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Famous Like Me > Writer > E > Mircea Eliade

Profile of Mircea Eliade on Famous Like Me

 
Name: Mircea Eliade  
   
Also Know As:
   
Date of Birth: 8th March 1907
   
Place of Birth: Bucharest, Romania
   
Profession: Writer
 
 
From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia
Mircea Eliade

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

In 1928, at the University of Bucharest, he met Emil Cioran and Eugène Ionesco, and the three became, with short interruptions, lifelong friends. Since the 1970s he has been criticized for his pre-war sympathies with Garda de Fier (The Iron Guard), an extreme-right-wing political organization. However, his political views did not have any great influence on his scholarly production, which began after a long period of study in India at the University of Calcutta. Finding that the Maharaja of Kassimbazar sponsored European scholars to study in India, Eliade applied and was granted an allowance for four years. In 1928 he sailed for Calcutta to study Sanskrit and philosophy under Surendranath Dasgupta (1885-1952), a Cambridge educated Bengali professor at the University of Calcutta, and author of a five volume History of Indian Philosophy. He went on to marry Professor Dasgupta's daughter Uma.

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 partly influenced by Rudolf Otto, Gerardus van der Leeuw, Nae Ionescu and the work of the Traditionalist School. Mircea Eliade has had an decisive influence on many scholars, for instance Ioan Petru Culianu. In Romania, Eliade's legacy in the field of history of religions is mirrored by the journal "Archaeus" " (founded 1997).

Selected scholarly works

  • Yoga, Immortality and Freedom. translated: W.R. 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.
  • The Sacred and the Profane: The Nature of Religion, translated from French: W.R. Trask, Harvest/HBJ Publishers, 1957 ISBN 015679201X. Building on Rudolf Otto's 1917 work, The Idea of the Holy, and his own previous work, Eliade shows how religion emerges from the experience of the sacred, and myths of time and nature.
  • Cosmos and History:The Myth of the Eternal Return. translated: W.R. Trask. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1954. Perhaps 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.R. 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)..

The History of Religions section of the University of Chicago bears Mircea Eliade's name in recognition of his wide contribution to the research on this subject.

Selected fiction

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

This content from Wikipedia is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article Mircea Eliade