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Mircea Eliade

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Mircea Eliade (March 9 1907, Bucharest - April 22 1986, Chicago) was a Romanian historian of religions and writer (fantasy and autobiographical). He spoke 8 languages fluently (Romanian, French, German, Italian, English, Hebrew, Persian and Sanskrit).

Mircea Eliade
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Mircea Eliade

In 1928, at the University of Bucharest, he met Emile Cioran and Eugène Ionesco, and the three became lifelong friends. He has been criticized for alleged connections in his youth with Garda de Fier (The Iron Guard), an extreme-right-wing political organization. However, it is not at all clear that the personal associations of his youth had any great influence on his scholarly production, which began after a long period of study in India.

In his work on the history of religion, he is most regarded for his writings on shamanism, yoga and cosmological myths.

His thinking has been greatly influenced by - and has helped to popularise - the work of the Traditionalist School.

Table of contents

Selected Scholarly Works

  • Yoga, Immortality and Freedom. Translated, W. Trask. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1958. First published in French as Yoga: Essai sur l'origine de la mystique Indienne in 1933, this informative and scholarly work analyses yoga as a concrete search for freedom from human limitations.
  • Cosmos and History:The Myth of the Eternal Return. Translated W. Trask. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1954. Perhap[s Eliade's most crucial and approachable short work. Contains his analysis of time as heterogenous for the religious and homogenous for the non-religious and his conception of the 'terror of history' and the ability to 'reactualize' religious time. Originally published as Le Mythe de l'eternel retour: archétypes et répetition, 1949.
  • Shamanism: Archaic Techniques of Ecstasy. Translated, W. Trask. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1964. Long a standard work in the study of Shamanism, a detailed and valuable source of information on the phenomenon. Originally published Le Chamanisme, 1951.
  • From Primitives To Zen (full text) (http://alexm.here.ru:8081/mirrors/www.enteract.com/jwalz/Eliade/)

Selected Fiction

  • Bengal Nights. Translated by Catherine Spencer. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1994. Originally published Maitreyi, 1933.
  • The Old Man and The Bureaucrats. Translated by Mary Park Stevenson. University of Notre Dame Press, 1979. Originally published Pe strada Mântuleasa, 1968.

See also

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