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Joseph Campbell (1904-1987) was one of the foremost interpreters of myth in our time. He was a prolific writer, dedicated editor, inspiring lecturer, and an avid scholar of art, culture, religion, and philosophy.
Joseph Campbell's yearlong journey to Asia in 1954-1955 was a turning point in his life. After ten years' work on Indian art and philosophy, he made a long-postponed journey to the East. Baksheesh and Brahman is his journal of six months of disillusionment and revelation in India and a superb illustration of his working method.
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Subjects
Travel, Description and travel, Diaries, History, Biografias, CHR 1995, PRO Gotham Book Mart (former owner) (Gotham Book Mart Collection copy), Mitologia, Campbell, joseph, 1904-1987, India, description and travel, India, history, 1947-, Campbell, Joseph, 1904-1987 -- Travel -- India, Campbell, Joseph, 1904-1987 -- Diaries, India -- Description and travel, India -- History -- 1947-People
Joseph Campbell (1904-)Places
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1947-Showing 2 featured editions. View all 2 editions?
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1
Baksheesh & Brahman: Asian journals, India
2002, New World Library, 2002., New World Library
in English
- 1st ed.
1577312376 9781577312376
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2
Baksheesh and Brahman: Indian journal, 1954-1955
1995, HarperCollins
in English
- 1st ed.
0060168897 9780060168896
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Book Details
Edition Notes
Includes bibliographical references (p. [282]-286) and index.
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Work Description
"Joseph Campbell was one of the foremost interpreters of myth in our time. Yet when he traveled to Asia for the first time he was nearly fifty and at the crossroads of his life and career. This journal of those transformative six months in India - along with its companion volume, Sake & Satori, detailing his time in Japan and East Asia - are as close as Campbell ever came to writing an autobiography.".
"After ten years' intense study of Indian art and philosophy, Joseph Campbell embarked on this long-postponed journey. Searching for the transcendent (brahman) - the exotic mystery of the India in his books - he found instead stark realities: growing nationalism, cultural and religious rivalry, poverty, the impact of foreign aid, and a prevalent culture of what he called "baksheesh," or alms.
This carefully kept journal chronicles the disillusionment and revelation that would change the course of his life and studies. It is at once a diary of his adventures, a forum in which he develops his revolutionary ideas and clarifies his future pursuits, and a record of his insightful discussions of art, philosophy, and transcendent realities with Indians from every level of society.".
"Balancing Campbell's penetrating discussions of mythology and history are his often-amusing observations of an alien culture and his fellow Western travelers. The text is enhanced by more than sixty personal photographs, specially commissioned maps, and illustrations redrawn from Campbell's own hand.
Baksheesh & Brahman illustrates Campbell's working method and grants an illuminating look at the thoughts and experiences of an incredible mind, as well as a revealing portrait of the roiling Indian subcontinent of fifty years ago."--BOOK JACKET.
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