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Mircea Eliade

Mircea Eliade (Romanian: [ˈmirtʃe̯a eliˈade]; March 13 [O.S. February 28] 1907 – April 22, 1986) was a Romanian historian of religion, fiction writer, philosopher, and professor at the University of Chicago. One of the most influential scholars of religion of the 20th century[1] and interpreter of religious experience, he established paradigms in religious studies that persist to this day. His theory that hierophanies form the basis of religion, splitting the human experience of reality into sacred and profane space and time, has proved influential.[2] One of his most instrumental contributions to religious studies was his theory of eternal return, which holds that myths and rituals do not simply commemorate hierophanies, but (at least in the minds of the religious) actually participate in them.[2]

Mircea Eliade
Eliade in 1933
Born(1907-03-13)March 13, 1907
Bucharest, Kingdom of Romania
DiedApril 22, 1986(1986-04-22) (aged 79)
Chicago, Illinois, United States
Resting placeOak Woods Cemetery
OccupationHistorian, philosopher, short-story writer, journalist, essayist, novelist
Language
NationalityRomanian
CitizenshipRomania
United States
Education
Period1921–1986
GenreFantasy, autobiography, travel literature
SubjectHistory of religion, philosophy of religion, cultural history, political history
Literary movementModernism
Criterion
Trăirism
ParentsGheorghe Eliade
Jeana née Vasilescu

Eliade's literary works belong to the fantastic and autobiographical genres. The best known are the novels Maitreyi ('La Nuit Bengali' or 'Bengal Nights', 1933), Noaptea de Sânziene ('The Forbidden Forest', 1955), Isabel și apele diavolului ('Isabel and the Devil's Waters'), and Romanul Adolescentului Miop ('Novel of the Nearsighted Adolescent', 1989); the novellas Domnișoara Christina ('Miss Christina', 1936) and Tinerețe fără tinerețe ('Youth Without Youth', 1976); and the short stories Secretul doctorului Honigberger ('The Secret of Dr. Honigberger', 1940) and La Țigănci ('With the Gypsy Girls', 1963).

Early in his life, Eliade was a journalist and essayist, a disciple of Romanian philosopher and journalist Nae Ionescu, and a member of the literary society Criterion. In the 1940s, he served as cultural attaché of the Kingdom of Romania to the United Kingdom and Portugal. Several times during the late 1930s, Eliade publicly expressed his support for the Iron Guard, a Romanian Christian fascist terrorist[3] organization. His involvement with fascism at the time, as well as his other far-right connections, came under frequent criticism after World War II.

Noted for his vast erudition, Eliade had fluent command of five languages (Romanian, French, German, Italian, and English) and a reading knowledge of three others (Hebrew, Persian, and Sanskrit). In 1990 he was elected a posthumous member of the Romanian Academy.

Biography edit

Childhood edit

Born in Bucharest, he was the son of Romanian Land Forces officer Gheorghe Eliade (whose original surname was Ieremia)[4][5] and Jeana née Vasilescu.[6] An Orthodox believer, Gheorghe Eliade registered his son's birth four days before the actual date, to coincide with the liturgical calendar feast of the Forty Martyrs of Sebaste.[5] Mircea Eliade had a sister, Corina, the mother of semiologist Sorin Alexandrescu.[7][8] His family moved between Tecuci and Bucharest, ultimately settling in the capital in 1914,[4] and purchasing a house on Melodiei Street, near Piața Rosetti, where Mircea Eliade resided until late in his teens.[8]

Eliade kept a particularly fond memory of his childhood and, later in life, wrote about the impact various unusual episodes and encounters had on his mind. In one instance during the World War I Romanian Campaign, when Eliade was about ten years of age, he witnessed the bombing of Bucharest by German zeppelins and the patriotic fervor in the occupied capital at news that Romania was able to stop the Central Powers' advance into Moldavia.[9]

He described this stage in his life as marked by an unrepeatable epiphany.[10][11] Recalling his entrance into a drawing room that an "eerie iridescent light" had turned into "a fairy-tale palace", he wrote,

I practiced for many years [the] exercise of recapturing that epiphanic moment, and I would always find again the same plenitude. I would slip into it as into a fragment of time devoid of duration—without beginning, middle, or end. During my last years of lycée, when I struggled with profound attacks of melancholy, I still succeeded at times in returning to the golden green light of that afternoon. [...] But even though the beatitude was the same, it was now impossible to bear because it aggravated my sadness too much. By this time I knew the world to which the drawing room belonged [...] was a world forever lost.[12]

Robert Ellwood, a professor of religion who did his graduate studies under Mircea Eliade,[13] saw this type of nostalgia as one of the most characteristic themes in Eliade's life and academic writings.[11]

Adolescence and literary debut edit

After completing his primary education at the school on Mântuleasa Street,[4] Eliade attended the Spiru Haret National College in the same class as Arșavir Acterian, Haig Acterian, and Petre Viforeanu (and several years the senior of Nicolae Steinhardt, who eventually became a close friend of Eliade's).[14] Among his other colleagues was future philosopher Constantin Noica[5] and Noica's friend, future art historian Barbu Brezianu.[15]

As a child, Eliade was fascinated with the natural world, which formed the setting of his very first literary attempts,[5] as well as with Romanian folklore and the Christian faith as expressed by peasants.[8] Growing up, he aimed to find and record what he believed was the common source of all religious traditions.[8] The young Eliade's interest in physical exercise and adventure led him to pursue mountaineering and sailing,[8] and he also joined the Romanian Boy Scouts.[16]

With a group of friends, he designed and sailed a boat on the Danube, from Tulcea to the Black Sea.[17] In parallel, Eliade grew estranged from the educational environment, becoming disenchanted with the discipline required and obsessed with the idea that he was uglier and less virile than his colleagues.[5] In order to cultivate his willpower, he would force himself to swallow insects[5] and only slept four to five hours a night.[9] At one point, Eliade was failing four subjects, among which was the study of the Romanian language.[5]

Instead, he became interested in natural science and chemistry, as well as the occult,[5] and wrote short pieces on entomological subjects.[9] Despite his father's concern that he was in danger of losing his already weak eyesight, Eliade read passionately.[5] One of his favorite authors was Honoré de Balzac, whose work he studied carefully.[5][9] Eliade also became acquainted with the modernist short stories of Giovanni Papini and social anthropology studies by James George Frazer.[9]

His interest in the two writers led him to learn Italian and English in private, and he also began studying Persian and Hebrew.[4][9] At the time, Eliade became acquainted with Saadi's poems and the ancient Mesopotamian Epic of Gilgamesh.[9] He was also interested in philosophy—studying, among others, Socrates, Vasile Conta, and the Stoics Marcus Aurelius and Epictetus, and read works of history—the two Romanian historians who influenced him from early on were Bogdan Petriceicu Hasdeu and Nicolae Iorga.[9] His first published work was the 1921 Inamicul viermelui de mătase ("The Silkworm's Enemy"),[4] followed by Cum am găsit piatra filosofală ("How I Found the Philosophers' Stone").[9] Four years later, Eliade completed work on his debut volume, the autobiographical Novel of the Nearsighted Adolescent.[9]

University studies and Indian sojourn edit

Between 1925 and 1928, he attended the University of Bucharest's Faculty of Philosophy and Letters in 1928, earning his diploma with a study on Early Modern Italian philosopher Tommaso Campanella.[4] In 1927, Eliade traveled to Italy, where he met Papini[4] and collaborated with the scholar Giuseppe Tucci.

It was during his student years that Eliade met Nae Ionescu, who lectured in Logic, becoming one of his disciples and friends.[5][8][18] He was especially attracted to Ionescu's radical ideas and his interest in religion, which signified a break with the rationalist tradition represented by senior academics such as Constantin Rădulescu-Motru, Dimitrie Gusti, and Tudor Vianu (all of whom owed inspiration to the defunct literary society Junimea, albeit in varying degrees).[5]

Eliade's scholarly works began after a long period of study in British 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, which was later doubled by a Romanian scholarship.[19] In autumn 1928, he sailed for Calcutta to study Sanskrit and philosophy under Surendranath Dasgupta, a Bengali Cambridge alumnus and professor at Calcutta University, the author of a five volume History of Indian Philosophy. Before reaching the Indian subcontinent, Eliade also made a brief visit to Egypt.[4] Once in India, he visited large areas of the region, and spent a short period at a Himalayan ashram.[20]

He studied the basics of Indian philosophy, and, in parallel, learned Sanskrit, Pali and Bengali under Dasgupta's direction.[19] At the time, he also became interested in the actions of Mahatma Gandhi and the Satyagraha as a phenomenon; later, Eliade adapted Gandhian ideas in his discourse on spirituality and Romania.

In 1930, while living with Dasgupta, Eliade fell in love with his host's daughter, Maitreyi Devi, later writing a barely disguised autobiographical novel Maitreyi (also known as "La Nuit Bengali" or "Bengal Nights"), in which he claimed that he carried on a physical relationship with her.[21]

Eliade received his PhD in 1933, with a thesis on Yoga practices.[5][8][22][23] The book, which was translated into French three years later,[19] had significant impact in academia, both in Romania and abroad.[8]

He later recalled that the book was an early step for understanding not just Indian religious practices, but also Romanian spirituality.[24] During the same period, Eliade began a correspondence with the Ceylonese-born philosopher Ananda Coomaraswamy.[25] In 1936–1937, he functioned as honorary assistant for Ionescu's course, lecturing in Metaphysics.[26]

In 1933, Mircea Eliade had a physical relationship with the actress Sorana Țopa, while falling in love with Nina Mareș, whom he ultimately married.[7][8][27] The latter, introduced to him by his new friend Mihail Sebastian, already had a daughter, Giza, from a man who had divorced her.[8] Eliade subsequently adopted Giza,[28] and the three of them moved to an apartment at 141 Dacia Boulevard.[8] He left his residence in 1936, during a trip he made to the United Kingdom and Germany, when he first visited London, Oxford and Berlin.[4]

Criterion and Cuvântul edit

 
Eliade's home in Bucharest (1934–1940)

After contributing various and generally polemical pieces in university magazines, Eliade came to the attention of journalist Pamfil Șeicaru, who invited him to collaborate on the nationalist paper Cuvântul, which was noted for its harsh tones.[5] By then, Cuvântul was also hosting articles by Nae Ionescu.[5]

As one of the figures in the Criterion literary society (1933–1934), Eliade's initial encounter with the traditional far right was polemical: the group's conferences were stormed by members of A. C. Cuza's National-Christian Defense League, who objected to what they viewed as pacifism and addressed antisemitic insults to several speakers, including Sebastian;[29][30] in 1933, he was among the signers of a manifesto opposing Nazi Germany's state-enforced racism.[31]

In 1934, at a time when Sebastian was publicly insulted by Nae Ionescu, who prefaced his book (De două mii de ani...) with thoughts on the "eternal damnation" of Jews, Mircea Eliade spoke out against this perspective, and commented that Ionescu's references to the verdict "Outside the Church there is no salvation" contradicted the notion of God's omnipotence.[32][33] However, he contended that Ionescu's text was not evidence of antisemitism.[34]

In 1936, reflecting on the early history of the Romanian Kingdom and its Jewish community, he deplored the expulsion of Jewish scholars from Romania, making specific references to Moses Gaster, Heimann Hariton Tiktin and Lazăr Șăineanu.[35] Eliade's views at the time focused on innovation—in the summer of 1933, he replied to an anti-modernist critique written by George Călinescu:

All I wish for is a deep change, a complete transformation. But, for God's sake, in any direction other than spirituality.[36]

He and friends Emil Cioran and Constantin Noica were by then under the influence of Trăirism, a school of thought that was formed around the ideals expressed by Ionescu. A form of existentialism, Trăirism was also the synthesis of traditional and newer right-wing beliefs.[37] Early on, a public polemic was sparked between Eliade and Camil Petrescu: the two eventually reconciled and later became good friends.[28]

Like Mihail Sebastian, who was himself becoming influenced by Ionescu, he maintained contacts with intellectuals from all sides of the political spectrum: their entourage included the right-wing Dan Botta and Mircea Vulcănescu, the non-political Petrescu and Ionel Jianu, and Belu Zilber, who was a member of the illegal Romanian Communist Party.[38]

The group also included Haig Acterian, Mihail Polihroniade, Petru Comarnescu, Marietta Sadova and Floria Capsali.[32]

He was also close to Marcel Avramescu, a former Surrealist writer whom he introduced to the works of René Guénon.[39] A doctor in the Kabbalah and future Romanian Orthodox cleric, Avramescu joined Eliade in editing the short-lived esoteric magazine Memra (the only one of its kind in Romania).[40]

Among the intellectuals who attended his lectures were Mihai Şora (whom he deemed his favorite student), Eugen Schileru and Miron Constantinescu—known later as, respectively, a philosopher, an art critic, and a sociologist and political figure of the communist regime.[28] Mariana Klein, who became Șora's wife, was one of Eliade's female students, and later authored works on his scholarship.[28]

Eliade later recounted that he had himself enlisted Zilber as a Cuvântul contributor, in order for him to provide a Marxist perspective on the issues discussed by the journal.[38] Their relation soured in 1935, when the latter publicly accused Eliade of serving as an agent for the secret police, Siguranța Statului (Sebastian answered to the statement by alleging that Zilber was himself a secret agent, and the latter eventually retracted his claim).[38]

1930s political transition edit

Eliade's articles before and after his adherence to the principles of the Iron Guard (or, as it was usually known at the time, the Legionary Movement), beginning with his Itinerar spiritual ("Spiritual Itinerary", serialized in Cuvântul in 1927), center on several political ideals advocated by the far right.

They displayed his rejection of liberalism and the modernizing goals of the 1848 Wallachian revolution (perceived as "an abstract apology of Mankind"[41] and "ape-like imitation of [Western] Europe"),[42] as well as for democracy itself (accusing it of "managing to crush all attempts at national renaissance",[43] and later praising Benito Mussolini's Fascist Italy on the grounds that, according to Eliade, "[in Italy,] he who thinks for himself is promoted to the highest office in the shortest of times").[43] He approved of an ethnic nationalist state centered on the Orthodox Church (in 1927, despite his still-vivid interest in Theosophy, he recommended young intellectuals "the return to the Church"),[44] which he opposed to, among others, the secular nationalism of Constantin Rădulescu-Motru;[45] referring to this particular ideal as "Romanianism", Eliade was, in 1934, still viewing it as "neither fascism, nor chauvinism".[46]

Eliade was especially dissatisfied with the incidence of unemployment among intellectuals, whose careers in state-financed institutions had been rendered uncertain by the Great Depression.[47]

In 1936, Eliade was the focus of a campaign in the far right press, being targeted for having authored "pornography" in his Domnișoara Christina and Isabel și apele diavolului; similar accusations were aimed at other cultural figures, including Tudor Arghezi and Geo Bogza.[48] Assessments of Eliade's work were in sharp contrast to one another: also in 1936, Eliade accepted an award from the Romanian Writers' Society, of which he had been a member since 1934.[49] In summer 1937, through an official decision which came as a result of the accusations, and despite student protests, he was stripped of his position at the university.[50]

Eliade decided to sue the Ministry of Education, asking for a symbolic compensation of 1 leu.[51] He won the trial, and regained his position as Nae Ionescu's assistant.[51]

Nevertheless, by 1937, he gave his intellectual support to the Iron Guard, in which he saw "a Christian revolution aimed at creating a new Romania",[52] and a group able "to reconcile Romania with God".[52] His articles of the time, published in Iron Guard-affiliated papers such as Sfarmă-Piatră and Buna Vestire, contain ample praises of the movement's leaders (Corneliu Zelea Codreanu, Ion Moța, Vasile Marin, and Gheorghe Cantacuzino-Grănicerul).[53][54] The transition he went through was similar to that of his fellow generation members and close collaborators—among the notable exceptions to this rule were Petru Comarnescu, sociologist Henri H. Stahl and future dramatist Eugène Ionesco, as well as Sebastian.[55]

He eventually enrolled in the Totul pentru Țară ("Everything for the Fatherland" Party), the political expression of the Iron Guard,[5][56] and contributed to its 1937 electoral campaign in Prahova County—as indicated by his inclusion on a list of party members with county-level responsibilities (published in Buna Vestire).[56]

Internment and diplomatic service edit

The stance taken by Eliade resulted in his arrest on July 14, 1938, after a crackdown on the Iron Guard authorized by King Carol II. At the time of his arrest, he had just interrupted a column on Provincia și legionarismul ("The Province and Legionary Ideology") in Vremea, having been singled out by Prime Minister Armand Călinescu as an author of Iron Guard propaganda.[57]

Eliade was kept for three weeks in a cell at the Siguranța Statului Headquarters, in an attempt to have him sign a "declaration of dissociation" with the Iron Guard, but he refused to do so.[58] In the first week of August he was transferred to a makeshift camp at Miercurea-Ciuc. When Eliade began coughing blood in October 1938, he was taken to a clinic in Moroeni.[58] Eliade was simply released on November 12, and subsequently spent his time writing his play Iphigenia (also known as Ifigenia).[32] In April 1940, with the help of Alexandru Rosetti, he became Cultural Attaché to the United Kingdom, a posting cut short when Romanian-British foreign relations were broken.[58]

After leaving London he was assigned the office of Counsel and Press Officer (later Cultural Attaché) to the Romanian Embassy in Portugal,[27][59][60][61] where he was kept on as diplomat by the National Legionary State (the Iron Guard government) and, ultimately, by Ion Antonescu's regime. His office involved disseminating propaganda in favor of the Romanian state.[27] In 1941, during his time in Portugal, Eliade stayed in Estoril, at the Hotel Palácio. He would later find a house in Cascais, at Rua da Saudade.[62][63]

In February 1941, weeks after the bloody Legionary Rebellion was crushed by Antonescu, Iphigenia was staged by the National Theater Bucharest—the play soon raised concerns that it owed inspiration to the Iron Guard's ideology, and even that its inclusion in the program was a Legionary attempt at subversion.[32]

In 1942, Eliade authored a volume in praise of the Estado Novo, established in Portugal by António de Oliveira Salazar,[61][64][65] claiming that "The Salazarian state, a Christian and totalitarian one, is first and foremost based on love".[64] On July 7 of the same year, he was received by Salazar himself, who assigned Eliade the task of warning Antonescu to withdraw the Romanian Army from the Eastern Front ("[In his place], I would not be grinding it in Russia").[66] Eliade also claimed that such contacts with the leader of a neutral country had made him the target for Gestapo surveillance, but that he had managed to communicate Salazar's advice to Mihai Antonescu, Romania's Foreign Minister.[66]

In autumn 1943, he traveled to occupied France, where he rejoined Emil Cioran, also meeting with scholar Georges Dumézil and the collaborationist writer Paul Morand.[27] At the same time, he applied for a position of lecturer at the University of Bucharest, but withdrew from the race, leaving Constantin Noica and Ion Zamfirescu to dispute the position, in front of a panel of academics comprising Lucian Blaga and Dimitrie Gusti (Zamfirescu's eventual selection, going against Blaga's recommendation, was to be the topic of a controversy).[67] In his private notes, Eliade wrote that he took no further interest in the office, because his visits abroad had convinced him that he had "something great to say", and that he could not function within the confines of "a minor culture".[27] Also during the war, Eliade traveled to Berlin, where he met and conversed with controversial political theorist Carl Schmitt,[8][27] and frequently visited Francoist Spain, where he notably attended the 1944 Lusitano-Spanish scientific congress in Córdoba.[27][68][69] It was during his trips to Spain that Eliade met philosophers José Ortega y Gasset and Eugenio d'Ors. He maintained a friendship with d'Ors, and met him again on several occasions after the war.[68]

Nina Eliade fell ill with uterine cancer and died during their stay in Lisbon, in late 1944. As the widower later wrote, the disease was probably caused by an abortion procedure she had undergone at an early stage of their relationship.[27] He came to suffer from clinical depression, which increased as Romania and her Axis allies suffered major defeats on the Eastern Front.[27][69] Contemplating a return to Romania as a soldier or a monk,[27] he was on a continuous search for effective antidepressants, medicating himself with passion flower extract, and, eventually, with methamphetamine.[69] This was probably not his first experience with drugs: vague mentions in his notebooks have been read as indication that Mircea Eliade was taking opium during his travels to Calcutta.[69] Later, discussing the works of Aldous Huxley, Eliade wrote that the British author's use of mescaline as a source of inspiration had something in common with his own experience, indicating 1945 as a date of reference and adding that it was "needless to explain why that is".[69]

Early exile edit

At signs that the Romanian communist regime was about to take hold, Eliade opted not to return to the country. On September 16, 1945, he moved to France with his adopted daughter Giza.[4][27] Once there, he resumed contacts with Dumézil, who helped him recover his position in academia.[8] On Dumézil's recommendation, he taught at the École Pratique des Hautes Études in Paris.[28] It was estimated that, at the time, it was not uncommon for him to work 15 hours a day.[23] Eliade married a second time, to the Romanian exile Christinel Cotescu.[8][70] His second wife, the descendant of boyars, was the sister-in-law of the conductor Ionel Perlea.[70]

Together with Emil Cioran and other Romanian expatriates, Eliade rallied with the former diplomat Alexandru Busuioceanu, helping him publicize anti-communist opinion to the Western European public.[71] He was also briefly involved in publishing a Romanian-language magazine, titled Luceafărul ("The Morning Star"),[71] and was again in contact with Mihai Șora, who had been granted a scholarship to study in France, and with Șora's wife Mariana.[28] In 1947, he was facing material constraints, and Ananda Coomaraswamy found him a job as a French-language teacher in the United States, at a school in Arizona; the arrangement ended upon Coomaraswamy's death in September.[25]

Beginning in 1948, he wrote for the journal Critique, edited by French philosopher Georges Bataille.[4] The following year, he went on a visit to Italy, where he wrote the first 300 pages of his novel Noaptea de Sânziene (he visited the country a third time in 1952).[4] He collaborated with Carl Jung and the Eranos circle after Henry Corbin recommended him in 1949,[25] and wrote for the Antaios magazine (edited by Ernst Jünger).[23] In 1950, Eliade began attending Eranos conferences, meeting Jung, Olga Fröbe-Kapteyn, Gershom Scholem and Paul Radin.[72] He described Eranos as "one of the most creative cultural experiences of the modern Western world."[73]

In October 1956, he moved to the United States, settling in Chicago the following year.[4][8] He had been invited by Joachim Wach to give a series of lectures at Wach's home institution, the University of Chicago.[73] Eliade and Wach are generally admitted to be the founders of the "Chicago school" that basically defined the study of religions for the second half of the 20th century.[74] Upon Wach's death before the lectures were delivered, Eliade was appointed as his successor, becoming, in 1964, the Sewell Avery Distinguished Service Professor of the History of Religions.[4] Beginning in 1954, with the first edition of his volume on Eternal Return, Eliade also enjoyed commercial success: the book went through several editions under different titles, and sold over 100,000 copies.[75]

In 1966, Mircea Eliade became a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.[4] He also worked as editor-in-chief of Macmillan Publishers' Encyclopedia of Religion, and, in 1968, lectured in religious history at the University of California, Santa Barbara.[76] It was also during that period that Mircea Eliade completed his voluminous and influential History of Religious Ideas, which grouped together the overviews of his main original interpretations of religious history.[8] He occasionally traveled out of the United States, attending the Congress for the History of Religions in Marburg (1960), and visiting Sweden and Norway in 1970.[4]

Final years and death edit

Initially, Eliade was attacked with virulence by the Romanian Communist Party press, chiefly by România Liberă—which described him as "the Iron Guard's ideologue, enemy of the working class, apologist of Salazar's dictatorship".[77] However, the regime also made secretive attempts to enlist his and Cioran's support: Haig Acterian's widow, theater director Marietta Sadova, was sent to Paris in order to re-establish contacts with the two.[78] Although the move was planned by Romanian officials, her encounters were to be used as evidence incriminating her at a February 1960 trial for treason (where Constantin Noica and Dinu Pillat were the main defendants).[78] Romania's secret police, the Securitate, also portrayed Eliade as a spy for the British Secret Intelligence Service and a former agent of the Gestapo.[79]

He was slowly rehabilitated at home beginning in the early 1960s, under the rule of Gheorghe Gheorghiu-Dej.[80] In the 1970s, Eliade was approached by the Nicolae Ceaușescu regime in several ways, in order to have him return.[8] The move was prompted by the officially sanctioned nationalism and Romania's claim to independence from the Eastern Bloc, as both phenomena came to see Eliade's prestige as an asset. An unprecedented event occurred with the interview that was granted by Mircea Eliade to poet Adrian Păunescu, during the latter's 1970 visit to Chicago; Eliade complimented both Păunescu's activism and his support for official tenets, expressing a belief that

the youth of Eastern Europe is clearly superior to that of Western Europe. [...] I am convinced that, within ten years, the young revolutionary generation shan't be behaving as does today the noisy minority of Western contesters. [...] Eastern youth have seen the abolition of traditional institutions, have accepted it [...] and are not yet content with the structures enforced, but rather seek to improve them.[81]

Păunescu's visit to Chicago was followed by those of the nationalist official writer Eugen Barbu and by Eliade's friend Constantin Noica (who had since been released from jail).[54] At the time, Eliade contemplated returning to Romania, but was eventually persuaded by fellow Romanian intellectuals in exile (including Radio Free Europe's Virgil Ierunca and Monica Lovinescu) to reject Communist proposals.[54] In 1977, he joined other exiled Romanian intellectuals in signing a telegram protesting the repressive measures newly enforced by the Ceaușescu regime.[5] Writing in 2007, Romanian anthropologist Andrei Oișteanu recounted how, around 1984, the Securitate unsuccessfully attempted to become an agent of influence in Eliade's Chicago circle.[82]

During his later years, Eliade's past was progressively exposed publicly, the stress of which probably contributed to the decline of his health.[5] By then, his writing career was hampered by severe arthritis.[28] The last academic honors bestowed upon him were the French Academy's Bordin Prize (1977) and the title of Doctor Honoris Causa, granted by George Washington University (1985).[4][83]

 
Eliade's grave at Oak Woods Cemetery

Mircea Eliade died at the Bernard Mitchell Hospital in April 1986. Eight days previously, he suffered a stroke while reading Emil Cioran's Exercises of Admiration, and had subsequently lost his speech function.[10] Four months before, a fire had destroyed part of his office at the Meadville Lombard Theological School (an event which he had interpreted as an omen).[5][10] Eliade's Romanian disciple Ioan Petru Culianu, who recalled the scientific community's reaction to the news, described Eliade's death as "a mahaparanirvana", thus comparing it to the passing of Gautama Buddha.[10] His body was cremated in Chicago, and the funeral ceremony was held on University grounds, at the Rockefeller Chapel.[4][10] It was attended by 1,200 people, and included a public reading of Eliade's text in which he recalled the epiphany of his childhood—the lecture was given by novelist Saul Bellow, Eliade's colleague at the university.[10] His student and the bearer of his legacy, Charles H. Long, co-founder of the History of Religions at the University of Chicago Divinity School, gave the eulogy.[84] His grave is located in Oak Woods Cemetery.[85]

Work edit

The general nature of religion edit

In his work on the history of religion, Eliade is most highly regarded for his writings on Alchemy,[86] Shamanism, Yoga and what he called the eternal return—the implicit belief, supposedly present in religious thought in general, that religious behavior is not only an imitation of, but also a participation in, sacred events, and thus restores the mythical time of origins. Eliade's thinking was in part influenced by Rudolf Otto, Gerardus van der Leeuw, Nae Ionescu and the writings of the Traditionalist School (René Guénon and Julius Evola).[39] For instance, Eliade's The Sacred and the Profane partially builds on Otto's The Idea of the Holy to show how religion emerges from the experience of the sacred, and myths of time and nature.

Eliade is known for his attempt to find broad, cross-cultural parallels and unities in religion, particularly in myths. Wendy Doniger, Eliade's colleague from 1978 until his death, has observed that "Eliade argued boldly for universals where he might more safely have argued for widely prevalent patterns."[87] His Treatise on the History of Religions was praised by French philologist Georges Dumézil for its coherence and ability to synthesize diverse and distinct mythologies.[88]

Robert Ellwood describes Eliade's approach to religion as follows. Eliade approaches religion by imagining an ideally "religious" person, whom he calls homo religiosus in his writings. Eliade's theories basically describe how this homo religiosus would view the world.[89] This does not mean that all religious practitioners actually think and act like homo religiosus. Instead, it means that religious behavior "says through its own language" that the world is as homo religiosus would see it, whether or not the real-life participants in religious behavior are aware of it.[90] However, Ellwood writes that Eliade "tends to slide over that last qualification", implying that traditional societies actually thought like homo religiosus.[90]

Sacred and profane edit

 
Moses taking off his shoes in front of the burning bush (illustration from a 16th-century edition of the Speculum Humanae Salvationis).

Eliade argues that "Yahweh is both kind and wrathful; the God of the Christian mystics and theologians is terrible and gentle at once."[91] He also thought that the Indian and Chinese mystic tried to attain "a state of perfect indifference and neutrality" that resulted in a coincidence of opposites in which "pleasure and pain, desire and repulsion, cold and heat [...] are expunged from his awareness."[91]

Eliade's understanding of religion centers on his concept of hierophany (manifestation of the Sacred)—a concept that includes, but is not limited to, the older and more restrictive concept of theophany (manifestation of a god).[92] From the perspective of religious thought, Eliade argues, hierophanies give structure and orientation to the world, establishing a sacred order. The "profane" space of nonreligious experience can only be divided up geometrically: it has no "qualitative differentiation and, hence, no orientation [is] given by virtue of its inherent structure."[93] Thus, profane space gives man no pattern for his behavior. In contrast to profane space, the site of a hierophany has a sacred structure to which religious man conforms himself. A hierophany amounts to a "revelation of an absolute reality, opposed to the non-reality of the vast surrounding expanse."[94] As an example of "sacred space" demanding a certain response from man, Eliade gives the story of Moses halting before Yahweh's manifestation as a burning bush (Exodus 3:5) and taking off his shoes.[95]

Origin myths and sacred time edit

Eliade notes that, in traditional societies, myth represents the absolute truth about primordial time.[96] According to the myths, this was the time when the Sacred first appeared, establishing the world's structure—myths claim to describe the primordial events that made society and the natural world be that which they are. Eliade argues that all myths are, in that sense, origin myths: "myth, then, is always an account of a creation."[97]

Many traditional societies believe that the power of a thing lies in its origin.[98] If origin is equivalent to power, then "it is the first manifestation of a thing that is significant and valid"[99] (a thing's reality and value therefore lies only in its first appearance).

According to Eliade's theory, only the Sacred has value, only a thing's first appearance has value and, therefore, only the Sacred's first appearance has value. Myth describes the Sacred's first appearance; therefore, the mythical age is sacred time,[96] the only time of value: "primitive man was interested only in the beginnings [...] to him it mattered little what had happened to himself, or to others like him, in more or less distant times."[100] Eliade postulated this as the reason for the "nostalgia for origins" that appears in many religions, the desire to return to a primordial Paradise.[100]

Eternal return and "Terror of history" edit

Eliade argues that traditional man attributes no value to the linear march of historical events: only the events of the mythical age have value. To give his own life value, traditional man performs myths and rituals. Because the Sacred's essence lies only in the mythical age, only in the Sacred's first appearance, any later appearance is actually the first appearance; by recounting or re-enacting mythical events, myths and rituals "re-actualize" those events.[101] Eliade often uses the term "archetypes" to refer to the mythical models established by the Sacred, although Eliade's use of the term should be distinguished from the use of the term in Jungian psychology.[102]

Thus, argues Eliade, religious behavior does not only commemorate, but also participates in, sacred events:

In imitating the exemplary acts of a god or of a mythical hero, or simply by recounting their adventures, the man of an archaic society detaches himself from profane time and magically re-enters the Great Time, the sacred time.[96]

Eliade called this concept the "eternal return" (distinguished from the philosophical concept of "eternal return"). Wendy Doniger noted that Eliade's theory of the eternal return "has become a truism in the study of religions."[2]

Eliade attributes the well-known "cyclic" vision of time in ancient thought to belief in the eternal return. For instance, the New Year ceremonies among the Mesopotamians, the Egyptians, and other Near Eastern peoples re-enacted their cosmogonic myths. Therefore, by the logic of the eternal return, each New Year ceremony was the beginning of the world for these peoples. According to Eliade, these peoples felt a need to return to the Beginning at regular intervals, turning time into a circle.[103]

Eliade argues that yearning to remain in the mythical age causes a "terror of history": traditional man desires to escape the linear succession of events (which, Eliade indicated, he viewed as empty of any inherent value or sacrality). Eliade suggests that the abandonment of mythical thought and the full acceptance of linear, historical time, with its "terror", is one of the reasons for modern man's anxieties.[104] Traditional societies escape this anxiety to an extent, as they refuse to completely acknowledge historical time. But the return to the sources involved an apocalyptic experience. Doina Ruști, analyzing the storyThe Old Man and The Bureaucrats (Pe strada Mântuleasa), says The memories [105] create the chaos, because "the myth makes irruption in a world in tormented birth, without memory, and transform all in a labyrinth".

Coincidentia oppositorum edit

Eliade claims that many myths, rituals, and mystical experiences involve a "coincidence of opposites," or coincidentia oppositorum. In fact, he calls the coincidentia oppositorum "the mythical pattern."[106] Many myths, Eliade notes, "present us with a twofold revelation":

they express on the one hand the diametrical opposition of two divine figures sprung from one and the same principle and destined, in many versions, to be reconciled at some illud tempus of eschatology, and on the other, the coincidentia oppositorum in the very nature of the divinity, which shows itself, by turns or even simultaneously, benevolent and terrible, creative and destructive, solar and serpentine, and so on (in other words, actual and potential).[107]

Eliade argues that "Yahweh is both kind and wrathful; the God of the Christian mystics and theologians is terrible and gentle at once."[91] He also thought that the Indian and Chinese mystic tried to attain "a state of perfect indifference and neutrality" that resulted in a coincidence of opposites in which "pleasure and pain, desire and repulsion, cold and heat [...] are expunged from his awareness".[91]

According to Eliade, the coincidentia oppositorum's appeal lies in "man's deep dissatisfaction with his actual situation, with what is called the human condition".[108] In many mythologies, the end of the mythical age involves a "fall", a fundamental "ontological change in the structure of the World".[109] Because the coincidentia oppositorum is a contradiction, it represents a denial of the world's current logical structure, a reversal of the "fall".

Also, traditional man's dissatisfaction with the post-mythical age expresses itself as a feeling of being "torn and separate".[108] In many mythologies, the lost mythical age was a Paradise, "a paradoxical state in which the contraries exist side by side without conflict, and the multiplications form aspects of a mysterious Unity".[109] The coincidentia oppositorum expresses a wish to recover the lost unity of the mythical Paradise, for it presents a reconciliation of opposites and the unification of diversity:

On the level of pre-systematic thought, the mystery of totality embodies man's endeavor to reach a perspective in which the contraries are abolished, the Spirit of Evil reveals itself as a stimulant of Good, and Demons appear as the night aspect of the Gods.[109]

Exceptions to the general nature edit

 
The Last Judgment (detail) in the 12th century Byzantine mosaic at Torcello.

Eliade acknowledges that not all religious behavior has all the attributes described in his theory of sacred time and the eternal return. The Zoroastrian, Jewish, Christian, and Muslim traditions embrace linear, historical time as sacred or capable of sanctification, while some Eastern traditions largely reject the notion of sacred time, seeking escape from the cycles of time.

Because they contain rituals, Judaism and Christianity necessarily—Eliade argues—retain a sense of cyclic time:

by the very fact that it is a religion, Christianity had to keep at least one mythical aspect—liturgical Time, that is, the periodic rediscovery of the illud tempus of the beginnings [and] an imitation of the Christ as exemplary pattern.[110]

However, Judaism and Christianity do not see time as a circle endlessly turning on itself; nor do they see such a cycle as desirable, as a way to participate in the Sacred. Instead, these religions embrace the concept of linear history progressing toward the Messianic Age or the Last Judgment, thus initiating the idea of "progress" (humans are to work for a Paradise in the future).[111] However, Eliade's understanding of Judaeo-Christian eschatology can also be understood as cyclical in that the "end of time" is a return to God: "The final catastrophe will put an end to history, hence will restore man to eternity and beatitude."[112]

The pre-Islamic Persian religion of Zoroastrianism, which made a notable "contribution to the religious formation of the West",[113] also has a linear sense of time; although, according to Eliade, the Hebrews' linear sense of time predates their being influenced by Zoroastrianism.[113] In fact, Eliade identifies the Hebrews, not the Zoroastrians, as the first culture to truly "valorize" historical time, the first to see all major historical events as episodes in a continuous divine revelation.[114] However, Eliade argues, Judaism elaborated its mythology of linear time by adding elements borrowed from Zoroastrianism—including ethical dualism, a savior figure, the future resurrection of the body, and the idea of cosmic progress toward "the final triumph of Good."[113]

The Indian religions of the East generally retain a cyclic view of time—for instance, the Hindu doctrine of kalpas. According to Eliade, most religions that accept the cyclic view of time also embrace it: they see it as a way to return to the sacred time. However, in Buddhism, Jainism, and some forms of Hinduism, the Sacred lies outside the flux of the material world (called maya, or "illusion"), and one can only reach it by escaping from the cycles of time.[115] Because the Sacred lies outside cyclic time, which conditions humans, people can only reach the Sacred by escaping the human condition. According to Eliade, Yoga techniques aim at escaping the limitations of the body, allowing the soul (atman) to rise above maya and reach the Sacred (nirvana, moksha). Imagery of "freedom", and of death to one's old body and rebirth with a new body, occur frequently in Yogic texts, representing escape from the bondage of the temporal human condition.[116] Eliade discusses these themes in detail in Yoga: Immortality and Freedom.

Symbolism of the Center edit

 
The Cosmic Tree Yggdrasill, as depicted in a 17th-century Icelandic miniature

A recurrent theme in Eliade's myth analysis is the axis mundi, the Center of the World. According to Eliade, the Cosmic Center is a necessary corollary to the division of reality into the Sacred and the profane. The Sacred contains all value, and the world gains purpose and meaning only through hierophanies:

In the homogeneous and infinite expanse, in which no point of reference is possible and hence no orientation is established, the hierophany reveals an absolute fixed point, a center.[94]

Because profane space gives man no orientation for his life, the Sacred must manifest itself in a hierophany, thereby establishing a sacred site around which man can orient himself. The site of a hierophany establishes a "fixed point, a center".[94] This Center abolishes the "homogeneity and relativity of profane space",[93] for it becomes "the central axis for all future orientation".[94]

A manifestation of the Sacred in profane space is, by definition, an example of something breaking through from one plane of existence to another. Therefore, the initial hierophany that establishes the Center must be a point at which there is contact between different planes—this, Eliade argues, explains the frequent mythical imagery of a Cosmic Tree or Pillar joining Heaven, Earth, and the underworld.[117]

Eliade noted that, when traditional societies found a new territory, they often perform consecrating rituals that reenact the hierophany that established the center and founded the world.[118] In addition, the designs of traditional buildings, especially temples, usually imitate the mythical image of the axis mundi joining the different cosmic levels. For instance, the Babylonian ziggurats were built to resemble cosmic mountains passing through the heavenly spheres, and the rock of the Temple in Jerusalem was supposed to reach deep into the tehom, or primordial waters.[119]

According to the logic of the eternal return, the site of each such symbolic Center will actually be the Center of the World:

It may be said, in general, that the majority of the sacred and ritual trees that we meet with in the history of religions are only replicas, imperfect copies of this exemplary archetype, the Cosmic Tree. Thus, all these sacred trees are thought of as situated at the Centre of the World, and all the ritual trees or posts [...] are, as it were, magically projected into the Centre of the World.[120]

According to Eliade's interpretation, religious man apparently feels the need to live not only near, but at, the mythical Center as much as possible, given that the center is the point of communication with the Sacred.[121]

Thus, Eliade argues, many traditional societies share common outlines in their mythical geographies. In the middle of the known world is the sacred Center, "a place that is sacred above all";[122] this Center anchors the established order.[93] Around the sacred Center lies the known world, the realm of established order; and beyond the known world is a chaotic and dangerous realm, "peopled by ghosts, demons, [and] 'foreigners' (who are [identified with] demons and the souls of the dead)".[123] According to Eliade, traditional societies place their known world at the Center because (from their perspective) their known world is the realm that obeys a recognizable order, and it therefore must be the realm in which the Sacred manifests itself; the regions beyond the known world, which seem strange and foreign, must lie far from the center, outside the order established by the Sacred.[124]

The High God edit

According to some "evolutionistic" theories of religion, especially that of Edward Burnett Tylor, cultures naturally progress from animism and polytheism to monotheism.[125] According to this view, more advanced cultures should be more monotheistic, and more primitive cultures should be more polytheistic. However, many of the most "primitive", pre-agricultural societies believe in a supreme sky-god.[126] Thus, according to Eliade, post-19th-century scholars have rejected Tylor's theory of evolution from animism.[127] Based on the discovery of supreme sky-gods among "primitives", Eliade suspects that the earliest humans worshiped a heavenly Supreme Being.[128] In Patterns in Comparative Religion, he writes, "The most popular prayer in the world is addressed to 'Our Father who art in heaven.' It is possible that man's earliest prayers were addressed to the same heavenly father."[129]

However, Eliade disagrees with Wilhelm Schmidt, who thought the earliest form of religion was a strict monotheism. Eliade dismisses this theory of "primordial monotheism" (Urmonotheismus) as "rigid" and unworkable.[130] "At most," he writes, "this schema [Schmidt's theory] renders an account of human [religious] evolution since the Paleolithic era".[131] If an Urmonotheismus did exist, Eliade adds, it probably differed in many ways from the conceptions of God in many modern monotheistic faiths: for instance, the primordial High God could manifest himself as an animal without losing his status as a celestial Supreme Being.[132]

According to Eliade, heavenly Supreme Beings are actually less common in more advanced cultures.[133] Eliade speculates that the discovery of agriculture brought a host of fertility gods and goddesses into the forefront, causing the celestial Supreme Being to fade away and eventually vanish from many ancient religions.[134] Even in primitive hunter-gatherer societies, the High God is a vague, distant figure, dwelling high above the world.[135] Often he has no cult and receives prayer only as a last resort, when all else has failed.[136] Eliade calls the distant High God a deus otiosus ("idle god").[137]

In belief systems that involve a deus otiosus, the distant High God is believed to have been closer to humans during the mythical age. After finishing his works of creation, the High God "forsook the earth and withdrew into the highest heaven".[138] This is an example of the Sacred's distance from "profane" life, life lived after the mythical age: by escaping from the profane condition through religious behavior, figures such as the shaman return to the conditions of the mythical age, which include nearness to the High God ("by his flight or ascension, the shaman [...] meets the God of Heaven face to face and speaks directly to him, as man sometimes did in illo tempore").[139] The shamanistic behaviors surrounding the High God are a particularly clear example of the eternal return.

Shamanism edit

 
A shaman performing a ceremonial in Tuva.

Eliade's scholarly work includes a study of shamanism, Shamanism: Archaic Techniques of Ecstasy, a survey of shamanistic practices in different areas. His Myths, Dreams and Mysteries also addresses shamanism in some detail.

In Shamanism, Eliade argues for a restrictive use of the word shaman: it should not apply to just any magician or medicine man, as that would make the term redundant; at the same time, he argues against restricting the term to the practitioners of the sacred of Siberia and Central Asia (it is from one of the titles for this function, namely, šamán, considered by Eliade to be of Tungusic origin, that the term itself was introduced into Western languages).[140] Eliade defines a shaman as follows:

he is believed to cure, like all doctors, and to perform miracles of the fakir type, like all magicians [...] But beyond this, he is a psychopomp, and he may also be a priest, mystic, and poet.[141]

If we define shamanism this way, Eliade claims, we find that the term covers a collection of phenomena that share a common and unique "structure" and "history."[141] (When thus defined, shamanism tends to occur in its purest forms in hunting and pastoral societies like those of Siberia and Central Asia, which revere a celestial High God "on the way to becoming a deus otiosus."[142] Eliade takes the shamanism of those regions as his most representative example.)

In his examinations of shamanism, Eliade emphasizes the shaman's attribute of regaining man's condition before the "Fall" out of sacred time: "The most representative mystical experience of the archaic societies, that of shamanism, betrays the Nostalgia for Paradise, the desire to recover the state of freedom and beatitude before 'the Fall'."[139] This concern—which, by itself, is the concern of almost all religious behavior, according to Eliade—manifests itself in specific ways in shamanism.

Death, resurrection and secondary functions edit

According to Eliade, one of the most common shamanistic themes is the shaman's supposed death and resurrection. This occurs in particular during his initiation.[143] Often, the procedure is supposed to be performed by spirits who dismember the shaman and strip the flesh from his bones, then put him back together and revive him. In more than one way, this death and resurrection represents the shaman's elevation above human nature.

First, the shaman dies so that he can rise above human nature on a quite literal level. After he has been dismembered by the initiatory spirits, they often replace his old organs with new, magical ones (the shaman dies to his profane self so that he can rise again as a new, sanctified, being).[144] Second, by being reduced to his bones, the shaman experiences rebirth on a more symbolic level: in many hunting and herding societies, the bone represents the source of life, so reduction to a skeleton "is equivalent to re-entering the womb of this primordial life, that is, to a complete renewal, a mystical rebirth".[145] Eliade considers this return to the source of life essentially equivalent to the eternal return.[146]

Third, the shamanistic phenomenon of repeated death and resurrection also represents a transfiguration in other ways. The shaman dies not once but many times: having died during initiation and risen again with new powers, the shaman can send his spirit out of his body on errands; thus, his whole career consists of repeated deaths and resurrections. The shaman's new ability to die and return to life shows that he is no longer bound by the laws of profane time, particularly the law of death: "the ability to 'die' and come to life again [...] denotes that [the shaman] has surpassed the human condition."[147]

Having risen above the human condition, the shaman is not bound by the flow of history. Therefore, he enjoys the conditions of the mythical age. In many myths, humans can speak with animals; and, after their initiations, many shamans claim to be able to communicate with animals. According to Eliade, this is one manifestation of the shaman's return to "the illud tempus described to us by the paradisiac myths."[148]

The shaman can descend to the underworld or ascend to heaven, often by climbing the World Tree, the cosmic pillar, the sacred ladder, or some other form of the axis mundi.[149] Often, the shaman will ascend to heaven to speak with the High God. Because the gods (particularly the High God, according to Eliade's deus otiosus concept) were closer to humans during the mythical age, the shaman's easy communication with the High God represents an abolition of history and a return to the mythical age.[139]

Because of his ability to communicate with the gods and descend to the land of the dead, the shaman frequently functions as a psychopomp and a medicine man.[141]

Philosophy edit

Early contributions edit

In addition to his political essays, the young Mircea Eliade authored others, philosophical in content. Connected with the ideology of Trăirism, they were often prophetic in tone, and saw Eliade being hailed as a herald by various representatives of his generation.[9] When Eliade was 21 years old and publishing his Itinerar spiritual, literary critic Şerban Cioculescu described him as "the column leader of the spiritually mystical and Orthodox youth."[9] Cioculescu discussed his "impressive erudition", but argued that it was "occasionally plethoric, poetically inebriating itself through abuse."[9] Cioculescu's colleague Perpessicius saw the young author and his generation as marked by "the specter of war", a notion he connected to various essays of the 1920s and 30s in which Eliade threatened the world with the verdict that a new conflict was looming (while asking that young people be allowed to manifest their will and fully experience freedom before perishing).[9]

One of Eliade's noted contributions in this respect was the 1932 Soliloquii ('Soliloquies'), which explored existential philosophy. George Călinescu who saw in it "an echo of Nae Ionescu's lectures",[150] traced a parallel with the essays of another of Ionescu's disciples, Emil Cioran, while noting that Cioran's were "of a more exulted tone and written in the aphoristic form of Kierkegaard."[151] Călinescu recorded Eliade's rejection of objectivity, citing the author's stated indifference towards any "naïveté" or "contradictions" that the reader could possibly reproach him, as well as his dismissive thoughts of "theoretical data" and mainstream philosophy in general (Eliade saw the latter as "inert, infertile and pathogenic").[150] Eliade thus argued, "a sincere brain is unassailable, for it denies itself to any relationship with outside truths."[152]

The young writer was however careful to clarify that the existence he took into consideration was not the life of "instincts and personal idiosyncrasies", which he believed determined the lives of many humans, but that of a distinct set comprising "personalities".[152] He described "personalities" as characterized by both "purpose" and "a much more complicated and dangerous alchemy."[152] This differentiation, George Călinescu believed, echoed Ionescu's metaphor of man, seen as "the only animal who can fail at living", and the duck, who "shall remain a duck no matter what it does".[153] According to Eliade, the purpose of personalities is infinity: "consciously and gloriously bringing [existence] to waste, into as many skies as possible, continuously fulfilling and polishing oneself, seeking ascent and not circumference."[152]

In Eliade's view, two roads await man in this process. One is glory, determined by either work or procreation, and the other the asceticism of religion or magic—both, Călinescu believed, were aimed at reaching the absolute, even in those cases where Eliade described the latter as an "abyssal experience" into which man may take the plunge.[150] The critic pointed out that the addition of "a magical solution" to the options taken into consideration seemed to be Eliade's own original contributions to his mentor's philosophy, and proposed that it may have owed inspiration to Julius Evola and his disciples.[150] He also recorded that Eliade applied this concept to human creation, and specifically to artistic creation, citing him describing the latter as "a magical joy, the victorious break of the iron circle" (a reflection of imitatio dei, having salvation for its ultimate goal).[150]

Philosopher of religion edit

Anti-reductionism and the "transconscious" edit

By profession, Eliade was a historian of religion. However, his scholarly works draw heavily on philosophical and psychological terminology. In addition, they contain a number of philosophical arguments about religion. In particular, Eliade often implies the existence of a universal psychological or spiritual "essence" behind all religious phenomena.[154] Because of these arguments, some have accused Eliade of overgeneralization and "essentialism," or even of promoting a theological agenda under the guise of historical scholarship. However, others argue that Eliade is better understood as a scholar who is willing to openly discuss sacred experience and its consequences.[note 1]

In studying religion, Eliade rejects certain "reductionist" approaches.[155] Eliade thinks a religious phenomenon cannot be reduced to a product of culture and history. He insists that, although religion involves "the social man, the economic man, and so forth", nonetheless "all these conditioning factors together do not, of themselves, add up to the life of the spirit."[156]

Using this anti-reductionist position, Eliade argues against those who accuse him of overgeneralizing, of looking for universals at the expense of particulars. Eliade admits that every religious phenomenon is shaped by the particular culture and history that produced it:

When the Son of God incarnated and became the Christ, he had to speak Aramaic; he could only conduct himself as a Hebrew of his times [...] His religious message, however universal it might be, was conditioned by the past and present history of the Hebrew people. If the Son of God had been born in India, his spoken language would have had to conform itself to the structure of the Indian languages.[156]

However, Eliade argues against those he calls "historicist or existentialist philosophers" who do not recognize "man in general" behind particular men produced by particular situations[156] (Eliade cites Immanuel Kant as the likely forerunner of this kind of "historicism".)[156] He adds that human consciousness transcends (is not reducible to) its historical and cultural conditioning,[157] and even suggests the possibility of a "transconscious".[158] By this, Eliade does not necessarily mean anything supernatural or mystical: within the "transconscious," he places religious motifs, symbols, images, and nostalgias that are supposedly universal and whose causes therefore cannot be reduced to historical and cultural conditioning.[159]

Platonism and "primitive ontology" edit

According to Eliade, traditional man feels that things "acquire their reality, their identity, only to the extent of their participation in a transcendent reality".[160] To traditional man, the profane world is "meaningless", and a thing rises out of the profane world only by conforming to an ideal, mythical model.[161]

Eliade describes this view of reality as a fundamental part of "primitive ontology" (the study of "existence" or "reality").[161] Here he sees a similarity with the philosophy of Plato, who believed that physical phenomena are pale and transient imitations of eternal models or "Forms" (see Theory of forms). He argued:

Plato could be regarded as the outstanding philosopher of 'primitive mentality,' that is, as the thinker who succeeded in giving philosophic currency and validity to the modes of life and behavior of archaic humanity.[161]

Eliade thinks the Platonic theory of forms is "primitive ontology" persisting in Greek philosophy. He claims that Platonism is the "most fully elaborated" version of this primitive ontology.[162]

In The Structure of Religious Knowing: Encountering the Sacred in Eliade and Lonergan, John Daniel Dadosky argues that, by making this statement, Eliade was acknowledging "indebtedness to Greek philosophy in general, and to Plato's theory of forms specifically, for his own theory of archetypes and repetition".[163] However, Dadosky also states that "one should be cautious when trying to assess Eliade's indebtedness to Plato".[164] Dadosky quotes Robert Segal, a professor of religion, who draws a distinction between Platonism and Eliade's "primitive ontology": for Eliade, the ideal models are patterns that a person or object may or may not imitate; for Plato, there is a Form for everything, and everything imitates a Form by the very fact that it exists.[165]

Existentialism and secularism edit

Behind the diverse cultural forms of different religions, Eliade proposes a universal: traditional man, he claims, "always believes that there is an absolute reality, the sacred, which transcends this world but manifests itself in this world, thereby sanctifying it and making it real."[166] Furthermore, traditional man's behavior gains purpose and meaning through the Sacred: "By imitating divine behavior, man puts and keeps himself close to the gods—that is, in the real and the significant."[166] According to Eliade, "modern nonreligious man assumes a new existential situation."[166] For traditional man, historical events gain significance by imitating sacred, transcendent events. In contrast, nonreligious man lacks sacred models for how history or human behavior should be, so he must decide on his own how history should proceed—he "regards himself solely as the subject and agent of history, and refuses all appeal to transcendence".[167]

From the standpoint of religious thought, the world has an objective purpose established by mythical events, to which man should conform himself: "Myth teaches [religious man] the primordial 'stories' that have constituted him existentially."[168] From the standpoint of secular thought, any purpose must be invented and imposed on the world by man. Because of this new "existential situation," Eliade argues, the Sacred becomes the primary obstacle to nonreligious man's "freedom". In viewing himself as the proper maker of history, nonreligious man resists all notions of an externally (for instance, divinely) imposed order or model he must obey: modern man "makes himself, and he only makes himself completely in proportion as he desacralizes himself and the world. [...] He will not truly be free until he has killed the last god."[167]

Religious survivals in the secular world edit

Eliade says that secular man cannot escape his bondage to religious thought. By its very nature, secularism depends on religion for its sense of identity: by resisting sacred models, by insisting that man make history on his own, secular man identifies himself only through opposition to religious thought: "He [secular man] recognizes himself in proportion as he 'frees' and 'purifies' himself from the 'superstitions' of his ancestors."[169] Furthermore, modern man "still retains a large stock of camouflaged myths and degenerated rituals".[170] For example, modern social events still have similarities to traditional initiation rituals, and modern novels feature mythical motifs and themes.[171] Finally, secular man still participates in something like the eternal return: by reading modern literature, "modern man succeeds in obtaining an 'escape from time' comparable to the 'emergence from time' effected by myths".[172]

Eliade sees traces of religious thought even in secular academia. He thinks modern scientists are motivated by the religious desire to return to the sacred time of origins:

One could say that the anxious search for the origins of Life and Mind; the fascination in the 'mysteries of Nature'; the urge to penetrate and decipher the inner structure of Matter—all these longings and drives denote a sort of nostalgia for the primordial, for the original universal matrix. Matter, Substance, represents the absolute origin, the beginning of all things.[173]

Eliade believes the rise of materialism in the 19th century forced the religious nostalgia for "origins" to express itself in science. He mentions his own field of History of Religions as one of the fields that was obsessed with origins during the 19th century:

The new discipline of History of Religions developed rapidly in this cultural context. And, of course, it followed a like pattern: the positivistic approach to the facts and the search for origins, for the very beginning of religion.

All Western historiography was during that time obsessed with the quest of origins. [...] This search for the origins of human institutions and cultural creations prolongs and completes the naturalist's quest for the origin of species, the biologist's dream of grasping the origin of life, the geologist's and the astronomer's endeavor to understand the origin of the Earth and the Universe. From a psychological point of view, one can decipher here the same nostalgia for the 'primordial' and the 'original'.[174]

In some of his writings, Eliade describes modern political ideologies as secularized mythology. According to Eliade, Marxism "takes up and carries on one of the great eschatological myths of the Middle Eastern and Mediterranean world, namely: the redemptive part to be played by the Just (the 'elect', the 'anointed', the 'innocent', the 'missioners', in our own days the proletariat), whose sufferings are invoked to change the ontological status of the world."[175] Eliade sees the widespread myth of the Golden Age, "which, according to a number of traditions, lies at the beginning and the end of History", as the "precedent" for Karl Marx's vision of a classless society.[176] Finally, he sees Marx's belief in the final triumph of the good (the proletariat) over the evil (the bourgeoisie) as "a truly messianic Judaeo-Christian ideology".[176] Despite Marx's hostility toward religion, Eliade implies, his ideology works within a conceptual framework inherited from religious mythology.

Likewise, Eliade notes that Nazism involved a pseudo-pagan mysticism based on ancient Germanic religion. He suggests that the differences between the Nazis' pseudo-Germanic mythology and Marx's pseudo-Judaeo-Christian mythology explain their differing success:

In comparison with the vigorous optimism of the communist myth, the mythology propagated by the national socialists seems particularly inept; and this is not only because of the limitations of the racial myth (how could one imagine that the rest of Europe would voluntarily accept submission to the master-race?), but above all because of the fundamental pessimism of the Germanic mythology. [...] For the eschaton prophesied and expected by the ancient Germans was the ragnarok—that is, a catastrophic end of the world.[176]

Modern man and the "terror of history" edit

According to Eliade, modern man displays "traces" of "mythological behavior" because he intensely needs sacred time and the eternal return.[177] Despite modern man's claims to be nonreligious, he ultimately cannot find value in the linear progression of historical events; even modern man feels the "terror of history": "Here too [...] there is always the struggle against Time, the hope to be freed from the weight of 'dead Time,' of the Time that crushes and kills."[178]

This "terror of history" becomes especially acute when violent and threatening historical events confront modern man—the mere fact that a terrible event has happened, that it is part of history, is of little comfort to those who suffer from it. Eliade asks rhetorically how modern man can "tolerate the catastrophes and horrors of history—from collective deportations and massacres to atomic bombings—if beyond them he can glimpse no sign, no transhistorical meaning".[179] He indicates that, if repetitions of mythical events provided sacred value and meaning for history in the eyes of ancient man, modern man has denied the Sacred and must therefore invent value and purpose on his own. Without the Sacred to confer an absolute, objective value upon historical events, modern man is left with "a relativistic or nihilistic view of history" and a resulting "spiritual aridity".[180] In chapter 4 ("The Terror of History") of The Myth of the Eternal Return and chapter 9 ("Religious Symbolism and the Modern Man's Anxiety") of Myths, Dreams, and Mysteries, Eliade argues at length that the rejection of religious thought is a primary cause of modern man's anxieties.

Inter-cultural dialogue and a "new humanism" edit

Eliade argues that modern man may escape the "Terror of history" by learning from traditional cultures. For example, Eliade thinks Hinduism has advice for modern Westerners. According to many branches of Hinduism, the world of historical time is illusory, and the only absolute reality is the immortal soul or atman within man. According to Eliade, Hindus thus escape the terror of history by refusing to see historical time as the true reality.[181]

Eliade notes that a Western or Continental philosopher might feel suspicious toward this Hindu view of history:

One can easily guess what a European historical and existentialist philosopher might reply [...] You ask me, he would say, to 'die to History'; but man is not, and he cannot be anything else but History, for his very essence is temporality. You are asking me, then, to give up my authentic existence and to take refuge in an abstraction, in pure Being, in the atman: I am to sacrifice my dignity as a creator of History in order to live an a-historic, inauthentic existence, empty of all human content. Well, I prefer to put up with my anxiety: at least, it cannot deprive me of a certain heroic grandeur, that of becoming conscious of, and accepting, the human condition.[182]

However, Eliade argues that the Hindu approach to history does not necessarily lead to a rejection of history. On the contrary, in Hinduism historical human existence is not the "absurdity" that many Continental philosophers see it as.[182] According to Hinduism, history is a divine creation, and one may live contentedly within it as long as one maintains a certain degree of detachment from it: "One is devoured by Time, by History, not because one lives in them, but because one thinks them real and, in consequence, one forgets or undervalues eternity."[183] Furthermore, Eliade argues that Westerners can learn from non-Western cultures to see something besides absurdity in suffering and death. Traditional cultures see suffering and death as a rite of passage. In fact, their initiation rituals often involve a symbolic death and resurrection, or symbolic ordeals followed by relief. Thus, Eliade argues, modern man can learn to see his historical ordeals, even death, as necessary initiations into the next stage of one's existence.[184]

Eliade even suggests that traditional thought offers relief from the vague anxiety caused by "our obscure presentiment of the end of the world, or more exactly of the end of our world, our own civilization".[184] Many traditional cultures have myths about the end of their world or civilization; however, these myths do not succeed "in paralysing either Life or Culture".[184] These traditional cultures emphasize cyclic time and, therefore, the inevitable rise of a new world or civilization on the ruins of the old. Thus, they feel comforted even in contemplating the end times.[185]

Eliade argues that a Western spiritual rebirth can happen within the framework of Western spiritual traditions.[186] However, he says, to start this rebirth, Westerners may need to be stimulated by ideas from non-Western cultures. In his Myths, Dreams, and Mysteries, Eliade claims that a "genuine encounter" between cultures "might well constitute the point of departure for a new humanism, upon a world scale".[187]

Christianity and the "salvation" of History edit

Mircea Eliade sees the Abrahamic religions as a turning point between the ancient, cyclic view of time and the modern, linear view of time, noting that, in their case, sacred events are not limited to a far-off primordial age, but continue throughout history: "time is no longer [only] the circular Time of the Eternal Return; it has become linear and irreversible Time".[188] He thus sees in Christianity the ultimate example of a religion embracing linear, historical time. When God is born as a man, into the stream of history, "all history becomes a theophany".[189] According to Eliade, "Christianity strives to save history".[190] In Christianity, the Sacred enters a human being (Christ) to save humans, but it also enters history to "save" history and turn otherwise ordinary, historical events into something "capable of transmitting a trans-historical message".[190]

From Eliade's perspective, Christianity's "trans-historical message" may be the most important help that modern man could have in confronting the terror of history. In his book Mito ("Myth"), Italian researcher Furio Jesi argues that Eliade denies man the position of a true protagonist in history: for Eliade, true human experience lies not in intellectually "making history", but in man's experiences of joy and grief. Thus, from Eliade's perspective, the Christ story becomes the perfect myth for modern man.[191] In Christianity, God willingly entered historical time by being born as Christ, and accepted the suffering that followed. By identifying with Christ, modern man can learn to confront painful historical events.[191] Ultimately, according to Jesi, Eliade sees Christianity as the only religion that can save man from the "Terror of history".[192]

In Eliade's view, traditional man sees time as an endless repetition of mythical archetypes. In contrast, modern man has abandoned mythical archetypes and entered linear, historical time—in this context, unlike many other religions, Christianity attributes value to historical time. Thus, Eliade concludes, "Christianity incontestably proves to be the religion of 'fallen man'", of modern man who has lost "the paradise of archetypes and repetition".[193]

"Modern gnosticism", Romanticism and Eliade's nostalgia edit

In analyzing the similarities between the "mythologists" Eliade, Joseph Campbell and Carl Jung, Robert Ellwood concluded that the three modern mythologists, all of whom believed that myths reveal "timeless truth",[194] fulfilled the role "gnostics" had in antiquity. The diverse religious movements covered by the term "gnosticism" share the basic doctrines that the surrounding world is fundamentally evil or inhospitable, that we are trapped in the world through no fault of our own, and that we can be saved from the world only through secret knowledge (gnosis).[195] Ellwood claimed that the three mythologists were "modern gnostics through and through",[196] remarking,

Whether in Augustan Rome or modern Europe, democracy all too easily gave way to totalitarianism, technology was as readily used for battle as for comfort, and immense wealth lay alongside abysmal poverty. [...] Gnostics past and present sought answers not in the course of outward human events, but in knowledge of the world's beginning, of what lies above and beyond the world, and of the secret places of the human soul. To all this the mythologists spoke, and they acquired large and loyal followings.[197]

According to Ellwood, the mythologists believed in gnosticism's basic doctrines (even if in a secularized form). Ellwood also believes that Romanticism, which stimulated the modern study of mythology,[198] strongly influenced the mythologists. Because Romantics stress that emotion and imagination have the same dignity as reason, Ellwood argues, they tend to think political truth "is known less by rational considerations than by its capacity to fire the passions" and, therefore, that political truth is "very apt to be found [...] in the distant past".[198]

As modern gnostics, Ellwood argues, the three mythologists felt alienated from the surrounding modern world. As scholars, they knew of primordial societies that had operated differently from modern ones. And as people influenced by Romanticism, they saw myths as a saving gnosis that offered "avenues of eternal return to simpler primordial ages when the values that rule the world were forged".[199] In addition, Ellwood identifies Eliade's personal sense of nostalgia as a source for his interest in, or even his theories about, traditional societies.[200] He cites Eliade himself claiming to desire an "eternal return" like that by which traditional man returns to the mythical paradise: "My essential preoccupation is precisely the means of escaping History, of saving myself through symbol, myth, rite, archetypes".[201]

In Ellwood's view, Eliade's nostalgia was only enhanced by his exile from Romania: "In later years Eliade felt about his own Romanian past as did primal folk about mythic time. He was drawn back to it, yet he knew he could not live there, and that all was not well with it."[202] He suggests that this nostalgia, along with Eliade's sense that "exile is among the profoundest metaphors for all human life",[203] influenced Eliade's theories. Ellwood sees evidence of this in Eliade's concept of the "Terror of history" from which modern man is no longer shielded.[204] In this concept, Ellwood sees an "element of nostalgia" for earlier times "when the sacred was strong and the terror of history had barely raised its head".[205]

Criticism of Eliade's scholarship edit

Overgeneralization edit

Eliade cites a wide variety of myths and rituals to support his theories. However, he has been accused of making overgeneralizations: many scholars think he lacks sufficient evidence to put forth his ideas as universal, or even general, principles of religious thought. According to one scholar, "Eliade may have been the most popular and influential contemporary historian of religion", but "many, if not most, specialists in anthropology, sociology, and even history of religions have either ignored or quickly dismissed" Eliade's works.[206]

The classicist G. S. Kirk criticizes Eliade's insistence that Australian Aborigines and ancient Mesopotamians had concepts of "being", "non-being", "real", and "becoming", although they lacked words for them. Kirk also believes that Eliade overextends his theories: for example, Eliade claims that the modern myth of the "noble savage" results from the religious tendency to idealize the primordial, mythical age.[207] According to Kirk, "such extravagances, together with a marked repetitiousness, have made Eliade unpopular with many anthropologists and sociologists".[207] In Kirk's view, Eliade derived his theory of eternal return from the functions of Australian Aboriginal mythology and then proceeded to apply the theory to other mythologies to which it did not apply. For example, Kirk argues that the eternal return does not accurately describe the functions of Native American or Greek mythology.[208] Kirk concludes, "Eliade's idea is a valuable perception about certain myths, not a guide to the proper understanding of all of them".[209]

Even Wendy Doniger, Eliade's successor at the University of Chicago, claims (in an introduction to Eliade's own Shamanism) that the eternal return does not apply to all myths and rituals, although it may apply to many of them.[2] However, although Doniger agrees that Eliade made overgeneralizations, she notes that his willingness to "argue boldly for universals" allowed him to see patterns "that spanned the entire globe and the whole of human history".[210] Whether they were true or not, she argues, Eliade's theories are still useful "as starting points for the comparative study of religion". She also argues that Eliade's theories have been able to accommodate "new data to which Eliade did not have access".[2]

Lack of empirical support edit

Several researchers have criticized Eliade's work as having no empirical support. Thus, he is said to have "failed to provide an adequate methodology for the history of religions and to establish this discipline as an empirical science",[211] though the same critics admit that "the history of religions should not aim at being an empirical science anyway".[211] Specifically, his claim that the sacred is a structure of human consciousness is distrusted as not being empirically provable: "no one has yet turned up the basic category sacred".[212] Also, there has been mention of his tendency to ignore the social aspects of religion.[54] Anthropologist Alice Kehoe is highly critical of Eliade's work on Shamanism, namely because he was not an anthropologist but a historian. She contends that Eliade never did any field work or contacted any indigenous groups that practiced Shamanism, and that his work was synthesized from various sources without being supported by direct field research.[213]

In contrast, Professor Kees W. Bolle of the University of California, Los Angeles argues that "Professor Eliade's approach, in all his works, is empirical":[214] Bolle sets Eliade apart for what he sees as Eliade's particularly close "attention to the various particular motifs" of different myths.[214] French researcher Daniel Dubuisson places doubt on Eliade's scholarship and its scientific character, citing the Romanian academic's alleged refusal to accept the treatment of religions in their historical and cultural context, and proposing that Eliade's notion of hierophany refers to the actual existence of a supernatural level.[61]

Ronald Inden, a historian of India and University of Chicago professor, criticized Mircea Eliade, alongside other intellectual figures (Carl Jung and Joseph Campbell among them), for encouraging a "romantic view" of Hinduism.[215] He argued that their approach to the subject relied mainly on an Orientalist approach, and made Hinduism seem like "a private realm of the imagination and the religious which modern, Western man lacks but needs."[215]

Far-right and nationalist influences edit

Although his scholarly work was never subordinated to his early political beliefs, the school of thought he was associated with in interwar Romania, namely Trăirism, as well as the works of Julius Evola he continued to draw inspiration from, have thematic links to fascism.[39][61][216] Writer and academic Marcel Tolcea [ro] has argued that, through Evola's particular interpretation of Guénon's works, Eliade kept a traceable connection with far right ideologies in his academic contributions.[39] Daniel Dubuisson singled out Eliade's concept of homo religiosus as a reflection of fascist elitism, and argued that the Romanian scholar's views of Judaism and the Old Testament, which depicted Hebrews as the enemies of an ancient cosmic religion, were ultimately the preservation of an antisemitic discourse.[61]

A piece authored in 1930 saw Eliade defining Julius Evola as a great thinker and offering praise to the controversial intellectuals Oswald Spengler, Arthur de Gobineau, Houston Stewart Chamberlain and the Nazi ideologue Alfred Rosenberg.[61] Evola, who continued to defend the core principles of mystical fascism, once protested to Eliade about the latter's failure to cite him and Guénon. Eliade replied that his works were written for a contemporary public, and not to initiates of esoteric circles.[217] After the 1960s, he, together with Evola, Louis Rougier, and other intellectuals, offered support to Alain de Benoist's controversial Groupement de recherche et d'études pour la civilisation européenne, part of the Nouvelle Droite intellectual trend.[218]

Notably, Eliade was also preoccupied with the cult of Thracian deity Zalmoxis and its supposed monotheism.[219][220] This, like his conclusion that Romanization had been superficial inside Roman Dacia, was a view celebrated by contemporary partisans of protochronist nationalism.[54][219] According to historian Sorin Antohi, Eliade may have actually encouraged protochronists such as Edgar Papu to carry out research which resulted in the claim that medieval Romanians had anticipated the Renaissance.[221]

In his study of Eliade, Jung, and Campbell, Ellwood also discusses the connection between academic theories and controversial political involvements, noting that all three mythologists have been accused of reactionary political positions. Ellwood notes the obvious parallel between the conservatism of myth, which speaks of a primordial golden age, and the conservatism of far right politics.[222] However, Ellwood argues that the explanation is more complex than that. Wherever their political sympathies may have sometimes been, he claims, the three mythologists were often "apolitical if not antipolitical, scorning any this-worldly salvation".[223] Moreover, the connection between mythology and politics differs for each of the mythologists in question: in Eliade's case, Ellwood believes, a strong sense of nostalgia ("for childhood, for historical times past, for cosmic religion, for paradise"),[89] influenced not only the scholar's academic interests, but also his political views.

Because Eliade stayed out of politics during his later life, Ellwood tries to extract an implicit political philosophy from Eliade's scholarly works. Ellwood argues that the later Eliade's nostalgia for ancient traditions did not make him a political reactionary, even a quiet one. He concludes that the later Eliade was, in fact, a "radical modernist".[224] According to Ellwood,

Those who see Eliade's fascination with the primordial as merely reactionary in the ordinary political or religious sense of the word do not understand the mature Eliade in a sufficiently radical way. [...] Tradition was not for him exactly Burkean 'prescription' or sacred trust to be kept alive generation after generation, for Eliade was fully aware that tradition, like men and nations, lives only by changing and even occultation. The tack is not to try fruitlessly to keep it unchanging, but to discover where it is hiding.[224]

According to Eliade, religious elements survive in secular culture, but in new, "camouflaged" forms.[225] Thus, Ellwood believes that the later Eliade probably thought modern man should preserve elements of the past, but should not try to restore their original form through reactionary politics.[226] He suspects that Eliade would have favored "a minimal rather than a maximalist state" that would allow personal spiritual transformation without enforcing it.[227]

Many scholars have accused Eliade of "essentialism", a type of overgeneralization in which one incorrectly attributes a common "essence" to a whole group—in this case, all "religious" or "traditional" societies. Furthermore, some see a connection between Eliade's essentialism with regard to religion and fascist essentialism with regard to races and nations.[228] To Ellwood, this connection "seems rather tortured, in the end amounting to little more than an ad hominem argument which attempts to tar Eliade's entire [scholarly] work with the ill-repute all decent people feel for storm troopers and the Iron Guard".[228] However, Ellwood admits that common tendencies in "mythological thinking" may have caused Eliade, as well as Jung and Campbell, to view certain groups in an "essentialist" way, and that this may explain their purported antisemitism: "A tendency to think in generic terms of peoples, races, religions, or parties, which as we shall see is undoubtedly the profoundest flaw in mythological thinking, including that of such modern mythologists as our three, can connect with nascent anti-Semitism, or the connection can be the other way."[229]

Literary works edit

Generic traits edit

Many of Mircea Eliade's literary works, in particular his earliest ones, are noted for their eroticism and their focus on subjective experience. Modernist in style, they have drawn comparisons to the contemporary writings of Mihail Sebastian,[230] I. Valerian,[231] and Ion Biberi.[232] Alongside Honoré de Balzac and Giovanni Papini, his literary passions included Aldous Huxley and Miguel de Unamuno,[28] as well as André Gide.[9] Eliade also read with interest the prose of Romain Rolland, Henrik Ibsen, and the Enlightenment thinkers Voltaire and Denis Diderot.[9] As a youth, he read the works of Romanian authors such as Liviu Rebreanu and Panait Istrati; initially, he was also interested in Ionel Teodoreanu's prose works, but later rejected them and criticized their author.[9]

Investigating the works' main characteristics, George Călinescu stressed that Eliade owed much of his style to the direct influence of French author André Gide, concluding that, alongside Camil Petrescu and a few others, Eliade was among Gide's leading disciples in Romanian literature.[6] He commented that, like Gide, Eliade believed that the artist "does not take a stand, but experiences good and evil while setting himself free from both, maintaining an intact curiosity."[6] A specific aspect of this focus on experience is sexual experimentation—Călinescu notes that Eliade's fiction works tend to depict a male figure "possessing all practicable women in [a given] family".[233] He also considered that, as a rule, Eliade depicts woman as "a basic means for a sexual experience and repudiated with harsh egotism."[233]

For Călinescu, such a perspective on life culminated in "banality," leaving authors gripped by the "cult of the self" and "a contempt for literature".[6] Polemically, Călinescu proposed that Mircea Eliade's supposed focus on "aggressive youth" served to instill his interwar Romanian writers with the idea that they had a common destiny as a generation apart.[6] He also commented that, when set in Romania, Mircea Eliade's stories lacked the "perception of immediate reality", and, analyzing the non-traditional names the writer tended to ascribe to his Romanian characters, that they did not depict "specificity".[234] Additionally, in Călinescu's view, Eliade's stories were often "sensationalist compositions of the illustrated magazine kind."[235] Mircea Eliade's assessment of his own pre-1940 literary contributions oscillated between expressions of pride[27] and the bitter verdict that they were written for "an audience of little ladies and high school students".[60]

A secondary but unifying feature present in most of Eliade's stories is their setting, a magical and part-fictional Bucharest.[8] In part, they also serve to illustrate or allude to Eliade's own research in the field of religion, as well as to the concepts he introduced.[8] Thus, commentators such as Matei Călinescu and Carmen Mușat have also argued that a main characteristic of Eliade's fantasy prose is a substitution between the supernatural and the mundane: in this interpretation, Eliade turns the daily world into an incomprehensible place, while the intrusive supernatural aspect promises to offer the sense of life.[236] The notion was in turn linked to Eliade's own thoughts on transcendence, and in particular his idea that, once "camouflaged" in life or history, miracles become "unrecognizable".[236]

Oriental-themed novels edit

Isabel și apele diavolului edit

One of Eliade's earliest fiction writings, the controversial first-person narrative Isabel şi apele diavolului ('Isabel and the Devil's Waters'), focused on the figure of a young and brilliant academic, whose self-declared fear is that of "being common."[237] The hero's experience is recorded in "notebooks", which are compiled to form the actual narrative, and which serve to record his unusual, mostly sexual, experiences in British India—the narrator describes himself as dominated by "a devilish indifference" towards "all things having to do with art or metaphysics", focusing instead on eroticism.[237] The guest of a pastor, the scholar ponders sexual adventures with his host's wife, servant girl, and finally with his daughter Isabel. Persuading the pastor's adolescent son to run away from home, becoming the sexual initiator of a twelve-year-old girl and the lover of a much older woman, the character also attempts to seduce Isabel. Although she falls in love, the young woman does not give in to his pressures, but eventually allows herself to be abused and impregnated by another character, letting the object of her affection know that she had thought of him all along.[238]

Maitreyi edit

One of Eliade's best-known works, the novel Maitreyi, dwells on Eliade's own experience, comprising camouflaged details of his relationships with Surendranath Dasgupta and Dasgupta's daughter Maitreyi Devi. The main character, Allan, is an Englishman who visits the Indian engineer Narendra Sen and courts his daughter, herself known as Maitreyi. The narrative is again built on "notebooks" to which Allan adds his comments. This technique Călinescu describes as "boring", and its result "cynical".[238]

Allan himself stands alongside Eliade's male characters, whose focus is on action, sensation and experience—his chaste contacts with Maitreyi are encouraged by Sen, who hopes for a marriage which is nonetheless abhorred by his would-be European son-in-law.[238] Instead, Allan is fascinated to discover Maitreyi's Oriental version of Platonic love, marked by spiritual attachment more than by physical contact.[239] However, their affair soon after turns physical, and she decides to attach herself to Allan as one would to a husband, in what is an informal and intimate wedding ceremony (which sees her vowing her love and invoking an earth goddess as the seal of union).[234] Upon discovering this, Narendra Sen becomes enraged, rejecting their guest and keeping Maitreyi in confinement. As a result, his daughter decides to have intercourse with a lowly stranger, becoming pregnant in the hope that her parents would consequently allow her to marry her lover. However, the story also casts doubt on her earlier actions, reflecting rumors that Maitreyi was not a virgin at the time she and Allan first met, which also seems to expose her father as a hypocrite.[234]

George Călinescu objected to the narrative, arguing that both the physical affair and the father's rage seemed artificial, while commenting that Eliade placing doubt on his Indian characters' honesty had turned the plot into a piece of "ethnological humor".[234] Noting that the work developed on a classical theme of miscegenation, which recalled the prose of François-René de Chateaubriand and Pierre Loti,[238] the critic proposed that its main merit was in introducing the exotic novel to local literature.[234]

Șantier edit

Mircea Eliade's other early works include Șantier ('Building Site'), a part-novel, part-diary account of his Indian sojourn. George Călinescu objected to its "monotony", and, noting that it featured a set of "intelligent observations," criticized the "banality of its ideological conversations."[234] Șantier was also noted for its portrayal of drug addiction and intoxication with opium, both of which could have referred to Eliade's actual travel experience.[69]

Portraits of a generation edit

Novel of the Nearsighted Adolescent edit

In his earliest novel, titled Novel of the Nearsighted Adolescent and written in the first person, Eliade depicts his experience through high school.[9] It is proof of the influence exercised on him by the literature of Giovanni Papini, and in particular by Papini's story Un uomo finito.[9] Each of its chapters reads like an independent novella, and, in all, the work experiments with the limits traced between novel and diary.[9] Literary critic Eugen Simion called it "the most valuable" among Eliade's earliest literary attempts, but noted that, being "ambitious", the book had failed to achieve "an aesthetically satisfactory format".[9] According to Simion, the innovative intent of the Novel... was provided by its technique, by its goal of providing authenticity in depicting experiences, and by its insight into adolescent psychology.[9] The novel notably shows its narrator practicing self-flagellation.[9]

Întoarcerea din rai edit

Eliade's 1934 novel Întoarcerea din rai ('Return from Paradise') centers on Pavel Anicet, a young man who seeks knowledge through what Călinescu defined as "sexual excess".[234] His search leaves him with a reduced sensitivity: right after being confronted with his father's death, Anicet breaks out in tears only after sitting through an entire dinner.[234]

The other characters, standing for Eliade's generation, all seek knowledge through violence or retreat from the world—nonetheless, unlike Anicet, they ultimately fail at imposing rigors upon themselves.[234] Pavel himself eventually abandons his belief in sex as a means for enlightenment, and commits suicide in hopes of reaching the level of primordial unity. The solution, George Călinescu noted, mirrored the strange murder in Gide's Lafcadio's Adventures.[234] Eliade himself indicated that the book dealt with the "loss of the beatitude, illusions, and optimism that had dominated the first twenty years of 'Greater Romania'."[240] Robert Ellwood connected the work to Eliade's recurring sense of loss in respect to the "atmosphere of euphoria and faith" of his adolescence.[202] Călinescu criticizes Întoarcerea din rai, describing its dialog sequences as "awkward", its narrative as "void", and its artistic interest as "non-existent", proposing that the reader could however find it relevant as the "document of a mentality".[234]

Huliganii edit

The novel Huliganii ('The Hooligans') is intended as the fresco of a family, and, through it, that of an entire generation. The book's main protagonist, Petru Anicet, is a composer who places value in experiments; other characters include Dragu, who considers "a hooligan's experience" as "the only fertile debut into life", and the totalitarian Alexandru Pleşa, who is on the search for "the heroic life" by enlisting youth in "perfect regiments, equally intoxicated by a collective myth."[241][242]

Călinescu thought that the young male characters all owed inspiration to Fyodor Dostoevsky's Rodion Romanovich Raskolnikov (see Crime and Punishment).[233] Anicet, who partly shares Pleșa's vision for a collective experiment, is also prone to sexual adventures, and seduces the women of the Lecca family (who have hired him as a piano teacher).[233] Romanian-born novelist Norman Manea called Anicet's experiment: "the paraded defiance of bourgeois conventions, in which venereal disease and lubricity dwell together."[241] In one episode of the book, Anicet convinces Anișoara Lecca to gratuitously steal from her parents—an outrage which leads her mother to moral decay and, eventually, to suicide.[233] George Călinescu criticized the book for inconsistencies and "excesses in Dostoyevskianism," but noted that the Lecca family portrayal was "suggestive", and that the dramatic scenes were written with "a remarkable poetic calm."[233]

Marriage in Heaven edit

The novel Marriage in Heaven depicts the correspondence between two male friends, an artist and a common man, who complain to each other about their failures in love: the former complains about a lover who wanted his children when he did not, while the other recalls being abandoned by a woman who, despite his intentions, did not want to become pregnant by him. Eliade lets the reader understand that they are in fact talking about the same woman.[235]

Fantastic and fantasy literature edit

Mircea Eliade's earliest works, most of which were published at later stages, belong to the fantasy genre. One of the first such literary exercises to be printed, the 1921 Cum am găsit piatra filosofală, showed its adolescent author's interest in themes that he was to explore throughout his career, in particular esotericism and alchemy.[9] Written in the first person, it depicts an experiment which, for a moment, seems to be the discovery of the philosophers' stone.[9] These early writings also include two sketches for novels: Minunata călătorie a celor cinci cărăbuși in țara furnicilor roșii ('The Wonderful Journey of the Five Beetles into the Land of the Red Ants') and Memoriile unui soldat de plumb ('The Memoirs of a Lead Soldier').[9] In the former, a company of beetle spies is sent among the red ants—their travel offers a setting for satirical commentary.[9] Eliade himself explained that Memoriile unui soldat de plumb was an ambitious project, designed as a fresco to include the birth of the Universe, abiogenesis, human evolution, and the entire world history.[9]

Eliade's fantasy novel Domnișoara Christina, was, on its own, the topic of a scandal.[233] The novel deals with the fate of an eccentric family, the Moscus, who are haunted by the ghost of a murdered young woman, known as Christina. The apparition shares characteristics with vampires and with strigoi: she is believed to be drinking the blood of cattle and that of a young family member.[233] The young man Egor becomes the object of Christina's desire, and is shown to have intercourse with her.[233] Noting that the plot and setting reminded one of horror fiction works by the German author Hanns Heinz Ewers, and defending Domnişoara Christina in front of harsher criticism, Călinescu nonetheless argued that the "international environment" in which it took place was "upsetting".[233] He also depicted the plot as focused on "major impurity", summarizing the story's references to necrophilia, menstrual fetish and ephebophilia.[233]

Șarpele edit

Eliade's short story Șarpele ('The Snake') was described by George Călinescu as "hermetic".[233] While on a trip to the forest, several persons witness a feat of magic performed by the male character Andronic, who summons a snake from the bottom of a river and places it on an island. At the end of the story, Andronic and the female character Dorina are found on the island, naked and locked in a sensual embrace.[233] Călinescu saw the piece as an allusion to Gnosticism, to the Kabbalah, and to Babylonian mythology, while linking the snake to the Greek mythological figure and major serpent symbol Ophion.[233] He was however dissatisfied with this introduction of iconic images, describing it as "languishing".[235]

In Curte la Dionis

In the relation between history and culture, „the memory acts from the event toward the creation, so that the cultural memory is the prisoner of history.”[243] When it will liberate itself, the human will escape the labyrinth, according to a character of the In Dionysus’ Court, of which ideal is the cultural memory; but, for him, the amnesia becomes a torment because, although he forgot details of his own existence, he kept the vague impression of a decisive meeting and with the obsession that he is not knowing his place in the universe: he had forgotten the message that he had to transmit to the world.

Un om mare edit

The short story Un om mare ('A Big Man'), which Eliade authored during his stay in Portugal, shows a common person, the engineer Cucoanes, who grows steadily and uncontrollably, reaching immense proportions and ultimately disappearing into the wilderness of the Bucegi Mountains.[244] Eliade himself referenced the story and Aldous Huxley's experiments in the same section of his private notes, a matter which allowed Matei Călinescu to propose that Un om mare was a direct product of its author's experience with drugs.[69] The same commentator, who deemed Un om mare "perhaps Eliade's most memorable short story", connected it with the uriași characters present in Romanian folklore.[244]

Other writings edit

Eliade reinterpreted the Greek mythological figure Iphigeneia in his eponymous 1941 play. Here, the maiden falls in love with Achilles, and accepts to be sacrificed on the pyre as a means to ensure both her lover's happiness (as predicted by an oracle) and her father Agamemnon's victory in the Trojan War.[245] Discussing the association Iphigenia's character makes between love and death, Romanian theater critic Radu Albala noted that it was a possible echo of Meşterul Manole legend, in which a builder of the Curtea de Argeș Monastery has to sacrifice his wife in exchange for permission to complete work.[245] In contrast with early renditions of the myth by authors such as Euripides and Jean Racine, Eliade's version ends with the sacrifice being carried out in full.[245]

In addition to his fiction, the exiled Eliade authored several volumes of memoirs and diaries and travel writings. They were published sporadically, and covered various stages of his life. One of the earliest such pieces was India, grouping accounts of the travels he made through the Indian subcontinent.[68] Writing for the Spanish journal La Vanguardia, commentator Sergio Vila-Sanjuán described the first volume of Eliade's Autobiography (covering the years 1907 to 1937) as "a great book", while noting that the other main volume was "more conventional and insincere."[8] In Vila-Sanjuán's view, the texts reveal Mircea Eliade himself as "a Dostoyevskyian character", as well as "an accomplished person, a Goethian figure".[8]

A work that drew particular interest was his Jurnal portughez ('Portuguese Diary'), completed during his stay in Lisbon and published only after its author's death. A portion of it dealing with his stay in Romania is believed to have been lost.[7] The travels to Spain, partly recorded in Jurnal portughez, also led to a separate volume, Jurnal cordobez ('Cordoban Diary'), which Eliade compiled from various independent notebooks.[68] Jurnal portughez shows Eliade coping with clinical depression and political crisis, and has been described by Andrei Oișteanu as "an overwhelming [read], through the immense suffering it exhales."[69] Literary historian Paul Cernat argued that part of the volume is "a masterpiece of its time," while concluding that some 700 pages were passable for the "among others" section of Eliade's bibliography.[27] Noting that the book featured parts where Eliade spoke of himself in eulogistic terms, notably comparing himself favorably to Goethe and Romania's national poet Mihai Eminescu, Cernat accused the writer of "egolatry", and deduced that Eliade was "ready to step over dead bodies for the sake of his spiritual 'mission' ".[27] The same passages led philosopher and journalist Cătălin Avramescu to argue that Eliade's behavior was evidence of "megalomania".[60]

Eliade also wrote various essays of literary criticism. In his youth, alongside his study on Julius Evola, he published essays which introduced the Romanian public to representatives of modern Spanish literature and philosophy, among them Adolfo Bonilla San Martín, Miguel de Unamuno, José Ortega y Gasset, Eugenio d'Ors, Vicente Blasco Ibáñez and Marcelino Menéndez y Pelayo.[68] He also wrote an essay on the works of James Joyce, connecting it with his own theories on the eternal return ("[Joyce's literature is] saturated with nostalgia for the myth of the eternal repetition"), and deeming Joyce himself an anti-historicist "archaic" figure among the modernists.[246] In the 1930s, Eliade edited the collected works of Romanian historian Bogdan Petriceicu Hasdeu.[9]

M. L. Ricketts discovered and translated into English a previously unpublished play written by Mircea Eliade in Paris 1946 Aventura Spirituală ('A Spiritual Adventure'). It was published first in Theory in Action - the journal of the Transformative Studies Institute,[247] vol. 5 (2012): 2–58 -, and then in Italian (M. Eliade, Tutto il teatro, Milano: Edizioni Bietti, 2016).

Controversy: antisemitism and links with the Iron Guard edit

Early statements edit

The early years in Eliade's public career show him to have been highly tolerant of Jews in general, and of the Jewish minority in Romania in particular. His early condemnation of Nazi antisemitic policies was accompanied by his caution and moderation in regard to Nae Ionescu's various anti-Jewish attacks.[32][248]

Late in the 1930s, Mihail Sebastian was marginalized by Romania's antisemitic policies, and came to reflect on his Romanian friend's association with the far right. The subsequent ideological break between him and Eliade has been compared by writer Gabriela Adameșteanu with that between Jean-Paul Sartre and Albert Camus.[241] In his Journal, published long after his 1945 death, Sebastian claimed that Eliade's actions during the 1930s show him to be an antisemite. According to Sebastian, Eliade had been friendly to him until the start of his political commitments, after which he severed all ties.[32][249] Before their friendship came apart, however, Sebastian claimed that he took notes on their conversations (which he later published) during which Eliade was supposed to have expressed antisemitic views. According to Sebastian, Eliade said in 1939:

The Poles' resistance in Warsaw is a Jewish resistance. Only yids are capable of the blackmail of putting women and children in the front line, to take advantage of the Germans' sense of scruple. The Germans have no interest in the destruction of Romania. Only a pro-German government can save us... What is happening on the frontier with Bukovina is a scandal, because new waves of Jews are flooding into the country. Rather than a Romania again invaded by kikes, it would be better to have a German protectorate.[250]

The friendship between Eliade and Sebastian drastically declined during the war: the latter writer, fearing for his security during the pro-Nazi Ion Antonescu regime (see Romania during World War II), hoped that Eliade, by then a diplomat, could intervene in his favor; however, upon his brief return to Romania, Eliade did not see or approach Sebastian.[8][32]

Later, Mircea Eliade expressed his regret at not having had the chance to redeem his friendship with Sebastian before the latter was killed in a car accident.[27][66] Paul Cernat notes that Eliade's statement includes an admission that he "counted on [Sebastian's] support, in order to get back into Romanian life and culture", and proposes that Eliade may have expected his friend to vouch for him in front of hostile authorities.[27] Some of Sebastian's late recordings in his diary show that their author was reflecting with nostalgia on his relationship with Eliade, and that he deplored the outcome.[8][32]

Eliade provided two distinct explanations for not having met with Sebastian: one was related to his claim of being followed around by the Gestapo, and the other, expressed in his diaries, was that the shame of representing a regime that humiliated Jews had made him avoid facing his former friend.[32] Another take on the matter was advanced in 1972 by the Israeli magazine Toladot, which claimed that, as an official representative, Eliade was aware of Antonescu's agreement to implement the Final Solution in Romania and of how this could affect Sebastian (see Holocaust in Romania).[32] In addition, rumors were sparked that Sebastian and Nina Mareș had a physical relationship, one which could have contributed to the clash between the two literary figures.[8]

Beyond his involvement with a movement known for its antisemitism, Eliade did not usually comment on Jewish issues. However, an article titled Piloții orbi ("The Blind Pilots"), contributed to the journal Vremea in 1936, showed that he supported at least some Iron Guard accusations against the Jewish community:

Since the war [that is, World War I], Jews have occupied the villages of Maramureș and Bukovina, and gained the absolute majority in the towns and cities in Bessarabia.[note 2] [...] It would be absurd to expect Jews to resign themselves in order to become a minority with certain rights and very many duties—after they have tasted the honey of power and conquered as many command positions as they have. Jews are currently fighting with all forces to maintain their positions, expecting a future offensive—and, as far as I am concerned, I understand their fight and admire their vitality, tenacity, genius.[251]

One year later, a text, accompanied by his picture, was featured as answer to an inquiry by the Iron Guard's Buna Vestire about the reasons he had for supporting the movement. A short section of it summarizes an anti-Jewish attitude:

Can the Romanian nation end its life in the saddest decay witnessed by history, undermined by misery and syphilis, conquered by Jews and torn to pieces by foreigners, demoralized, betrayed, sold for a few million lei?[32][252]

According to the literary critic Z. Ornea, in the 1980s Eliade denied authorship of the text. He explained the use of his signature, his picture, and the picture's caption, as having been applied by the magazine's editor, Mihail Polihroniade, to a piece the latter had written after having failed to obtain Eliade's contribution; he also claimed that, given his respect for Polihroniade, he had not wished to publicize this matter previously.[253]

Polemics and exile edit

Dumitru G. Danielopol, a fellow diplomat present in London during Eliade's stay in the city, later stated that the latter had identified himself as "a guiding light of [the Iron Guard] movement" and victim of Carol II's repression.[54] In October 1940, as the National Legionary State came into existence, the British Foreign Office blacklisted Mircea Eliade, alongside five other Romanians, due to his Iron Guard connections and suspicions that he was prepared to spy in favor of Nazi Germany.[79] According to various sources, while in Portugal, the diplomat was also preparing to disseminate propaganda in favor of the Iron Guard.[54] In Jurnal portughez, Eliade defines himself as "a Legionary",[8][27] and speaks of his own "Legionary climax" as a stage he had gone through during the early 1940s.[27][32]

The depolitisation of Eliade after the start of his diplomatic career was also mistrusted by his former close friend Eugène Ionesco, who indicated that, upon the close of World War II, Eliade's personal beliefs as communicated to his friends amounted to "all is over now that Communism has won".[254] This forms part of Ionesco's severe and succinct review of the careers of Legionary-inspired intellectuals, many of them his friends and former friends, in a letter he sent to Tudor Vianu.[54][255] In 1946, Ionesco indicated to Petru Comarnescu that he did not want to see either Eliade or Cioran, and that he considered the two of them "Legionaries for ever"—adding "we are hyenas to one another".[256]

Eliade's former friend, the communist Belu Zilber, who was attending the Paris Conference in 1946, refused to see Eliade, arguing that, as an Iron Guard affiliate, the latter had "denounced left-wingers", and contrasting him with Cioran ("They are both Legionaries, but [Cioran] is honest").[257] Three years later, Eliade's political activities were brought into discussion as he was getting ready to publish a translation of his Techniques du Yoga with the left-leaning Italian company Giulio Einaudi Editore—the denunciation was probably orchestrated by Romanian officials.[258]

In August 1954, when Horia Sima, who led the Iron Guard during its exile, was rejected by a faction inside the movement, Mircea Eliade's name was included on a list of persons who supported the latter—although this may have happened without his consent.[258] According to exiled dissident and novelist Dumitru Ţepeneag, around that date, Eliade expressed his sympathy for Iron Guard members in general, whom he viewed as "courageous".[259] However, according to Robert Ellwood, the Eliade he met in the 1960s was entirely apolitical, remained aloof from "the passionate politics of that era in the United States", and "[r]eportedly [...] never read newspapers"[260] (an assessment shared by Sorin Alexandrescu).[7] Eliade's student Ioan Petru Culianu noted that journalists had come to refer to the Romanian scholar as "the great recluse".[10] Despite Eliade's withdrawal from radical politics, Ellwood indicates, he still remained concerned with Romania's welfare. He saw himself and other exiled Romanian intellectuals as members of a circle who worked to "maintain the culture of a free Romania and, above all, to publish texts that had become unpublishable in Romania itself".[261]

Beginning in 1969, Eliade's past became the subject of public debate in Israel. At the time, historian Gershom Scholem asked Eliade to explain his attitudes, which the latter did using vague terms.[32][54][262] As a result of this exchange, Scholem declared his dissatisfaction, and argued that Israel could not extend a welcome to the Romanian academic.[54] During the final years of Eliade's life, his disciple Culianu exposed and publicly criticized his 1930s pro-Iron Guard activities; relations between the two soured as a result.[263] Eliade's other Romanian disciple, Andrei Oişteanu, noted that, in the years following Eliade's death, conversations with various people who had known the scholar had made Culianu less certain of his earlier stances, and had led him to declare: "Mr. Eliade was never antisemitic, a member of the Iron Guard, or pro-Nazi. But, in any case, I am led to believe that he was closer to the Iron Guard than I would have liked to believe."[264]

At an early stage of his polemic with Culianu, Eliade complained in writing that "it is not possible to write an objective history" of the Iron Guard and its leader Corneliu Zelea Codreanu.[265] Arguing that people "would only accept apologetics [...] or executions", he contended: "After Buchenwald and Auschwitz, even honest people cannot afford being objective".[265]

Posterity edit

Alongside the arguments introduced by Daniel Dubuisson, criticism of Mircea Eliade's political involvement with antisemitism and fascism came from Adriana Berger, Leon Volovici, Alexandra Lagniel-Lavastine, Florin Țurcanu and others, who have attempted to trace Eliade's antisemitism throughout his work and through his associations with contemporary antisemites, such as the Italian fascist occultist Julius Evola. Volovici, for example, is critical of Eliade not only because of his support for the Iron Guard, but also for spreading antisemitism and anti-Masonry in 1930s Romania.[266] In 1991, exiled novelist Norman Manea published an essay firmly condemning Eliade's attachment to the Iron Guard.[8]

Other scholars, like Bryan S. Rennie, have claimed that there is, to date, no evidence of Eliade's membership, active services rendered, or of any real involvement with any fascist or totalitarian movements or membership organizations, nor that there is any evidence of his continued support for nationalist ideals after their inherently violent nature was revealed. They further assert that there is no imprint of overt political beliefs in Eliade's scholarship, and also claim that Eliade's critics are following political agendas.[267] Romanian scholar Mircea Handoca, editor of Eliade's writings, argues that the controversy surrounding Eliade was encouraged by a group of exiled writers, of whom Manea was a main representative, and believes that Eliade's association with the Guard was a conjectural one, determined by the young author's Christian values and conservative stance, as well as by his belief that a Legionary Romania could mirror Portugal's Estado Novo.[8] Handoca opined that Eliade changed his stance after discovering that the Legionaries had turned violent, and argued that there was no evidence of Eliade's actual affiliation with the Iron Guard as a political movement.[8] Additionally, Joaquín Garrigós, who translated Eliade's works into Spanish, claimed that none of Eliade's texts he ever encountered show him to be an antisemite.[8] Mircea Eliade's nephew and commentator Sorin Alexandrescu himself proposed that Eliade's politics were essentially conservative and patriotic, in part motivated by a fear of the Soviet Union which he shared with many other young intellectuals.[8] Based on Mircea Eliade's admiration for Gandhi, various other authors assess that Eliade remained committed to nonviolence.[8]

Robert Ellwood also places Eliade's involvement with the Iron Guard in relation to scholar's conservatism, and connects this aspect of Eliade's life with both his nostalgia and his study of primal societies. According to Ellwood, the part of Eliade that felt attracted to the "freedom of new beginnings suggested by primal myths" is the same part that felt attracted to the Guard, with its almost mythological notion of a new beginning through a "national resurrection".[268] On a more basic level, Ellwood describes Eliade as an "instinctively spiritual" person who saw the Iron Guard as a spiritual movement.[269] In Ellwood's view, Eliade was aware that the "golden age" of antiquity was no longer accessible to secular man, that it could be recalled but not re-established. Thus, a "more accessible" object for nostalgia was a "secondary silver age within the last few hundred years"—the Kingdom of Romania's 19th century cultural renaissance.[270] To the young Eliade, the Iron Guard seemed like a path for returning to the silver age of Romania's glory, being a movement "dedicated to the cultural and national renewal of the Romanian people by appeal to their spiritual roots".[260] Ellwood describes the young Eliade as someone "capable of being fired up by mythological archetypes and with no awareness of the evil that was to be unleashed".[271]

Because of Eliade's withdrawal from politics, and also because the later Eliade's religiosity was very personal and idiosyncratic,[227] Ellwood believes the later Eliade probably would have rejected the "corporate sacred" of the Iron Guard.[227] According to Ellwood, the later Eliade had the same desire for a Romanian "resurrection" that had motivated the early Eliade to support the Iron Guard, but he now channeled it apolitically through his efforts to "maintain the culture of a free Romania" abroad.[272] In one of his writings, Eliade says, "Against the terror of History there are only two possibilities of defense: action or contemplation."[273] According to Ellwood, the young Eliade took the former option, trying to reform the world through action, whereas the older Eliade tried to resist the terror of history intellectually.[202]

Eliade's own version of events, presenting his involvement in far right politics as marginal, was judged to contain several inaccuracies and unverifiable claims.[54][274] For instance, Eliade depicted his arrest as having been solely caused by his friendship with Nae Ionescu.[275] On another occasion, answering Gershom Scholem's query, he is known to have explicitly denied ever having contributed to Buna Vestire.[54] According to Sorin Antohi, "Eliade died without ever clearly expressing regret for his Iron Guard sympathies".[276] Z. Ornea noted that, in a short section of his Autobiography where he discusses the Einaudi incident, Eliade speaks of "my imprudent acts and errors committed in youth", as "a series of malentendus that would follow me all my life."[277] Ornea commented that this was the only instance where the Romanian academic spoke of his political involvement with a dose of self-criticism, and contrasted the statement with Eliade's usual refusal to discuss his stances "pertinently".[258] Reviewing the arguments brought in support of Eliade, Sergio Vila-Sanjuán concluded: "Nevertheless, Eliade's pro-Legionary columns endure in the newspaper libraries, he never showed his regret for this connection [with the Iron Guard] and always, right up to his final writings, he invoked the figure of his teacher Nae Ionescu."[8]

In his Felix Culpa, Manea directly accused Eliade of having embellished his memoirs in order to minimize an embarrassing past.[8] A secondary debate surrounding Eliade's alleged unwillingness to dissociate with the Guard took place after Jurnalul portughez saw print. Sorin Alexandrescu expressed a belief that notes in the diary show Eliade's "break with his far right past".[7] Cătălin Avramescu defined this conclusion as "whitewashing", and, answering to Alexandrescu's claim that his uncle's support for the Guard was always superficial, argued that Jurnal portughez and other writings of the time showed Eliade's disenchantment with the Legionaries' Christian stance in tandem with his growing sympathy for Nazism and its pagan messages.[60] Paul Cernat, who stressed that it was the only one of Eliade's autobiographical works not to have been reworked by its author, concluded that the book documented Eliade's own efforts to "camouflage" his political sympathies without rejecting them altogether.[27]

Oișteanu argued that, in old age, Eliade moved away from his earlier stances and even came to sympathize with the non-Marxist Left and the hippie youth movement.[76][82] He noted that Eliade initially felt apprehensive about the consequences of hippie activism, but that the interests they shared, as well as their advocacy of communalism and free love had made him argue that hippies were "a quasi-religious movement" that was "rediscovering the sacrality of Life".[278] Andrei Oișteanu, who proposed that Eliade's critics were divided into a "maximalist" and a "minimalist" camp (trying to, respectively, enhance or shadow the impact Legionary ideas had on Eliade), argued in favor of moderation, and indicated that Eliade's fascism needed to be correlated to the political choices of his generation.[262]

Political symbolism in Eliade's fiction edit

Various critics have traced links between Eliade's fiction works and his political views, or Romanian politics in general. Early on, George Călinescu argued that the totalitarian model outlined in Huliganii was: "An allusion to certain bygone political movements [...], sublimated in the ever so abstruse philosophy of death as a path to knowledge."[233] By contrast, Întoarcerea din rai partly focuses on a failed communist rebellion, which enlists the participation of its main characters.[234]

Iphigenia‍'s story of self-sacrifice, turned voluntary in Eliade's version, was taken by various commentators, beginning with Mihail Sebastian, as a favorable allusion to the Iron Guard's beliefs on commitment and death, as well as to the bloody outcome of the 1941 Legionary Rebellion.[32] Ten years after its premiere, the play was reprinted by Legionary refugees in Argentina: on the occasion, the text was reviewed for publishing by Eliade himself.[32] Reading Iphigenia was what partly sparked Culianu's investigation of his mentor's early political affiliations.[32]

A special debate was sparked by Un om mare. Culianu viewed it as a direct reference to Corneliu Zelea Codreanu and his rise in popularity, an interpretation partly based on the similarity between, on one hand, two monikers ascribed to the Legionary leader (by, respectively, his adversaries and his followers), and, on the other, the main character's name (Cucoanes).[244] Matei Călinescu did not reject Culianu's version, but argued that, on its own, the piece was beyond political interpretations.[244] Commenting on this dialog, literary historian and essayist Mircea Iorgulescu objected to the original verdict, indicating his belief that there was no historical evidence to substantiate Culianu's point of view.[244]

Alongside Eliade's main works, his attempted novel of youth, Minunata călătorie a celor cinci cărăbuși in țara furnicilor roșii, which depicts a population of red ants living in a totalitarian society and forming bands to harass the beetles, was seen as a potential allusion to the Soviet Union and to communism.[9] Despite Eliade's ultimate reception in Communist Romania, this writing could not be published during the period, after censors singled out fragments which they saw as especially problematic.[9]

Cultural legacy edit

Tributes edit

 
Eliade's portrait on a Moldovan stamp
 
Portrait on the Alley of Classics, Chişinău

An endowed chair in the History of Religions at the University of Chicago Divinity School was named after Eliade in recognition of his wide contribution to the research on this subject; the first holder of this chair is Wendy Doniger, who was succeeded by Brook Ziporyn in 2020.[279]

To evaluate the legacy of Eliade and Joachim Wach within the discipline of the history of religions, the University of Chicago chose 2006 (the intermediate year between the 50th anniversary of Wach's death and the 100th anniversary of Eliade's birth), to hold a two-day conference in order to reflect upon their academic contributions and their political lives in their social and historical contexts, as well as the relationship between their works and their lives.[74]

In 1990, after the Romanian Revolution, Eliade was elected posthumously to the Romanian Academy. In Romania, Mircea Eliade's legacy in the field of the history of religions is mirrored by the journal Archaeus (founded 1997, and affiliated with the University of Bucharest Faculty of History). The 6th European Association for the Study of Religion and International Association for the History of Religions Special Conference on Religious History of Europe and Asia took place from September 20 to September 23, 2006, in Bucharest. An important section of the Congress was dedicated to the memory of Mircea Eliade, whose legacy in the field of history of religions was scrutinized by various scholars, some of whom were his direct students at the University of Chicago.[280]

As Antohi noted, Eliade, Emil Cioran and Constantin Noica "represent in Romanian culture ultimate expressions of excellence, [Eliade and Cioran] being regarded as proof that Romania's interwar culture (and, by extension, Romanian culture as a whole) was able to reach the ultimate levels of depth, sophistication and creativity."[276] A Romanian Television 1 poll carried out in 2006 nominated Mircea Eliade as the 7th Greatest Romanian in history; his case was argued by the journalist Dragoş Bucurenci (see 100 greatest Romanians). His name was given to a boulevard in the northern Bucharest area of Primăverii, to a street in Cluj-Napoca, and to high schools in Bucharest, Sighişoara, and Reşiţa. The Eliades' house on Melodiei Street was torn down during the communist regime, and an apartment block was raised in its place; his second residence, on Dacia Boulevard, features a memorial plaque in his honor.[8]

Eliade's image in contemporary culture also has political implications. Historian Irina Livezeanu proposed that the respect he enjoys in Romania is matched by that of other "nationalist thinkers and politicians" who "have reentered the contemporary scene largely as heroes of a pre- and anticommunist past", including Nae Ionescu and Cioran, but also Ion Antonescu and Nichifor Crainic.[281] In parallel, according to Oişteanu (who relied his assessment on Eliade's own personal notes), Eliade's interest in the American hippie community was reciprocated by members of the latter, some of whom reportedly viewed Eliade as "a guru".[76]

Eliade has also been hailed as an inspiration by German representatives of the Neue Rechte, claiming legacy from the Conservative Revolutionary movement (among them is the controversial magazine Junge Freiheit and the essayist Karlheinz Weißmann).[282] In 2007, Florin Ţurcanu's biographical volume on Eliade was issued in a German translation by the Antaios publishing house, which is mouthpiece for the Neue Rechte.[282] The edition was not reviewed by the mainstream German press.[282] Other sections of the European far right also claim Eliade as an inspiration, and consider his contacts with the Iron Guard to be a merit—among their representatives are the Italian neofascist Claudio Mutti and Romanian groups who trace their origin to the Legionary Movement.[262]

Portrayals, filmography and dramatizations edit

Early on, Mircea Eliade's novels were the subject of satire: before the two of them became friends, Nicolae Steinhardt, using the pen name Antisthius, authored and published parodies of them.[14] Maitreyi Devi, who strongly objected to Eliade's account of their encounter and relationship, wrote her own novel as a reply to his Maitreyi; written in Bengali, it was titled Na Hanyate ('It Does Not Die').[21]

Several authors, including Ioan Petru Culianu, have drawn a parallel between Eugène Ionesco's Absurdist play of 1959, Rhinoceros, which depicts the population of a small town falling victim to a mass metamorphosis, and the impact fascism had on Ionesco's closest friends (Eliade included).[283]

In 2000, Saul Bellow published his controversial Ravelstein novel. Having for its setting the University of Chicago, it had among its characters Radu Grielescu, who was identified by several critics as Eliade. The latter's portrayal, accomplished through statements made by the eponymous character, is polemical: Grielescu, who is identified as a disciple of Nae Ionescu, took part in the Bucharest Pogrom, and is in Chicago as a refugee scholar, searching for the friendship of a Jewish colleague as a means to rehabilitate himself.[284] In 2005, the Romanian literary critic and translator Antoaneta Ralian, who was an acquaintance of Bellow's, argued that much of the negative portrayal was owed to a personal choice Bellow made (after having divorced from Alexandra Bagdasar, his Romanian wife and Eliade disciple).[285] She also mentioned that, during a 1979 interview, Bellow had expressed admiration for Eliade.[285]

The film Mircea Eliade et la redécouverte du Sacré (1987), and part of the television series Architecture et Géographie sacrées by Paul Barbă Neagră, discuss Eliade's works.

Film adaptations edit

The Bengali Night, a 1988 film directed by Nicolas Klotz and based upon the French translation of Maitreyi, stars British actor Hugh Grant as Allan, the European character based on Eliade, while Supriya Pathak is Gayatri, a character based on Maitreyi Devi (who had refused to be mentioned by name).[21] The film, considered "pornographic" by Hindu activists, was only shown once in India.[21]

Live adaptations edit

  • Domnișoara Christina (1981), opera at the Romanian Radio[286]
  • Iphigenia (1982), play at the National Theater Bucharest[245]
  • La señorita Cristina (2000), opera at the Teatro Real, Madrid[68]
  • Cazul Gavrilescu ('The Gavrilescu Case', 2001), play at the Nottara Theater[287]
  • La Țigănci (2003), play at the Odeon Theater[288]
  • Apocalipsa după Mircea Eliade ('The Apocalypse According to Mircea Eliade', 2007)[289]

Eliade's Iphigenia was again included in theater programs during the late years of the Nicolae Ceauşescu regime: in January 1982, a new version, directed by Ion Cojar, premiered at the National Theater Bucharest, starring Mircea Albulescu, Tania Filip and Adrian Pintea in some of the main roles.[245]

La Țigănci  [ro] has been the basis for two theater adaptations: Cazul Gavrilescu ('The Gavrilescu Case'), directed by Gelu Colceag and hosted by the Nottara Theater;[287] and an eponymous play by director Alexandru Hausvater, first staged by the Odeon Theater in 2003, starring, among others, Adriana Trandafir, Florin Zamfirescu, and Carmen Tănase.[288]

In March 2007, on Eliade's 100th birthday, the Romanian Radio Broadcasting Company hosted the Mircea Eliade Week, during which radio drama adaptations of several works were broadcast.[290] In September of that year, director and dramatist Cezarina Udrescu staged a multimedia performance based on a number of works Mircea Eliade wrote during his stay in Portugal; titled Apocalipsa după Mircea Eliade ('The Apocalypse According to Mircea Eliade'), and shown as part of a Romanian Radio cultural campaign, it starred Ion Caramitru, Oana Pellea and Răzvan Vasilescu.[289]

Domnișoara Christina has been the subject of two operas: the first, carrying the same Romanian title, was authored by Romanian composer Șerban Nichifor and premiered in 1981 at the Romanian Radio;[286] the second, titled La señorita Cristina, was written by Spanish composer Luis de Pablo and premiered in 2000 at the Teatro Real in Madrid.[68]

Selected bibliography edit

  • A History of Religious Ideas. Vol. 1: From the Stone Age to the Eleusinian Mysteries. Trans. Willard R. Trask. Chicago: U of Chicago P, 1978. (Histoire des croyances et des idées religieuses. 3 vols. 1976–83.)
  • Images and Symbols: Studies in Religious Symbolism (trans. Philip Mairet), Princeton University Press, Princeton, 1991
  • Myth and Reality (trans. Willard R. Trask), Harper & Row, New York, 1963
  • Myths, Dreams and Mysteries (trans. Philip Mairet), Harper & Row, New York, 1967
  • Myths, Rites, Symbols: A Mircea Eliade Reader, Vol. 2, Ed. Wendell C. Beane and William G. Doty, Harper Colophon, New York, 1976
  • Patterns in Comparative Religion, Sheed & Ward, New York, 1958
  • Shamanism: Archaic Techniques of Ecstasy, Princeton University Press, Princeton, 2004
  • The Myth of the Eternal Return: Cosmos and History (trans. Willard R. Trask), Princeton University Press, Princeton, 1971
  • "The Quest for the 'Origins' of Religion", in History of Religions 4.1 (1964), p. 154–169
  • The Sacred and the Profane: The Nature of Religion (trans. Willard R. Trask), Harper Torchbooks, New York, 1961
  • ‘’Hypermnésie et évasion. Doina Ruști, „Philologica Jassyensia”, An III, Nr. 1, 2007, p. 235-241
  • Yoga: Immortality and Freedom (trans. Willard R. Trask), Princeton University Press, Princeton, 2009
  • Isabela Vasiliu-Scraba, Harismele Duhului Sfânt si fotografia "de 14 ani" (Mircea Eliade), în rev. "Acolada", Satu Mare, annul XIV, nr. 12 (157), decembrie 2020, pp. 12–13

See also edit

  • Sântoaderi, supernatural entities found in Romanian folklore

Notes edit

  1. ^ For example, according to Wendy Doniger (Doniger, "Foreword to the 2004 Edition", Eliade, Shamanism, p. xv.), Eliade has been accused "of being a crypto-theologian"; however, Doniger argues that Eliade is better characterized as "an open hierogian". Likewise, Robert Ellwood (Ellwood, p. 111) denies that Eliade practiced "covert theology".
  2. ^ It was popular prejudice in the late 1930s to claim that Ukrainian Jews in the Soviet Union had obtained Romanian citizenship illegally after crossing the border into Maramureş and Bukovina. In 1938, this accusation served as an excuse for the Octavian Goga-A. C. Cuza government to suspend and review all Jewish citizenship guaranteed after 1923, rendering it very difficult to regain (Ornea, p.391). Eliade's mention of Bessarabia probably refers to an earlier period, being his interpretation of a pre-Greater Romania process.

References edit

Citations edit

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  3. ^ Gross, Feliks (November 5, 2018) [1972]. "From the individual terror of the totalitarians to the underground struggle against the conquerors, 1918-1945". Violence in politics: Terror and political assassination in Eastern Europe and Russia. Studies in the Social Sciences, volume 13 (reprint ed.). Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG. p. 63. ISBN 9783111382449. Retrieved October 15, 2023. The Rumanian Iron Guard and the Croat Ustasha practiced widely all kinds of violence, including individual terror.
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  56. ^ a b Ornea, p. 207
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  90. ^ a b Ellwood, p. 104
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  108. ^ a b Eliade, Myths, Rites, Symbols, p. 439
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  112. ^ Eliade, The Myth of the Eternal Return, p. 124
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  114. ^ Eliade, A History of Religious Ideas, vol. 1, p. 356
  115. ^ Eliade, The Sacred and the Profane, p. 109
  116. ^ Eliade, Myths, Rites, Symbols, Volume 2, pp. 312–314
  117. ^ Eliade, Shamanism, pp. 259–260
  118. ^ Eliade, The Sacred and the Profane, pp. 32–36
  119. ^ Eliade, The Sacred and the Profane, pp. 40, 42
  120. ^ Eliade, Images and Symbols, p. 44
  121. ^ Eliade, The Sacred and the Profane, p. 43
  122. ^ Eliade, Images and Symbols, p. 39
  123. ^ Eliade, The Sacred and the Profane, p. 29
  124. ^ Eliade, Images and Symbols, pp. 39–40; Eliade, The Sacred and the Profane, p. 30
  125. ^ Eliade, "The Quest for the 'Origins' of Religion", pp. 157, 161
  126. ^ Eliade, Myth and Reality, p. 93; Patterns in Comparative Religion, pp. 38–40, 54–58
  127. ^ Eliade, "The Quest for the 'Origins' of Religion", p. 161
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  132. ^ Eliade, Myths, Dreams and Mysteries, pp. 176–177
  133. ^ Eliade, Patterns in Comparative Religion, pp. 54–55
  134. ^ Eliade, Myths, Dreams and Mysteries, p. 138
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  139. ^ a b c Eliade, Myths, Dreams and Mysteries, p. 66
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  141. ^ a b c Eliade, Shamanism, p. 4
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  145. ^ Eliade, Shamanism, p. 63
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  238. ^ a b c d Călinescu, p. 957
  239. ^ Călinescu, pp. 957–958
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  247. ^ "Volume 5, Number 1, January 2012 | Transformative Studies Institute".
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  249. ^ Sebastian, passim
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  251. ^ Eliade, 1936, in Ornea, pp. 412–413; partially in the Final Report, p. 49.
  252. ^ Eliade, 1937, in Ornea, p. 413; in the Final Report, p. 49
  253. ^ Ornea, p. 206; Ornea is skeptical of these explanations, given the long period of time spent before Eliade gave them, and especially the fact that the article itself, despite the haste in which it must have been written, has remarkably detailed references to many articles written by Eliade in various papers over a period of time.
  254. ^ Ionesco, 1945, in Ornea, p. 184
  255. ^ Ornea, pp. 184–185
  256. ^ Ionesco, 1946, in Ornea, p. 211
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  259. ^ Constantin Coroiu, , in Evenimentul, August 31, 2006; retrieved October 4, 2007 (in Romanian)
  260. ^ a b Ellwood, p. 83
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  264. ^ Culianu, in Oişteanu, "Angajamentul..."
  265. ^ a b Eliade, in Ellwood, p. 91; in Oişteanu, "Angajamentul..."
  266. ^ Leon Volovici, Nationalist Ideology and Antisemitism: The Case of Romanian Intellectuals in the 1930s, Pergamon Press, Oxford, 1991, pp. 104–105, 110–111, 120–126, 134
  267. ^ Bryan S. Rennie, Reconstructing Eliade: Making Sense of Religion, State University of New York Press, Albany, 1996, pp. 149–177. ISBN 0-7914-2763-3
  268. ^ Ellwood, pp. 100–101
  269. ^ Ellwood, p. 86
  270. ^ Ellwood, p. xiv
  271. ^ Ellwood, p. 91
  272. ^ Ellwood, p. 115
  273. ^ Eliade, The Forbidden Forest, in Ellwood, p. 101
  274. ^ Ornea, pp. 202, 208–211, 239–240
  275. ^ Ornea, pp. 202, 209
  276. ^ a b Antohi, preface to Liiceanu, p. xxiii
  277. ^ Eliade, in Ornea, p. 210
  278. ^ Eliade, in Oişteanu, "Mircea Eliade şi mişcarea hippie"
  279. ^ "Brook A. Ziporyn Lecture". divinity.uchicago.edu. Retrieved April 4, 2023.
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Sources edit

Secondary sources
  • of the International Commission on the Holocaust in Romania, Polirom, Iași, 2004. ISBN 973-681-989-2; retrieved October 8, 2007.
  • Sorin Antohi, "Commuting to Castalia: Noica's 'School', Culture and Power in Communist Romania", preface to Gabriel Liiceanu, The Păltiniş Diary: A Paideic Model in Humanist Culture, Central European University Press, Budapest, 2000, pp. vii–xxiv. ISBN 963-9116-89-0.
  • George Călinescu, Istoria literaturii române de la origini până în prezent ("The History of Romanian Literature from Its Origins to Present Times"), Editura Minerva, Bucharest, 1986
  • John Daniel Dadosky, The Structure of Religious Knowing: Encountering the Sacred in Eliade and Lonergan, State University of New York Press, Albany, 2004.
  • Robert Ellwood, The Politics of Myth: A Study of C. G. Jung, Mircea Eliade, and Joseph Campbell, State University of New York Press, Albany, 1999.
  • Victor Frunză, Istoria stalinismului în România ("The History of Stalinism in Romania"), Humanitas, Bucharest, 1990
  • Roger Griffin, The Nature of Fascism, Routledge, London, 1993.
  • Mircea Handoca, on page of the Humanitas publishing house (in Romanian)
  • Furio Jesi, Mito, Mondadori, Milan, 1980.
  • G. S. Kirk,
  • William McGuire, Bollingen: An Adventure in Collecting the Past, Princeton University Press, Princeton, 1982. ISBN 0-691-01885-5.
  • Lucian Nastasă, "Suveranii" universităţilor româneşti ("The 'Sovereigns' of Romanian Universities"), Editura Limes, Cluj-Napoca, 2007 (available online at the Romanian Academy's George Bariţ Institute of History)
  • Andrei Oişteanu,
    • "Angajamentul politic al lui Mircea Eliade" ("Mircea Eliade's Political Affiliation"), in 22, Nr. 891, March–April 2007; retrieved November 15, 2007; retrieved January 17, 2008. (in Romanian)
    • , in Dilema Veche, Vol. III, May 2006; retrieved November 7, 2007 (in Romanian)
  • Z. Ornea, Anii treizeci. Extrema dreaptă românească ("The 1930s: The Romanian Far Right"), Editura EST-Samuel Tastet Editeur, Bucharest, 2008
  • Mihail Sebastian, Journal, 1935–1944: The Fascist Years, Ivan R. Dee, Chicago, 2000. ISBN 1-56663-326-5.
  • David Leeming. "Archetypes". The Oxford Companion to World Mythology. Oxford University Press, 2004. Oxford Reference Online. Oxford University Press. UC—Irvine. 30 May 2011 [1]
  • Isabela Vasiliu-Scraba, Harismele Duhului Sfânt si fotografia "de 14 ani" (Mircea Eliade), în rev. "Acolada", Satu Mare, annul XIV, nr. 12 (157), decembrie 2020, pp. 12–13

Further reading edit

English edit

  • Carrasco, David and Law, Jane Marie (eds.). 1985. Waiting for the Dawn. Boulder: Westview Press.
  • Dudley, Guilford. 1977. Religion on Trial: Mircea Eliade & His Critics. Philadelphia: Temple University Press.
  • Idinopulos, Thomas A., Yonan, Edward A. (eds.) 1994. Religion and Reductionism: Essays on Eliade, Segal, and the Challenge of the Social Sciences for the Study of Religion, Leiden: Brill Publishers. ISBN 90-04-06788-4
  • Lincoln, Bruce. 2024. Secrets, Lies, and Consequences: A Great Scholar's Hidden Past and His Protégé's Unsolved Murder. New York: Oxford University Press.
  • McCutcheon, Russell T. 1997. Manufacturing Religion: The Discourse on Sui Generis Religion and the Politics of Nostalgia. New York: Oxford University Press.
  • Olson, Carl. 1992. The Theology and Philosophy of Eliade: A Search for the Centre. New York: St Martins Press.
  • Pals, Daniel L. 1996. Seven Theories of Religion. USA: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-508725-9
  • Rennie, Bryan S. 1996. Reconstructing Eliade: Making Sense of Religion. Albany: State University of New York Press.
  • ———, ed. (2001), Changing Religious Worlds: The Meaning and End of Mircea Eliade, Albany: State University of New York Press.
  • ——— (2007), The International Eliade, Albany: State University of New York Press, ISBN 978-0-7914-7087-9.
  • Simion, Eugen. 2001. Mircea Eliade: A Spirit of Amplitude. Boulder: East European Monographs.
  • Strenski, Ivan. 1987. Four Theories of Myth in Twentieth-Century History: Cassirer, Eliade, Levi Strauss and Malinowski. Iowa City: University of Iowa Press.
  • Wasserstrom, Steven M. 1999. Religion after Religion: Gershom Scholem, Mircea Eliade, and Henry Corbin at Eranos. Princeton: Princeton University Press
  • Wedemeyer, Christian; Doniger, Wendy (eds.). 2010. Hermeneutics, Politics, and the History of Religions: The Contested Legacies of Joachim Wach and Mircea Eliade. Oxford etc.: Oxford University Press

Other languages edit

  • Alexandrescu, Sorin. 2007. Mircea Eliade, dinspre Portugalia. Bucharest: Humanitas. ISBN 973-50-1220-0
  • Băicuș, Iulian, 2009, Mircea Eliade. Literator și mitodolog. În căutarea Centrului pierdut. Bucharest: Editura Universității București
  • Călinescu, Matei. 2002. Despre Ioan P. Culianu și Mircea Eliade. Amintiri, lecturi, reflecții. Iași: Polirom. ISBN 973-681-064-X
  • Culianu, Ioan Petru. 1978. Mircea Eliade. Assisi: Cittadella Editrice; 2008 Roma: Settimo Sigillo.
  • David, Dorin. 2010. De la Eliade la Culianu (I). București: Eikon.
  • David, Dorin. 2014. Mircea Eliade: la marginea labirintului: corespondențe între opera științifică și proza fantastică. București: Eikon.
  • De Martino, Marcello. 2008. Mircea Eliade esoterico. Roma: Settimo Sigillo.
  • Dubuisson, Daniel. 2005. Impostures et pseudo-science. L'œuvre de Mircea Eliade. Villeneuve d'Ascq: Presses Universitaires du Septentrion
  • Gorshunova, Olga. 2008. Terra Incognita of Ioan Culianu, in Ètnografičeskoe obozrenie. N° 6, pp. 94–110. ISSN 0869-5415.(in Russian).
  • Laignel-Lavastine, Alexandra. 2002. Cioran, Eliade, Ionesco – L'oubli du fascisme. Paris: Presses Universitaires de France-Perspectives critiques.
  • Oișteanu, Andrei. 2007. Religie, politică și mit. Texte despre Mircea Eliade și Ioan Petru Culianu. Iași: Polirom.
  • Posada, Mihai. 2006. Opera publicistică a lui Mircea Eliade. Bucharest: Editura Criterion. ISBN 978-973-8982-14-7
  • Ruști, Doina. 1997. Dicționar de simboluri din opera lui Mircea Eliade. Bucharest: Editura Coresi. E-book
  • Tacou, Constantin (ed.). 1977. Cahier Eliade. Paris: L'Herne.
  • Tolcea, Marcel. 2002. Eliade, ezotericul. Timișoara: Editura Mirton.
  • Țurcanu, Florin. 2003. Mircea Eliade. Le prisonnier de l'histoire. Paris: Editions La Découverte.

External links edit

  • Biography of Mircea Eliade February 5, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
  • Petri Liukkonen. "Mircea Eliade". Books and Writers.
  • (in Romanian)
  • (in Romanian)
  • Eliade and symbols
  • Claudia Guggenbühl, Mircea Eliade and Surendranath Dasgupta. The History Of Their Encounter
  • Mircea Eliade at Library of Congress, with 199 library catalogue records
  • Guide to the Mircea Eliade Papers 1926-1998 at the University of Chicago Special Collections Research Center

mircea, eliade, eliade, redirects, here, other, persons, same, name, eliade, surname, romanian, ˈmirtʃe, eliˈade, march, february, 1907, april, 1986, romanian, historian, religion, fiction, writer, philosopher, professor, university, chicago, most, influential. Eliade redirects here For other persons of the same name see Eliade surname Mircea Eliade Romanian ˈmirtʃe a eliˈade March 13 O S February 28 1907 April 22 1986 was a Romanian historian of religion fiction writer philosopher and professor at the University of Chicago One of the most influential scholars of religion of the 20th century 1 and interpreter of religious experience he established paradigms in religious studies that persist to this day His theory that hierophanies form the basis of religion splitting the human experience of reality into sacred and profane space and time has proved influential 2 One of his most instrumental contributions to religious studies was his theory of eternal return which holds that myths and rituals do not simply commemorate hierophanies but at least in the minds of the religious actually participate in them 2 Mircea EliadeEliade in 1933Born 1907 03 13 March 13 1907Bucharest Kingdom of RomaniaDiedApril 22 1986 1986 04 22 aged 79 Chicago Illinois United StatesResting placeOak Woods CemeteryOccupationHistorian philosopher short story writer journalist essayist novelistLanguageRomanian French German EnglishNationalityRomanianCitizenshipRomaniaUnited StatesEducationUniversity of Calcutta University of BucharestPeriod1921 1986GenreFantasy autobiography travel literatureSubjectHistory of religion philosophy of religion cultural history political historyLiterary movementModernismCriterionTrăirismParentsGheorghe Eliade Jeana nee VasilescuEliade s literary works belong to the fantastic and autobiographical genres The best known are the novels Maitreyi La Nuit Bengali or Bengal Nights 1933 Noaptea de Sanziene The Forbidden Forest 1955 Isabel și apele diavolului Isabel and the Devil s Waters and Romanul Adolescentului Miop Novel of the Nearsighted Adolescent 1989 the novellas Domnișoara Christina Miss Christina 1936 and Tinerețe fără tinerețe Youth Without Youth 1976 and the short stories Secretul doctorului Honigberger The Secret of Dr Honigberger 1940 and La Țigănci With the Gypsy Girls 1963 Early in his life Eliade was a journalist and essayist a disciple of Romanian philosopher and journalist Nae Ionescu and a member of the literary society Criterion In the 1940s he served as cultural attache of the Kingdom of Romania to the United Kingdom and Portugal Several times during the late 1930s Eliade publicly expressed his support for the Iron Guard a Romanian Christian fascist terrorist 3 organization His involvement with fascism at the time as well as his other far right connections came under frequent criticism after World War II Noted for his vast erudition Eliade had fluent command of five languages Romanian French German Italian and English and a reading knowledge of three others Hebrew Persian and Sanskrit In 1990 he was elected a posthumous member of the Romanian Academy Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Childhood 1 2 Adolescence and literary debut 1 3 University studies and Indian sojourn 1 4 Criterion and Cuvantul 1 5 1930s political transition 1 6 Internment and diplomatic service 1 7 Early exile 1 8 Final years and death 2 Work 2 1 The general nature of religion 2 1 1 Sacred and profane 2 1 2 Origin myths and sacred time 2 1 3 Eternal return and Terror of history 2 1 4 Coincidentia oppositorum 2 2 Exceptions to the general nature 2 3 Symbolism of the Center 2 4 The High God 2 5 Shamanism 2 5 1 Death resurrection and secondary functions 3 Philosophy 3 1 Early contributions 3 2 Philosopher of religion 3 2 1 Anti reductionism and the transconscious 3 2 2 Platonism and primitive ontology 3 2 3 Existentialism and secularism 3 2 4 Religious survivals in the secular world 3 2 5 Modern man and the terror of history 3 2 6 Inter cultural dialogue and a new humanism 3 2 7 Christianity and the salvation of History 3 2 8 Modern gnosticism Romanticism and Eliade s nostalgia 4 Criticism of Eliade s scholarship 4 1 Overgeneralization 4 2 Lack of empirical support 4 3 Far right and nationalist influences 5 Literary works 5 1 Generic traits 5 2 Oriental themed novels 5 2 1 Isabel și apele diavolului 5 2 2 Maitreyi 5 2 3 Șantier 5 3 Portraits of a generation 5 3 1 Novel of the Nearsighted Adolescent 5 3 2 Intoarcerea din rai 5 3 3 Huliganii 5 3 4 Marriage in Heaven 5 4 Fantastic and fantasy literature 5 4 1 Șarpele 5 4 2 Un om mare 5 5 Other writings 6 Controversy antisemitism and links with the Iron Guard 6 1 Early statements 6 2 Polemics and exile 6 3 Posterity 6 4 Political symbolism in Eliade s fiction 7 Cultural legacy 7 1 Tributes 7 2 Portrayals filmography and dramatizations 7 2 1 Film adaptations 7 2 2 Live adaptations 8 Selected bibliography 9 See also 10 Notes 11 References 11 1 Citations 11 2 Sources 12 Further reading 12 1 English 12 2 Other languages 13 External linksBiography editChildhood edit Born in Bucharest he was the son of Romanian Land Forces officer Gheorghe Eliade whose original surname was Ieremia 4 5 and Jeana nee Vasilescu 6 An Orthodox believer Gheorghe Eliade registered his son s birth four days before the actual date to coincide with the liturgical calendar feast of the Forty Martyrs of Sebaste 5 Mircea Eliade had a sister Corina the mother of semiologist Sorin Alexandrescu 7 8 His family moved between Tecuci and Bucharest ultimately settling in the capital in 1914 4 and purchasing a house on Melodiei Street near Piața Rosetti where Mircea Eliade resided until late in his teens 8 Eliade kept a particularly fond memory of his childhood and later in life wrote about the impact various unusual episodes and encounters had on his mind In one instance during the World War I Romanian Campaign when Eliade was about ten years of age he witnessed the bombing of Bucharest by German zeppelins and the patriotic fervor in the occupied capital at news that Romania was able to stop the Central Powers advance into Moldavia 9 He described this stage in his life as marked by an unrepeatable epiphany 10 11 Recalling his entrance into a drawing room that an eerie iridescent light had turned into a fairy tale palace he wrote I practiced for many years the exercise of recapturing that epiphanic moment and I would always find again the same plenitude I would slip into it as into a fragment of time devoid of duration without beginning middle or end During my last years of lycee when I struggled with profound attacks of melancholy I still succeeded at times in returning to the golden green light of that afternoon But even though the beatitude was the same it was now impossible to bear because it aggravated my sadness too much By this time I knew the world to which the drawing room belonged was a world forever lost 12 Robert Ellwood a professor of religion who did his graduate studies under Mircea Eliade 13 saw this type of nostalgia as one of the most characteristic themes in Eliade s life and academic writings 11 Adolescence and literary debut edit After completing his primary education at the school on Mantuleasa Street 4 Eliade attended the Spiru Haret National College in the same class as Arșavir Acterian Haig Acterian and Petre Viforeanu and several years the senior of Nicolae Steinhardt who eventually became a close friend of Eliade s 14 Among his other colleagues was future philosopher Constantin Noica 5 and Noica s friend future art historian Barbu Brezianu 15 As a child Eliade was fascinated with the natural world which formed the setting of his very first literary attempts 5 as well as with Romanian folklore and the Christian faith as expressed by peasants 8 Growing up he aimed to find and record what he believed was the common source of all religious traditions 8 The young Eliade s interest in physical exercise and adventure led him to pursue mountaineering and sailing 8 and he also joined the Romanian Boy Scouts 16 With a group of friends he designed and sailed a boat on the Danube from Tulcea to the Black Sea 17 In parallel Eliade grew estranged from the educational environment becoming disenchanted with the discipline required and obsessed with the idea that he was uglier and less virile than his colleagues 5 In order to cultivate his willpower he would force himself to swallow insects 5 and only slept four to five hours a night 9 At one point Eliade was failing four subjects among which was the study of the Romanian language 5 Instead he became interested in natural science and chemistry as well as the occult 5 and wrote short pieces on entomological subjects 9 Despite his father s concern that he was in danger of losing his already weak eyesight Eliade read passionately 5 One of his favorite authors was Honore de Balzac whose work he studied carefully 5 9 Eliade also became acquainted with the modernist short stories of Giovanni Papini and social anthropology studies by James George Frazer 9 His interest in the two writers led him to learn Italian and English in private and he also began studying Persian and Hebrew 4 9 At the time Eliade became acquainted with Saadi s poems and the ancient Mesopotamian Epic of Gilgamesh 9 He was also interested in philosophy studying among others Socrates Vasile Conta and the Stoics Marcus Aurelius and Epictetus and read works of history the two Romanian historians who influenced him from early on were Bogdan Petriceicu Hasdeu and Nicolae Iorga 9 His first published work was the 1921 Inamicul viermelui de mătase The Silkworm s Enemy 4 followed by Cum am găsit piatra filosofală How I Found the Philosophers Stone 9 Four years later Eliade completed work on his debut volume the autobiographical Novel of the Nearsighted Adolescent 9 University studies and Indian sojourn edit Between 1925 and 1928 he attended the University of Bucharest s Faculty of Philosophy and Letters in 1928 earning his diploma with a study on Early Modern Italian philosopher Tommaso Campanella 4 In 1927 Eliade traveled to Italy where he met Papini 4 and collaborated with the scholar Giuseppe Tucci It was during his student years that Eliade met Nae Ionescu who lectured in Logic becoming one of his disciples and friends 5 8 18 He was especially attracted to Ionescu s radical ideas and his interest in religion which signified a break with the rationalist tradition represented by senior academics such as Constantin Rădulescu Motru Dimitrie Gusti and Tudor Vianu all of whom owed inspiration to the defunct literary society Junimea albeit in varying degrees 5 Eliade s scholarly works began after a long period of study in British 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 which was later doubled by a Romanian scholarship 19 In autumn 1928 he sailed for Calcutta to study Sanskrit and philosophy under Surendranath Dasgupta a Bengali Cambridge alumnus and professor at Calcutta University the author of a five volume History of Indian Philosophy Before reaching the Indian subcontinent Eliade also made a brief visit to Egypt 4 Once in India he visited large areas of the region and spent a short period at a Himalayan ashram 20 He studied the basics of Indian philosophy and in parallel learned Sanskrit Pali and Bengali under Dasgupta s direction 19 At the time he also became interested in the actions of Mahatma Gandhi and the Satyagraha as a phenomenon later Eliade adapted Gandhian ideas in his discourse on spirituality and Romania In 1930 while living with Dasgupta Eliade fell in love with his host s daughter Maitreyi Devi later writing a barely disguised autobiographical novel Maitreyi also known as La Nuit Bengali or Bengal Nights in which he claimed that he carried on a physical relationship with her 21 Eliade received his PhD in 1933 with a thesis on Yoga practices 5 8 22 23 The book which was translated into French three years later 19 had significant impact in academia both in Romania and abroad 8 He later recalled that the book was an early step for understanding not just Indian religious practices but also Romanian spirituality 24 During the same period Eliade began a correspondence with the Ceylonese born philosopher Ananda Coomaraswamy 25 In 1936 1937 he functioned as honorary assistant for Ionescu s course lecturing in Metaphysics 26 In 1933 Mircea Eliade had a physical relationship with the actress Sorana Țopa while falling in love with Nina Mareș whom he ultimately married 7 8 27 The latter introduced to him by his new friend Mihail Sebastian already had a daughter Giza from a man who had divorced her 8 Eliade subsequently adopted Giza 28 and the three of them moved to an apartment at 141 Dacia Boulevard 8 He left his residence in 1936 during a trip he made to the United Kingdom and Germany when he first visited London Oxford and Berlin 4 Criterion and Cuvantul edit nbsp Eliade s home in Bucharest 1934 1940 After contributing various and generally polemical pieces in university magazines Eliade came to the attention of journalist Pamfil Șeicaru who invited him to collaborate on the nationalist paper Cuvantul which was noted for its harsh tones 5 By then Cuvantul was also hosting articles by Nae Ionescu 5 As one of the figures in the Criterion literary society 1933 1934 Eliade s initial encounter with the traditional far right was polemical the group s conferences were stormed by members of A C Cuza s National Christian Defense League who objected to what they viewed as pacifism and addressed antisemitic insults to several speakers including Sebastian 29 30 in 1933 he was among the signers of a manifesto opposing Nazi Germany s state enforced racism 31 In 1934 at a time when Sebastian was publicly insulted by Nae Ionescu who prefaced his book De două mii de ani with thoughts on the eternal damnation of Jews Mircea Eliade spoke out against this perspective and commented that Ionescu s references to the verdict Outside the Church there is no salvation contradicted the notion of God s omnipotence 32 33 However he contended that Ionescu s text was not evidence of antisemitism 34 In 1936 reflecting on the early history of the Romanian Kingdom and its Jewish community he deplored the expulsion of Jewish scholars from Romania making specific references to Moses Gaster Heimann Hariton Tiktin and Lazăr Șăineanu 35 Eliade s views at the time focused on innovation in the summer of 1933 he replied to an anti modernist critique written by George Călinescu All I wish for is a deep change a complete transformation But for God s sake in any direction other than spirituality 36 He and friends Emil Cioran and Constantin Noica were by then under the influence of Trăirism a school of thought that was formed around the ideals expressed by Ionescu A form of existentialism Trăirism was also the synthesis of traditional and newer right wing beliefs 37 Early on a public polemic was sparked between Eliade and Camil Petrescu the two eventually reconciled and later became good friends 28 Like Mihail Sebastian who was himself becoming influenced by Ionescu he maintained contacts with intellectuals from all sides of the political spectrum their entourage included the right wing Dan Botta and Mircea Vulcănescu the non political Petrescu and Ionel Jianu and Belu Zilber who was a member of the illegal Romanian Communist Party 38 The group also included Haig Acterian Mihail Polihroniade Petru Comarnescu Marietta Sadova and Floria Capsali 32 He was also close to Marcel Avramescu a former Surrealist writer whom he introduced to the works of Rene Guenon 39 A doctor in the Kabbalah and future Romanian Orthodox cleric Avramescu joined Eliade in editing the short lived esoteric magazine Memra the only one of its kind in Romania 40 Among the intellectuals who attended his lectures were Mihai Sora whom he deemed his favorite student Eugen Schileru and Miron Constantinescu known later as respectively a philosopher an art critic and a sociologist and political figure of the communist regime 28 Mariana Klein who became Șora s wife was one of Eliade s female students and later authored works on his scholarship 28 Eliade later recounted that he had himself enlisted Zilber as a Cuvantul contributor in order for him to provide a Marxist perspective on the issues discussed by the journal 38 Their relation soured in 1935 when the latter publicly accused Eliade of serving as an agent for the secret police Siguranța Statului Sebastian answered to the statement by alleging that Zilber was himself a secret agent and the latter eventually retracted his claim 38 1930s political transition edit Eliade s articles before and after his adherence to the principles of the Iron Guard or as it was usually known at the time the Legionary Movement beginning with his Itinerar spiritual Spiritual Itinerary serialized in Cuvantul in 1927 center on several political ideals advocated by the far right They displayed his rejection of liberalism and the modernizing goals of the 1848 Wallachian revolution perceived as an abstract apology of Mankind 41 and ape like imitation of Western Europe 42 as well as for democracy itself accusing it of managing to crush all attempts at national renaissance 43 and later praising Benito Mussolini s Fascist Italy on the grounds that according to Eliade in Italy he who thinks for himself is promoted to the highest office in the shortest of times 43 He approved of an ethnic nationalist state centered on the Orthodox Church in 1927 despite his still vivid interest in Theosophy he recommended young intellectuals the return to the Church 44 which he opposed to among others the secular nationalism of Constantin Rădulescu Motru 45 referring to this particular ideal as Romanianism Eliade was in 1934 still viewing it as neither fascism nor chauvinism 46 Eliade was especially dissatisfied with the incidence of unemployment among intellectuals whose careers in state financed institutions had been rendered uncertain by the Great Depression 47 In 1936 Eliade was the focus of a campaign in the far right press being targeted for having authored pornography in his Domnișoara Christina and Isabel și apele diavolului similar accusations were aimed at other cultural figures including Tudor Arghezi and Geo Bogza 48 Assessments of Eliade s work were in sharp contrast to one another also in 1936 Eliade accepted an award from the Romanian Writers Society of which he had been a member since 1934 49 In summer 1937 through an official decision which came as a result of the accusations and despite student protests he was stripped of his position at the university 50 Eliade decided to sue the Ministry of Education asking for a symbolic compensation of 1 leu 51 He won the trial and regained his position as Nae Ionescu s assistant 51 Nevertheless by 1937 he gave his intellectual support to the Iron Guard in which he saw a Christian revolution aimed at creating a new Romania 52 and a group able to reconcile Romania with God 52 His articles of the time published in Iron Guard affiliated papers such as Sfarmă Piatră and Buna Vestire contain ample praises of the movement s leaders Corneliu Zelea Codreanu Ion Moța Vasile Marin and Gheorghe Cantacuzino Grănicerul 53 54 The transition he went through was similar to that of his fellow generation members and close collaborators among the notable exceptions to this rule were Petru Comarnescu sociologist Henri H Stahl and future dramatist Eugene Ionesco as well as Sebastian 55 He eventually enrolled in the Totul pentru Țară Everything for the Fatherland Party the political expression of the Iron Guard 5 56 and contributed to its 1937 electoral campaign in Prahova County as indicated by his inclusion on a list of party members with county level responsibilities published in Buna Vestire 56 Internment and diplomatic service edit The stance taken by Eliade resulted in his arrest on July 14 1938 after a crackdown on the Iron Guard authorized by King Carol II At the time of his arrest he had just interrupted a column on Provincia și legionarismul The Province and Legionary Ideology in Vremea having been singled out by Prime Minister Armand Călinescu as an author of Iron Guard propaganda 57 Eliade was kept for three weeks in a cell at the Siguranța Statului Headquarters in an attempt to have him sign a declaration of dissociation with the Iron Guard but he refused to do so 58 In the first week of August he was transferred to a makeshift camp at Miercurea Ciuc When Eliade began coughing blood in October 1938 he was taken to a clinic in Moroeni 58 Eliade was simply released on November 12 and subsequently spent his time writing his play Iphigenia also known as Ifigenia 32 In April 1940 with the help of Alexandru Rosetti he became Cultural Attache to the United Kingdom a posting cut short when Romanian British foreign relations were broken 58 After leaving London he was assigned the office of Counsel and Press Officer later Cultural Attache to the Romanian Embassy in Portugal 27 59 60 61 where he was kept on as diplomat by the National Legionary State the Iron Guard government and ultimately by Ion Antonescu s regime His office involved disseminating propaganda in favor of the Romanian state 27 In 1941 during his time in Portugal Eliade stayed in Estoril at the Hotel Palacio He would later find a house in Cascais at Rua da Saudade 62 63 In February 1941 weeks after the bloody Legionary Rebellion was crushed by Antonescu Iphigenia was staged by the National Theater Bucharest the play soon raised concerns that it owed inspiration to the Iron Guard s ideology and even that its inclusion in the program was a Legionary attempt at subversion 32 In 1942 Eliade authored a volume in praise of the Estado Novo established in Portugal by Antonio de Oliveira Salazar 61 64 65 claiming that The Salazarian state a Christian and totalitarian one is first and foremost based on love 64 On July 7 of the same year he was received by Salazar himself who assigned Eliade the task of warning Antonescu to withdraw the Romanian Army from the Eastern Front In his place I would not be grinding it in Russia 66 Eliade also claimed that such contacts with the leader of a neutral country had made him the target for Gestapo surveillance but that he had managed to communicate Salazar s advice to Mihai Antonescu Romania s Foreign Minister 66 In autumn 1943 he traveled to occupied France where he rejoined Emil Cioran also meeting with scholar Georges Dumezil and the collaborationist writer Paul Morand 27 At the same time he applied for a position of lecturer at the University of Bucharest but withdrew from the race leaving Constantin Noica and Ion Zamfirescu to dispute the position in front of a panel of academics comprising Lucian Blaga and Dimitrie Gusti Zamfirescu s eventual selection going against Blaga s recommendation was to be the topic of a controversy 67 In his private notes Eliade wrote that he took no further interest in the office because his visits abroad had convinced him that he had something great to say and that he could not function within the confines of a minor culture 27 Also during the war Eliade traveled to Berlin where he met and conversed with controversial political theorist Carl Schmitt 8 27 and frequently visited Francoist Spain where he notably attended the 1944 Lusitano Spanish scientific congress in Cordoba 27 68 69 It was during his trips to Spain that Eliade met philosophers Jose Ortega y Gasset and Eugenio d Ors He maintained a friendship with d Ors and met him again on several occasions after the war 68 Nina Eliade fell ill with uterine cancer and died during their stay in Lisbon in late 1944 As the widower later wrote the disease was probably caused by an abortion procedure she had undergone at an early stage of their relationship 27 He came to suffer from clinical depression which increased as Romania and her Axis allies suffered major defeats on the Eastern Front 27 69 Contemplating a return to Romania as a soldier or a monk 27 he was on a continuous search for effective antidepressants medicating himself with passion flower extract and eventually with methamphetamine 69 This was probably not his first experience with drugs vague mentions in his notebooks have been read as indication that Mircea Eliade was taking opium during his travels to Calcutta 69 Later discussing the works of Aldous Huxley Eliade wrote that the British author s use of mescaline as a source of inspiration had something in common with his own experience indicating 1945 as a date of reference and adding that it was needless to explain why that is 69 Early exile edit At signs that the Romanian communist regime was about to take hold Eliade opted not to return to the country On September 16 1945 he moved to France with his adopted daughter Giza 4 27 Once there he resumed contacts with Dumezil who helped him recover his position in academia 8 On Dumezil s recommendation he taught at the Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes in Paris 28 It was estimated that at the time it was not uncommon for him to work 15 hours a day 23 Eliade married a second time to the Romanian exile Christinel Cotescu 8 70 His second wife the descendant of boyars was the sister in law of the conductor Ionel Perlea 70 Together with Emil Cioran and other Romanian expatriates Eliade rallied with the former diplomat Alexandru Busuioceanu helping him publicize anti communist opinion to the Western European public 71 He was also briefly involved in publishing a Romanian language magazine titled Luceafărul The Morning Star 71 and was again in contact with Mihai Șora who had been granted a scholarship to study in France and with Șora s wife Mariana 28 In 1947 he was facing material constraints and Ananda Coomaraswamy found him a job as a French language teacher in the United States at a school in Arizona the arrangement ended upon Coomaraswamy s death in September 25 Beginning in 1948 he wrote for the journal Critique edited by French philosopher Georges Bataille 4 The following year he went on a visit to Italy where he wrote the first 300 pages of his novel Noaptea de Sanziene he visited the country a third time in 1952 4 He collaborated with Carl Jung and the Eranos circle after Henry Corbin recommended him in 1949 25 and wrote for the Antaios magazine edited by Ernst Junger 23 In 1950 Eliade began attending Eranos conferences meeting Jung Olga Frobe Kapteyn Gershom Scholem and Paul Radin 72 He described Eranos as one of the most creative cultural experiences of the modern Western world 73 In October 1956 he moved to the United States settling in Chicago the following year 4 8 He had been invited by Joachim Wach to give a series of lectures at Wach s home institution the University of Chicago 73 Eliade and Wach are generally admitted to be the founders of the Chicago school that basically defined the study of religions for the second half of the 20th century 74 Upon Wach s death before the lectures were delivered Eliade was appointed as his successor becoming in 1964 the Sewell Avery Distinguished Service Professor of the History of Religions 4 Beginning in 1954 with the first edition of his volume on Eternal Return Eliade also enjoyed commercial success the book went through several editions under different titles and sold over 100 000 copies 75 In 1966 Mircea Eliade became a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences 4 He also worked as editor in chief of Macmillan Publishers Encyclopedia of Religion and in 1968 lectured in religious history at the University of California Santa Barbara 76 It was also during that period that Mircea Eliade completed his voluminous and influential History of Religious Ideas which grouped together the overviews of his main original interpretations of religious history 8 He occasionally traveled out of the United States attending the Congress for the History of Religions in Marburg 1960 and visiting Sweden and Norway in 1970 4 Final years and death edit Initially Eliade was attacked with virulence by the Romanian Communist Party press chiefly by Romania Liberă which described him as the Iron Guard s ideologue enemy of the working class apologist of Salazar s dictatorship 77 However the regime also made secretive attempts to enlist his and Cioran s support Haig Acterian s widow theater director Marietta Sadova was sent to Paris in order to re establish contacts with the two 78 Although the move was planned by Romanian officials her encounters were to be used as evidence incriminating her at a February 1960 trial for treason where Constantin Noica and Dinu Pillat were the main defendants 78 Romania s secret police the Securitate also portrayed Eliade as a spy for the British Secret Intelligence Service and a former agent of the Gestapo 79 He was slowly rehabilitated at home beginning in the early 1960s under the rule of Gheorghe Gheorghiu Dej 80 In the 1970s Eliade was approached by the Nicolae Ceaușescu regime in several ways in order to have him return 8 The move was prompted by the officially sanctioned nationalism and Romania s claim to independence from the Eastern Bloc as both phenomena came to see Eliade s prestige as an asset An unprecedented event occurred with the interview that was granted by Mircea Eliade to poet Adrian Păunescu during the latter s 1970 visit to Chicago Eliade complimented both Păunescu s activism and his support for official tenets expressing a belief that the youth of Eastern Europe is clearly superior to that of Western Europe I am convinced that within ten years the young revolutionary generation shan t be behaving as does today the noisy minority of Western contesters Eastern youth have seen the abolition of traditional institutions have accepted it and are not yet content with the structures enforced but rather seek to improve them 81 Păunescu s visit to Chicago was followed by those of the nationalist official writer Eugen Barbu and by Eliade s friend Constantin Noica who had since been released from jail 54 At the time Eliade contemplated returning to Romania but was eventually persuaded by fellow Romanian intellectuals in exile including Radio Free Europe s Virgil Ierunca and Monica Lovinescu to reject Communist proposals 54 In 1977 he joined other exiled Romanian intellectuals in signing a telegram protesting the repressive measures newly enforced by the Ceaușescu regime 5 Writing in 2007 Romanian anthropologist Andrei Oișteanu recounted how around 1984 the Securitate unsuccessfully attempted to become an agent of influence in Eliade s Chicago circle 82 During his later years Eliade s past was progressively exposed publicly the stress of which probably contributed to the decline of his health 5 By then his writing career was hampered by severe arthritis 28 The last academic honors bestowed upon him were the French Academy s Bordin Prize 1977 and the title of Doctor Honoris Causa granted by George Washington University 1985 4 83 nbsp Eliade s grave at Oak Woods CemeteryMircea Eliade died at the Bernard Mitchell Hospital in April 1986 Eight days previously he suffered a stroke while reading Emil Cioran s Exercises of Admiration and had subsequently lost his speech function 10 Four months before a fire had destroyed part of his office at the Meadville Lombard Theological School an event which he had interpreted as an omen 5 10 Eliade s Romanian disciple Ioan Petru Culianu who recalled the scientific community s reaction to the news described Eliade s death as a mahaparanirvana thus comparing it to the passing of Gautama Buddha 10 His body was cremated in Chicago and the funeral ceremony was held on University grounds at the Rockefeller Chapel 4 10 It was attended by 1 200 people and included a public reading of Eliade s text in which he recalled the epiphany of his childhood the lecture was given by novelist Saul Bellow Eliade s colleague at the university 10 His student and the bearer of his legacy Charles H Long co founder of the History of Religions at the University of Chicago Divinity School gave the eulogy 84 His grave is located in Oak Woods Cemetery 85 Work editThe general nature of religion edit In his work on the history of religion Eliade is most highly regarded for his writings on Alchemy 86 Shamanism Yoga and what he called the eternal return the implicit belief supposedly present in religious thought in general that religious behavior is not only an imitation of but also a participation in sacred events and thus restores the mythical time of origins Eliade s thinking was in part influenced by Rudolf Otto Gerardus van der Leeuw Nae Ionescu and the writings of the Traditionalist School Rene Guenon and Julius Evola 39 For instance Eliade s The Sacred and the Profane partially builds on Otto s The Idea of the Holy to show how religion emerges from the experience of the sacred and myths of time and nature Eliade is known for his attempt to find broad cross cultural parallels and unities in religion particularly in myths Wendy Doniger Eliade s colleague from 1978 until his death has observed that Eliade argued boldly for universals where he might more safely have argued for widely prevalent patterns 87 His Treatise on the History of Religions was praised by French philologist Georges Dumezil for its coherence and ability to synthesize diverse and distinct mythologies 88 Robert Ellwood describes Eliade s approach to religion as follows Eliade approaches religion by imagining an ideally religious person whom he calls homo religiosus in his writings Eliade s theories basically describe how this homo religiosus would view the world 89 This does not mean that all religious practitioners actually think and act like homo religiosus Instead it means that religious behavior says through its own language that the world is as homo religiosus would see it whether or not the real life participants in religious behavior are aware of it 90 However Ellwood writes that Eliade tends to slide over that last qualification implying that traditional societies actually thought like homo religiosus 90 Sacred and profane edit nbsp Moses taking off his shoes in front of the burning bush illustration from a 16th century edition of the Speculum Humanae Salvationis Eliade argues that Yahweh is both kind and wrathful the God of the Christian mystics and theologians is terrible and gentle at once 91 He also thought that the Indian and Chinese mystic tried to attain a state of perfect indifference and neutrality that resulted in a coincidence of opposites in which pleasure and pain desire and repulsion cold and heat are expunged from his awareness 91 Eliade s understanding of religion centers on his concept of hierophany manifestation of the Sacred a concept that includes but is not limited to the older and more restrictive concept of theophany manifestation of a god 92 From the perspective of religious thought Eliade argues hierophanies give structure and orientation to the world establishing a sacred order The profane space of nonreligious experience can only be divided up geometrically it has no qualitative differentiation and hence no orientation is given by virtue of its inherent structure 93 Thus profane space gives man no pattern for his behavior In contrast to profane space the site of a hierophany has a sacred structure to which religious man conforms himself A hierophany amounts to a revelation of an absolute reality opposed to the non reality of the vast surrounding expanse 94 As an example of sacred space demanding a certain response from man Eliade gives the story of Moses halting before Yahweh s manifestation as a burning bush Exodus 3 5 and taking off his shoes 95 Origin myths and sacred time edit Eliade notes that in traditional societies myth represents the absolute truth about primordial time 96 According to the myths this was the time when the Sacred first appeared establishing the world s structure myths claim to describe the primordial events that made society and the natural world be that which they are Eliade argues that all myths are in that sense origin myths myth then is always an account of a creation 97 Many traditional societies believe that the power of a thing lies in its origin 98 If origin is equivalent to power then it is the first manifestation of a thing that is significant and valid 99 a thing s reality and value therefore lies only in its first appearance According to Eliade s theory only the Sacred has value only a thing s first appearance has value and therefore only the Sacred s first appearance has value Myth describes the Sacred s first appearance therefore the mythical age is sacred time 96 the only time of value primitive man was interested only in the beginnings to him it mattered little what had happened to himself or to others like him in more or less distant times 100 Eliade postulated this as the reason for the nostalgia for origins that appears in many religions the desire to return to a primordial Paradise 100 Eternal return and Terror of history edit Main article Eternal return Eliade Eliade argues that traditional man attributes no value to the linear march of historical events only the events of the mythical age have value To give his own life value traditional man performs myths and rituals Because the Sacred s essence lies only in the mythical age only in the Sacred s first appearance any later appearance is actually the first appearance by recounting or re enacting mythical events myths and rituals re actualize those events 101 Eliade often uses the term archetypes to refer to the mythical models established by the Sacred although Eliade s use of the term should be distinguished from the use of the term in Jungian psychology 102 Thus argues Eliade religious behavior does not only commemorate but also participates in sacred events In imitating the exemplary acts of a god or of a mythical hero or simply by recounting their adventures the man of an archaic society detaches himself from profane time and magically re enters the Great Time the sacred time 96 Eliade called this concept the eternal return distinguished from the philosophical concept of eternal return Wendy Doniger noted that Eliade s theory of the eternal return has become a truism in the study of religions 2 Eliade attributes the well known cyclic vision of time in ancient thought to belief in the eternal return For instance the New Year ceremonies among the Mesopotamians the Egyptians and other Near Eastern peoples re enacted their cosmogonic myths Therefore by the logic of the eternal return each New Year ceremony was the beginning of the world for these peoples According to Eliade these peoples felt a need to return to the Beginning at regular intervals turning time into a circle 103 Eliade argues that yearning to remain in the mythical age causes a terror of history traditional man desires to escape the linear succession of events which Eliade indicated he viewed as empty of any inherent value or sacrality Eliade suggests that the abandonment of mythical thought and the full acceptance of linear historical time with its terror is one of the reasons for modern man s anxieties 104 Traditional societies escape this anxiety to an extent as they refuse to completely acknowledge historical time But the return to the sources involved an apocalyptic experience Doina Ruști analyzing the storyThe Old Man and The Bureaucrats Pe strada Mantuleasa says The memories 105 create the chaos because the myth makes irruption in a world in tormented birth without memory and transform all in a labyrinth Coincidentia oppositorum edit Eliade claims that many myths rituals and mystical experiences involve a coincidence of opposites or coincidentia oppositorum In fact he calls the coincidentia oppositorum the mythical pattern 106 Many myths Eliade notes present us with a twofold revelation they express on the one hand the diametrical opposition of two divine figures sprung from one and the same principle and destined in many versions to be reconciled at some illud tempus of eschatology and on the other the coincidentia oppositorum in the very nature of the divinity which shows itself by turns or even simultaneously benevolent and terrible creative and destructive solar and serpentine and so on in other words actual and potential 107 Eliade argues that Yahweh is both kind and wrathful the God of the Christian mystics and theologians is terrible and gentle at once 91 He also thought that the Indian and Chinese mystic tried to attain a state of perfect indifference and neutrality that resulted in a coincidence of opposites in which pleasure and pain desire and repulsion cold and heat are expunged from his awareness 91 According to Eliade the coincidentia oppositorum s appeal lies in man s deep dissatisfaction with his actual situation with what is called the human condition 108 In many mythologies the end of the mythical age involves a fall a fundamental ontological change in the structure of the World 109 Because the coincidentia oppositorum is a contradiction it represents a denial of the world s current logical structure a reversal of the fall Also traditional man s dissatisfaction with the post mythical age expresses itself as a feeling of being torn and separate 108 In many mythologies the lost mythical age was a Paradise a paradoxical state in which the contraries exist side by side without conflict and the multiplications form aspects of a mysterious Unity 109 The coincidentia oppositorum expresses a wish to recover the lost unity of the mythical Paradise for it presents a reconciliation of opposites and the unification of diversity On the level of pre systematic thought the mystery of totality embodies man s endeavor to reach a perspective in which the contraries are abolished the Spirit of Evil reveals itself as a stimulant of Good and Demons appear as the night aspect of the Gods 109 Exceptions to the general nature edit nbsp The Last Judgment detail in the 12th century Byzantine mosaic at Torcello Eliade acknowledges that not all religious behavior has all the attributes described in his theory of sacred time and the eternal return The Zoroastrian Jewish Christian and Muslim traditions embrace linear historical time as sacred or capable of sanctification while some Eastern traditions largely reject the notion of sacred time seeking escape from the cycles of time Because they contain rituals Judaism and Christianity necessarily Eliade argues retain a sense of cyclic time by the very fact that it is a religion Christianity had to keep at least one mythical aspect liturgical Time that is the periodic rediscovery of the illud tempus of the beginnings and an imitation of the Christ as exemplary pattern 110 However Judaism and Christianity do not see time as a circle endlessly turning on itself nor do they see such a cycle as desirable as a way to participate in the Sacred Instead these religions embrace the concept of linear history progressing toward the Messianic Age or the Last Judgment thus initiating the idea of progress humans are to work for a Paradise in the future 111 However Eliade s understanding of Judaeo Christian eschatology can also be understood as cyclical in that the end of time is a return to God The final catastrophe will put an end to history hence will restore man to eternity and beatitude 112 The pre Islamic Persian religion of Zoroastrianism which made a notable contribution to the religious formation of the West 113 also has a linear sense of time although according to Eliade the Hebrews linear sense of time predates their being influenced by Zoroastrianism 113 In fact Eliade identifies the Hebrews not the Zoroastrians as the first culture to truly valorize historical time the first to see all major historical events as episodes in a continuous divine revelation 114 However Eliade argues Judaism elaborated its mythology of linear time by adding elements borrowed from Zoroastrianism including ethical dualism a savior figure the future resurrection of the body and the idea of cosmic progress toward the final triumph of Good 113 The Indian religions of the East generally retain a cyclic view of time for instance the Hindu doctrine of kalpas According to Eliade most religions that accept the cyclic view of time also embrace it they see it as a way to return to the sacred time However in Buddhism Jainism and some forms of Hinduism the Sacred lies outside the flux of the material world called maya or illusion and one can only reach it by escaping from the cycles of time 115 Because the Sacred lies outside cyclic time which conditions humans people can only reach the Sacred by escaping the human condition According to Eliade Yoga techniques aim at escaping the limitations of the body allowing the soul atman to rise above maya and reach the Sacred nirvana moksha Imagery of freedom and of death to one s old body and rebirth with a new body occur frequently in Yogic texts representing escape from the bondage of the temporal human condition 116 Eliade discusses these themes in detail in Yoga Immortality and Freedom Symbolism of the Center edit Main article Axis mundi nbsp The Cosmic Tree Yggdrasill as depicted in a 17th century Icelandic miniatureA recurrent theme in Eliade s myth analysis is the axis mundi the Center of the World According to Eliade the Cosmic Center is a necessary corollary to the division of reality into the Sacred and the profane The Sacred contains all value and the world gains purpose and meaning only through hierophanies In the homogeneous and infinite expanse in which no point of reference is possible and hence no orientation is established the hierophany reveals an absolute fixed point a center 94 Because profane space gives man no orientation for his life the Sacred must manifest itself in a hierophany thereby establishing a sacred site around which man can orient himself The site of a hierophany establishes a fixed point a center 94 This Center abolishes the homogeneity and relativity of profane space 93 for it becomes the central axis for all future orientation 94 A manifestation of the Sacred in profane space is by definition an example of something breaking through from one plane of existence to another Therefore the initial hierophany that establishes the Center must be a point at which there is contact between different planes this Eliade argues explains the frequent mythical imagery of a Cosmic Tree or Pillar joining Heaven Earth and the underworld 117 Eliade noted that when traditional societies found a new territory they often perform consecrating rituals that reenact the hierophany that established the center and founded the world 118 In addition the designs of traditional buildings especially temples usually imitate the mythical image of the axis mundi joining the different cosmic levels For instance the Babylonian ziggurats were built to resemble cosmic mountains passing through the heavenly spheres and the rock of the Temple in Jerusalem was supposed to reach deep into the tehom or primordial waters 119 According to the logic of the eternal return the site of each such symbolic Center will actually be the Center of the World It may be said in general that the majority of the sacred and ritual trees that we meet with in the history of religions are only replicas imperfect copies of this exemplary archetype the Cosmic Tree Thus all these sacred trees are thought of as situated at the Centre of the World and all the ritual trees or posts are as it were magically projected into the Centre of the World 120 According to Eliade s interpretation religious man apparently feels the need to live not only near but at the mythical Center as much as possible given that the center is the point of communication with the Sacred 121 Thus Eliade argues many traditional societies share common outlines in their mythical geographies In the middle of the known world is the sacred Center a place that is sacred above all 122 this Center anchors the established order 93 Around the sacred Center lies the known world the realm of established order and beyond the known world is a chaotic and dangerous realm peopled by ghosts demons and foreigners who are identified with demons and the souls of the dead 123 According to Eliade traditional societies place their known world at the Center because from their perspective their known world is the realm that obeys a recognizable order and it therefore must be the realm in which the Sacred manifests itself the regions beyond the known world which seem strange and foreign must lie far from the center outside the order established by the Sacred 124 The High God edit See also Sky father and Deus otiosus According to some evolutionistic theories of religion especially that of Edward Burnett Tylor cultures naturally progress from animism and polytheism to monotheism 125 According to this view more advanced cultures should be more monotheistic and more primitive cultures should be more polytheistic However many of the most primitive pre agricultural societies believe in a supreme sky god 126 Thus according to Eliade post 19th century scholars have rejected Tylor s theory of evolution from animism 127 Based on the discovery of supreme sky gods among primitives Eliade suspects that the earliest humans worshiped a heavenly Supreme Being 128 In Patterns in Comparative Religion he writes The most popular prayer in the world is addressed to Our Father who art in heaven It is possible that man s earliest prayers were addressed to the same heavenly father 129 However Eliade disagrees with Wilhelm Schmidt who thought the earliest form of religion was a strict monotheism Eliade dismisses this theory of primordial monotheism Urmonotheismus as rigid and unworkable 130 At most he writes this schema Schmidt s theory renders an account of human religious evolution since the Paleolithic era 131 If an Urmonotheismus did exist Eliade adds it probably differed in many ways from the conceptions of God in many modern monotheistic faiths for instance the primordial High God could manifest himself as an animal without losing his status as a celestial Supreme Being 132 According to Eliade heavenly Supreme Beings are actually less common in more advanced cultures 133 Eliade speculates that the discovery of agriculture brought a host of fertility gods and goddesses into the forefront causing the celestial Supreme Being to fade away and eventually vanish from many ancient religions 134 Even in primitive hunter gatherer societies the High God is a vague distant figure dwelling high above the world 135 Often he has no cult and receives prayer only as a last resort when all else has failed 136 Eliade calls the distant High God a deus otiosus idle god 137 In belief systems that involve a deus otiosus the distant High God is believed to have been closer to humans during the mythical age After finishing his works of creation the High God forsook the earth and withdrew into the highest heaven 138 This is an example of the Sacred s distance from profane life life lived after the mythical age by escaping from the profane condition through religious behavior figures such as the shaman return to the conditions of the mythical age which include nearness to the High God by his flight or ascension the shaman meets the God of Heaven face to face and speaks directly to him as man sometimes did in illo tempore 139 The shamanistic behaviors surrounding the High God are a particularly clear example of the eternal return Shamanism edit nbsp A shaman performing a ceremonial in Tuva Eliade s scholarly work includes a study of shamanism Shamanism Archaic Techniques of Ecstasy a survey of shamanistic practices in different areas His Myths Dreams and Mysteries also addresses shamanism in some detail In Shamanism Eliade argues for a restrictive use of the word shaman it should not apply to just any magician or medicine man as that would make the term redundant at the same time he argues against restricting the term to the practitioners of the sacred of Siberia and Central Asia it is from one of the titles for this function namely saman considered by Eliade to be of Tungusic origin that the term itself was introduced into Western languages 140 Eliade defines a shaman as follows he is believed to cure like all doctors and to perform miracles of the fakir type like all magicians But beyond this he is a psychopomp and he may also be a priest mystic and poet 141 If we define shamanism this way Eliade claims we find that the term covers a collection of phenomena that share a common and unique structure and history 141 When thus defined shamanism tends to occur in its purest forms in hunting and pastoral societies like those of Siberia and Central Asia which revere a celestial High God on the way to becoming a deus otiosus 142 Eliade takes the shamanism of those regions as his most representative example In his examinations of shamanism Eliade emphasizes the shaman s attribute of regaining man s condition before the Fall out of sacred time The most representative mystical experience of the archaic societies that of shamanism betrays the Nostalgia for Paradise the desire to recover the state of freedom and beatitude before the Fall 139 This concern which by itself is the concern of almost all religious behavior according to Eliade manifests itself in specific ways in shamanism Death resurrection and secondary functions edit According to Eliade one of the most common shamanistic themes is the shaman s supposed death and resurrection This occurs in particular during his initiation 143 Often the procedure is supposed to be performed by spirits who dismember the shaman and strip the flesh from his bones then put him back together and revive him In more than one way this death and resurrection represents the shaman s elevation above human nature First the shaman dies so that he can rise above human nature on a quite literal level After he has been dismembered by the initiatory spirits they often replace his old organs with new magical ones the shaman dies to his profane self so that he can rise again as a new sanctified being 144 Second by being reduced to his bones the shaman experiences rebirth on a more symbolic level in many hunting and herding societies the bone represents the source of life so reduction to a skeleton is equivalent to re entering the womb of this primordial life that is to a complete renewal a mystical rebirth 145 Eliade considers this return to the source of life essentially equivalent to the eternal return 146 Third the shamanistic phenomenon of repeated death and resurrection also represents a transfiguration in other ways The shaman dies not once but many times having died during initiation and risen again with new powers the shaman can send his spirit out of his body on errands thus his whole career consists of repeated deaths and resurrections The shaman s new ability to die and return to life shows that he is no longer bound by the laws of profane time particularly the law of death the ability to die and come to life again denotes that the shaman has surpassed the human condition 147 Having risen above the human condition the shaman is not bound by the flow of history Therefore he enjoys the conditions of the mythical age In many myths humans can speak with animals and after their initiations many shamans claim to be able to communicate with animals According to Eliade this is one manifestation of the shaman s return to the illud tempus described to us by the paradisiac myths 148 The shaman can descend to the underworld or ascend to heaven often by climbing the World Tree the cosmic pillar the sacred ladder or some other form of the axis mundi 149 Often the shaman will ascend to heaven to speak with the High God Because the gods particularly the High God according to Eliade s deus otiosus concept were closer to humans during the mythical age the shaman s easy communication with the High God represents an abolition of history and a return to the mythical age 139 Because of his ability to communicate with the gods and descend to the land of the dead the shaman frequently functions as a psychopomp and a medicine man 141 Philosophy editEarly contributions edit In addition to his political essays the young Mircea Eliade authored others philosophical in content Connected with the ideology of Trăirism they were often prophetic in tone and saw Eliade being hailed as a herald by various representatives of his generation 9 When Eliade was 21 years old and publishing his Itinerar spiritual literary critic Serban Cioculescu described him as the column leader of the spiritually mystical and Orthodox youth 9 Cioculescu discussed his impressive erudition but argued that it was occasionally plethoric poetically inebriating itself through abuse 9 Cioculescu s colleague Perpessicius saw the young author and his generation as marked by the specter of war a notion he connected to various essays of the 1920s and 30s in which Eliade threatened the world with the verdict that a new conflict was looming while asking that young people be allowed to manifest their will and fully experience freedom before perishing 9 One of Eliade s noted contributions in this respect was the 1932 Soliloquii Soliloquies which explored existential philosophy George Călinescu who saw in it an echo of Nae Ionescu s lectures 150 traced a parallel with the essays of another of Ionescu s disciples Emil Cioran while noting that Cioran s were of a more exulted tone and written in the aphoristic form of Kierkegaard 151 Călinescu recorded Eliade s rejection of objectivity citing the author s stated indifference towards any naivete or contradictions that the reader could possibly reproach him as well as his dismissive thoughts of theoretical data and mainstream philosophy in general Eliade saw the latter as inert infertile and pathogenic 150 Eliade thus argued a sincere brain is unassailable for it denies itself to any relationship with outside truths 152 The young writer was however careful to clarify that the existence he took into consideration was not the life of instincts and personal idiosyncrasies which he believed determined the lives of many humans but that of a distinct set comprising personalities 152 He described personalities as characterized by both purpose and a much more complicated and dangerous alchemy 152 This differentiation George Călinescu believed echoed Ionescu s metaphor of man seen as the only animal who can fail at living and the duck who shall remain a duck no matter what it does 153 According to Eliade the purpose of personalities is infinity consciously and gloriously bringing existence to waste into as many skies as possible continuously fulfilling and polishing oneself seeking ascent and not circumference 152 In Eliade s view two roads await man in this process One is glory determined by either work or procreation and the other the asceticism of religion or magic both Călinescu believed were aimed at reaching the absolute even in those cases where Eliade described the latter as an abyssal experience into which man may take the plunge 150 The critic pointed out that the addition of a magical solution to the options taken into consideration seemed to be Eliade s own original contributions to his mentor s philosophy and proposed that it may have owed inspiration to Julius Evola and his disciples 150 He also recorded that Eliade applied this concept to human creation and specifically to artistic creation citing him describing the latter as a magical joy the victorious break of the iron circle a reflection of imitatio dei having salvation for its ultimate goal 150 Philosopher of religion edit Anti reductionism and the transconscious edit By profession Eliade was a historian of religion However his scholarly works draw heavily on philosophical and psychological terminology In addition they contain a number of philosophical arguments about religion In particular Eliade often implies the existence of a universal psychological or spiritual essence behind all religious phenomena 154 Because of these arguments some have accused Eliade of overgeneralization and essentialism or even of promoting a theological agenda under the guise of historical scholarship However others argue that Eliade is better understood as a scholar who is willing to openly discuss sacred experience and its consequences note 1 In studying religion Eliade rejects certain reductionist approaches 155 Eliade thinks a religious phenomenon cannot be reduced to a product of culture and history He insists that although religion involves the social man the economic man and so forth nonetheless all these conditioning factors together do not of themselves add up to the life of the spirit 156 Using this anti reductionist position Eliade argues against those who accuse him of overgeneralizing of looking for universals at the expense of particulars Eliade admits that every religious phenomenon is shaped by the particular culture and history that produced it When the Son of God incarnated and became the Christ he had to speak Aramaic he could only conduct himself as a Hebrew of his times His religious message however universal it might be was conditioned by the past and present history of the Hebrew people If the Son of God had been born in India his spoken language would have had to conform itself to the structure of the Indian languages 156 However Eliade argues against those he calls historicist or existentialist philosophers who do not recognize man in general behind particular men produced by particular situations 156 Eliade cites Immanuel Kant as the likely forerunner of this kind of historicism 156 He adds that human consciousness transcends is not reducible to its historical and cultural conditioning 157 and even suggests the possibility of a transconscious 158 By this Eliade does not necessarily mean anything supernatural or mystical within the transconscious he places religious motifs symbols images and nostalgias that are supposedly universal and whose causes therefore cannot be reduced to historical and cultural conditioning 159 Platonism and primitive ontology edit According to Eliade traditional man feels that things acquire their reality their identity only to the extent of their participation in a transcendent reality 160 To traditional man the profane world is meaningless and a thing rises out of the profane world only by conforming to an ideal mythical model 161 Eliade describes this view of reality as a fundamental part of primitive ontology the study of existence or reality 161 Here he sees a similarity with the philosophy of Plato who believed that physical phenomena are pale and transient imitations of eternal models or Forms see Theory of forms He argued Plato could be regarded as the outstanding philosopher of primitive mentality that is as the thinker who succeeded in giving philosophic currency and validity to the modes of life and behavior of archaic humanity 161 Eliade thinks the Platonic theory of forms is primitive ontology persisting in Greek philosophy He claims that Platonism is the most fully elaborated version of this primitive ontology 162 In The Structure of Religious Knowing Encountering the Sacred in Eliade and Lonergan John Daniel Dadosky argues that by making this statement Eliade was acknowledging indebtedness to Greek philosophy in general and to Plato s theory of forms specifically for his own theory of archetypes and repetition 163 However Dadosky also states that one should be cautious when trying to assess Eliade s indebtedness to Plato 164 Dadosky quotes Robert Segal a professor of religion who draws a distinction between Platonism and Eliade s primitive ontology for Eliade the ideal models are patterns that a person or object may or may not imitate for Plato there is a Form for everything and everything imitates a Form by the very fact that it exists 165 Existentialism and secularism edit Behind the diverse cultural forms of different religions Eliade proposes a universal traditional man he claims always believes that there is an absolute reality the sacred which transcends this world but manifests itself in this world thereby sanctifying it and making it real 166 Furthermore traditional man s behavior gains purpose and meaning through the Sacred By imitating divine behavior man puts and keeps himself close to the gods that is in the real and the significant 166 According to Eliade modern nonreligious man assumes a new existential situation 166 For traditional man historical events gain significance by imitating sacred transcendent events In contrast nonreligious man lacks sacred models for how history or human behavior should be so he must decide on his own how history should proceed he regards himself solely as the subject and agent of history and refuses all appeal to transcendence 167 From the standpoint of religious thought the world has an objective purpose established by mythical events to which man should conform himself Myth teaches religious man the primordial stories that have constituted him existentially 168 From the standpoint of secular thought any purpose must be invented and imposed on the world by man Because of this new existential situation Eliade argues the Sacred becomes the primary obstacle to nonreligious man s freedom In viewing himself as the proper maker of history nonreligious man resists all notions of an externally for instance divinely imposed order or model he must obey modern man makes himself and he only makes himself completely in proportion as he desacralizes himself and the world He will not truly be free until he has killed the last god 167 Religious survivals in the secular world edit Eliade says that secular man cannot escape his bondage to religious thought By its very nature secularism depends on religion for its sense of identity by resisting sacred models by insisting that man make history on his own secular man identifies himself only through opposition to religious thought He secular man recognizes himself in proportion as he frees and purifies himself from the superstitions of his ancestors 169 Furthermore modern man still retains a large stock of camouflaged myths and degenerated rituals 170 For example modern social events still have similarities to traditional initiation rituals and modern novels feature mythical motifs and themes 171 Finally secular man still participates in something like the eternal return by reading modern literature modern man succeeds in obtaining an escape from time comparable to the emergence from time effected by myths 172 Eliade sees traces of religious thought even in secular academia He thinks modern scientists are motivated by the religious desire to return to the sacred time of origins One could say that the anxious search for the origins of Life and Mind the fascination in the mysteries of Nature the urge to penetrate and decipher the inner structure of Matter all these longings and drives denote a sort of nostalgia for the primordial for the original universal matrix Matter Substance represents the absolute origin the beginning of all things 173 Eliade believes the rise of materialism in the 19th century forced the religious nostalgia for origins to express itself in science He mentions his own field of History of Religions as one of the fields that was obsessed with origins during the 19th century The new discipline of History of Religions developed rapidly in this cultural context And of course it followed a like pattern the positivistic approach to the facts and the search for origins for the very beginning of religion All Western historiography was during that time obsessed with the quest of origins This search for the origins of human institutions and cultural creations prolongs and completes the naturalist s quest for the origin of species the biologist s dream of grasping the origin of life the geologist s and the astronomer s endeavor to understand the origin of the Earth and the Universe From a psychological point of view one can decipher here the same nostalgia for the primordial and the original 174 In some of his writings Eliade describes modern political ideologies as secularized mythology According to Eliade Marxism takes up and carries on one of the great eschatological myths of the Middle Eastern and Mediterranean world namely the redemptive part to be played by the Just the elect the anointed the innocent the missioners in our own days the proletariat whose sufferings are invoked to change the ontological status of the world 175 Eliade sees the widespread myth of the Golden Age which according to a number of traditions lies at the beginning and the end of History as the precedent for Karl Marx s vision of a classless society 176 Finally he sees Marx s belief in the final triumph of the good the proletariat over the evil the bourgeoisie as a truly messianic Judaeo Christian ideology 176 Despite Marx s hostility toward religion Eliade implies his ideology works within a conceptual framework inherited from religious mythology Likewise Eliade notes that Nazism involved a pseudo pagan mysticism based on ancient Germanic religion He suggests that the differences between the Nazis pseudo Germanic mythology and Marx s pseudo Judaeo Christian mythology explain their differing success In comparison with the vigorous optimism of the communist myth the mythology propagated by the national socialists seems particularly inept and this is not only because of the limitations of the racial myth how could one imagine that the rest of Europe would voluntarily accept submission to the master race but above all because of the fundamental pessimism of the Germanic mythology For the eschaton prophesied and expected by the ancient Germans was the ragnarok that is a catastrophic end of the world 176 Modern man and the terror of history edit According to Eliade modern man displays traces of mythological behavior because he intensely needs sacred time and the eternal return 177 Despite modern man s claims to be nonreligious he ultimately cannot find value in the linear progression of historical events even modern man feels the terror of history Here too there is always the struggle against Time the hope to be freed from the weight of dead Time of the Time that crushes and kills 178 This terror of history becomes especially acute when violent and threatening historical events confront modern man the mere fact that a terrible event has happened that it is part of history is of little comfort to those who suffer from it Eliade asks rhetorically how modern man can tolerate the catastrophes and horrors of history from collective deportations and massacres to atomic bombings if beyond them he can glimpse no sign no transhistorical meaning 179 He indicates that if repetitions of mythical events provided sacred value and meaning for history in the eyes of ancient man modern man has denied the Sacred and must therefore invent value and purpose on his own Without the Sacred to confer an absolute objective value upon historical events modern man is left with a relativistic or nihilistic view of history and a resulting spiritual aridity 180 In chapter 4 The Terror of History of The Myth of the Eternal Return and chapter 9 Religious Symbolism and the Modern Man s Anxiety of Myths Dreams and Mysteries Eliade argues at length that the rejection of religious thought is a primary cause of modern man s anxieties Inter cultural dialogue and a new humanism edit Eliade argues that modern man may escape the Terror of history by learning from traditional cultures For example Eliade thinks Hinduism has advice for modern Westerners According to many branches of Hinduism the world of historical time is illusory and the only absolute reality is the immortal soul or atman within man According to Eliade Hindus thus escape the terror of history by refusing to see historical time as the true reality 181 Eliade notes that a Western or Continental philosopher might feel suspicious toward this Hindu view of history One can easily guess what a European historical and existentialist philosopher might reply You ask me he would say to die to History but man is not and he cannot be anything else but History for his very essence is temporality You are asking me then to give up my authentic existence and to take refuge in an abstraction in pure Being in the atman I am to sacrifice my dignity as a creator of History in order to live an a historic inauthentic existence empty of all human content Well I prefer to put up with my anxiety at least it cannot deprive me of a certain heroic grandeur that of becoming conscious of and accepting the human condition 182 However Eliade argues that the Hindu approach to history does not necessarily lead to a rejection of history On the contrary in Hinduism historical human existence is not the absurdity that many Continental philosophers see it as 182 According to Hinduism history is a divine creation and one may live contentedly within it as long as one maintains a certain degree of detachment from it One is devoured by Time by History not because one lives in them but because one thinks them real and in consequence one forgets or undervalues eternity 183 Furthermore Eliade argues that Westerners can learn from non Western cultures to see something besides absurdity in suffering and death Traditional cultures see suffering and death as a rite of passage In fact their initiation rituals often involve a symbolic death and resurrection or symbolic ordeals followed by relief Thus Eliade argues modern man can learn to see his historical ordeals even death as necessary initiations into the next stage of one s existence 184 Eliade even suggests that traditional thought offers relief from the vague anxiety caused by our obscure presentiment of the end of the world or more exactly of the end of our world our own civilization 184 Many traditional cultures have myths about the end of their world or civilization however these myths do not succeed in paralysing either Life or Culture 184 These traditional cultures emphasize cyclic time and therefore the inevitable rise of a new world or civilization on the ruins of the old Thus they feel comforted even in contemplating the end times 185 Eliade argues that a Western spiritual rebirth can happen within the framework of Western spiritual traditions 186 However he says to start this rebirth Westerners may need to be stimulated by ideas from non Western cultures In his Myths Dreams and Mysteries Eliade claims that a genuine encounter between cultures might well constitute the point of departure for a new humanism upon a world scale 187 Christianity and the salvation of History edit Mircea Eliade sees the Abrahamic religions as a turning point between the ancient cyclic view of time and the modern linear view of time noting that in their case sacred events are not limited to a far off primordial age but continue throughout history time is no longer only the circular Time of the Eternal Return it has become linear and irreversible Time 188 He thus sees in Christianity the ultimate example of a religion embracing linear historical time When God is born as a man into the stream of history all history becomes a theophany 189 According to Eliade Christianity strives to save history 190 In Christianity the Sacred enters a human being Christ to save humans but it also enters history to save history and turn otherwise ordinary historical events into something capable of transmitting a trans historical message 190 From Eliade s perspective Christianity s trans historical message may be the most important help that modern man could have in confronting the terror of history In his book Mito Myth Italian researcher Furio Jesi argues that Eliade denies man the position of a true protagonist in history for Eliade true human experience lies not in intellectually making history but in man s experiences of joy and grief Thus from Eliade s perspective the Christ story becomes the perfect myth for modern man 191 In Christianity God willingly entered historical time by being born as Christ and accepted the suffering that followed By identifying with Christ modern man can learn to confront painful historical events 191 Ultimately according to Jesi Eliade sees Christianity as the only religion that can save man from the Terror of history 192 In Eliade s view traditional man sees time as an endless repetition of mythical archetypes In contrast modern man has abandoned mythical archetypes and entered linear historical time in this context unlike many other religions Christianity attributes value to historical time Thus Eliade concludes Christianity incontestably proves to be the religion of fallen man of modern man who has lost the paradise of archetypes and repetition 193 Modern gnosticism Romanticism and Eliade s nostalgia edit In analyzing the similarities between the mythologists Eliade Joseph Campbell and Carl Jung Robert Ellwood concluded that the three modern mythologists all of whom believed that myths reveal timeless truth 194 fulfilled the role gnostics had in antiquity The diverse religious movements covered by the term gnosticism share the basic doctrines that the surrounding world is fundamentally evil or inhospitable that we are trapped in the world through no fault of our own and that we can be saved from the world only through secret knowledge gnosis 195 Ellwood claimed that the three mythologists were modern gnostics through and through 196 remarking Whether in Augustan Rome or modern Europe democracy all too easily gave way to totalitarianism technology was as readily used for battle as for comfort and immense wealth lay alongside abysmal poverty Gnostics past and present sought answers not in the course of outward human events but in knowledge of the world s beginning of what lies above and beyond the world and of the secret places of the human soul To all this the mythologists spoke and they acquired large and loyal followings 197 According to Ellwood the mythologists believed in gnosticism s basic doctrines even if in a secularized form Ellwood also believes that Romanticism which stimulated the modern study of mythology 198 strongly influenced the mythologists Because Romantics stress that emotion and imagination have the same dignity as reason Ellwood argues they tend to think political truth is known less by rational considerations than by its capacity to fire the passions and therefore that political truth is very apt to be found in the distant past 198 As modern gnostics Ellwood argues the three mythologists felt alienated from the surrounding modern world As scholars they knew of primordial societies that had operated differently from modern ones And as people influenced by Romanticism they saw myths as a saving gnosis that offered avenues of eternal return to simpler primordial ages when the values that rule the world were forged 199 In addition Ellwood identifies Eliade s personal sense of nostalgia as a source for his interest in or even his theories about traditional societies 200 He cites Eliade himself claiming to desire an eternal return like that by which traditional man returns to the mythical paradise My essential preoccupation is precisely the means of escaping History of saving myself through symbol myth rite archetypes 201 In Ellwood s view Eliade s nostalgia was only enhanced by his exile from Romania In later years Eliade felt about his own Romanian past as did primal folk about mythic time He was drawn back to it yet he knew he could not live there and that all was not well with it 202 He suggests that this nostalgia along with Eliade s sense that exile is among the profoundest metaphors for all human life 203 influenced Eliade s theories Ellwood sees evidence of this in Eliade s concept of the Terror of history from which modern man is no longer shielded 204 In this concept Ellwood sees an element of nostalgia for earlier times when the sacred was strong and the terror of history had barely raised its head 205 Criticism of Eliade s scholarship editOvergeneralization edit Eliade cites a wide variety of myths and rituals to support his theories However he has been accused of making overgeneralizations many scholars think he lacks sufficient evidence to put forth his ideas as universal or even general principles of religious thought According to one scholar Eliade may have been the most popular and influential contemporary historian of religion but many if not most specialists in anthropology sociology and even history of religions have either ignored or quickly dismissed Eliade s works 206 The classicist G S Kirk criticizes Eliade s insistence that Australian Aborigines and ancient Mesopotamians had concepts of being non being real and becoming although they lacked words for them Kirk also believes that Eliade overextends his theories for example Eliade claims that the modern myth of the noble savage results from the religious tendency to idealize the primordial mythical age 207 According to Kirk such extravagances together with a marked repetitiousness have made Eliade unpopular with many anthropologists and sociologists 207 In Kirk s view Eliade derived his theory of eternal return from the functions of Australian Aboriginal mythology and then proceeded to apply the theory to other mythologies to which it did not apply For example Kirk argues that the eternal return does not accurately describe the functions of Native American or Greek mythology 208 Kirk concludes Eliade s idea is a valuable perception about certain myths not a guide to the proper understanding of all of them 209 Even Wendy Doniger Eliade s successor at the University of Chicago claims in an introduction to Eliade s own Shamanism that the eternal return does not apply to all myths and rituals although it may apply to many of them 2 However although Doniger agrees that Eliade made overgeneralizations she notes that his willingness to argue boldly for universals allowed him to see patterns that spanned the entire globe and the whole of human history 210 Whether they were true or not she argues Eliade s theories are still useful as starting points for the comparative study of religion She also argues that Eliade s theories have been able to accommodate new data to which Eliade did not have access 2 Lack of empirical support edit Several researchers have criticized Eliade s work as having no empirical support Thus he is said to have failed to provide an adequate methodology for the history of religions and to establish this discipline as an empirical science 211 though the same critics admit that the history of religions should not aim at being an empirical science anyway 211 Specifically his claim that the sacred is a structure of human consciousness is distrusted as not being empirically provable no one has yet turned up the basic category sacred 212 Also there has been mention of his tendency to ignore the social aspects of religion 54 Anthropologist Alice Kehoe is highly critical of Eliade s work on Shamanism namely because he was not an anthropologist but a historian She contends that Eliade never did any field work or contacted any indigenous groups that practiced Shamanism and that his work was synthesized from various sources without being supported by direct field research 213 In contrast Professor Kees W Bolle of the University of California Los Angeles argues that Professor Eliade s approach in all his works is empirical 214 Bolle sets Eliade apart for what he sees as Eliade s particularly close attention to the various particular motifs of different myths 214 French researcher Daniel Dubuisson places doubt on Eliade s scholarship and its scientific character citing the Romanian academic s alleged refusal to accept the treatment of religions in their historical and cultural context and proposing that Eliade s notion of hierophany refers to the actual existence of a supernatural level 61 Ronald Inden a historian of India and University of Chicago professor criticized Mircea Eliade alongside other intellectual figures Carl Jung and Joseph Campbell among them for encouraging a romantic view of Hinduism 215 He argued that their approach to the subject relied mainly on an Orientalist approach and made Hinduism seem like a private realm of the imagination and the religious which modern Western man lacks but needs 215 Far right and nationalist influences edit Although his scholarly work was never subordinated to his early political beliefs the school of thought he was associated with in interwar Romania namely Trăirism as well as the works of Julius Evola he continued to draw inspiration from have thematic links to fascism 39 61 216 Writer and academic Marcel Tolcea ro has argued that through Evola s particular interpretation of Guenon s works Eliade kept a traceable connection with far right ideologies in his academic contributions 39 Daniel Dubuisson singled out Eliade s concept of homo religiosus as a reflection of fascist elitism and argued that the Romanian scholar s views of Judaism and the Old Testament which depicted Hebrews as the enemies of an ancient cosmic religion were ultimately the preservation of an antisemitic discourse 61 A piece authored in 1930 saw Eliade defining Julius Evola as a great thinker and offering praise to the controversial intellectuals Oswald Spengler Arthur de Gobineau Houston Stewart Chamberlain and the Nazi ideologue Alfred Rosenberg 61 Evola who continued to defend the core principles of mystical fascism once protested to Eliade about the latter s failure to cite him and Guenon Eliade replied that his works were written for a contemporary public and not to initiates of esoteric circles 217 After the 1960s he together with Evola Louis Rougier and other intellectuals offered support to Alain de Benoist s controversial Groupement de recherche et d etudes pour la civilisation europeenne part of the Nouvelle Droite intellectual trend 218 Notably Eliade was also preoccupied with the cult of Thracian deity Zalmoxis and its supposed monotheism 219 220 This like his conclusion that Romanization had been superficial inside Roman Dacia was a view celebrated by contemporary partisans of protochronist nationalism 54 219 According to historian Sorin Antohi Eliade may have actually encouraged protochronists such as Edgar Papu to carry out research which resulted in the claim that medieval Romanians had anticipated the Renaissance 221 In his study of Eliade Jung and Campbell Ellwood also discusses the connection between academic theories and controversial political involvements noting that all three mythologists have been accused of reactionary political positions Ellwood notes the obvious parallel between the conservatism of myth which speaks of a primordial golden age and the conservatism of far right politics 222 However Ellwood argues that the explanation is more complex than that Wherever their political sympathies may have sometimes been he claims the three mythologists were often apolitical if not antipolitical scorning any this worldly salvation 223 Moreover the connection between mythology and politics differs for each of the mythologists in question in Eliade s case Ellwood believes a strong sense of nostalgia for childhood for historical times past for cosmic religion for paradise 89 influenced not only the scholar s academic interests but also his political views Because Eliade stayed out of politics during his later life Ellwood tries to extract an implicit political philosophy from Eliade s scholarly works Ellwood argues that the later Eliade s nostalgia for ancient traditions did not make him a political reactionary even a quiet one He concludes that the later Eliade was in fact a radical modernist 224 According to Ellwood Those who see Eliade s fascination with the primordial as merely reactionary in the ordinary political or religious sense of the word do not understand the mature Eliade in a sufficiently radical way Tradition was not for him exactly Burkean prescription or sacred trust to be kept alive generation after generation for Eliade was fully aware that tradition like men and nations lives only by changing and even occultation The tack is not to try fruitlessly to keep it unchanging but to discover where it is hiding 224 According to Eliade religious elements survive in secular culture but in new camouflaged forms 225 Thus Ellwood believes that the later Eliade probably thought modern man should preserve elements of the past but should not try to restore their original form through reactionary politics 226 He suspects that Eliade would have favored a minimal rather than a maximalist state that would allow personal spiritual transformation without enforcing it 227 Many scholars have accused Eliade of essentialism a type of overgeneralization in which one incorrectly attributes a common essence to a whole group in this case all religious or traditional societies Furthermore some see a connection between Eliade s essentialism with regard to religion and fascist essentialism with regard to races and nations 228 To Ellwood this connection seems rather tortured in the end amounting to little more than an ad hominem argument which attempts to tar Eliade s entire scholarly work with the ill repute all decent people feel for storm troopers and the Iron Guard 228 However Ellwood admits that common tendencies in mythological thinking may have caused Eliade as well as Jung and Campbell to view certain groups in an essentialist way and that this may explain their purported antisemitism A tendency to think in generic terms of peoples races religions or parties which as we shall see is undoubtedly the profoundest flaw in mythological thinking including that of such modern mythologists as our three can connect with nascent anti Semitism or the connection can be the other way 229 Literary works editGeneric traits edit Many of Mircea Eliade s literary works in particular his earliest ones are noted for their eroticism and their focus on subjective experience Modernist in style they have drawn comparisons to the contemporary writings of Mihail Sebastian 230 I Valerian 231 and Ion Biberi 232 Alongside Honore de Balzac and Giovanni Papini his literary passions included Aldous Huxley and Miguel de Unamuno 28 as well as Andre Gide 9 Eliade also read with interest the prose of Romain Rolland Henrik Ibsen and the Enlightenment thinkers Voltaire and Denis Diderot 9 As a youth he read the works of Romanian authors such as Liviu Rebreanu and Panait Istrati initially he was also interested in Ionel Teodoreanu s prose works but later rejected them and criticized their author 9 Investigating the works main characteristics George Călinescu stressed that Eliade owed much of his style to the direct influence of French author Andre Gide concluding that alongside Camil Petrescu and a few others Eliade was among Gide s leading disciples in Romanian literature 6 He commented that like Gide Eliade believed that the artist does not take a stand but experiences good and evil while setting himself free from both maintaining an intact curiosity 6 A specific aspect of this focus on experience is sexual experimentation Călinescu notes that Eliade s fiction works tend to depict a male figure possessing all practicable women in a given family 233 He also considered that as a rule Eliade depicts woman as a basic means for a sexual experience and repudiated with harsh egotism 233 For Călinescu such a perspective on life culminated in banality leaving authors gripped by the cult of the self and a contempt for literature 6 Polemically Călinescu proposed that Mircea Eliade s supposed focus on aggressive youth served to instill his interwar Romanian writers with the idea that they had a common destiny as a generation apart 6 He also commented that when set in Romania Mircea Eliade s stories lacked the perception of immediate reality and analyzing the non traditional names the writer tended to ascribe to his Romanian characters that they did not depict specificity 234 Additionally in Călinescu s view Eliade s stories were often sensationalist compositions of the illustrated magazine kind 235 Mircea Eliade s assessment of his own pre 1940 literary contributions oscillated between expressions of pride 27 and the bitter verdict that they were written for an audience of little ladies and high school students 60 A secondary but unifying feature present in most of Eliade s stories is their setting a magical and part fictional Bucharest 8 In part they also serve to illustrate or allude to Eliade s own research in the field of religion as well as to the concepts he introduced 8 Thus commentators such as Matei Călinescu and Carmen Mușat have also argued that a main characteristic of Eliade s fantasy prose is a substitution between the supernatural and the mundane in this interpretation Eliade turns the daily world into an incomprehensible place while the intrusive supernatural aspect promises to offer the sense of life 236 The notion was in turn linked to Eliade s own thoughts on transcendence and in particular his idea that once camouflaged in life or history miracles become unrecognizable 236 Oriental themed novels edit Isabel și apele diavolului edit One of Eliade s earliest fiction writings the controversial first person narrative Isabel si apele diavolului Isabel and the Devil s Waters focused on the figure of a young and brilliant academic whose self declared fear is that of being common 237 The hero s experience is recorded in notebooks which are compiled to form the actual narrative and which serve to record his unusual mostly sexual experiences in British India the narrator describes himself as dominated by a devilish indifference towards all things having to do with art or metaphysics focusing instead on eroticism 237 The guest of a pastor the scholar ponders sexual adventures with his host s wife servant girl and finally with his daughter Isabel Persuading the pastor s adolescent son to run away from home becoming the sexual initiator of a twelve year old girl and the lover of a much older woman the character also attempts to seduce Isabel Although she falls in love the young woman does not give in to his pressures but eventually allows herself to be abused and impregnated by another character letting the object of her affection know that she had thought of him all along 238 Maitreyi edit One of Eliade s best known works the novel Maitreyi dwells on Eliade s own experience comprising camouflaged details of his relationships with Surendranath Dasgupta and Dasgupta s daughter Maitreyi Devi The main character Allan is an Englishman who visits the Indian engineer Narendra Sen and courts his daughter herself known as Maitreyi The narrative is again built on notebooks to which Allan adds his comments This technique Călinescu describes as boring and its result cynical 238 Allan himself stands alongside Eliade s male characters whose focus is on action sensation and experience his chaste contacts with Maitreyi are encouraged by Sen who hopes for a marriage which is nonetheless abhorred by his would be European son in law 238 Instead Allan is fascinated to discover Maitreyi s Oriental version of Platonic love marked by spiritual attachment more than by physical contact 239 However their affair soon after turns physical and she decides to attach herself to Allan as one would to a husband in what is an informal and intimate wedding ceremony which sees her vowing her love and invoking an earth goddess as the seal of union 234 Upon discovering this Narendra Sen becomes enraged rejecting their guest and keeping Maitreyi in confinement As a result his daughter decides to have intercourse with a lowly stranger becoming pregnant in the hope that her parents would consequently allow her to marry her lover However the story also casts doubt on her earlier actions reflecting rumors that Maitreyi was not a virgin at the time she and Allan first met which also seems to expose her father as a hypocrite 234 George Călinescu objected to the narrative arguing that both the physical affair and the father s rage seemed artificial while commenting that Eliade placing doubt on his Indian characters honesty had turned the plot into a piece of ethnological humor 234 Noting that the work developed on a classical theme of miscegenation which recalled the prose of Francois Rene de Chateaubriand and Pierre Loti 238 the critic proposed that its main merit was in introducing the exotic novel to local literature 234 Șantier edit Mircea Eliade s other early works include Șantier Building Site a part novel part diary account of his Indian sojourn George Călinescu objected to its monotony and noting that it featured a set of intelligent observations criticized the banality of its ideological conversations 234 Șantier was also noted for its portrayal of drug addiction and intoxication with opium both of which could have referred to Eliade s actual travel experience 69 Portraits of a generation edit Novel of the Nearsighted Adolescent edit In his earliest novel titled Novel of the Nearsighted Adolescent and written in the first person Eliade depicts his experience through high school 9 It is proof of the influence exercised on him by the literature of Giovanni Papini and in particular by Papini s story Un uomo finito 9 Each of its chapters reads like an independent novella and in all the work experiments with the limits traced between novel and diary 9 Literary critic Eugen Simion called it the most valuable among Eliade s earliest literary attempts but noted that being ambitious the book had failed to achieve an aesthetically satisfactory format 9 According to Simion the innovative intent of the Novel was provided by its technique by its goal of providing authenticity in depicting experiences and by its insight into adolescent psychology 9 The novel notably shows its narrator practicing self flagellation 9 Intoarcerea din rai edit Eliade s 1934 novel Intoarcerea din rai Return from Paradise centers on Pavel Anicet a young man who seeks knowledge through what Călinescu defined as sexual excess 234 His search leaves him with a reduced sensitivity right after being confronted with his father s death Anicet breaks out in tears only after sitting through an entire dinner 234 The other characters standing for Eliade s generation all seek knowledge through violence or retreat from the world nonetheless unlike Anicet they ultimately fail at imposing rigors upon themselves 234 Pavel himself eventually abandons his belief in sex as a means for enlightenment and commits suicide in hopes of reaching the level of primordial unity The solution George Călinescu noted mirrored the strange murder in Gide s Lafcadio s Adventures 234 Eliade himself indicated that the book dealt with the loss of the beatitude illusions and optimism that had dominated the first twenty years of Greater Romania 240 Robert Ellwood connected the work to Eliade s recurring sense of loss in respect to the atmosphere of euphoria and faith of his adolescence 202 Călinescu criticizes Intoarcerea din rai describing its dialog sequences as awkward its narrative as void and its artistic interest as non existent proposing that the reader could however find it relevant as the document of a mentality 234 Huliganii edit The novel Huliganii The Hooligans is intended as the fresco of a family and through it that of an entire generation The book s main protagonist Petru Anicet is a composer who places value in experiments other characters include Dragu who considers a hooligan s experience as the only fertile debut into life and the totalitarian Alexandru Plesa who is on the search for the heroic life by enlisting youth in perfect regiments equally intoxicated by a collective myth 241 242 Călinescu thought that the young male characters all owed inspiration to Fyodor Dostoevsky s Rodion Romanovich Raskolnikov see Crime and Punishment 233 Anicet who partly shares Pleșa s vision for a collective experiment is also prone to sexual adventures and seduces the women of the Lecca family who have hired him as a piano teacher 233 Romanian born novelist Norman Manea called Anicet s experiment the paraded defiance of bourgeois conventions in which venereal disease and lubricity dwell together 241 In one episode of the book Anicet convinces Anișoara Lecca to gratuitously steal from her parents an outrage which leads her mother to moral decay and eventually to suicide 233 George Călinescu criticized the book for inconsistencies and excesses in Dostoyevskianism but noted that the Lecca family portrayal was suggestive and that the dramatic scenes were written with a remarkable poetic calm 233 Marriage in Heaven edit The novel Marriage in Heaven depicts the correspondence between two male friends an artist and a common man who complain to each other about their failures in love the former complains about a lover who wanted his children when he did not while the other recalls being abandoned by a woman who despite his intentions did not want to become pregnant by him Eliade lets the reader understand that they are in fact talking about the same woman 235 Fantastic and fantasy literature edit Mircea Eliade s earliest works most of which were published at later stages belong to the fantasy genre One of the first such literary exercises to be printed the 1921 Cum am găsit piatra filosofală showed its adolescent author s interest in themes that he was to explore throughout his career in particular esotericism and alchemy 9 Written in the first person it depicts an experiment which for a moment seems to be the discovery of the philosophers stone 9 These early writings also include two sketches for novels Minunata călătorie a celor cinci cărăbuși in țara furnicilor roșii The Wonderful Journey of the Five Beetles into the Land of the Red Ants and Memoriile unui soldat de plumb The Memoirs of a Lead Soldier 9 In the former a company of beetle spies is sent among the red ants their travel offers a setting for satirical commentary 9 Eliade himself explained that Memoriile unui soldat de plumb was an ambitious project designed as a fresco to include the birth of the Universe abiogenesis human evolution and the entire world history 9 Eliade s fantasy novel Domnișoara Christina was on its own the topic of a scandal 233 The novel deals with the fate of an eccentric family the Moscus who are haunted by the ghost of a murdered young woman known as Christina The apparition shares characteristics with vampires and with strigoi she is believed to be drinking the blood of cattle and that of a young family member 233 The young man Egor becomes the object of Christina s desire and is shown to have intercourse with her 233 Noting that the plot and setting reminded one of horror fiction works by the German author Hanns Heinz Ewers and defending Domnisoara Christina in front of harsher criticism Călinescu nonetheless argued that the international environment in which it took place was upsetting 233 He also depicted the plot as focused on major impurity summarizing the story s references to necrophilia menstrual fetish and ephebophilia 233 Șarpele edit Eliade s short story Șarpele The Snake was described by George Călinescu as hermetic 233 While on a trip to the forest several persons witness a feat of magic performed by the male character Andronic who summons a snake from the bottom of a river and places it on an island At the end of the story Andronic and the female character Dorina are found on the island naked and locked in a sensual embrace 233 Călinescu saw the piece as an allusion to Gnosticism to the Kabbalah and to Babylonian mythology while linking the snake to the Greek mythological figure and major serpent symbol Ophion 233 He was however dissatisfied with this introduction of iconic images describing it as languishing 235 In Curte la DionisIn the relation between history and culture the memory acts from the event toward the creation so that the cultural memory is the prisoner of history 243 When it will liberate itself the human will escape the labyrinth according to a character of the In Dionysus Court of which ideal is the cultural memory but for him the amnesia becomes a torment because although he forgot details of his own existence he kept the vague impression of a decisive meeting and with the obsession that he is not knowing his place in the universe he had forgotten the message that he had to transmit to the world Un om mare edit The short story Un om mare A Big Man which Eliade authored during his stay in Portugal shows a common person the engineer Cucoanes who grows steadily and uncontrollably reaching immense proportions and ultimately disappearing into the wilderness of the Bucegi Mountains 244 Eliade himself referenced the story and Aldous Huxley s experiments in the same section of his private notes a matter which allowed Matei Călinescu to propose that Un om mare was a direct product of its author s experience with drugs 69 The same commentator who deemed Un om mare perhaps Eliade s most memorable short story connected it with the uriași characters present in Romanian folklore 244 Other writings edit Eliade reinterpreted the Greek mythological figure Iphigeneia in his eponymous 1941 play Here the maiden falls in love with Achilles and accepts to be sacrificed on the pyre as a means to ensure both her lover s happiness as predicted by an oracle and her father Agamemnon s victory in the Trojan War 245 Discussing the association Iphigenia s character makes between love and death Romanian theater critic Radu Albala noted that it was a possible echo of Mesterul Manole legend in which a builder of the Curtea de Argeș Monastery has to sacrifice his wife in exchange for permission to complete work 245 In contrast with early renditions of the myth by authors such as Euripides and Jean Racine Eliade s version ends with the sacrifice being carried out in full 245 In addition to his fiction the exiled Eliade authored several volumes of memoirs and diaries and travel writings They were published sporadically and covered various stages of his life One of the earliest such pieces was India grouping accounts of the travels he made through the Indian subcontinent 68 Writing for the Spanish journal La Vanguardia commentator Sergio Vila Sanjuan described the first volume of Eliade s Autobiography covering the years 1907 to 1937 as a great book while noting that the other main volume was more conventional and insincere 8 In Vila Sanjuan s view the texts reveal Mircea Eliade himself as a Dostoyevskyian character as well as an accomplished person a Goethian figure 8 A work that drew particular interest was his Jurnal portughez Portuguese Diary completed during his stay in Lisbon and published only after its author s death A portion of it dealing with his stay in Romania is believed to have been lost 7 The travels to Spain partly recorded in Jurnal portughez also led to a separate volume Jurnal cordobez Cordoban Diary which Eliade compiled from various independent notebooks 68 Jurnal portughez shows Eliade coping with clinical depression and political crisis and has been described by Andrei Oișteanu as an overwhelming read through the immense suffering it exhales 69 Literary historian Paul Cernat argued that part of the volume is a masterpiece of its time while concluding that some 700 pages were passable for the among others section of Eliade s bibliography 27 Noting that the book featured parts where Eliade spoke of himself in eulogistic terms notably comparing himself favorably to Goethe and Romania s national poet Mihai Eminescu Cernat accused the writer of egolatry and deduced that Eliade was ready to step over dead bodies for the sake of his spiritual mission 27 The same passages led philosopher and journalist Cătălin Avramescu to argue that Eliade s behavior was evidence of megalomania 60 Eliade also wrote various essays of literary criticism In his youth alongside his study on Julius Evola he published essays which introduced the Romanian public to representatives of modern Spanish literature and philosophy among them Adolfo Bonilla San Martin Miguel de Unamuno Jose Ortega y Gasset Eugenio d Ors Vicente Blasco Ibanez and Marcelino Menendez y Pelayo 68 He also wrote an essay on the works of James Joyce connecting it with his own theories on the eternal return Joyce s literature is saturated with nostalgia for the myth of the eternal repetition and deeming Joyce himself an anti historicist archaic figure among the modernists 246 In the 1930s Eliade edited the collected works of Romanian historian Bogdan Petriceicu Hasdeu 9 M L Ricketts discovered and translated into English a previously unpublished play written by Mircea Eliade in Paris 1946 Aventura Spirituală A Spiritual Adventure It was published first in Theory in Action the journal of the Transformative Studies Institute 247 vol 5 2012 2 58 and then in Italian M Eliade Tutto il teatro Milano Edizioni Bietti 2016 Controversy antisemitism and links with the Iron Guard editEarly statements edit The early years in Eliade s public career show him to have been highly tolerant of Jews in general and of the Jewish minority in Romania in particular His early condemnation of Nazi antisemitic policies was accompanied by his caution and moderation in regard to Nae Ionescu s various anti Jewish attacks 32 248 Late in the 1930s Mihail Sebastian was marginalized by Romania s antisemitic policies and came to reflect on his Romanian friend s association with the far right The subsequent ideological break between him and Eliade has been compared by writer Gabriela Adameșteanu with that between Jean Paul Sartre and Albert Camus 241 In his Journal published long after his 1945 death Sebastian claimed that Eliade s actions during the 1930s show him to be an antisemite According to Sebastian Eliade had been friendly to him until the start of his political commitments after which he severed all ties 32 249 Before their friendship came apart however Sebastian claimed that he took notes on their conversations which he later published during which Eliade was supposed to have expressed antisemitic views According to Sebastian Eliade said in 1939 The Poles resistance in Warsaw is a Jewish resistance Only yids are capable of the blackmail of putting women and children in the front line to take advantage of the Germans sense of scruple The Germans have no interest in the destruction of Romania Only a pro German government can save us What is happening on the frontier with Bukovina is a scandal because new waves of Jews are flooding into the country Rather than a Romania again invaded by kikes it would be better to have a German protectorate 250 The friendship between Eliade and Sebastian drastically declined during the war the latter writer fearing for his security during the pro Nazi Ion Antonescu regime see Romania during World War II hoped that Eliade by then a diplomat could intervene in his favor however upon his brief return to Romania Eliade did not see or approach Sebastian 8 32 Later Mircea Eliade expressed his regret at not having had the chance to redeem his friendship with Sebastian before the latter was killed in a car accident 27 66 Paul Cernat notes that Eliade s statement includes an admission that he counted on Sebastian s support in order to get back into Romanian life and culture and proposes that Eliade may have expected his friend to vouch for him in front of hostile authorities 27 Some of Sebastian s late recordings in his diary show that their author was reflecting with nostalgia on his relationship with Eliade and that he deplored the outcome 8 32 Eliade provided two distinct explanations for not having met with Sebastian one was related to his claim of being followed around by the Gestapo and the other expressed in his diaries was that the shame of representing a regime that humiliated Jews had made him avoid facing his former friend 32 Another take on the matter was advanced in 1972 by the Israeli magazine Toladot which claimed that as an official representative Eliade was aware of Antonescu s agreement to implement the Final Solution in Romania and of how this could affect Sebastian see Holocaust in Romania 32 In addition rumors were sparked that Sebastian and Nina Mareș had a physical relationship one which could have contributed to the clash between the two literary figures 8 Beyond his involvement with a movement known for its antisemitism Eliade did not usually comment on Jewish issues However an article titled Piloții orbi The Blind Pilots contributed to the journal Vremea in 1936 showed that he supported at least some Iron Guard accusations against the Jewish community Since the war that is World War I Jews have occupied the villages of Maramureș and Bukovina and gained the absolute majority in the towns and cities in Bessarabia note 2 It would be absurd to expect Jews to resign themselves in order to become a minority with certain rights and very many duties after they have tasted the honey of power and conquered as many command positions as they have Jews are currently fighting with all forces to maintain their positions expecting a future offensive and as far as I am concerned I understand their fight and admire their vitality tenacity genius 251 One year later a text accompanied by his picture was featured as answer to an inquiry by the Iron Guard s Buna Vestire about the reasons he had for supporting the movement A short section of it summarizes an anti Jewish attitude Can the Romanian nation end its life in the saddest decay witnessed by history undermined by misery and syphilis conquered by Jews and torn to pieces by foreigners demoralized betrayed sold for a few million lei 32 252 According to the literary critic Z Ornea in the 1980s Eliade denied authorship of the text He explained the use of his signature his picture and the picture s caption as having been applied by the magazine s editor Mihail Polihroniade to a piece the latter had written after having failed to obtain Eliade s contribution he also claimed that given his respect for Polihroniade he had not wished to publicize this matter previously 253 Polemics and exile edit Dumitru G Danielopol a fellow diplomat present in London during Eliade s stay in the city later stated that the latter had identified himself as a guiding light of the Iron Guard movement and victim of Carol II s repression 54 In October 1940 as the National Legionary State came into existence the British Foreign Office blacklisted Mircea Eliade alongside five other Romanians due to his Iron Guard connections and suspicions that he was prepared to spy in favor of Nazi Germany 79 According to various sources while in Portugal the diplomat was also preparing to disseminate propaganda in favor of the Iron Guard 54 In Jurnal portughez Eliade defines himself as a Legionary 8 27 and speaks of his own Legionary climax as a stage he had gone through during the early 1940s 27 32 The depolitisation of Eliade after the start of his diplomatic career was also mistrusted by his former close friend Eugene Ionesco who indicated that upon the close of World War II Eliade s personal beliefs as communicated to his friends amounted to all is over now that Communism has won 254 This forms part of Ionesco s severe and succinct review of the careers of Legionary inspired intellectuals many of them his friends and former friends in a letter he sent to Tudor Vianu 54 255 In 1946 Ionesco indicated to Petru Comarnescu that he did not want to see either Eliade or Cioran and that he considered the two of them Legionaries for ever adding we are hyenas to one another 256 Eliade s former friend the communist Belu Zilber who was attending the Paris Conference in 1946 refused to see Eliade arguing that as an Iron Guard affiliate the latter had denounced left wingers and contrasting him with Cioran They are both Legionaries but Cioran is honest 257 Three years later Eliade s political activities were brought into discussion as he was getting ready to publish a translation of his Techniques du Yoga with the left leaning Italian company Giulio Einaudi Editore the denunciation was probably orchestrated by Romanian officials 258 In August 1954 when Horia Sima who led the Iron Guard during its exile was rejected by a faction inside the movement Mircea Eliade s name was included on a list of persons who supported the latter although this may have happened without his consent 258 According to exiled dissident and novelist Dumitru Ţepeneag around that date Eliade expressed his sympathy for Iron Guard members in general whom he viewed as courageous 259 However according to Robert Ellwood the Eliade he met in the 1960s was entirely apolitical remained aloof from the passionate politics of that era in the United States and r eportedly never read newspapers 260 an assessment shared by Sorin Alexandrescu 7 Eliade s student Ioan Petru Culianu noted that journalists had come to refer to the Romanian scholar as the great recluse 10 Despite Eliade s withdrawal from radical politics Ellwood indicates he still remained concerned with Romania s welfare He saw himself and other exiled Romanian intellectuals as members of a circle who worked to maintain the culture of a free Romania and above all to publish texts that had become unpublishable in Romania itself 261 Beginning in 1969 Eliade s past became the subject of public debate in Israel At the time historian Gershom Scholem asked Eliade to explain his attitudes which the latter did using vague terms 32 54 262 As a result of this exchange Scholem declared his dissatisfaction and argued that Israel could not extend a welcome to the Romanian academic 54 During the final years of Eliade s life his disciple Culianu exposed and publicly criticized his 1930s pro Iron Guard activities relations between the two soured as a result 263 Eliade s other Romanian disciple Andrei Oisteanu noted that in the years following Eliade s death conversations with various people who had known the scholar had made Culianu less certain of his earlier stances and had led him to declare Mr Eliade was never antisemitic a member of the Iron Guard or pro Nazi But in any case I am led to believe that he was closer to the Iron Guard than I would have liked to believe 264 At an early stage of his polemic with Culianu Eliade complained in writing that it is not possible to write an objective history of the Iron Guard and its leader Corneliu Zelea Codreanu 265 Arguing that people would only accept apologetics or executions he contended After Buchenwald and Auschwitz even honest people cannot afford being objective 265 Posterity edit Alongside the arguments introduced by Daniel Dubuisson criticism of Mircea Eliade s political involvement with antisemitism and fascism came from Adriana Berger Leon Volovici Alexandra Lagniel Lavastine Florin Țurcanu and others who have attempted to trace Eliade s antisemitism throughout his work and through his associations with contemporary antisemites such as the Italian fascist occultist Julius Evola Volovici for example is critical of Eliade not only because of his support for the Iron Guard but also for spreading antisemitism and anti Masonry in 1930s Romania 266 In 1991 exiled novelist Norman Manea published an essay firmly condemning Eliade s attachment to the Iron Guard 8 Other scholars like Bryan S Rennie have claimed that there is to date no evidence of Eliade s membership active services rendered or of any real involvement with any fascist or totalitarian movements or membership organizations nor that there is any evidence of his continued support for nationalist ideals after their inherently violent nature was revealed They further assert that there is no imprint of overt political beliefs in Eliade s scholarship and also claim that Eliade s critics are following political agendas 267 Romanian scholar Mircea Handoca editor of Eliade s writings argues that the controversy surrounding Eliade was encouraged by a group of exiled writers of whom Manea was a main representative and believes that Eliade s association with the Guard was a conjectural one determined by the young author s Christian values and conservative stance as well as by his belief that a Legionary Romania could mirror Portugal s Estado Novo 8 Handoca opined that Eliade changed his stance after discovering that the Legionaries had turned violent and argued that there was no evidence of Eliade s actual affiliation with the Iron Guard as a political movement 8 Additionally Joaquin Garrigos who translated Eliade s works into Spanish claimed that none of Eliade s texts he ever encountered show him to be an antisemite 8 Mircea Eliade s nephew and commentator Sorin Alexandrescu himself proposed that Eliade s politics were essentially conservative and patriotic in part motivated by a fear of the Soviet Union which he shared with many other young intellectuals 8 Based on Mircea Eliade s admiration for Gandhi various other authors assess that Eliade remained committed to nonviolence 8 Robert Ellwood also places Eliade s involvement with the Iron Guard in relation to scholar s conservatism and connects this aspect of Eliade s life with both his nostalgia and his study of primal societies According to Ellwood the part of Eliade that felt attracted to the freedom of new beginnings suggested by primal myths is the same part that felt attracted to the Guard with its almost mythological notion of a new beginning through a national resurrection 268 On a more basic level Ellwood describes Eliade as an instinctively spiritual person who saw the Iron Guard as a spiritual movement 269 In Ellwood s view Eliade was aware that the golden age of antiquity was no longer accessible to secular man that it could be recalled but not re established Thus a more accessible object for nostalgia was a secondary silver age within the last few hundred years the Kingdom of Romania s 19th century cultural renaissance 270 To the young Eliade the Iron Guard seemed like a path for returning to the silver age of Romania s glory being a movement dedicated to the cultural and national renewal of the Romanian people by appeal to their spiritual roots 260 Ellwood describes the young Eliade as someone capable of being fired up by mythological archetypes and with no awareness of the evil that was to be unleashed 271 Because of Eliade s withdrawal from politics and also because the later Eliade s religiosity was very personal and idiosyncratic 227 Ellwood believes the later Eliade probably would have rejected the corporate sacred of the Iron Guard 227 According to Ellwood the later Eliade had the same desire for a Romanian resurrection that had motivated the early Eliade to support the Iron Guard but he now channeled it apolitically through his efforts to maintain the culture of a free Romania abroad 272 In one of his writings Eliade says Against the terror of History there are only two possibilities of defense action or contemplation 273 According to Ellwood the young Eliade took the former option trying to reform the world through action whereas the older Eliade tried to resist the terror of history intellectually 202 Eliade s own version of events presenting his involvement in far right politics as marginal was judged to contain several inaccuracies and unverifiable claims 54 274 For instance Eliade depicted his arrest as having been solely caused by his friendship with Nae Ionescu 275 On another occasion answering Gershom Scholem s query he is known to have explicitly denied ever having contributed to Buna Vestire 54 According to Sorin Antohi Eliade died without ever clearly expressing regret for his Iron Guard sympathies 276 Z Ornea noted that in a short section of his Autobiography where he discusses the Einaudi incident Eliade speaks of my imprudent acts and errors committed in youth as a series of malentendus that would follow me all my life 277 Ornea commented that this was the only instance where the Romanian academic spoke of his political involvement with a dose of self criticism and contrasted the statement with Eliade s usual refusal to discuss his stances pertinently 258 Reviewing the arguments brought in support of Eliade Sergio Vila Sanjuan concluded Nevertheless Eliade s pro Legionary columns endure in the newspaper libraries he never showed his regret for this connection with the Iron Guard and always right up to his final writings he invoked the figure of his teacher Nae Ionescu 8 In his Felix Culpa Manea directly accused Eliade of having embellished his memoirs in order to minimize an embarrassing past 8 A secondary debate surrounding Eliade s alleged unwillingness to dissociate with the Guard took place after Jurnalul portughez saw print Sorin Alexandrescu expressed a belief that notes in the diary show Eliade s break with his far right past 7 Cătălin Avramescu defined this conclusion as whitewashing and answering to Alexandrescu s claim that his uncle s support for the Guard was always superficial argued that Jurnal portughez and other writings of the time showed Eliade s disenchantment with the Legionaries Christian stance in tandem with his growing sympathy for Nazism and its pagan messages 60 Paul Cernat who stressed that it was the only one of Eliade s autobiographical works not to have been reworked by its author concluded that the book documented Eliade s own efforts to camouflage his political sympathies without rejecting them altogether 27 Oișteanu argued that in old age Eliade moved away from his earlier stances and even came to sympathize with the non Marxist Left and the hippie youth movement 76 82 He noted that Eliade initially felt apprehensive about the consequences of hippie activism but that the interests they shared as well as their advocacy of communalism and free love had made him argue that hippies were a quasi religious movement that was rediscovering the sacrality of Life 278 Andrei Oișteanu who proposed that Eliade s critics were divided into a maximalist and a minimalist camp trying to respectively enhance or shadow the impact Legionary ideas had on Eliade argued in favor of moderation and indicated that Eliade s fascism needed to be correlated to the political choices of his generation 262 Political symbolism in Eliade s fiction edit Various critics have traced links between Eliade s fiction works and his political views or Romanian politics in general Early on George Călinescu argued that the totalitarian model outlined in Huliganii was An allusion to certain bygone political movements sublimated in the ever so abstruse philosophy of death as a path to knowledge 233 By contrast Intoarcerea din rai partly focuses on a failed communist rebellion which enlists the participation of its main characters 234 Iphigenia s story of self sacrifice turned voluntary in Eliade s version was taken by various commentators beginning with Mihail Sebastian as a favorable allusion to the Iron Guard s beliefs on commitment and death as well as to the bloody outcome of the 1941 Legionary Rebellion 32 Ten years after its premiere the play was reprinted by Legionary refugees in Argentina on the occasion the text was reviewed for publishing by Eliade himself 32 Reading Iphigenia was what partly sparked Culianu s investigation of his mentor s early political affiliations 32 A special debate was sparked by Un om mare Culianu viewed it as a direct reference to Corneliu Zelea Codreanu and his rise in popularity an interpretation partly based on the similarity between on one hand two monikers ascribed to the Legionary leader by respectively his adversaries and his followers and on the other the main character s name Cucoanes 244 Matei Călinescu did not reject Culianu s version but argued that on its own the piece was beyond political interpretations 244 Commenting on this dialog literary historian and essayist Mircea Iorgulescu objected to the original verdict indicating his belief that there was no historical evidence to substantiate Culianu s point of view 244 Alongside Eliade s main works his attempted novel of youth Minunata călătorie a celor cinci cărăbuși in țara furnicilor roșii which depicts a population of red ants living in a totalitarian society and forming bands to harass the beetles was seen as a potential allusion to the Soviet Union and to communism 9 Despite Eliade s ultimate reception in Communist Romania this writing could not be published during the period after censors singled out fragments which they saw as especially problematic 9 Cultural legacy editTributes edit nbsp Eliade s portrait on a Moldovan stamp nbsp Portrait on the Alley of Classics ChisinăuAn endowed chair in the History of Religions at the University of Chicago Divinity School was named after Eliade in recognition of his wide contribution to the research on this subject the first holder of this chair is Wendy Doniger who was succeeded by Brook Ziporyn in 2020 279 To evaluate the legacy of Eliade and Joachim Wach within the discipline of the history of religions the University of Chicago chose 2006 the intermediate year between the 50th anniversary of Wach s death and the 100th anniversary of Eliade s birth to hold a two day conference in order to reflect upon their academic contributions and their political lives in their social and historical contexts as well as the relationship between their works and their lives 74 In 1990 after the Romanian Revolution Eliade was elected posthumously to the Romanian Academy In Romania Mircea Eliade s legacy in the field of the history of religions is mirrored by the journal Archaeus founded 1997 and affiliated with the University of Bucharest Faculty of History The 6th European Association for the Study of Religion and International Association for the History of Religions Special Conference on Religious History of Europe and Asia took place from September 20 to September 23 2006 in Bucharest An important section of the Congress was dedicated to the memory of Mircea Eliade whose legacy in the field of history of religions was scrutinized by various scholars some of whom were his direct students at the University of Chicago 280 As Antohi noted Eliade Emil Cioran and Constantin Noica represent in Romanian culture ultimate expressions of excellence Eliade and Cioran being regarded as proof that Romania s interwar culture and by extension Romanian culture as a whole was able to reach the ultimate levels of depth sophistication and creativity 276 A Romanian Television 1 poll carried out in 2006 nominated Mircea Eliade as the 7th Greatest Romanian in history his case was argued by the journalist Dragos Bucurenci see 100 greatest Romanians His name was given to a boulevard in the northern Bucharest area of Primăverii to a street in Cluj Napoca and to high schools in Bucharest Sighisoara and Resiţa The Eliades house on Melodiei Street was torn down during the communist regime and an apartment block was raised in its place his second residence on Dacia Boulevard features a memorial plaque in his honor 8 Eliade s image in contemporary culture also has political implications Historian Irina Livezeanu proposed that the respect he enjoys in Romania is matched by that of other nationalist thinkers and politicians who have reentered the contemporary scene largely as heroes of a pre and anticommunist past including Nae Ionescu and Cioran but also Ion Antonescu and Nichifor Crainic 281 In parallel according to Oisteanu who relied his assessment on Eliade s own personal notes Eliade s interest in the American hippie community was reciprocated by members of the latter some of whom reportedly viewed Eliade as a guru 76 Eliade has also been hailed as an inspiration by German representatives of the Neue Rechte claiming legacy from the Conservative Revolutionary movement among them is the controversial magazine Junge Freiheit and the essayist Karlheinz Weissmann 282 In 2007 Florin Ţurcanu s biographical volume on Eliade was issued in a German translation by the Antaios publishing house which is mouthpiece for the Neue Rechte 282 The edition was not reviewed by the mainstream German press 282 Other sections of the European far right also claim Eliade as an inspiration and consider his contacts with the Iron Guard to be a merit among their representatives are the Italian neofascist Claudio Mutti and Romanian groups who trace their origin to the Legionary Movement 262 Portrayals filmography and dramatizations edit Early on Mircea Eliade s novels were the subject of satire before the two of them became friends Nicolae Steinhardt using the pen name Antisthius authored and published parodies of them 14 Maitreyi Devi who strongly objected to Eliade s account of their encounter and relationship wrote her own novel as a reply to his Maitreyi written in Bengali it was titled Na Hanyate It Does Not Die 21 Several authors including Ioan Petru Culianu have drawn a parallel between Eugene Ionesco s Absurdist play of 1959 Rhinoceros which depicts the population of a small town falling victim to a mass metamorphosis and the impact fascism had on Ionesco s closest friends Eliade included 283 In 2000 Saul Bellow published his controversial Ravelstein novel Having for its setting the University of Chicago it had among its characters Radu Grielescu who was identified by several critics as Eliade The latter s portrayal accomplished through statements made by the eponymous character is polemical Grielescu who is identified as a disciple of Nae Ionescu took part in the Bucharest Pogrom and is in Chicago as a refugee scholar searching for the friendship of a Jewish colleague as a means to rehabilitate himself 284 In 2005 the Romanian literary critic and translator Antoaneta Ralian who was an acquaintance of Bellow s argued that much of the negative portrayal was owed to a personal choice Bellow made after having divorced from Alexandra Bagdasar his Romanian wife and Eliade disciple 285 She also mentioned that during a 1979 interview Bellow had expressed admiration for Eliade 285 The film Mircea Eliade et la redecouverte du Sacre 1987 and part of the television series Architecture et Geographie sacrees by Paul Barbă Neagră discuss Eliade s works Film adaptations edit The Bengali Night 1988 directed by Nicolas Klotz Domnisoara Christina Miss Christina 1992 directed by Viorel Sergovici Șarpele The Snake 1996 Eu sunt Adam 1996 directed by Dan Pița Youth Without Youth 2007 directed by Francis Ford Coppola Domnisoara Christina 2013 The Bengali Night a 1988 film directed by Nicolas Klotz and based upon the French translation of Maitreyi stars British actor Hugh Grant as Allan the European character based on Eliade while Supriya Pathak is Gayatri a character based on Maitreyi Devi who had refused to be mentioned by name 21 The film considered pornographic by Hindu activists was only shown once in India 21 Live adaptations edit Domnișoara Christina 1981 opera at the Romanian Radio 286 Iphigenia 1982 play at the National Theater Bucharest 245 La senorita Cristina 2000 opera at the Teatro Real Madrid 68 Cazul Gavrilescu The Gavrilescu Case 2001 play at the Nottara Theater 287 La Țigănci 2003 play at the Odeon Theater 288 Apocalipsa după Mircea Eliade The Apocalypse According to Mircea Eliade 2007 289 Eliade s Iphigenia was again included in theater programs during the late years of the Nicolae Ceausescu regime in January 1982 a new version directed by Ion Cojar premiered at the National Theater Bucharest starring Mircea Albulescu Tania Filip and Adrian Pintea in some of the main roles 245 La Țigănci ro has been the basis for two theater adaptations Cazul Gavrilescu The Gavrilescu Case directed by Gelu Colceag and hosted by the Nottara Theater 287 and an eponymous play by director Alexandru Hausvater first staged by the Odeon Theater in 2003 starring among others Adriana Trandafir Florin Zamfirescu and Carmen Tănase 288 In March 2007 on Eliade s 100th birthday the Romanian Radio Broadcasting Company hosted the Mircea Eliade Week during which radio drama adaptations of several works were broadcast 290 In September of that year director and dramatist Cezarina Udrescu staged a multimedia performance based on a number of works Mircea Eliade wrote during his stay in Portugal titled Apocalipsa după Mircea Eliade The Apocalypse According to Mircea Eliade and shown as part of a Romanian Radio cultural campaign it starred Ion Caramitru Oana Pellea and Răzvan Vasilescu 289 Domnișoara Christina has been the subject of two operas the first carrying the same Romanian title was authored by Romanian composer Șerban Nichifor and premiered in 1981 at the Romanian Radio 286 the second titled La senorita Cristina was written by Spanish composer Luis de Pablo and premiered in 2000 at the Teatro Real in Madrid 68 Selected bibliography editFor a more comprehensive list see Bibliography of Mircea Eliade A History of Religious Ideas Vol 1 From the Stone Age to the Eleusinian Mysteries Trans Willard R Trask Chicago U of Chicago P 1978 Histoire des croyances et des idees religieuses 3 vols 1976 83 Images and Symbols Studies in Religious Symbolism trans Philip Mairet Princeton University Press Princeton 1991 Myth and Reality trans Willard R Trask Harper amp Row New York 1963 Myths Dreams and Mysteries trans Philip Mairet Harper amp Row New York 1967 Myths Rites Symbols A Mircea Eliade Reader Vol 2 Ed Wendell C Beane and William G Doty Harper Colophon New York 1976 Patterns in Comparative Religion Sheed amp Ward New York 1958 Shamanism Archaic Techniques of Ecstasy Princeton University Press Princeton 2004 The Myth of the Eternal Return Cosmos and History trans Willard R Trask Princeton University Press Princeton 1971 The Quest for the Origins of Religion in History of Religions 4 1 1964 p 154 169 The Sacred and the Profane The Nature of Religion trans Willard R Trask Harper Torchbooks New York 1961 Hypermnesie et evasion Doina Ruști Philologica Jassyensia An III Nr 1 2007 p 235 241 Yoga Immortality and Freedom trans Willard R Trask Princeton University Press Princeton 2009 Isabela Vasiliu Scraba Harismele Duhului Sfant si fotografia de 14 ani Mircea Eliade in rev Acolada Satu Mare annul XIV nr 12 157 decembrie 2020 pp 12 13See also editSantoaderi supernatural entities found in Romanian folkloreNotes edit For example according to Wendy Doniger Doniger Foreword to the 2004 Edition Eliade Shamanism p xv Eliade has been accused of being a crypto theologian however Doniger argues that Eliade is better characterized as an open hierogian Likewise Robert Ellwood Ellwood p 111 denies that Eliade practiced covert theology It was popular prejudice in the late 1930s to claim that Ukrainian Jews in the Soviet Union had obtained Romanian citizenship illegally after crossing the border into Maramures and Bukovina In 1938 this accusation served as an excuse for the Octavian Goga A C Cuza government to suspend and review all Jewish citizenship guaranteed after 1923 rendering it very difficult to regain Ornea p 391 Eliade s mention of Bessarabia probably refers to an earlier period being his interpretation of a pre Greater Romania process References editCitations edit Rennie Bryan January 2001 Changing Religious Worlds The Meaning and End of Mircea Eliade SUNY Press ISBN 978 0 7914 4729 1 a b c d e Wendy Doniger Foreword to the 2004 Edition Eliade Shamanism p xiii Gross Feliks November 5 2018 1972 From the individual terror of the totalitarians to the underground struggle against the conquerors 1918 1945 Violence in politics Terror and political assassination in Eastern Europe and Russia Studies in the Social Sciences volume 13 reprint ed Walter de Gruyter GmbH amp Co KG p 63 ISBN 9783111382449 Retrieved October 15 2023 The Rumanian Iron Guard and the Croat Ustasha practiced widely all kinds of violence including individual terror a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Biografie in Handoca a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Silviu Mihai A doua viaţă a lui Mircea Eliade Mircea Eliade s Second Life in Cotidianul February 6 2006 retrieved July 31 2007 in Romanian a b c d e Călinescu p 956 a b c d e Simona Chiţan Nostalgia după Romania Nostalgia for Romania interview with Sorin Alexandrescu in Evenimentul Zilei June 24 2006 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah Sergio Vila Sanjuan Paseo por el Bucarest de Mircea Eliade Passing through Mircea Eliade s Bucharest in La Vanguardia May 30 2007 in Spanish retrieved January 16 2008 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae Ion Hadarcă Mircea Eliade la inceputuri Mircea Eliade at His Beginnings Archived 2007 11 08 at the Wayback Machine in Revista Sud Est 1 2007 retrieved January 21 2008 in Romanian a b c d e f g Ioan P Culianu Mahaparanirvana in El Hilo de Ariadna Archived 2007 12 30 at the Wayback Machine Vol II a b Ellwood pp 98 99 Eliade Autobiography in Ellwood pp 98 99 Ellwood p 5 a b Steinhardt in Handoca Veronica Marinescu Am luat din intamplările vieții tot ce este mai frumos spune cercetătorul operei brancușiene I Took the Best Out of Life s Occurrences Says Researcher of Brancuși s Work Archived 2018 05 26 at the Wayback Machine interview with Barbu Brezianu in Curierul Național March 13 2004 retrieved February 22 2008 in Romanian Maria Vlădescu 100 de ani de cercetasi 100 Years of Scouting in Evenimentul Zilei August 2 2007 Constantin Roman Continental Drift Colliding Continents Converging Cultures CRC Press Institute of Physics Publishing Bristol and Philadelphia 2000 p 60 ISBN 0 7503 0686 6 Călinescu pp 954 955 Nastasă p 76 a b c Nastasă p 237 McGuire p 150 Nastasă p 237 a b c d Ginu Kamani A Terrible Hurt The Untold Story behind the Publishing of Maitreyi Devi at the University of Chicago Press website retrieved July 16 2007 Biografie in Handoca Nastasă p 237 a b c Albert Ribas Mircea Eliade historiador de las religiones Mircea Eliade Historian of Religions in El Ciervo Revista de pensamiento y cultura Ano 49 Num 588 Marzo 2000 pp 35 38 Eliade in Nastasă p 238 a b c McGuire p 150 Nastasă p 442 Ornea p 452 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Paul Cernat Jurnalul unui om mare The Diary of A Big Man Archived June 3 2015 at the Wayback Machine in Observator Cultural Nr 338 September 2006 retrieved January 23 2008 in Romanian a b c d e f g h Șora in Handoca Bejan Cristina A 2019 Intellectuals and Fascism in Interwar Romania The Criterion Association Cham Switzerland Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 3 030 20164 7 Ornea pp 150 151 153 Ornea pp 174 175 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Andrei Oisteanu Mihail Sebastian si Mircea Eliade cronica unei prietenii accidentate Mihail Sebastian and Mircea Eliade the Chronicle of an Abrupt Friendship in 22 Nr 926 December 2007 retrieved January 18 2008 in Romanian Eliade 1934 in Ornea p 408 see also Ellwood p 85 Eliade 1934 in Ornea pp 408 409 Eliade 1936 in Ornea p 410 Eliade 1933 in Ornea p 167 Ornea Chapter IV a b c Stelian Tănase Belu Zilber Part II Archived 2007 09 27 at the Wayback Machine in 22 Nr 701 August 2003 retrieved October 4 2007 in Romanian a b c d Paul Cernat Eliade in cheie ezoterică Eliade in Esoterical Key Archived September 12 2015 at the Wayback Machine review of Marcel Tolcea Eliade ezotericul Eliade the Esoteric in Observator Cultural Nr 175 July 2003 retrieved July 16 2007 in Romanian Paul Cernat Recuperarea lui Ionathan X Uranus The Recuperation of Ionathan X Uranus in Observator Cultural Nr 299 December 2005 retrieved November 22 2007 in Romanian Eliade 1933 in Ornea p 32 Eliade 1936 in Ornea p 32 a b Eliade 1937 in Ornea p 53 Eliade 1927 in Ornea p 147 Eliade 1935 in Ornea p 128 Eliade 1934 in Ornea p 136 Eliade 1933 in Ornea pp 178 186 Ornea pp 445 455 Nastasă pp 525 526 Nastasă p 86 Ornea pp 452 453 Sora in Handoca a b Ornea p 453 a b Eliade 1937 in Ornea p 203 Ornea pp 202 206 a b c d e f g h i j k l Ovidiu Simonca Mircea Eliade si căderea in lume Mircea Eliade and the Descent into the World Archived 2012 12 22 at archive today review of Florin Ţurcanu Mircea Eliade Le prisonnier de l histoire Mircea Eliade The Prisoner of History in Observator Cultural Nr 305 January February 2006 retrieved July 16 2007 in Romanian Ornea p 180 a b Ornea p 207 Ornea pp 208 209 a b c Ornea p 209 Biografie in Handoca Nastasă p 442 a b c d Cătălin Avramescu Citim una inţelegem alta We Read One Thing and Understand Another Archived 2016 04 11 at the Wayback Machine in Dilema Veche Vol III August 2006 retrieved January 28 2008 in Romanian a b c d e f Michael Lowy Review of Daniel Dubuisson Impostures et pseudo science L œuvre de Mircea Eliade in Archives de Science Sociale et Religion 132 2005 in French retrieved January 22 2008 Exiles Memorial Center Pimentel I 2014 Cascais 650 anos territorio historia memoria 1364 2014 Camara Municipal de Cascais a b Eliade Salazar in Eliade despre Salazar Eliade on Salazar Evenimentul Zilei October 13 2002 Ellwood p 90 a b c Eliade in Handoca Nastasă pp 442 443 a b c d e f g Joaquin Garrigos Pasiunea lui Mircea Eliade pentru Spania Mircea Eliade s Passion for Spain Archived 2016 04 11 at the Wayback Machine in Dilema Veche Vol IV October 2007 retrieved January 21 2008 in Romanian a b c d e f g h Andrei Oisteanu Mircea Eliade de la opium la amfetamine Mircea Eliade from Opium to Amphetamines Archived 2007 05 16 at the Wayback Machine in 22 Nr 896 May 2007 retrieved January 17 2008 in Romanian a b Mihai Sorin Rădulescu Cottestii familia soţiei lui Mircea Eliade The Cottescus the Family of Mircea Eliade s Wife Archived 2008 08 03 at the Wayback Machine in Ziarul Financiar June 30 2006 retrieved January 22 2008 in Romanian a b Dan Gulea O perspectivă sintetică A Syncretic Perspective in Observator Cultural Nr 242 October 2004 retrieved October 4 2007 in Romanian McGuire pp 150 151 a b McGuire p 151 a b Conference on Hermeneutics in History Mircea Eliade Joachim Wach and the Science of Religions Archived 2006 12 11 at the Wayback Machine at the University of Chicago Martin Marty Center Institute for the Advanced Study of Religion Archived 2008 09 05 at the Wayback Machine retrieved July 29 2007 McGuire pp 151 152 a b c Oisteanu Mircea Eliade si miscarea hippie Romania Liberă passim September October 1944 in Frunză p 251 a b Vladimir Tismăneanu Stalinism pentru eternitate Romanian translation of Stalinism for All Seasons Polirom Iasi 2005 pp 187 337 ISBN 973 681 899 3 a b Alexandru Popescu Scriitorii si spionajul Writers and Spying Archived 2008 02 15 at the Wayback Machine in Ziarul Financiar January 26 2007 retrieved November 8 2007 in Romanian Frunză pp 448 449 Eliade 1970 in Paul Cernat Imblanzitorul Romaniei Socialiste De la Birca la Chicago si inapoi The Tamer of Socialist Romania From Birca to Chicago and Back part of Paul Cernat Ion Manolescu Angelo Mitchievici Ioan Stanomir Explorări in comunismul romanesc Forays into Romanian Communism Polirom Iasi 2004 p 346 a b Cristian Teodorescu Eliade si Culianu prin ocheanul lui Oisteanu Eliade and Culianu through Oisteanu s Lens in Cotidianul June 14 2007 retrieved November 7 2007 in Romanian Guide to the Mircea Eliade Papers 1926 1998 www lib uchicago edu Retrieved November 8 2019 David Carrasco Codex Charles Long The Scholar Who Traveled to Many Places to Understand Others in With This Root About My Person Charles H Long and New Directions in the Study of Religion ed Jennifer Reid and David Carrasco Albuquerque University of New Mexico Press 2020 306 MAE Repatrierea lui Cioran Eliade și Brancuși in Romania ar diminua semnificativ afluxul de turiști Foreign Affairs Ministry Repatriation to Romania of Cioran Eliade and Brancuși Would Significantly Diminish Tourist Arrivals in Adevărul April 11 2011 retrieved May 21 2014 in Romanian Calian George Florin 2010 Alkimia Operativa and Alkimia Speculativa Some Modern Controversies on the Historiography of Alchemy Budapest Annual of Medieval Studies at CEU p 169 Eliade offers a theoretical background for understanding alchemy from the perspective of the history of religion Alchemy is a spiritual technique and can be understood not as an important moment in the history of science but rather as a kind of religious phenomenon with its own particular rules Doniger s foreword to Eliade s Shamanism Princeton University Press edition 1972 p xii Dumezil Introducere in Eliade Tratat de istorie a religiilor Introducere Religious History Treatise Patterns in Comparative Religion Humanitas Bucharest 1992 a b Ellwood p 99 a b Ellwood p 104 a b c d Eliade Myths Rites Symbols p 450 Eliade The Sacred and the Profane pp 20 22 Shamanism p xiii a b c Eliade The Sacred and the Profane p 22 a b c d Eliade The Sacred and the Profane p 21 Eliade The Sacred and the Profane p 20 a b c Eliade Myths Dreams and Mysteries p 23 Eliade Myth and Reality p 6 Eliade Myth and Reality p 15 Eliade Myth and Reality p 34 a b Eliade Myths Dreams and Mysteries p 44 Eliade The Sacred and the Profane pp 68 69 Leeming Archetypes Eliade Myth and Reality pp 47 49 Eliade The Myth of the Eternal Return Chapter 4 Myths Dreams and Mysteries pp 231 245 Doina Ruști 1997 Dicționar de simboluri din opera lui Mircea Eliade in Romanian Bucuresti Corint p 90 In Patterns in Comparative Religion p 419 Eliade gives a section about the coincidentia oppositorum the title Coincidentia Oppositorum THE MYTHICAL PATTERN Beane and Doty chose to retain this title when excerpting this section in Myths Rites Symbols p 449 Eliade Myths Rites Symbols p 449 a b Eliade Myths Rites Symbols p 439 a b c Eliade Myths Rites Symbols p 440 Eliade Myth and Reality p 169 Eliade Myth and Reality pp 64 65 169 Eliade The Myth of the Eternal Return p 124 a b c Eliade A History of Religious Ideas vol 1 p 302 Eliade A History of Religious Ideas vol 1 p 356 Eliade The Sacred and the Profane p 109 Eliade Myths Rites Symbols Volume 2 pp 312 314 Eliade Shamanism pp 259 260 Eliade The Sacred and the Profane pp 32 36 Eliade The Sacred and the Profane pp 40 42 Eliade Images and Symbols p 44 Eliade The Sacred and the Profane p 43 Eliade Images and Symbols p 39 Eliade The Sacred and the Profane p 29 Eliade Images and Symbols pp 39 40 Eliade The Sacred and the Profane p 30 Eliade The Quest for the Origins of Religion pp 157 161 Eliade Myth and Reality p 93 Patterns in Comparative Religion pp 38 40 54 58 Eliade The Quest for the Origins of Religion p 161 Eliade Patterns in Comparative Religion pp 38 54 Myths Dreams and Mysteries p 176 Eliade Patterns in Comparative Religion p 38 Eliade The Quest for the Origins of Religion p 162 see also Eliade Patterns in Comparative Religion pp 54 58 Eliade Myths Dreams and Mysteries p 176 Eliade Myths Dreams and Mysteries pp 176 177 Eliade Patterns in Comparative Religion pp 54 55 Eliade Myths Dreams and Mysteries p 138 See Eliade Patterns in Comparative Religion pp 54 56 Eliade Myths Dreams and Mysteries pp 134 136 The Myth of the Eternal Return p 97 Eliade Myth and Reality pp 93 94 Eliade Myths Dreams and Mysteries p 134 a b c Eliade Myths Dreams and Mysteries p 66 Eliade Shamanism pp 3 4 a b c Eliade Shamanism p 4 Eliade Shamanism pp 6 8 9 See for example Myths Dreams and Mysteries pp 82 83 Eliade Shamanism p 43 Eliade Shamanism p 63 Eliade Myths Dreams and Mysteries p 84 Eliade Myths Dreams and Mysteries p 102 Eliade Myths Dreams and Mysteries p 63 Eliade Myths Dreams and Mysteries p 64 a b c d e Călinescu p 954 Călinescu p 955 a b c d Eliade in Călinescu p 954 Ionescu in Călinescu pp 953 954 Ellwood pp 110 111 Douglas Allen Myth and Religion in Mircea Eliade Routledge London 2002 pp 45 46 Adrian Marino L Hermeneutique de Mircea Eliade Editions Gallimard Paris 1981 p 60 a b c d Eliade Images and Symbols p 32 Eliade Images and Symbols p 33 Eliade Images and Symbols p 17 Eliade Images and Symbols pp 16 17 Eliade The Myth of the Eternal Return p 5 a b c Eliade The Myth of the Eternal Return p 34 Eliade in Dadosky p 105 Dadosky p 105 Dadosky p 106 Segal in Dadosky pp 105 106 a b c Eliade The Sacred and the Profane p 202 a b Eliade The Sacred and the Profane p 203 Eliade Myth and Reality p 12 see also Eliade Myth and Reality pp 20 145 Eliade The Sacred and the Profane p 204 Eliade The Sacred and the Profane p 205 Eliade The Sacred and the Profane p 205 Myth and Reality p 191 Eliade The Sacred and the Profane p 205 see also Eliade Myth and Reality p 192 Eliade The Quest for the Origins of Religion p 158 Eliade The Quest for the Origins of Religion p 160 Eliade Myths Dreams and Mysteries 1960 pp 25 26 in Ellwood pp 91 92 a b c Eliade Myths Dreams and Mysteries 1960 pp 25 26 in Ellwood p 92 Eliade Myth and Reality p 192 Eliade Myth and Reality p 193 Eliade The Myth of the Eternal Return p 151 Eliade The Myth of the Eternal Return p 152 Eliade Myths Dreams and Mysteries pp 240 241 a b Eliade Myths Dreams and Mysteries p 241 Eliade Myths Dreams and Mysteries p 242 a b c Eliade Myths Dreams and Mysteries p 243 Eliade Myths Dreams and Mysteries pp 243 244 Eliade Myths Dreams and Mysteries p 244 Eliade Myths Dreams and Mysteries p 245 Eliade Myth and Reality p 65 Eliade Myths Dreams and Mysteries p 153 a b Eliade Images and Symbols p 170 a b Jesi pp 66 67 Jesi pp 66 70 Eliade The Myth of the Eternal Return p 162 Ellwood p 6 Ellwood p 9 Ellwood p 15 Ellwood p 2 a b Ellwood p 19 Ellwood p 1 Ellwood pp 99 117 Eliade quoted by Virgil Ierunca The Literary Work of Mircea Eliade in Ellwood p 117 a b c Ellwood p 101 Ellwood p 97 Ellwood p 102 Ellwood p 103 Douglas Allen Eliade and History in Journal of Religion 52 2 1988 p 545 a b Kirk Myth footnote p 255 Kirk The Nature of Greek Myths pp 64 66 Kirk The Nature of Greek Myths p 66 Wendy Doniger Foreword to the 2004 Edition Eliade Shamanism p xii a b Mac Linscott Ricketts Review of Religion on Trial Mircea Eliade and His Critics by Guilford Dudley III in Journal of the American Academy of Religion Vol 46 No 3 September 1978 pp 400 402 Gregory D Alles Review of Changing Religious Worlds The Meaning and End of Mircea Eliade by Brian Rennie in Journal of the American Academy of Religion Vol 71 pp 466 469 Alles italics Alice Kehoe Shamans and Religion An Anthropological Exploration in Critical Thinking Waveland Press London 2000 passim ISBN 1 57766 162 1 a b Kees W Bolle The Freedom of Man in Myth Vanderbilt University Press Nashville 1968 p 14 ISBN 0 8265 1248 8 a b Inden in Morny Joy Irigaray s Eastern Expedition Chapter 4 of Morny Joy Kathleen O Grady Judith L Poxon Religion in French Feminist Thought Critical Perspectives Routledge London 2003 p 63 ISBN 0 415 21536 6 Griffin passim Eliade Fragments d un Journal 11 1970 1978 Editions Gallimard Paris 1981 p 194 Griffin p 173 Douglas R Holmes Integral Europe Fast Capitalism Multiculturalism Neofascism Princeton University Press Princeton 2000 p 78 a b Lucian Boia Istorie si mit in constiinţa romanească Humanitas Bucharest 1997 tr History and Myth in Romanian Consciousness Central European University Press Budapest 2001 p 152 Eliade Zalmoxis The Vanishing God in Slavic Review Vol 33 No 4 December 1974 pp 807 809 Antohi preface to Liiceanu p xx Ellwood pp xiii xiv Ellwood p 13 a b Ellwood p 119 Ellwood p 118 Ellwood pp 119 120 a b c Ellwood p 120 a b Ellwood p 111 Ellwood p x Călinescu p 963 Călinescu p 843 Călinescu p 967 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Călinescu p 959 a b c d e f g h i j k l Călinescu p 958 a b c Călinescu p 960 a b Carmen Musat Despre fantastica alcătuire a realului On the Fantastic Shape of Reality Archived April 23 2011 at the Wayback Machine in Observator Cultural Nr 131 August September 2002 retrieved January 17 2008 in Romanian a b Eliade in Călinescu p 956 a b c d Călinescu p 957 Călinescu pp 957 958 Eliade in Ellwood p 101 a b c Gabriela Adamesteanu Cum suportă individul socurile Istoriei Dialog cu Norman Manea How the Individual Bears the Shocks of History A Dialog with Norman Manea in Observator Cultural Nr 304 January 2006 retrieved January 16 2008 in Romanian Eliade in Călinescu pp 958 959 Doina Ruști 1997 Dicționar de simboluri din opera lui Mircea Eliade in Romanian București Coresi p 89 a b c d e Mircea Iorgulescu L Affaire după Matei L Affaire according to Matei Part II Archived 2007 09 27 at the Wayback Machine in 22 Nr 636 May 2002 retrieved January 17 2008 in Romanian a b c d e Radu Albala Teatrul Naţional din București Ifigenia de Mircea Eliade National Theater Bucharest Ifigenia by Mircea Eliade in Teatru Archived September 11 2018 at the Wayback Machine Vol XXVII Nr 2 February 1982 text facsimile Archived 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Gypsy Girls with Popescu Archived 2008 03 27 at the Wayback Machine in Adevărul May 31 2003 retrieved December 4 2007 in Romanian a b Scrieri de Eliade si Visniec in cadrul festivalului Enescu Texts by Eliade and Visniec as Part of the Enescu Festival Archived 2007 09 22 at the Wayback Machine in Gandul September 12 2007 retrieved December 4 2007 in Romanian Săptămana Mircea Eliade la Radio Romania The Mircea Eliade Week on Radio Romania 2007 press communique in Romanian at the LiterNet publishing house retrieved December 4 2007 Sources edit Secondary sourcesFinal Report of the International Commission on the Holocaust in Romania Polirom Iași 2004 ISBN 973 681 989 2 retrieved October 8 2007 Sorin Antohi Commuting to Castalia Noica s School Culture and Power in Communist Romania preface to Gabriel Liiceanu The Păltinis Diary A Paideic Model in Humanist Culture Central European University Press Budapest 2000 pp vii xxiv ISBN 963 9116 89 0 George Călinescu Istoria literaturii romane de la origini pană in prezent The History of Romanian Literature from Its Origins to Present Times Editura Minerva Bucharest 1986 John Daniel Dadosky The Structure of Religious Knowing Encountering the Sacred in Eliade and Lonergan State University of New York Press Albany 2004 Robert Ellwood The Politics of Myth A Study of C G Jung Mircea Eliade and Joseph Campbell State University of New York Press Albany 1999 Victor Frunză Istoria stalinismului in Romania The History of Stalinism in Romania Humanitas Bucharest 1990 Roger Griffin The Nature of Fascism Routledge London 1993 Mircea Handoca Convorbiri cu si despre Mircea Eliade Conversations with and about Mircea Eliade on Autori Published Authors page of the Humanitas publishing house in Romanian Furio Jesi Mito Mondadori Milan 1980 G S Kirk Myth Its Meaning and Functions in Ancient and Other Cultures University of California Press Berkeley 1973 The Nature of Greek Myths Penguin Books Harmondsworth 1974 William McGuire Bollingen An Adventure in Collecting the Past Princeton University Press Princeton 1982 ISBN 0 691 01885 5 Lucian Nastasă Suveranii universităţilor romanesti The Sovereigns of Romanian Universities Editura Limes Cluj Napoca 2007 available online at the Romanian Academy s George Bariţ Institute of History Andrei Oisteanu Angajamentul politic al lui Mircea Eliade Mircea Eliade s Political Affiliation in 22 Nr 891 March April 2007 retrieved November 15 2007 retrieved January 17 2008 in Romanian Mircea Eliade si miscarea hippie Mircea Eliade and the Hippie Movement in Dilema Veche Vol III May 2006 retrieved November 7 2007 in Romanian Z Ornea Anii treizeci Extrema dreaptă romanească The 1930s The Romanian Far Right Editura EST Samuel Tastet Editeur Bucharest 2008 Mihail Sebastian Journal 1935 1944 The Fascist Years Ivan R Dee Chicago 2000 ISBN 1 56663 326 5 David Leeming Archetypes The Oxford Companion to World Mythology Oxford University Press 2004 Oxford Reference Online Oxford University Press UC Irvine 30 May 2011 1 Isabela Vasiliu Scraba Harismele Duhului Sfant si fotografia de 14 ani Mircea Eliade in rev Acolada Satu Mare annul XIV nr 12 157 decembrie 2020 pp 12 13Further reading editEnglish edit Carrasco David and Law Jane Marie eds 1985 Waiting for the Dawn Boulder Westview Press Dudley Guilford 1977 Religion on Trial Mircea Eliade amp His Critics Philadelphia Temple University Press Idinopulos Thomas A Yonan Edward A eds 1994 Religion and Reductionism Essays on Eliade Segal and the Challenge of the Social Sciences for the Study of Religion Leiden Brill Publishers ISBN 90 04 06788 4 Lincoln Bruce 2024 Secrets Lies and Consequences A Great Scholar s Hidden Past and His Protege s Unsolved Murder New York Oxford University Press McCutcheon Russell T 1997 Manufacturing Religion The Discourse on Sui Generis Religion and the Politics of Nostalgia New York Oxford University Press Olson Carl 1992 The Theology and Philosophy of Eliade A Search for the Centre New York St Martins Press Pals Daniel L 1996 Seven Theories of Religion USA Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 508725 9 Rennie Bryan S 1996 Reconstructing Eliade Making Sense of Religion Albany State University of New York Press ed 2001 Changing Religious Worlds The Meaning and End of Mircea Eliade Albany State University of New York Press 2007 The International Eliade Albany State University of New York Press ISBN 978 0 7914 7087 9 Simion Eugen 2001 Mircea Eliade A Spirit of Amplitude Boulder East European Monographs Strenski Ivan 1987 Four Theories of Myth in Twentieth Century History Cassirer Eliade Levi Strauss and Malinowski Iowa City University of Iowa Press Wasserstrom Steven M 1999 Religion after Religion Gershom Scholem Mircea Eliade and Henry Corbin at Eranos Princeton Princeton University Press Wedemeyer Christian Doniger Wendy eds 2010 Hermeneutics Politics and the History of Religions The Contested Legacies of Joachim Wach and Mircea Eliade Oxford etc Oxford University PressOther languages edit Alexandrescu Sorin 2007 Mircea Eliade dinspre Portugalia Bucharest Humanitas ISBN 973 50 1220 0 Băicuș Iulian 2009 Mircea Eliade Literator și mitodolog In căutarea Centrului pierdut Bucharest Editura Universității București Călinescu Matei 2002 Despre Ioan P Culianu și Mircea Eliade Amintiri lecturi reflecții Iași Polirom ISBN 973 681 064 X Culianu Ioan Petru 1978 Mircea Eliade Assisi Cittadella Editrice 2008 Roma Settimo Sigillo David Dorin 2010 De la Eliade la Culianu I București Eikon David Dorin 2014 Mircea Eliade la marginea labirintului corespondențe intre opera științifică și proza fantastică București Eikon De Martino Marcello 2008 Mircea Eliade esoterico Roma Settimo Sigillo Dubuisson Daniel 2005 Impostures et pseudo science L œuvre de Mircea Eliade Villeneuve d Ascq Presses Universitaires du Septentrion Gorshunova Olga 2008 Terra Incognita of Ioan Culianu in Etnograficeskoe obozrenie N 6 pp 94 110 ISSN 0869 5415 in Russian Laignel Lavastine Alexandra 2002 Cioran Eliade Ionesco L oubli du fascisme Paris Presses Universitaires de France Perspectives critiques Oișteanu Andrei 2007 Religie politică și mit Texte despre Mircea Eliade și Ioan Petru Culianu Iași Polirom Posada Mihai 2006 Opera publicistică a lui Mircea Eliade Bucharest Editura Criterion ISBN 978 973 8982 14 7 Ruști Doina 1997 Dicționar de simboluri din opera lui Mircea Eliade Bucharest Editura Coresi E book Tacou Constantin ed 1977 Cahier Eliade Paris L Herne Tolcea Marcel 2002 Eliade ezotericul Timișoara Editura Mirton Țurcanu Florin 2003 Mircea Eliade Le prisonnier de l histoire Paris Editions La Decouverte External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Mircea Eliade Biography of Mircea Eliade Archived February 5 2009 at the Wayback Machine Petri Liukkonen Mircea Eliade Books and Writers Mircea Eliade From Primitives to Zen Bryan S Rennie on Mircea Eliade Joseph G Muthuraj The Significance of Mircea Eliade for Christian Theology Mircea Eliade presentation on the 100 Greatest Romanians site in Romanian Archaeus magazine in Romanian Eliade and symbols Claudia Guggenbuhl Mircea Eliade and Surendranath Dasgupta The History Of Their Encounter Mircea Eliade at Library of Congress with 199 library catalogue records Guide to the Mircea Eliade Papers 1926 1998 at the University of Chicago Special Collections Research Center Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mircea Eliade amp oldid 1200014386, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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