The oceanic feeling : the origins of religious sentiment in ancient India
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Bibliographic Information
The oceanic feeling : the origins of religious sentiment in ancient India
(Studies of classical India, v. 3)
D. Reidel Pub. Co. , distributed in the U.S.A. and Canada by Kluwer Boston, inc., c1980
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Note
Bibliography: p. 143-207
Includes index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
By way of a personal note, I can reveal to the reader that I was led to Sanskrit by an exposure to Indian philosophy while still a child. These early mystical interests gave way in the university to scholarly pursuits and, through reading the works of Franklin Edgerton, Louis Renou and Etienne Lamotte, I was introduced to the scientific study of the* past, to philology and the academic study of an ancient literature. In this period I wrote a number of books on Sanskrit aesthetics, concentrating on the sophisticated Indian notions of suggestion. This work has culminated in a three-volume study of the Dhvanyaloka and the Dhvanyalokalocana, for the Harvard Oriental Series. Eventually I found that I wanted to broaden my concern with India, to learn what was at the universal core of my studies and what could be of interest to everyone. In reading Indian literature, I came across so many bizarre tales and ideas that seemed incomprehensible and removed from the concerns of everyday life that I became troubled. Vedantic ideas of the world as a dream, for example, to which I had been particularly partial, seemed grandiose and megalomanic. I turned away with increasing scepticism from what I felt to be the hysterical outpourings of mystical and religious fanaticism.
Table of Contents
I: Introductory Essay on the Application of Psychoanalysis to the Indian Tradition.- II: The Oceanic Feeling: Origin of the Term.- III: The Oceanic Feeling: The Surrounding Imagery in the Earliest Sanskrit Texts and its Psychological Implications.- IV: The Oceanic Feeling: The Image of the Sea.- V: Monkeys, Children's Literature and Screen-Memories: A Psychological Approach to Enchanted Forests in the R?m?ya?a.- VI: Notes on Kubj? the Hunchback and K???a, with some Observations on Perversions.- VII: Yogic Powers and Symptom-Formation.- A Personal Epilogue.
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