Mircea Eliade

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A01=Nicolae Babuts
Archaic Ontology
Author_Nicolae Babuts
Category=QD
Category=QR
comparative mythology
Dhu Al Hijjah
Douglas Allen
Eliade's Approach
Eliade's Theory
Eliade’s Approach
Eliade’s Theory
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
Eric Ziolkowski
Essential Human Mode
eternal
Extratextual Events
Holy Mountains
homo
Homo Religiosus
Illo Tempore
initiation rites
John D. Dadosky
Journal II
Jupiter Optimus Maximus
Liviu Bordas
Magic Fact
Mimetic Rivalry
Mythic Consciousness
mythic imagination in modern culture
mythic structures
Nichifor Crainic
Nicolae Babuts
Nineteenth Century Approach
phenomenology of religion
religiosus
Religious Human Beings
return
ritual analysis
Robert A. Segal
Robert Ellwood
Sacred Myths
Sacred Profane Dichotomy
Sacred Reality
sacred symbolism
Spiritual Planes
Transcendent Sacred
Unseen Order
Virgil's Fourth Eclogue
Virgil’s Fourth Eclogue
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138512252
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 06 Oct 2017
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Mircea Eliade (1907�1986) was one of the twentieth century's foremost students of religion and cultural environments. This book examines the emergence, function, and value of religion and myth in his work.

Nicolae Babuts, Robert Ellwood, Eric Ziolkowski, John Dadosky, Robert Segal, Mac Linscott Ricketts, Douglas Allen, and Liviu Borda examine Eliade's views on the interaction between the sacred and the profane. Each explores Eliade's phenomenological approach to the study of religion and myth. They show that modern rites of initiation, cultural activities, and spectacles like bullfighting, film, and, perhaps surprisingly, reading and writing, all harken back to the archetypal structures of the mythical imagination. Perhaps the greatest achievement of Eliade's phenomenological approach is that it reveals what we have in common with pre-Socratic man: the mind's structural capacity to endow objects and events with spiritual values and meanings.

As a study of Eliade's concept of the mythic imagination, the book posits an analogy between the myths of the past and modern imitations. The authors suggest that in spite of their differences and their separate historical sources, myths represent basic structures of human consciousness. This book is essential reading for all students of religion, philosophy, and literature.

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