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The Spell of the Sensuous: Perception and Language in a More-Than-Human World
 
 

The Spell of the Sensuous: Perception and Language in a More-Than-Human World (Paperback)

by David Abram (Author) "LATE ONE EVENING I STEPPED OUT OF MY LITTLE HUT IN THE rice paddies of eastern Bali and found myself falling through space ..." (more)
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (27 customer reviews)
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Product Description

From Amazon.com

David Abram's writing casts a spell of its own as he weaves the reader through a meticulously researched work that gently addresses such seemingly daunting topics as where the past and future exist, the relationship between space and time, and how the written word serves to sever humans from their primordial source of sustenance: the earth.

"Only as the written text began to speak would the voices of the forest, and of the river, begin to fade. And only then would language loosen its ancient associations with the invisible breath, the spirit sever itself from the wind, the psyche dissociate itself from the environing air," writes Abram of the separation caused by the proliferation of the written word.

In writing The Spell of the Sensuous, Abram consulted an engaging collection of peoples and works. He uses aboriginal song lines, stories from the Koyukon people of northwestern Alaska, the philosophy of phenomenology, and the speeches of Socrates to paint a poetic landscape that explains how we became separated from the earth in the first place. With minimal environmental doomsaying, Abram discusses how we can begin to recover a sustainable relationship with the earth and the nonhuman beings who live among us--in the more-than-human world. --Kathryn True



From Publishers Weekly

How did Western civilization become so estranged from nonhuman nature that we condone the ongoing destruction of forests, rivers, valleys, species and ecosystems? Santa Fe ecologist/philosopher Abram's search for an answer to this dilemma led him to mingle with shamans in Nepal and sorcerers in Indonesia, where he studied how traditional healers monitor relations between the human community and the animate environment. In this stimulating inquiry, he also delves into the philosophy of phenomenologists Edmund Husserl and Maurice Merleau-Ponty, who replaced the conventional view of a single, wholly determinable reality with a fluid picture of the mind/body as a participatory organism that reciprocally interacts with its surroundings. Abram blames the invention of the phonetic alphabet for triggering a trend toward increasing abstraction and alienation from nature. He gleans insights into how to heal the rift from Australian aborigines' concept of the Dreamtime (the perpetual emerging of the world from chaos), the Navajo concept of a Holy Wind and the importance of breath in Jewish mysticism.
Copyright 1995 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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LATE ONE EVENING I STEPPED OUT OF MY LITTLE HUT IN THE rice paddies of eastern Bali and found myself falling through space. Read the first page
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Customer Reviews

27 Reviews
5 star:
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4 star:
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3 star:
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2 star:    (0)
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Average Customer Review
4.5 out of 5 stars (27 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Dazzling. This book changes lives., Mar 16 2004
By A Customer
I heard the author in a spirited public debate between him and biologist E.O. Wilson a couple years ago, at the old Town Hall in Boston. The mutual respect between the two men was palpable (perhaps because they are both outspoken advocates for wild nature). Yet they hold richly contrasting views regarding human society and its relation to the earth. Abram's eloquence there moved me to order this book. Upon reading it I was, in a word, stunned. It's easily one of the most important works I've come upon in thirty years of serious reading.

A few of the reader reviews below are absurdly off the mark. One of them claims that the book is anti-science. That's simply inane; I'm a working biologist, and can avow that this book is entirely consonant with the best of contemporary natural science. Indeed "The Spell of the Sensuous" got a rave review in "Science" (the journal of the American Academy for the Advancement of Science). Here's a brief excerpt from that review: "A truly original work. Abram puts forth his daring hypothesis with a poetic vigor and argumentative insight that stimulate reconsideration of the technological commonplace...With Abram anthropology becomes a bridge between science and its others." (Science, vol. 275)

In any case, this is a book that NEEDS to be much more widely known. (I've just read it a second time, and I'm still reeling at the implications.) A bunch of other reviews by a range of well-known thinkers are printed in the paperback edition. I'll copy them here, since they give a fine sense of both the depth and the span of Abram's book:

"This is a landmark book. Scholars will doubtless recognize its brilliance, but they may overlook the most important part of Abram's achievement: he has written the best instruction manual yet for becoming fully human. I walked outside when I was done and the world was a different place."

~Bill McKibben, author of "The End of Nature"

"A masterpiece - combining poetic passion with intellectual rigor and daring. Electric with energy, it offers us a new approach to scholarly inquiry: as a fully embodied human animal. It opens pathways and vistas that will be fruitfully explored for years, indeed for generations, to come."

~Joanna Macy, Buddhist scholar and author

"Speculative, learned, and always 'lucid and precise' as the eye of the vulture that confronted him once on a cliff ledge, Abram has one of those rare minds which, like the mind of a musician or a great mathematician, fuses dreaminess with smarts."

~The Village Voice

"Long-awaited, revolutionary. . . This book ponders the violent disconnection of the body from the natural world and what this means about how we live and die in it."

~The Los Angeles Times

"The outer world of nature is what awakens our inner world in all its capacities for understanding, affection and aesthetic appreciation. The wind, the rain, the mountains and rivers, the woodlands and meadows and all their inhabitants; we need these perhaps even more for our psyche than for our physical survival. No one that I know of has presented all this with the literary skill as well as the understanding that we find in this work of David Abram. It should be one of the most widely read and discussed books of these times."

~Thomas Berry, author of "The Dream of the Earth"

"I am breaking a vow to cease all blurb-writing for three years, but Abram's Spell must be praised. It's so well done, well-written, well thought. I know of no work more valuable for shifting our thinking and feeling about the place of humans in the world. Your children and their children will be grateful to him."

~James Hillman, author of "Revisioning Psychology"

"The Spell of the Sensuous does more than place itself on the cutting edge where ecology meets philosophy, psychology, and history. It magically subverts the dichotomies of culture and nature, body and mind, opening a vista of organic being and human possibility that is often imagined but seldom described. Reader beware, the message is spell-binding. One cannot read this book without risk of entering into an altered state of perceptual possibility."

~Max Oelschlager, author of "The Idea of Wilderness"

"Read it and get your gourd rattled smartly."

~ Jim Harrison, author of "Legends of the Fall"

"Disclosing the sentience of all nature, and revealing the unsuspected effect of the more-than-human on our language and our lives, in unprecedented fashion, Abram generates true philosophy for the twenty-first century."

~Lynn Margulis, co-originator of the Gaia Hypothesis,

"When rumor had it that David Abram was writing a book, we expected it to be very special and very powerful. Those expectations were justified. This book has the ability to awaken us. . ."

~Arne Naess, University of Oslo, founder of "deep ecology"

"A tour-de-force of sustained intelligence, broad scholarship, and a graceful prose style that has produced one of the most interesting books about nature published during the past decade."

~ Jack Turner, in "Terra Nova"

"Nobody writes about the ecological depths of the human and more-than-human world with more love and lyrical sensitivity than David Abram. "

~Theodore Roszak, author of "Where the Wasteland Ends"

"This book by David Abram lights up the landscape of language, flesh, mind, history, mapping us back into the world..."

~Gary Snyder, author of "Turtle Island"

"David Abram's passionate knowledge of language, mythology, landscape and his meditations on the human senses - all make for highly-charged, memorable reading. Without sermon, dogma, or academic bluster, The Spell of the Sensuous deftly tours us through interior and exterior terrains of the spirit, right up to the present. This is a major work of research and intuitive brilliance, an archive of clear ideas. At the end of a century of precarious ecology, "The Spell of the Sensuous" strikes the deepest notes of celebration and alertness - an indispensible book!"

~Howard Norman, folklorist, author of "The Bird Artist"

"Brilliant in its own field of environmental philosophy, it is destined to change the way we think about linguistics, literature, anthropology, and comparative religion, as well as the living landscape around us. . . . Beautifully written, elegantly argued, immensely original, The Spell of the Sensuous is the kind of book that comes along once in a generation. Like Carson's Silent Spring, it will become the touchstone for environmental literacy in the years to come."

~ Christopher Manes, in "Wild Earth"

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3.0 out of 5 stars Spell of the Sensous is a "Grade A " Intellectual Mythology, Jan 1 2004
By S.J. Snyder (Macarthur, WV United States) - See all my reviews
Spell of the Sensous is not a novel to be tossed aside lightly. It should be thrown with great force.David Abram's book The Spell of the Sensuous would not be one of the best books I've read recently; I'm also quiet certain that I don't agree with some of Dr. Abrams' philosophical assertions or hermeneutical views. Both Dr.Abrams' philosophical and ecological visions seem themselves hopelessly rooted in an ancient form of mysticism that curiously resembles the same sort of manmade abstractions that he much maligns throughout the book and that he subsequently blames for our societies current disassociation and estrangement from nature. This "oral culture" sensibility that Dr. Abrams seems so inclined to champion lacks any real world objectivity, instead it relies heavily on the same purely subjective and primitive mental processes that gave us many of the erroneous myths, fables and superstitions that used to plauge early mankind's world view.
On a more positive note, I must however acknowledge the powerful argument he makes for reestablishing a participatory relationship with the "others", and I whole-heartedly endorse the common sense environmental activism that he promotes in his book. Abram's new age sensibility seeks to place humanity firmly enmeshed within a highly complex and mutually reciprocal relationship with the rest of creation.
Dr.Abram's book introduced me to a whole new way of looking at language and especially writing in relation to the sensuous earth, and for that I am grateful (and that is why i rated it a 3 out of 5). I would definitely recommend this book for anyone interested in the study of language, philosophy or the environment.
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3.0 out of 5 stars HMMMM...., Jan 1 2004
By S.J. Snyder (Macarthur, WV United States) - See all my reviews
Dr.Abram's book introduced me to a whole new way of looking at language and especially writing in relation to the sensuous earth, and for that I am grateful (and that is why i rated it a 3 out of 5). I would definitely recommend this book for anyone interested in the study of language, philosophy or the environment.
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Most recent customer reviews

4.0 out of 5 stars Cool book...
...detailing the way academic philosophy can be adapted and shaped to aesthetics and lifestyle, or an appreciation of nature. Read more
Published on Aug 6 2003

5.0 out of 5 stars at last--
I just read the last page of Spell of the Sensuous and I am eager to read more. Having spent the summer studying western philosophy-- I found this book engaging. Read more
Published on Aug 1 2003

5.0 out of 5 stars The most profound book I've ever read
There is much talk these days about a paradigm shift. I certainly hope that this is true. We really need one. Read more
Published on Feb 7 2003 by DavidP

1.0 out of 5 stars Utter and total nonsense
Here we have it: how earlier peoples were "in tune with" their environent, and how we aren't. Science is evil. All the "..." in one book. Read more
Published on Jan 28 2003

5.0 out of 5 stars I'm waiting for his next book
I read this and loved it. Afterward, it occurred on me that I wouldn't be able to find anything as good for quite a while so I immediately read it again. Read more
Published on Oct 15 2002 by Musher X

5.0 out of 5 stars A most excellent immersion
I read this for a grad-level seminar and was not expecting much substance. I was wrong, but only in the sense that this book opened my eyes to the power of language in a way... Read more
Published on May 5 2002 by Sean Pearson

5.0 out of 5 stars Magnificent! A Literary Masterpiece!
"The Spell of the Sensuous" is one of the freshest, most enlightening and insightful books I've ever read. Read more
Published on April 24 2002 by Glenn V. Hughes

3.0 out of 5 stars see below
Like David Abram, I too appreciate nature. I would
never deliberately defile or spoil it in any way. I do not worship it, however;
but rather I worship its creator. Read more
Published on Nov 17 2001 by Michael Ezzo

5.0 out of 5 stars Change Your Mind
Few books have the power to change the way we experience our existence, but this book opens up vast new horizons. Read more
Published on Aug 2 2001

5.0 out of 5 stars Being fully human is not just about "people"
We live in a culture that is immersed in a futile solipsism of self-help philosophies based exclusively on how we interact with other human beings. Read more
Published on April 15 2001

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