Bültmann & Gerriets
Crazy Hope and Finite Experience
Final Essays of Paul Goodman
von Taylor Stoehr
Verlag: Taylor & Francis
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Kopierschutz: Adobe DRM


Speicherplatz: 2 MB
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ISBN: 978-1-134-89810-7
Erschienen am 13.05.2013
Sprache: Englisch
Umfang: 156 Seiten

Preis: 51,49 €

51,49 €
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Biografische Anmerkung
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Klappentext

Taylor Stoehr, Ph.D., Professor of English at the University of Massachusetts in Boston, is Paul Goodman's literary executor and biographer. In addition to editing over a dozen volumes of Goodman's work, he has written five books and numerous articles on literary figures such as Dickens, Hawthorne, Lawrence, and Thoreau, as well as cultural studies on utopian communities and other "countercultural" experiments of ninteenth-century America.



Within My Horizon. Politics Within Limits. Beyond My Horizon-Words. Being Queer. Apology for Literature.



From the publication of Growing Up Absurd in 1960 until his death in 1972, Paul Goodman had the ear of the young radicals of the New Left, pouring forth books and articles on education, technology, decentralization, and of course, the war in Vietnam. Yet Goodman saw himself primarily as an artist rather than a political thinker or sociologist, and many of his books, even during the 1960s, were works of poetry, drama, and fiction. He had also practiced as a psychotherapist and joined with Frederick Perls and Ralph Hefferkine in producing a new synthesis in psychological thought, Gestalt therapy, which has since become an international movement. In an age of specialization, few writers have taken on so braod a range of concerns.Crazy Hope and Finite Experience is the final summing up of the thought and life of a self-described "e;old-fashioned man of letters."e; This book brings together for the first time five personal essays, all written near the end of his life, in which Goodman discusses his sense of the world and how he was "e;in"e; it, his politics, his spiritual and religious attitude, his sexuality, and his calling as a literary artist. For those already familiar with one or another aspect of his work, Goodman's self-assessment will provide new insight into the credo that underlies his whole career. For those learning about him for the first time, it offers a vivid sense of the man and his perspective. And for psychotherapists - especially Gestalt therapists - the book will fill in the picture of Goodman as a theorist whose work was crucial to the development of a new approach to therapy.