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Loading... A Blue Fire (edition 1997)by James Hillman (Author)
Work InformationA Blue Fire by James Hillman
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. Disappointed. I encountered a reference to this book which implied that it contained a reprint of Hillman's essay "Pan and the Nightmare", which I wanted to read. However it contains only a few brief snippets from it, totalling no more than 2 pages. The 'excerpts' format of this book makes it more a 'Portait of Hillman by Thomas Moore' than an effective anthology of Hillman's writings. I arrived at this book long after reading, "The Soul's Code", which is a book I much admire. Unfortunately, this book didn't hold up. It's a collection of Hillman's essays, and perhaps the format of short essay doesn't permit for the development ideas as did "The Soul's Code." I found the reading somewhat pompous, difficult to track and in sections downright self-indulgent and obtuse. I'm sure there are words of wisdom buried in there, but they sure are buried. Consider, for example, this opening sentence: "The blue transit between black and white is like that sadness which emerges from despair as it proceeds toward reflection." What? Never mind that it's grammatically incorrect. And then, further on the blue theme: "It is the blue which deepens the idea of reflection beyond the single notion of mirroring, to the further notions of pondering, considering, meditating." I swear I feel like I should be high to figure that out, and I can't help wondering if he was high when he wrote it. There's an awful lot of that. Far too much for me. I tell my students that no amount of 'mouth feel' in prose will rescue it from a lack of clarity. I rest my case. I will return to Viktor Frankl, to Martin Buber. no reviews | add a review
We are extremely proud to offer this third and final part of the audio series A Blue Fire from a timeless workshop recorded years ago with the late, great James Hillman. You can also get the complete series which includes all three parts here at a discount. James Hillman's A Blue Fire burns through the entire range of his life's work in this lecture. Recorded during a seminar weekend in Rowe, Massachusetts, this talk is a conflagration of ideas. The result is Hillman revisions himself, his work, and archetypal psychology. Hillman reads from and reflects on his life's work. No library descriptions found. |
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)150.1954Philosophy & psychology Psychology Psychology Theory And Instruction Systems, schools, viewpoints Psychoanalytic systems Jungian systemLC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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Although Hillman does have a book by this title, this recording is a series of talks and discussion recorded at Rowe Retreat Center in Western Massachusetts back in 1990 (focused on the themes of the book).
Having been a student of Bill Plotkin and David Abram, I'm quite struck by the ways I can hear Hillman speaking through them. I'll begin by looking at the concept of imaging.
Carol Sanford spoke a lot about the importance of imaging; “always work in specific situations and experiences from your life, never in the generic!” Only after her death in listening to Hillman am I realizing that the term has a Greek lineage. Imaging is the practice of sitting with a somatic understanding of something rather than allowing ourselves to collapse into what something “means,” or other rational mental models (a right-hemisphere understand as opposed to left hemisphere). For example, in speaking about dreams, Hillman speaks about the importance of letting the image work on you rather than trying to move right into interpretation; experience as doorway. Images are infinitely-dimensional; the longer you sit with them, the more you get out of them.
As a series of talks, Hillman does bounce around a lot. He speaks about the three faces of Eros (I would describe them as carnal, unitive, and insatiable). He speaks about Eros' arrow prying open our wounded places.
There are some novel moments, such as when he speaks about ceilings, and the way in which they initially were designed both for the protection from certain energies while concentrating others (as in the canopy above a king or queen).
Hillman feels that the fundamental fallacy of the Western World is the belief in the individual. This is something to sit with.
If you're a fan of Jung and an animist, you'll love this recording!
A word of warning to those considering getting into other Hillman material: I've been advised to stay away from Hillman's best-known work—"The Soul's Code." ( )