The Myth of the Eternal Return: Cosmos and History
This founding work of the history of religions, first published in English in 1954, secured the North American reputation of the Romanian migr-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
...morePaperback, classic, 232 pages
Published
April 18th 2005
by Princeton University Press
(first published 1949)
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eliade's central premise is that to 'archaic' man an object or act only becomes 'real' insofar as it imitates or repeats an earlier archetype. more than that: man's very experience in the stream of time is altered, shifting from the profane to the sacred, only when he duplicates an earlier archetypical event. to put into a modern context -- a christian who took a sunday off, in replication of god taking the seventh day off, would be thrust into sacred time...
eliade enters into a kin...more
eliade enters into a kin...more
Erik Graff
rated it
·
review of another edition
Recommends it for:
investigators of "time"
Recommended to Erik by:
Robert Neale
Shelves:
religion
This book serves as a readable introduction to the work of Mircea Eliade, anthropologist of religion and one-time fascist, and to the concept of "time" as it differs between cultures. The primary distinction drawn by the author is between our modern sense of homogeneous (even isotropic, according to some physicists) time proceeding historically through cause and effect and the more common sense, historically and culturally speaking, that time is patterned and repetitive.
Th...more
Th...more
To Transcend Profane Time
It is always a joy to read a great man's greatest book- and the author himself considered this to be the most significant of all his works. He would expand the central concepts elsewhere, but it is here that they first seem to burst forth. The way he rattles out references and examples with only a line or footnote you get the feeling that he can't be bothered with detailed analysis because he is too caught up with the central ideas and is...more
It is always a joy to read a great man's greatest book- and the author himself considered this to be the most significant of all his works. He would expand the central concepts elsewhere, but it is here that they first seem to burst forth. The way he rattles out references and examples with only a line or footnote you get the feeling that he can't be bothered with detailed analysis because he is too caught up with the central ideas and is...more
See original review here: http://marklindner.info/blog/2012/01/28/...
This is the 5th book that I have read for My Two-Thirds Book Challenge.
I stated at the end of my review of Campbell’s The Hero with a Thousand Faces that I hoped that this might be a good follow-up book to Campbell and I have to say that I think it was. It is certainly a different project than Campbell’s but it dovetails nicely.
Contents:
Introduction to the 2005 Edition by Jonathan Z....more
This is the 5th book that I have read for My Two-Thirds Book Challenge.
I stated at the end of my review of Campbell’s The Hero with a Thousand Faces that I hoped that this might be a good follow-up book to Campbell and I have to say that I think it was. It is certainly a different project than Campbell’s but it dovetails nicely.
Contents:
Introduction to the 2005 Edition by Jonathan Z....more
Initially sub-titled "The Philosophy of History," this staggering short read is a probe into humanities' use of time to unconsciously obliterate history, forcing us to mythologize regeneration (the "new' year) in opposition to careful structures for storing historical ideals, models and timelines. Eliade claims history's storage (in text, spoken word) is merely a facade for anyone schooled outside of the deep study of history. Instead, humans store myth and archetypes readily whil...more
I had high hopes for this book before reading it, expecting to meet a more thorough examination of the idea of the 'eternal return' both in antiquity and going into modern times (with Nietzsche, the 're-enchantment' of the world etc.). Although many references were provided to numerous interesting religious ideas I lacked a more structured and comprehensible overview. Eliade seemed to get a bit lost in the many examples and digressions, leaving the main-point of his book a bit blurry. Hence the ...more
کتاب "اسطوره ی بازگشت جاودانه" را بهمن سرکاراتی با عنوان اصلی "مقدمه بر فلسفه ای از تاریخ" به فارسی برگردانده و انتشارات نیما (تبریز) آن را در سال 1365 چاپ و منتشر کرده است.
بهمن سرکاراتی خود پژوهشگری صاحب نظر در زمینه ی اسطوره و حماسه ی ایران است و تالیفات و مقالات بسیار متقن و سنجیده ای در زمینه ی اساطیر ایران و شاهنامه دارد که به راستی خواندنی و ارزشمند اند.
در ترجمه ی این اثر "الیاده" نیز کار سرکاراتی درخور تحسین و ستایش است.
دوست داشتم بدانم در ا...more
بهمن سرکاراتی خود پژوهشگری صاحب نظر در زمینه ی اسطوره و حماسه ی ایران است و تالیفات و مقالات بسیار متقن و سنجیده ای در زمینه ی اساطیر ایران و شاهنامه دارد که به راستی خواندنی و ارزشمند اند.
در ترجمه ی این اثر "الیاده" نیز کار سرکاراتی درخور تحسین و ستایش است.
دوست داشتم بدانم در ا...more
Eliade illuminates archaic cultures's conception of the universe as circular rather than linear. He describes that these cultures located a central location and an original time as the representative of the divine, perfect form. The heart is this central location within the self.
Eliade is neglected these days, but goes far in elucidating the contrast between the ancient mind and its sense of time and history, which was far ranging in scope and continuity, whereas the modern mind has forgotten its wildish ways and become captured to the contiguous tick of time.
One of many of Eliade's books placing religious experience at the heart of religious activity. In this case, he is interested in showing how the experience of the divine constitutes the human world.
Take 3 in "Tom's Time Trilogy," a little reading project I'm working my way through. Includes:
Basin and Range, John McPhee
Time's Arrow, Time's Cycle, Stephen Jay Gould
Basin and Range, John McPhee
Time's Arrow, Time's Cycle, Stephen Jay Gould
Essential. One of those books that affect how you frame further readings not just in mythology but philosophy and classic literature as well (War and Peace anyone?).
This book was recommended to me as an excellent and inspiring book concerning the philosophy of history, and while I was initially sceptic about the relevance of this book I quickly turned to liking it. This is, in my opinion, a must-read for everyone interested in alternative approaches to (historical) time. While the book may sometimes be a little too repetitive (the author uses lots of examples that do not necessarily contribute to the argument), there are also a lot of exciting passages and ...more
c1959 Harper Torchbooks
trade paper
In the intro the author says this book could have been titled an intro to a philosophy of history.
trade paper
In the intro the author says this book could have been titled an intro to a philosophy of history.
The Myth of the Eternal Return: Or, Cosmos and History by Mircea Eliade (1971)
La mayor parte de este libro está dedicada a temas que Eliade aborda más extensamente en "Tratado sobre la historia de las religiones y "Lo sagrado y lo profano". Su mayor aportación está en las últimas diez páginas, cuando hace una comparación entre las sociedades ahistóricas ("primitivas") y las que "hacen historia".
None
Rather fascinating concept, and a few fantastic examples, but overall not my cup of tea.
"Among countless stones, one stone becomes sacred - and hence instantly becomes saturated with being . . . because it commemorates a mythical act . . ." --Eliade, p. 4
Cevat
rated it
Eliade constructs his archetypal myth and religion theory in this book, and he also composes his "sacred time" - history theory, i think it it is brilliant book..
Though Eliade spends a lot of time on universals the scope of all of his mythological review is amazing. From Christian myths to Native American ones this is an amazing read. One of my favorite authors on world belief systems through out history. Completely unique.
Intriguing study of the cyclical nature of myth and history in ancient cultures. A good companion for Campbell, and unlike Fraser, it's short! (I prefer a small digestible idea to large, chewy ones)
This book demands a slow, methodical reading. One should have a working knowledge of ancient mythology as well as contemporary mythology (aka, religion). Definitely worth reading.
Ritual is sacred; everything else is profane. Ritual time is the original time, that "once upon a time," in which we live forever.
Illuminating and insightful exploration of human myth-making, non-linear perception, primordial history, and archaic mentality.
Elizabeth
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Romanian-born historian of religion, fiction writer, and one of the pre-eminent interpreters of world religion in this century. Eliade was an intensely prolific author of fiction and non-fiction alike, publishing over 1,300 pieces over 60 years. He earned international fame with LE MYTHE DE L'ÉTERNAL RETOUR (1949, The Myth of the Eternal Return), an interpretation of religious symbols and imagery....more
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