Mircea Eliade
Mircea Eliade
Mircea Eliade (1907-1986) was a Rumanian-born historian of religions and a novelist whose works were known in translation the world over.
Mircea Eliade began his life in Bucharest in 1907. While still studying in the lycée he wrote numerous articles in a popular vein on entomology, the history of alchemy, Orientalism, the history of religions, impressions of his travels, stories, and literary criticism. In 1925 he entered the University of Bucharest, where he pursued the study of Renaissance philosophy. Thus began a life-long preoccupation with the great creative epochs in Western history and with the puzzle of human, especially literary, creativity itself. Eliade had seen, for example, how the Rumanian poets, writers, and historians he admired had drawn material and inspiration from folk sources, and he was fascinated to see an analogous process at work in the Italian Renaissance.
For Eliade, the rediscovery of Greek philosophy, exemplified in Marsilio Ficino's Latin translations of the Corpus hermeticum and the founding by Ficino of the Platonic Academies in Florence, meant "a breakthrough toward the East, toward Europe and Persia." But as he later understood, it was not a simple reacquaintance with the classical heritage that made the Renaissance such a creative period; instead, the strange "new" occult elements which Renaissance thinkers encountered in their discoveries actually represented "the fund of Neolithic culture that is the matrix of all the urban cultures of the ancient Near East and the Mediterranean world."
In 1928, while in Rome to research his degree thesis on "Italian Philosophy, from Marsilio Ficino to Giordano Bruno," Eliade wrote to Professor Surendranath Dasgupta expressing a desire to study under his direction at the University
of Calcutta—which he did, thanks to a scholarship offered him by the Maharajah Manindra Chandra Mandy of Kassimbazar. Eliade's stay in India lasted three years. In 1933 he received his doctorate with a dissertation on yoga, later published in French under the title Yoga: Essai sur les origines de las mystique indienne (1936), and began teaching at the University of Bucharest that same year.
Shortly after his return from India, in the midst of a busy schedule that included university teaching and many commitments to write and lecture, Eliade's novel, Maitreyi, was released to great critical and popular acclaim. Born into a tradition which saw no incompatibility between scientific and literary occupations, Eliade, the historian of religions, continued to produce novels, stories, essays, and a travel book. Today, especially in Rumania and Germany, he is known primarily as a writer of fiction; and his popularity continues to grow as more and more of his works appear in translation.
During World War II Eliade served as cultural attaché to the Rumanian legations in London and Lisbon. After the war he elected to remain in exile in Paris where he could complete work on a number of manuscripts which had taken shape during the war years, notably Patterns in Comparative Religion and The Myth of the Eternal Return, both of which came to print in 1949. The years 1951 to 1955 saw the publication of several more volumes for which Eliade is well known: Shamanism, Images and Symbols, Yoga, The Forge and the Crucible, and The Forbidden Forest. Many regard the last title as his most important work of fiction.
Eliade travelled to the United States to deliver the 1956 Haskell Lectures at the University of Chicago, and a year later he was offered the post of professor and chairman of the History of Religions Department and professor in the Committee on Social Thought at the university. Almost 30 years later, he was professor emeritus at this same institution with the title Sewell Avery Distinguished Service Professor.
Eliade's scholarly output continued unabated. Volume I of A History of Religious Ideas appeared in 1974, and three of its four projected volumes had been published by 1985. A History of Religious Ideas marked something of a departure from his previous theoretical work. As in his sourcebook, From Primitives to Zen, Eliade presented the "creative moments" of the world's religious traditions in more or less chronological order, treating them in a way one might call more historical and less thematic. In addition to his scholarly writing, Eliade served as editor-in-chief of a massive encyclopedia of religion until his death in 1986.
While the differences between homo reliosus and non-religious people of the modern West are clear, Eliade argued that non-religion can be likened to the biblical "fall" of man. That is, just as the original "fall" produced forgetfulness of God and a "divided" consciousness, the second "fall" of modern times marked the further descent of religion into the depths of the unconscious—an explanation for, among other things, the importance modern people attach to dreams, the role of the unconscious in artistic creativity, and the persistence of initiatory and other religious patterns in literature. Eliade's theoretical work in the history of religions can thus be said to embrace even his own literary creations, so that the two together form a single oeuvre consistent with his visions of a "new humanism" in modern times.
Further Reading
Perhaps the best introduction to Mircea Eliade's life and thought is Ordeal by Labyrinth: Conversations with Claude-Heuri Rocquet, translated from the French by Derek Coltmann (1982). Readers desirous of knowing more about Eliade's fascinating career may also wish to consult his No Souvenirs: Journals 1957-1969 (1982) and Autobiography: Volume I, Journey East, Journey West 1907-1937 (1981).
Additional Sources
Eliade, Mircea, Exile's odyssey: 1937-1960, Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1988.
Eliade, Mircea, Autobiography, San Francisco: Harper & Row, 1981-1988; Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1990.
Ricketts, Mac Linscott, Mircea Eliade: the Romanian roots, 1907-1945, Boulder: East European Monographs; New York: Distributed by Columbia University Press, 1988. □
Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.
|
Zhu Zhu Pets[TM] Hamsters Invade the United States!
Business Wire; 9/1/2009; 700+ words
; ...Among Kids and the 2009 Toy of the Year! ST. LOUIS -- Zhu Zhu Pets[TM] hamsters have invaded the United States! From...launch in Phoenix, and remarkable focus group findings, Zhu Zhu Pets[TM] are expected to be the newest craze among...
|
|
Zhu Zhu Pets[TM] Hamsters Top Toys"R"Us Hot Holiday Toy List, FunFare's 2009 Holiday HOT DOZEN and Dr. Toy's Top High Tech Toys.
Business Wire; 9/30/2009; 700+ words
; ST. LOUIS -- Zhu Zhu Pets[TM] hamsters are officially one of the hot toys of 2009! Zhu Zhu Pets[TM] were recently included on some of the most influential toy lists of the holiday season. Toys"R"Us, a leading specialty toy retailer...
|
|
Zhu Rongji the man to watch in China.(Originated from Knight Ridder Newspapers)
Newspaper article from: Knight Ridder/Tribune News Service; 3/2/1998; ; 700+ words
; ...cutting off their easy loans. Opinions about Zhu Rongji run hot and cold, but everyone agrees...China. This week, the 69-year-old Zhu (joo rahng-jee), China's vice premier...training and a one-time state planner, Zhu has been China's top economic policymaker...
|
|
Zhu's Trip to U.S. Ends on Bright Note; Clinton Agrees to Resume WTO Talks
Newspaper article from: The Washington Post; 4/17/1999; ; 700+ words
; Premier Zhu Rongji's whirlwind trip through the United...Trade Organization. But just as important, Zhu's stops in Chicago, New York and Cambridge...agree to resume WTO talks later this month, Zhu will now be able to return to Beijing with...
|
|
Zhu returns from South Asia visit
Newspaper article from: China Daily; 1/19/2002; ; 676 words
; Premier Zhu Rongji arrived in Beijing yesterday from the...last leg of a five-day visit to India. Zhu's week-long South Asia tour, the country...understanding and trust between China and India." Zhu was the first Chinese premier to have visited...
|
|
Zhu Ready To Face Critics on U.S. Trip
Newspaper article from: The Washington Post; 4/5/1999; ; 700+ words
; ...Republican senator from Oregon, met Premier Zhu Rongji last Wednesday, the 71-year...rotten tomatoes and eggs. Smith encouraged Zhu to go anyway and confront his U.S. critics...few other Chinese leaders." On Tuesday, Zhu is scheduled to begin a controversial eight...
|
|
Zhu refutes allegations that scientist passed classified material to Beijing.
Newspaper article from: Knight Ridder/Tribune News Service; 3/15/1999; ; 700+ words
; BEIJING _ Chinese Premier Zhu Rongji on Monday dismissed as ``fallacy...the annual National People's Congress, Zhu became the most senior Chinese official...technology or military secrets from others?'' Zhu told a packed audience of Chinese and foreign...
|
|
Zhu: farmers a primary concern
Newspaper article from: China Daily; 3/16/2002; ; 700+ words
; Premier Zhu Rongji said yesterday that his biggest concern...resolved through agricultural restructuring. Zhu also said that China's goal of reaching...of the Ninth National People's Congress, Zhu reflected on the last four years since he...
|
|
Zhu Rongji, premier who propelled Chinese economy forward, bows out
News Wire article from: AP Worldstream; 3/6/2003; ; 700+ words
; ...the Communist Party ladder. To the last, Zhu Rongji _ who took office in 1998 with a...reputation for incorruptibility. On Wednesday, Zhu _ always flinty, rarely shy _ delivered...solidarity and rising international influence, Zhu said. He spoke proudly about economic achievements...
|
|
Zhu Zhu Pets™ Hamsters Invade the United States!
Newspaper article from: Pediatrics Week; 9/19/2009; 581 words
; Zhu Zhu Pets™ hamsters have invaded the United States! From baseball...successful test market launch in Phoenix, and remarkable focus group findings, Zhu Zhu Pets™ are expected to be the newest craze among kids...
|
|
Zhu De
Book article from: World Encyclopedia
Zhu De (1886–1976) Chinese communist military leader. Zhu helped to overthrow (1912) the Manchu dynasty. In...Enlai and joined the Chinese Communist Party. In 1928, Zhu joined forces with Mao Zedong , and led his section of...
|
|
Zhu Rongji
Book article from: A Dictionary of Contemporary World History
Zhu Rongji (b. 20 Oct. 1928), Premier of the People's Republic of China, 1998– Born in Changsha, Hunan...
|
|
San-Speaking Peoples
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of World Cultures
...Ko õ (!Xo õ ); !Xu; Zhu I õ asi (!Kung) Orientation Identification...widely known are those who call themselves "Zhu I õ asi" (!Kung or Juwasi in...ethnographic literature. Location. The Zhu I õ asi live in the semiarid savdveld...
|
|
WebEx Communications, Inc.
Book article from: International Directory of Company Histories
...California in 1995 by Subrah Iyar and Min Zhu. India-born Iyar had immigrated to the...Corporation's Internet business division. Zhu had grown up in Communist China and come...purchased by Quarterdeck for $13 million, and Zhu and Iyar went into business together under...
|
|
Pre-1600: World Events: Selected Occurrences Outside North America
Book article from: American Eras
...Outside North America China — Ming Hong Zhi, born Zhu You-Tang (1488 – 1505), Ming Zheng De, born Zhu Hou-Zhao (1506 – 1521), Ming Jia Jing, born Zhu Hou-Cong (1522 – 1566), Ming Long Qing, born...
|