Gratis verzending bij je eerste bestelling
€ 9,99

Deze aanbiedingen worden op dit artikel toegepast:

Sommige promoties kunnen worden gecombineerd; anderen komen niet in aanmerking om te worden gecombineerd met andere aanbiedingen. Voor meer informatie, zie de voorwaarden die zijn gekoppeld aan deze promoties.

Prijs is inclusief btw
Je bent geabonneerd op ! We zullen je items vooruitbestellen binnen 24 uur nadat ze beschikbaar zijn. Wanneer nieuwe boeken worden uitgebracht, brengen we je de laagste prijs die beschikbaar is in rekening tijdens de vooruitbestellingsperiode bij jouw standaard betaalmethode.
Werk je apparaat of betaalmethode bij, annuleer afzonderlijke vooruitbestellingen of je abonnement bij
Je lidmaatschappen en abonnementen
Afbeelding van logo voor Kindle-app

Download de gratis Kindle-app en begin direct Kindle-boeken te lezen op je smartphone, tablet of computer. Geen Kindle-apparaat vereist.

Lees direct in je browser met Kindle voor Web.

Gebruik de camera van je mobiele telefoon om de onderstaande code te scannen en de Kindle-app te downloaden.

QR-code voor downloaden van Kindle-app

Gurdjieff's Emissary in New York: Talks and Lectures with A. R. Orage 1924-1931 (English Edition) Kindle-editie

4,6 4,6 van 5 sterren 15 beoordelingen

Alfred Richard Orage (1873–1934), whom G. B. Shaw declared the most brilliant editor of the past century, suddenly laid down his pencil in 1922 and sold his famous journal The New Age to work with the mystic G. Gurdjieff in France. Orage hoped that with Gurdjieff’s help, he could come to a more fundamental understanding of the human species. For Orage, modern man had come to the end of his tether, and without the development of new faculties, he was convinced that the problems that pile up in front of mankind would not be solvable, and even the very will to live must decline.

Gurdjieff claimed to have found a way to develop new and higher faculties, and to have been trained in the necessary methods and knowledge which had its sources in the hidden wisdom of the East. Orage worked intensively for more than a year with Gurdjieff in his Institute for the Harmonious Development of Man, and it seems that he had found what he was seeking.

Gurdjieff, on the other hand, found in Orage someone whom he considered a brother in spirit. A spirit that was defined by Orage some years before as: “. . . displaying itself in disinterested interest in things; in things, that is to say, of no personal advantage, but only of general, public or universal importance.” When Gurdjieff expanded his activities into the New World, it was only consequent that Orage became his emissary there.

Orage arrived in New York in December 1923 to expound Gurdjieff’s ideas, and until 1931, was talking to a growing group of interested people. This book contains the notes of many of these talks. We are grateful to the notetakers and their prudence to leave their papers to the universities of Yale, Berkeley and Leeds, who guaranteed the survival of these papers in their archives. Without all this combined effort, they would otherwise be scattered all over the world, largely unknown and “upon the verge of being irrecoverably lost” as C. Daly King once wrote. Along with Orage’s Commentary on “Beelzebub’s Tales to His Grandson,” this edition completes the record of Orage’s meetings, talks and lectures on Gurdjieff’s teaching.

Illustrated with 130 line drawings and 37 photographs
Vanwege de bestandsgrootte kan het langer duren voordat dit boek is gedownload
Veiligheids- en productbronnen
Afbeeldingen en contactpersonen

Veiligheids- en productbronnen

Productbeschrijving

Over de auteur

British editor and critic, born at Dacre in Yorkshire; he taught in Leeds after training at a college in Culham, Oxfordshire. His interest in the cultural implications of socialism led him to found the Leeds Arts Club with Holbrook Jackson. His early publications include the monograph Friedrich Nietzsche (1905). In 1906 he became a journalist in London and took over the New Age in association with Jackson in 1907. His critical writings for the periodical emphasize the ethical and social functions of literature and contain close textual readings which anticipate the development of analytical criticism in the 1920s. The New Age remained a central forum for literary discourse until around 1920, when Orage became immersed in the teachings of Gurdjieff, whose Meetings with Remarkable Men (1963) he translated. Between 1922 and 1930 he was active as a fund-raiser for the Gurdjieff Institute in Fontainebleau. In 1931 he founded the New English Weekly, the chief organ of the Social Credit movement. His Political and Economic Writings (1935) were edited by Montgomery Butchart. 'The New Age' under Orage (1967) is by Wallace Martin, who edited Orage as Critic (1974), a selection of his critical work.

Productgegevens

  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B087MZZN8W
  • Uitgever ‏ : ‎ Book Studio (23 april 2020)
  • Taal ‏ : ‎ Engels
  • Bestandsgrootte ‏ : ‎ 42.9 MB
  • Tekst-naar-spraak ‏ : ‎ Ingeschakeld
  • Schermlezer ‏ : ‎ Ondersteund
  • Verbeterd lettertype ‏ : ‎ Ingeschakeld
  • X-Ray ‏ : ‎ Niet ingeschakeld
  • Word Wise ‏ : ‎ Ingeschakeld
  • Printlengte ‏ : ‎ 634 pagina's
  • Klantenrecensies:
    4,6 4,6 van 5 sterren 15 beoordelingen

Klantenrecensies

4,6 van 5 sterren
15 wereldwijde beoordelingen

Dit product beoordelen

Deel je gedachten met andere klanten

Beste recensies uit Nederland

Er zijn 0 recensies en 0 beoordelingen uit Nederland

Beste recensies uit andere landen

Vertaal alle beoordelingen naar het Nederlands
  • david kane
    5,0 van 5 sterren Five Stars
    Beoordeeld in de Verenigde Staten op 10 januari 2017
    contains exactly the description, arrived on time as stated
    Melden

Probleem melden


Bevat dit item ongepaste content?
Denk je dat dit item in strijd is met een auteursrecht?
Bevat dit item kwaliteits- of opmaakproblemen?