BOUNDARIES OF THE SOUL
Rousseau’s New Heloise (1761) which was so popular that libraries lent it out by the hour, and then Goethe’s Werther (1774), a s ...
may be illustrated in the case of Marcel Proust. Proust achieved his own mystical mythopoeic vision of temps perdu (forgotten pe ...
being in the presence of another, respectively the reader, the writer or a character from the mythic novel, as was the case, for ...
Thus, in MLC, the boundaries between subject and object, self and other, character and place, break down as in SC. What is inter ...
One of the most outstanding examples of the expression of MLC may be seen in the work of William Blake (1757-1827). Poet, painte ...
trivial daily mind. There are indeed, personifying spirits that we had best but call Graces and Gatekeepers, because through the ...
David Malouf, in words that might well be used to articulate the experience of the Palaeolithic cave painters, says: There are l ...
in all categories, revealed a certain quirkiness that in spite of the futility in attempting to define what the term ‘normal’ me ...
Swellfoot (Campbell, 1988:31). The same might apply to the therianthropic figures of the cave paintings and then later in the my ...
mental consciousness, which depends on the eye as its source or connector. There is the blood-consciousness, with the sexual con ...
which allowed human beings to function without the knowledge of a personal existence such as we now have. Thus, I am intrigued b ...
work; the (original) viewers of the cave pictographs and the readers of the mythopoeic writers has the potential to elicit not s ...
CHAPTER 10 THE MYTHOPOEI C DI MENSI ONS OF PLACE-ELSEWHERE-PLACE The mind is its own place, and in itself Can make a Heav’n of H ...
it is by definition unconscious and so encountered indirectly, is cast like a shadowy template across the collective consciousne ...
(ii) I f soul as consciousness needs place in which to be aware, then all manifestations of place are to some greater or lesser ...
perceptual stimuli of a locale or space but rather through the elevation of the imaginal experience of it. I t is then that the ...
the ‘there’ and the ‘here’ are for Pato real but at the same time also affective and imaginary constructs of place. His words ex ...
positions on the place-elsewhere-place continuum, although I believe that there are no clear demarcations between these points s ...
division, specific real spatial relations arise together. An apposite example of this is provided in Chapter 2 where I describe ...
I s this possibly the beginning of a scientific explanation for the energies of what has been termed the spirit of place? Actual ...
«
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
»
Free download pdf