Freud's India: Sigmund Freud and India's First Psychoanalyst Girindrasekhar Bose
Autor Alf Hiltebeitelen Limba Engleză Hardback – 27 sep 2018
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780190878375
ISBN-10: 0190878371
Pagini: 326
Dimensiuni: 160 x 236 x 28 mm
Greutate: 0.58 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0190878371
Pagini: 326
Dimensiuni: 160 x 236 x 28 mm
Greutate: 0.58 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Recenzii
meticulous reconstruction of the disagreements between Freud and Bose
[a] wonderful book ... This volume, like its companion, marks another crucial contribution to the emerging study of global Freudianism ... Students of comparative religion, psychoanalysis and psychology, and the history of thought will find this volume immensely rewarding ... Highly recommended.
Spectacularly impressive. You can dip into these amazing volumes and find all manner of marvelous things--not only the valuable information about Freud, Bose, goddesses, and the Mahābhārata, but Hiltebeitel's highly creative ideas about them.
These volumes comprise the magnum opus of a distinguished historian of religions. It lovingly orbits around two cultural oeuvres of roughly the same length: the great Hindu epic of the Mahābhārata and the Collected Works of Sigmund Freud. It is as if Hiltebeitel has treated the Mahābhārata as one immense psychoanalytic exploration of the maternal polytheisms of Indian Hindu culture and the Collected Works as an unintended but appropriate mythology of Western civilization and its male monotheisms. Behind this astonishing comparison haunts the question: 'Can psychoanalytic methods work in different ontological structures? Can they work here, for example, in the panpsychic nondualism of the Bengali founder of Indian psychoanalysis Girindrasekhar Bose?' The answer appears to be: 'Yes, they can, uncannily so. And the analysis goes both ways.'
This fascinating study gives nuanced attention to a specific historical focus-the Freud/Bose letters-to open up a profound and comprehensive exploration of the place of the feminine in Hindu myth and thought and the lack of recognition of the feminine in Freud and in most of western thought.
[a] wonderful book ... This volume, like its companion, marks another crucial contribution to the emerging study of global Freudianism ... Students of comparative religion, psychoanalysis and psychology, and the history of thought will find this volume immensely rewarding ... Highly recommended.
Spectacularly impressive. You can dip into these amazing volumes and find all manner of marvelous things--not only the valuable information about Freud, Bose, goddesses, and the Mahābhārata, but Hiltebeitel's highly creative ideas about them.
These volumes comprise the magnum opus of a distinguished historian of religions. It lovingly orbits around two cultural oeuvres of roughly the same length: the great Hindu epic of the Mahābhārata and the Collected Works of Sigmund Freud. It is as if Hiltebeitel has treated the Mahābhārata as one immense psychoanalytic exploration of the maternal polytheisms of Indian Hindu culture and the Collected Works as an unintended but appropriate mythology of Western civilization and its male monotheisms. Behind this astonishing comparison haunts the question: 'Can psychoanalytic methods work in different ontological structures? Can they work here, for example, in the panpsychic nondualism of the Bengali founder of Indian psychoanalysis Girindrasekhar Bose?' The answer appears to be: 'Yes, they can, uncannily so. And the analysis goes both ways.'
This fascinating study gives nuanced attention to a specific historical focus-the Freud/Bose letters-to open up a profound and comprehensive exploration of the place of the feminine in Hindu myth and thought and the lack of recognition of the feminine in Freud and in most of western thought.
Notă biografică
Alf Hiltebeitel is Professor of Religion at George Washington University. He works mainly on the two Sanskrit epics, the Mahābhārata and Ramayana, and on the south Indian Draupadi cult, which worships the Mahabharata's leading heroine as the Goddess. He is a historian of religions who studies Hinduism with longstanding interests in Sigmund Freud and in the comparative study of Judaism.