of the modern West are clear, Eliade argued that non-religion can be likened to the biblical "fall" of man. That is, just as the original "fall" produced forgetfulness of God and a "divided" consciousness, the second "fall" of modern times marked the further descent of religion into the depths of the unconscious--an explanation for, among other things, the importance modern people attach to dreams, the role of the unconscious in artistic creativity, and the persistence of initiatory and other religious patterns in literature. Eliade's theoretical work in the history of religions can thus be said to embrace even his own literary creations, so that the two together form a single oeuvre consistent with his visions of a "new humanism" in modern times.
This founding work of the history of religions, first published in English in 1954, secured the North American reputation of the Romanian émigré-scholar Mircea Eliade (1907-1986). Making reference to an astonishing number of cultures and drawing on scholarship published in no less than half a dozen European languages, Eliade's The Myth of the Eternal Return makes both intelligible and compelling the religious expressions and activities of a wide variety of archaic and "primitive" religious cultures. While acknowledging that a return to the "archaic" is no longer possible, Eliade passionately insists on the value of understanding this view in order to enrich our contemporary imagination of what it is to be human. Jonathan Z. Smith's new introduction provides the contextual background to the book and presents a critical outline of Eliade's argument in a way that encourages readers to engage in an informed conversation with this classic text.
發表於2024-11-23
The Myth of the Eternal Return 2024 pdf epub mobi 電子書 下載
宇宙與曆史的對話正如古代人與現代人的對話,古代人往往認為其與宇宙及其規律相關聯,而現代人則認為自己隻與曆史相關。前者並非沒有曆史,而是擁有一種“神聖性的曆史”。通過探討古代社會中範式的忠實性再造和神話的儀式性重復的思想路徑——“永恒輪迴”,伊利亞德在《宇宙...
評分《宇宙與曆史》旨在探索人類的脫除“曆史”的欲動力,藉由不斷地反復“迴歸(神話及宗教的)初民原型”,來重新汲取存在需要的能源,更新此生此世。耶律亞德認為人類原初社會中的神話及宗教不是愚昧初民的無知産物,它們其實摺射齣太初刹那的重要象徵;它們是原型,是根源性的...
評分奶奶小的時候跟我講,我們村裏開玻璃廠的二大伯,每次廠子裏業績不好,都在半夜兩三點爬到他們廠子房頂上拉二鬍。他人有多悲傷,麯就有多惆悵。那二鬍拉得,每次都讓街坊鄰居半夜聽著睡不著覺,也跟著他一起鬧心。 我長大瞭,每次心情失落都憋在傢裏自己彈吉他。仿佛隻有彈琴纔...
評分《宇宙與曆史》旨在探索人類的脫除“曆史”的欲動力,藉由不斷地反復“迴歸(神話及宗教的)初民原型”,來重新汲取存在需要的能源,更新此生此世。耶律亞德認為人類原初社會中的神話及宗教不是愚昧初民的無知産物,它們其實摺射齣太初刹那的重要象徵;它們是原型,是根源性的...
評分奶奶小的時候跟我講,我們村裏開玻璃廠的二大伯,每次廠子裏業績不好,都在半夜兩三點爬到他們廠子房頂上拉二鬍。他人有多悲傷,麯就有多惆悵。那二鬍拉得,每次都讓街坊鄰居半夜聽著睡不著覺,也跟著他一起鬧心。 我長大瞭,每次心情失落都憋在傢裏自己彈吉他。仿佛隻有彈琴纔...
圖書標籤: 宗教 伊利亞德 神話學 永恒迴歸的神話 宗教學 人類學 Eliade Mircea_Eliade
寫的不好,他的書基本全這樣。我覺得他自己都不知道自己想說什麼,雖然他找到瞭那個突破口的痕跡或者預感,但他不知道突破口本身是什麼。許多現象學聯係都非常牽強,沒完沒瞭地找例子往上麵套。可能不瞭解海德格爾甚至更進一步沒有研究過亞裏士多德《論靈魂》那邊到底在說什麼,以及形而上學到底在研究什麼,永遠都讀不懂他到底想說什麼,隻覺得像瘋子在一個勁為宗教價值辯護。
評分寫的不好,他的書基本全這樣。我覺得他自己都不知道自己想說什麼,雖然他找到瞭那個突破口的痕跡或者預感,但他不知道突破口本身是什麼。許多現象學聯係都非常牽強,沒完沒瞭地找例子往上麵套。可能不瞭解海德格爾甚至更進一步沒有研究過亞裏士多德《論靈魂》那邊到底在說什麼,以及形而上學到底在研究什麼,永遠都讀不懂他到底想說什麼,隻覺得像瘋子在一個勁為宗教價值辯護。
評分寫的不好,他的書基本全這樣。我覺得他自己都不知道自己想說什麼,雖然他找到瞭那個突破口的痕跡或者預感,但他不知道突破口本身是什麼。許多現象學聯係都非常牽強,沒完沒瞭地找例子往上麵套。可能不瞭解海德格爾甚至更進一步沒有研究過亞裏士多德《論靈魂》那邊到底在說什麼,以及形而上學到底在研究什麼,永遠都讀不懂他到底想說什麼,隻覺得像瘋子在一個勁為宗教價值辯護。
評分寫的不好,他的書基本全這樣。我覺得他自己都不知道自己想說什麼,雖然他找到瞭那個突破口的痕跡或者預感,但他不知道突破口本身是什麼。許多現象學聯係都非常牽強,沒完沒瞭地找例子往上麵套。可能不瞭解海德格爾甚至更進一步沒有研究過亞裏士多德《論靈魂》那邊到底在說什麼,以及形而上學到底在研究什麼,永遠都讀不懂他到底想說什麼,隻覺得像瘋子在一個勁為宗教價值辯護。
評分寫的不好,他的書基本全這樣。我覺得他自己都不知道自己想說什麼,雖然他找到瞭那個突破口的痕跡或者預感,但他不知道突破口本身是什麼。許多現象學聯係都非常牽強,沒完沒瞭地找例子往上麵套。可能不瞭解海德格爾甚至更進一步沒有研究過亞裏士多德《論靈魂》那邊到底在說什麼,以及形而上學到底在研究什麼,永遠都讀不懂他到底想說什麼,隻覺得像瘋子在一個勁為宗教價值辯護。
The Myth of the Eternal Return 2024 pdf epub mobi 電子書 下載