2018/08/14


The Curse of the Self: Self-Awareness, Egotism, and the Quality of Human Life 1st Edition
by Mark R. Leary (Author)

3.8 out of 5 stars 16 customer reviews





Despite its obvious advantages, our ability to be self-reflective comes at a high price. Few people realize how profoundly their lives are affected by self-reflection or how frequently inner chatter interferes with their success, pollutes their relationships with others, and undermines their happiness. 

By allowing people to ruminate about the past or imagine what might happen in the future, self-reflection conjures up a great deal of personal suffering in the form of depression, anxiety, anger, jealousy, and other negative emotions. A great deal of unhappiness, in the form of addictions, overeating, and domestic violence, is due to people's inability to exert control over their thoughts and behavior. Is it possible to direct our self-reflection in a way that will minimize the disadvantages and maximize the advantages? Is there a way to affect the egotistical self through self-reflection? In this volume, Mark Leary explores the personal and social problems that are created by the capacity for self-reflection, and by drawing upon psychology and other behavioral sciences, offers insights into how these problems can be minimized.

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Editorial Reviews

Review
"Get ready to drop your ego and step into the real world. If you ever wanted to know why everybody else always seems one step removed from reality - Beware - Leary's well researched deadly accurate book, proves once and for all that the common denominator in all your failed relationships is you! Read The Curse of the Self and unlock the door to the bizarre inner workings of the human mind." --Lisa Earle McLeod Syndicated columnist, Lifetime Radio commentator and author of Forget Perfect (Penguin/Putnam)

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"represents an impressive level of scholarship, presented in a pleasant and accessible way, with anecdotes and touches of humor. Leary is clearly an expert on the topic-I doubt you would find anyone better qualified to write this book." -Roy Baumeister, Professor, Department of Psychology, Florida State University
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"Many years ago Whitney Houston sang that the greatest love of all was love for the self. She wouldn't feel that way if she read Mark Leary's refreshing and provocative analysis of how our 'selves' cause many of our greatest disasters and disappointments. Ironically, this book generates considerable introspection, even as it provides inspiration for learning not to let our selves get in the way of healthful and meaningful living." -Todd F. Heatherton, Champion International Professor of Psychological and Brain Sciences, Dartmouth College
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"The Curse of the Self is a thinking person's self-help book, not in the trivial, superficial sense in which the term 'self-help book' is usually used, but in the sense of being both intellectually stimulating and offering useful, practical advice and insights." -Lee Jussim, Department of Psychology, Rutgers University
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About the Author

Mark R. Leary is Professor of Psychology at Duke University. He is a fellow of the American Psychological Association and the Society for Personality and Social Psychology, and former president of the International Society for Self and Identity. He was named by the Institute for Scientific Information as among the 25 most productive scholars in psychology (1986-1990).
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Product details

Paperback: 236 pages

Publisher: Oxford University Press; 1 edition (January 4, 2007)
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Average Customer Review: 3.8 out of 5 stars 16 customer reviews

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Top customer reviews


Nicholas Kadar


5.0 out of 5 starsYou Must Read This BookSeptember 21, 2015

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This is the best book written for lay people on behavioral and cognitive psychology that I have read (and I've read most of them). It achieves a synthesis rarely found in these types of books, and applies modern ideas about dual process theory to human nature with spectacular clarity. Books dealing with similar subject matter have catalogued the illusions of the self and the illusoriness of free will in a way most people find difficult to relate to, but this book is entirely different. It explains many of the personal and social problems of modern society in easy to understand and easy to relate to terms, and explains, pari passu, positive psychology and the principles underlying meditation with refreshing simplicity and clarity. Everyone would benefit from reading this book - and so would society at large.


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Camber


5.0 out of 5 starsPacked with practical insightsAugust 14, 2010

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Ironically, this is an excellent self-help book because, based on extensive psychological research, Mark Leary explains the importance of controlling and even diminishing the activity of the self. This is because the self is perhaps as much of a curse as a blessing (hence the book's title). The book provides practical techniques for managing the downsides of having a self and, though the book is written with academic rigor, it's also very enjoyable to read and easy to understand.




Because of the quality of Leary's writing (on which I can't improve), I'm quoting from the book extensively in this review in order to provide a rather detailed summary of the book. That will hopefully convince you of the value of the book and will encourage you to read it in its entirety.




Leary begins with the premise that "... the defining difference between human beings and other animals involves the nature of the human self. As we will see, evidence strongly suggests that most other animals do not have a self at all and that those species that do possess a self have only a very rudimentary one compared with human beings."




This leads to variety of conclusions, which are summarized in the preface of the book: "The ability to self-reflect offers many benefits by allowing us to plan ahead, reminisce about the past, consider options, innovate, and evaluate ourselves. However, self-awareness also sets us up for a host of problems that are unlike the difficulties faced by any other species. Among other things, the capacity for self-reflection distorts people's perceptions of the world, leading them to draw inaccurate conclusions about themselves and other people, and prompting them to make bad decisions based on faulty information. Self-awareness conjures up a great deal of personal suffering in the form of depression, anxiety, anger, and other negative emotions by allowing people to ruminate about the past or imagine what might befall them in the future. The inherently egocentric and egotistical manner in which the self processes information can blind people to their own shortcoming and undermine their relationships with others. The self also underlies a great deal of social conflict, leading people to dislike those who are different from them and to fight with members of other social groups. It also leads people to endanger their own well-being by putting egoistic goals over personal safety. For those inclined toward religion and spirituality, visionaries have proclaimed that the self stymies the quest for spiritual fulfillment and leads to immoral behavior. And, ironically, using self-reflection to help us deliberately control our own behavior can often backfire and create more problems than it solves."




To elaborate further, the following are more specific points from the book which I found particularly noteworthy:




" ... the self evolved under conditions much different from those under which most people live today."




"We spend much of each day in an automatic mode with our selves quiescent ... The self is sometimes engaged as we do these things, but it's not necessary."




"To the extent that we are self-focused and living in the inner world inside our heads, we are not able to live fully in the world outside."




"Once a behavior becomes well-learned, self-preoccupation can interfere with its execution."




"Perhaps the most tried-and-true method of quieting the self and reducing it effects on behavior is meditation."




"Perhaps the biggest bias in people's perceptions of themselves involves their penchant for overestimating their own positive qualities."




"Most people think not only that they are better than the average person, but that their friends, lovers, and children are above average as well."




"People tend to judge themselves as better than the average person on virtually every dimension that one can imagine."




"... self-serving attributions may be seen when people work together in groups, such as committees or teams. When the group does well ... each group member tends to feel that he or she was more responsible for the group's success than most of the other members were. When the group performs poorly, however, each member feels less responsible for the outcome than the average member."




"Although people typically keep their egos well inflated, occasionally the balloon pops, sending self-image into an uncontrolled dive. Even minor failures, setbacks, rejections, and disappointments can prompt harsh self-criticism."




"... people tend to think that the characteristics that they personally possess are more important and desirable than the characteristics that they do not possess."




"People are relatively blind to their own biases, but they see other people's biases much more clearly."




"We each tend to think that our view of the world is the correct one and that other reasonable, fair-minded people will (or at least should) see things the same way we do. When other people disagree with us, we naturally assume that they are deluded, ignorant, or biased."




"It is instructive that people who show the least evidence of self-serving illusions also tend to be the most depressed and that people who show the greatest biases in self-enhancement are most happy."




"... people who view their romantic partners in overly positive ways and who overestimate how much their partners care about them are more satisfied with their relationships than people who perceive their partners and their commitment more accurately."




"The tendency for people to perceive themselves and the world in self-serving ways reflects a method of reducing anxiety, uncertainty, and other unpleasant feelings by a back door route. In the short run, doing so undoubtedly makes us feel better about ourselves and our plight, and, as we have seen, it may have other beneficial consequences as well. But, in the long run, these illusions may compromise our ability to deal effectively with the challenges of life."




"... viewing emotions as natural reactions to real events overlooks the fact that people's emotions are often affected by how they talk to themselves, if not created entirely by the self."




"Many, perhaps most, of the things people worry about never materialize and, even when they do occur, worrying about them in advance is rarely beneficial."




"People who worry a great deal tend to be more depressed, report more physical symptoms, and have higher blood pressure than people who worry less."




"... the hunting-gathering lifestyle of human beings prior to the advent of agriculture did not evoke a great deal of rumination about the future. Life was lived mostly day to day, with no long-term goals to accumulate possessions, succeed, or improve one's lot in life, and, thus, few distal events to worry about. People's attention was focused primarily on what needed to be done today, and tomorrow was left largely to take care of itself. With the emergence of agriculture, however, people moved from and immediate-return environment ... to a delayed-return environment ... Modern society is a profoundly delayed-return environment."




"Anticipatory anxiety about death seems to be a uniquely human characteristic, another by-product of our ability to self-reflect. Only because we are able to imagine ourselves in the future can we worry about death at all ... When people think about their death, their reactions appear to arise not only from the fact that they will no longer function as a living organism but also that they will cease to exist as a mental self."




"People may be focused on the present moment yet still conjure up a good deal of unhappiness by wishing that, at this moment, they were somewhere else ... The solution to this particular curse of the self is to fully accept whatever situation one is in at the moment."




"Human beings expend much of their anger on symbolic events that 'threaten' something abstract that they hold dear, such as their ideas, opinions, and particularly their egos."




"... a person's sense of identity involves not only the person him- or herself but also his or her house, romantic partner, children, friends, prized belongings, and accomplishments."




"Once formed, people's self-concepts strongly influence their behavior."




"People who want to escape the aversiveness of self-reflection may watch mindless television, listen to music, read, exercise, shop, sleep, meditate, or have sex. Assuming that the person is not so self-absorbed that escaping the self is impossible (for example, when one is grieving), these diversion can decrease self-thought by focusing one's attention on other things. Some of the pleasure of these sorts of activities comes from their ability to quite the self."




"People with the highest status and power often need to escape the burdens of the self because they are chronically overwhelmed by their authority and responsibility."




"Various religions construe the problem a bit differently, but they concur that the self is an impediment - perhaps the chief impediment - to spiritual realization, religious practice, and moral behavior, and that a spiritual person must take steps to neutralize the self's negative effects."




"All organisms possess internal mechanisms by which they regulate themselves automatically, but human beings are unique in their ability to control themselves intentionally."




"People typically control themselves by telling themselves to do or not to do certain things."




"People do not purposefully control their behavior in ways that are not consistent with their attitudes, values, and goals unless they are self-focused and monitoring themselves. Self-control requires self-awareness."




"Failing to monitor themselves sufficiently allows impulses that were previously held in check by deliberate self-control to emerge. Research shows that people often behave in uncharacteristically dishonest, cruel, and antisocial ways when they are deindividuated."




"People cannot exert self-control ... unless they have an explicit goal ... Many failures of self-regulation occur because one urge or goal overrides another."




"... people have greater success controlling themselves if they do so early in a sequence of temptations when the impulse is not yet too strong."




"Perhaps the most surprising thing about self-control strength is that it can be depleted by previous acts of deliberate self-regulation. Each time a person controls him- or herself, self-control strength is temporarily weakened - as if some of it were used up - making subsequent efforts to control oneself more difficult ... In fact, simply making choices and decisions also depletes self-control strength. Even when people are not asked to control their behavior, they show signs of self-depletion when they must make difficult decisions."




" ... the self did not evolve to exert the amount of control that we require of it in modern life."




"... the insight that many of our problems, mistakes, and misbehaviors stem from the inherent nature of the self should lead us to cut everyone, ourselves included, a little more slack than we usually do. After all, we are all in this boat together, doing the best we can, using psychological equipment that isn't perfectly suited for the job."




"... chronically setting and pursuing goals can lead to a situation in which the purpose of life today is always the achievement of some goal tomorrow. Today simply becomes a means to some future end, leading us to forget that the only life we really have is the one going one right now. The self's ability to project into the future keeps us focused on the distant prize and distracts us from living fully today ... The solution may be to have goals, but not to become too attached to them."

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Nik


3.0 out of 5 starsKindle version not so greatDecember 17, 2016

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The kindle version is a lazy effort. The note superscripts in the text are not linked to the notes in the back, so I had to have two kindle devices open at once to easily refer to the notes while reading the text. The sections of the book are not delimited in the kindle version. And the index is not hyperlinked - in fact the index is not even text but is just images of pages.




As far as the content goes - chapter 1 was great. The rest was ok with a lot of material and self-help strategies I've seen before.




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Simply Curious


5.0 out of 5 starsThinking about our own thoughtsJuly 6, 2007

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Humans have the remarkable and perhaps unique ability to think about our own thoughts. This Strange Loop allows us to become aware of our self, to plan for the future, reflect and ruminate about the past, think about our selves as separate from others, imagine the thoughts of others, project our experiences into the minds of others, and judge our own actions. Self-awareness provides us the unique ability to control ourselves intentionally by imagining ourselves in the future and talk to ourselves about options for our future.




Self-awareness allows us to imagine the world from a variety of perspectives. Not only can we contemplate what we perceive now, but we can reflect on the past and imagine a variety of futures. We can also imagine what others are thinking now, or were thinking in the past, or will be thinking in the future. Self-awareness allows us to travel through time and read minds. But our awareness is less accurate than it may seem.




Self-awareness, introspection, and self-consciousness open us up to the emotions of pride, envy, jealousy, guilt, shame, and hope. Our ability to imagine the world from another's perspective allows us to feel empathy, compassion, pity, envy, and jealousy as it improves our emotional competency.




This excellent book explores the potentials and pitfalls of our self-awareness.

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Drew J Stapleton


4.0 out of 5 starsToo academic to be real, but such a great topic!January 10, 2014

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This author is a professional psychologist who specializes on this topic, however the beginning is the typical evolutionary wash of needless and almost weak-to-the-point-of-invalid causal links between evolution and the bases of our characters. Having said that, if you're into the academic tone (i.e., Stephen J Gould, etc etc) then its not going to be annoying to you at all. The great thing about this book is how you are faced with the reality of the situation you're in having a self which can be wrong and is always being re-worked in your own personal narrative and all that. I believe now that awareness of the mind games we play with ourselves can lead to massive healing. Thank you Dr. Leary.




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Meghan


5.0 out of 5 starsBuy it!August 26, 2014

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Amazing book. Needed it for a class. Loved every word. Doesn't read anything like a textbook, but your mind will definitely be expanded by the information contained within. If you buy one Psychology book- get this one.




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Joseph Dalton


5.0 out of 5 starsWell written and extensively researched.January 31, 2017

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This is a very good book if you want to understand why you're stressed out and are willing to try to do something about it. I highly recommend the book as well as a series of lectures that Professor Leary did for The Great Courses.







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Sustainable Soils: The Place of Organic Matter in Sustaining Soils and Their Productivity: Benjamin Wolf, George Snyder: 9781560229179: Amazon.com: Books



Sustainable Soils: The Place of Organic Matter in Sustaining Soils and Their Productivity: Benjamin Wolf, George Snyder: 9781560229179: Amazon.com: Books



5.0 out of 5 stars 1 customer review









Find the right balance of organic matter, tillage, and chemical additives to increase the quality and quantity of crops!

This book shows the importance of organic matter in maintaining crop production. The addition of organic matter to soil is covered in great detail. This book is unique in that it draws on practical farming operations to illustrate many of the points discussed. The senior author has had almost 60 years of experience in solving production problems—many of which have been related to insufficient organic matter.

In addition, Sustainable Soils: The Place of Organic Matter in Sustaining Soils and Their Productivity stresses the necessity of combining the addition of organic matter with reduced tillage and added chemicals. Photographs, tables, and figures, as well as appendixes containing common and botanical names of plants, symbols and abbreviations found in the text, and useful conversion factors and data help bring the information into focus quickly and efficiently. An extensive bibliography points the way to other useful material on this subject.

Sustainable Soils discusses:
what materials can be added
techniques for proper handling of organic matter
how much is enough (and how much is too much!)
the nutritive value of various forms of organic matter
the benefits that can be expected from properly handling and adding organic matter to soil

From the Editors: “Sustainable agriculture is not possible without a sustainable soil science, which in turn is largely dependent on organic matter. It is necessary to return large amounts of organic matter to the soil in order to maintain satisfactory crop production. It can be derived from crop residues, cover crops, sods, or various wastes, such as manures, sludges, and composts. This book details the benefits of various forms, and how each should be handled for maximum returns.”

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Product details

Paperback: 380 pages
Publisher: CRC Press; 1 edition (July 25, 2003)
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5.0 out of 5 starsSustainable SoilsNovember 12, 2003
Format: Paperback

A must have book for anyone that deals with soils for a living.
The vast amount of usable knowledge contained in this book is impressive. Even though the information is highly technical the book is structured so that it is easy to understand. Covers most, if not all, areas that will be encountered by someone in agronomy.
John Rowland
Turfgrass Management Consultant

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Building Soils for Better Crops: Fred Magdoff, Harold van Es, Jill Mason: 9781888626131: Amazon.com: Books



Building Soils for Better Crops: Fred Magdoff, Harold van Es, Jill Mason: 9781888626131: Amazon.com: Books



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QBuilding Soils for Better Crops is a one-of-a-kind, practical guide to ecological soil management, now expanded and in full color. It provides step-by-step information on soil-improving practices as well as in-depth background from what soil is to the importance of organic matter. Case studies of farmers from across the country provide inspiring examples of how soil and whole farms have been renewed through these techniques. A must-read for farmers, educators and students alike. Written by University of Vermont plant and soil science professor emeritus Fred Magdoff and Cornell University soil science professor Harold van Es. Produced by Sustainable Agriculture Research and Education (SARE).




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Product details

Paperback: 294 pages
Publisher: SARE Outreach; 3rd edition (January 1, 2010)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 1888626135
ISBN-13: 978-1888626131
Package Dimensions: 8.9 x 7.7 x 0.9 inches
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4.8 out of 5 stars
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Jean-michel Tremblay

5.0 out of 5 starsA gold mine with more nuggets than scrapMarch 1, 2016
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This book is absolutely terrific. Each topic comes with a take home lesson (like this type of soil can be improved with this practice) followed by further explanations. It answered all my questions ranging from organic matter equilibrium to the sustainability of such and such fertilizing practice.

I don't think it's for everyone though. If you are the kind of person who asks "yes, but why?", you will finish the book in a week and ask for more. If you just want some rules of thumb without too many details, maybe look elsewhere. Also it covers topics more or less independently, this is not a "just add water" cookbook. A true gem for the curious gardener.

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Diane Miessler

5.0 out of 5 starsInformation-packed fun read. A soil building page-turner.June 24, 2018
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LOVE this writer. Amazing fund of knowledge that she keeps increasing. She talks about experiments in progress - still trying out her own theories. And reading her books is like talking to a friend - fun, conversational, easy but fact-filled read. I’ve since gotten all her other books.


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Kida

4.0 out of 5 starsbut definitely geared towards large-scale farming rather than small-scale gardeners like myself. I may use a weed whacker instead ...August 14, 2017
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Lots of information here, but definitely geared towards large-scale farming rather than small-scale gardeners like myself. I may use a weed whacker instead of heavy-duty tractors and tillers, but the ultimate effects will be the same...improved soil, better crops, and less erosion.

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TC

5.0 out of 5 starsFive StarsApril 22, 2017
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Good information to make good dirt instead of resorting to chemicals.


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cjadwall

5.0 out of 5 starsExcellent Book for FarmersJanuary 21, 2014
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This book is packed with information that is presented in ways that are easy to understand. It is a good book for anyone interested in farming or even just hobby gardening.

4 people found this helpful

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George Hunt

5.0 out of 5 starsFive StarsApril 6, 2017
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Excellent


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RICHARD OKIRIA

5.0 out of 5 starsFive StarsDecember 17, 2016
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Thank you


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cassjo

5.0 out of 5 starsBought for my hubbyMarch 8, 2014
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Bought this book for my husband who is fairly new to planting and he is really loving this book, very helpful info.

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The Life Cycle Completed (Extended Version): Erik H. Erikson, Joan M. Erikson: 8601300247670: Amazon.com: Books



The Life Cycle Completed (Extended Version): Erik H. Erikson, Joan M. Erikson: 8601300247670: Amazon.com: Books


For decades Erik H. Erikson's concept of the stages of human development has deeply influenced the field of contemporary psychology. Here, with new material by Joan M. Erikson, is an expanded edition of his final work. The Life Cycle Completedeloquently closes the circle of Erikson's theories, outlining the unique rewards and challenges―for both individuals and society―of very old age.------------







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The Life Cycle Completed (Extended Version) Paperback – June 17, 1998
by Erik H. Erikson (Author), Joan M. Erikson (Author)
4.3 out of 5 stars 48 customer reviews






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This book will last and last, because it contains the wisdom of two wonderfully knowing observers of our human destiny. -- Robert Coles
About the Author


A winner of the Pulitzer Prize and the National Book Award, Erik H. Erikson was renowned worldwide as teacher, clinician, and theorist in the field of psychoanalysis and human development.


Product details

Paperback: 144 pages
Publisher: W. W. Norton & Company; Extended Version edition (June 17, 1998)
Language: English
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4.3 out of 5 stars
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M. Strabala

5.0 out of 5 starsPsychology in poetryFebruary 28, 2018
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An inspiring read. While this is a book on psychosocial development the Ericksons have skilled playfulness with language which draws the reader into a poetic comprehension of nine levels of human development from fancy to old age, the primary challenge of each phase, and the relational capacity opened up by the resolution of each challenge. They then explore how each conflict and capacity, either as a prefigurement or an echo potentially influences the individual’s psyche and social relations across time. Written at the intersection of psychology, sociology and spirituality, this book offers a hopeful and holistic perspective of human development and aging.

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Billie Pritchett

2.0 out of 5 starsIt's pretty horribly writtenNovember 16, 2014
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Erik Erikson's Life Cycle Completed is a book I'd been looking forward to reading for a long time. Having had some experience reading about Erikson's theory of personality, which mostly involves his eight stages of human development, I thought this might be an illuminating read. It wasn't. It's pretty horribly written, and unnecessarily abstruse.

I'll give you an example of what I mean. Here's a quote from the book that I chose randomly from the earlier portion which is representative of the Erikson's writing:

In summary, the process of identity formation emerges as an evolving configuration—a configuration that gradually integrates constitutional givens, idiosyncratic libidinal needs, favored capacities, significant identifications, effective defenses, successful sublimations, and consistent roles. All these, however, can only emerge from a mutual adaptation of individual potentials, technological world views, and religious or political ideologies.

The spontaneous ritualizations of this stage can, of course, appear surprising, confusing, and aggravating in the shiftiness of the adolescents’ first attempts to ritualize their interplay with age mates and to create small group rituals. But they also foster participation in public events on sports fields and concert grounds and in political and religious arenas. In all of these, young people can be seen to seek a form of ideological confirmation, and here spontaneous rites and formal rituals merge. Such search, however, can also lead to fanatic participation in militant ritualisms marked by totalism; that is, a totalization of the world image so illusory that it lacks the power of self-renewal and can become destructively fanatic.

Erikson, Erik H.; Erikson, Joan M. (1998-06-17). The Life Cycle Completed (Extended Version) (p. 74). W. W. Norton & Company. Kindle Edition.

One of the obvious problems with the writing is not only that it's jargon-filled but that he loves to nominalize--make words into or rely heavily upon abstract nouns. As a little exercise here, I'll try to put into plain English as best I can what he said above. Here goes.
Forming your identity is about drawing upon different areas of your life that make you 'you.' From your innate characteristics and your basic drives toward food, clothes, shelter, and love to the capacities you've cultivated in yourself or the groups and roles you identify with and on down to your defense mechanisms--all of these play a role in making you 'you,' and there's this complex interplay with all these factors and your ever-changing (political, religious, technological) worldview.

This period if identity formation is difficult and turbulent for adolescents but it can also be a great time for new kinds of spontaneous activity to emerge. Of course, we should always be mindful of how some of the habits we form during this period could be bad in the sense they became dangerous or become such a matter of ritual that they're conformist.

By the way, if you don't like my paraphrase, at least I gave a shot at clarity, which is more than I can say for Erikson's writing.

My advice to the reader who would like to read this book to absorb Erikson's theory is to read from Chapter 5 onward. As far as I can tell, this is the portion of the book that his wife Joan Erikson wrote, and it's very lucid and explains Erikson's theory much better than anything else in the earlier, chunkier part of the book.
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JMMaser

4.0 out of 5 starsIf you are looking for a good review of his work this will do itApril 27, 2016
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If you are looking for a good review of his work this will do it. I used it to write a paper on conflict and adolescence. It was helpful.

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RACHEAL

4.0 out of 5 starsReference for SchoolJune 3, 2016
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I bought this book because I needed an in depth analysis of Erikson's Theory. I was happy to buy this book because it not only referenced his work and explained it well, but there was added perspective by the author that was helpful. Would suggest this book to anyone that is studying the field of psychology.

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GlutenFreeMe

5.0 out of 5 starsRecommended for adult development learners and researchersMay 30, 2014
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Excellent book- I utilized this book in my dissertation on adult development of a grandmother. This book provides a detailed look in to the life cycle and the completion- death. A psychosocial approach was evident throughout the reading. Very useful in research and therapy tools.

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Joan Develder

5.0 out of 5 starsProfound Final Stage!October 10, 2016
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I have always liked Erikson's developmental model...now, with the edition of Joan Erikson's final stage, it is even more relevant and tender.

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MAG

5.0 out of 5 starsit is a bit of a boring read, but essential to understanding his thoughts and ...April 2, 2018
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I mean, it is a bit of a boring read, but essential to understanding his thoughts and processes.


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hguabC

4.0 out of 5 starsFour StarsMay 17, 2018
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Informational, but more suited for someone in the field of psychology!


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The Bhagavad Gita According to Gandhi: Mohandas K. Gandhi, Mahadev Desai: 9781617203336: Amazon.com: Books



The Bhagavad Gita According to Gandhi: Mohandas K. Gandhi, Mahadev Desai: 9781617203336: Amazon.com: Books




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My first acquaintance with the Gita began in 1888-89 with the verse translation by Sir Edwin Arnold known as the Song Celestial. On reading it, I felt a keen desire to read a Gujarati translation. And I read as many translations as I could lay hold of. But all such reading can give me no passport for presenting my own translation. Then again my knowledge of Sanskrit is limited, my knowledge of Gujarati too is in no way scholarly. How could I then dare present the public with my translation? It has been my endeavor, as also that of some companions, to reduce to practice the teaching of the Gita as I have understood it. The Gita has become for us a spiritual reference book. I am aware that we ever fail to act in perfect accord with the teaching. The failure is not due to want of effort, but is in spite of it. Even though the failures we seem to see rays of hope. The accompanying rendering contains the meaning of the Gita message which this little band is trying to enforce in its daily conduct.--Mahatma Gandhi Wilder Publications is a green publisher. All of our books are printed to order. This reduces waste and helps us keep prices low while greatly reducing our impact on the environment.

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Paperback: 80 pages
Publisher: Wilder Publications (September 5, 2012)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 1617203335
ISBN-13: 978-1617203336
Product Dimensions: 6 x 0.2 x 9 inches
Shipping Weight: 6.1 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
Average Customer Review: 4.1 out of 5 stars 82 customer reviews
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Customer reviews
4.1 out of 5 stars
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D. Krajnovich

5.0 out of 5 starsComparison of three versions of "The Gita According to Gandhi"December 19, 2016
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Many versions of The Gita According to Gandhi have been published. This review compares three that I have read (cf. thumbnail image at bottom of review).

As far as the Gita verses themselves are concerned, they are the same or nearly so in all three books. In other respects, the books differ substantially. Here is a brief chronology followed by a comparison.

1926-27: Gandhi translated the Gita from Sanskrit to Gujarati. In 1926 he gave a nine month series of teachings to members of his ashram. Mahadev Desai and another ashram member took notes on these teachings.
1929: Gandhi wrote an introduction to his translation in Gujarati, and the whole was published in Gujarati.
1931: Gandhi translated his introduction into English while serving a prison term. The introduction was published in English in Young India in 1931.
1933-34: Mahadev Desai, while in prison, translated Gandhi’s Gujarati version of the Gita into English. Desai also wrote a long supplementary introduction (“My Submission”), and added extensive notes of his own to the brief notes that Gandhi had interleaved with the Gita verses, in order to make the Gita more accessible to the English-speaking public.
1942: Desai died before his English translation was published.
1946: Gandhi explains in a Foreword how a collaborator of Desai proof-read Desai’s manuscript after his death and readied it for publication. Gandhi vouches for the accuracy of the English translation. The first edition of Desai’s posthumously published book – complete with Gandhi’s introduction and brief notes; Desai’s supplementary introduction and lengthy notes; and Gandhi’s Foreword – appeared in August 1946. I bought the fifteenth reprint, published in 2012. This version (with orange cover) is still available on Amazon.

The edition with the most reviews on Amazon is a stripped-down version from Wilder Publications. This is the first edition that I purchased and read. It contains Gandhi’s Foreword, Introduction, and brief notes, but it completely omits Desai’s supplementary introduction and all of Desai's notes. Most of what Gandhi praises in the Foreword has been left out. As other reviewers here have pointed out, the Wilder Publications edition suffers from the fact that the notes are not set off from the Gita verses by line spaces, indentation, or a smaller font. To make matters worse, nowhere is it explicitly stated that all of the notes are due to Gandhi. I believe they are (i.e., none of the notes are due to Desai), but this fact should have been made clear by the publisher. The Wilder edition does not have a Glossary or Index.

The Desai edition is superior in both form and content. It gives each verse in Gandhi’s Gujarati; then Desai’s English translation of Gandhi’s Gujarati; followed by Gandhi’s notes (if any) in a smaller font; followed by Desai’s notes in square brackets and a yet smaller font. You can read all of it, or easily skip the parts that don’t interest you. Desai’s supplementary introduction alone is worth the price of the book. At 120 pp., “My Submission” is a book within a book. It contains a wealth of helpful information, presented in an accessible way. Desai’s writing style reminds me somewhat of Montaigne: - by liberal use of quotes, he connects the Gita, Ghandi, and his own thoughts with the whole universe of eastern and western thought. You will find quotes from the Bible and the Koran; Buddha and Lao Tze; philosophers from Plato to Plotinus to Hume to William James; mystics like Meister Eckhart and Shankara; poets from Shakespeare to Browning to Keats. Even a few scientists are mentioned. (How many other Gita commentaries quote Max Planck?!) All in all, Desai’s contributions make for challenging and delightful reading. This edition has a good Index.

The last edition reviewed here makes a wonderful companion volume and complement to Desai. It was edited by John Strohmeier and published by North Atlantic Books in 2009. Strohmeier went back to the notes that Desai and another ashram member took in real time while Gandhi was giving his nine-month-long course in 1926. These transcripts first appeared in English in "The Collected Works of Mahatma Gandhi" (1969). Strohmeier’s edition is based on these transcripts. In his own words:
“In an effort to bring forward and clarify the essence of Gandhi’s teaching, I have abridged the commentary considerably, and rearranged it in a few sections. The original presentation of the material was unrehearsed and relatively spontaneous, and includes many of the redundancies, contradictions, ellipses, false starts, and situational digressions of everyday conversation. Some of these I have deleted after pursuing the trail of Gandhi’s thought carefully and respectfully… Others I have let stand where they illuminated important ideas, or explained the context in which he made his remarks. For example, his references to an impending flood, the killing of a snake, and the tormenting of a dog by some boys, although quite specific to ashram events, carry lessons that apply to the world beyond the ashram walls.”

The comments and illustrations in Strohmeier are more spontaneous, less polished than the comments in the other books. The reader gets to be the proverbial “fly on the wall” at the ashram in 1926. This book has a combined Glossary and Index.
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Elden

5.0 out of 5 starsFascinating ExplanationNovember 1, 2013
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Very worth while reading this. From my perspective not having a background into the sacred scripture The Bhagavad Gita, Gandhi's translation is eloquent and explained many things to me. I always appreciate such intelligence within a text and marvel how the writer, in this case Gandhi, translated the text so that I can understand the text as well as benefit from the text. The Bhagavad Gita has many lessons that apply to everyday life. I read also that Gandhi would read a portion of the text each day an admiral practice and one that I follow. When you enrich your mind daily with wisdom it has a most profound effect within you.

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Randhir

5.0 out of 5 starsSharing My ExperienceMay 21, 2014
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I have no rights to comment or give feedback on Holy book all I am doing is sharing my experience. After reading many self help books this is the last book that gave the proper Guidence. Its core concept if Detachment of action, Recouncement of Fruits of action and Even Mindness in any condition is what makes a real person. Dedicating all work as a work to god with devotion gives you the true essence of Karma Yoga. This book answer al you querries. With help of Mahatma Gandhijis Lucid explanation it makes reading more interesting.

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D. Bachelor

3.0 out of 5 starsneeds better formattingApril 4, 2010
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The text of the Bhagavad Gita and Gandhi's commentary are not as distinct from each other as I would have liked. The exact same text of both Gita and commentary can be found in "Anasaktiyoga: The Gospel of Selfless Action- the Gita according to Gandhi", edited by Jim Rankin. In Rankin's edition the text of the Gita is very distinct from Gandhi's commentary, and Rankin even labels who is speaking in the Gita so it is easy for someone (like myself)not familiar with the Gita to follow the flow of the discourse. Unfortunately Rankin does not include even half of the commentary included in "The Bhagavad Gita According to Gandhi" (edited by John Strohmeier) so if you are seeking Gandhi's thoughts on the Gita this is the better edition to purchase.

38 people found this helpful

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An Old Hippie Chick

4.0 out of 5 starsHeavy material, great translationApril 21, 2013
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After reading Ram Dass' book 'Love, service, Devotion, and the Ultimate Surrender,' about the Gita, I wanted to read the original material. I study comparative religion, and have read quite a bit about Hinduism, and know that the Gita is one of the holiest source materials. It's deep, though, and I'm struggling to get through it.

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Allen Levey

5.0 out of 5 starsA practical study of the GitaNovember 22, 2013
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The Bhagavad Gita According to Gandhi is excellent for a number of reasons. Initially, to me, it will always be excellent to write on the Bhagavad Gita, because it is so useful. Secondly, Gandhi brings his own personal humility to his writing, which invites a similar sense of study to the reader, and without which, I feel, the meaning of the book will not be seen correctly. Certainly a worthy read.

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Walter Lovelace

5.0 out of 5 starsGandhi EssentialsMarch 31, 2014
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Gandhi Essentials
The Gita is not easy to understand but seen through the eyes of Gandhi it becomes a pleasure to read and re-read. One need not agree with all of his comments but his down to earth attitude strkes home. A perfect companion read is Gandhi "A Spiritual Biography" by Arvind Sharma. They cover a very large amount of everything worth knowing about Gandhi.

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Robert

5.0 out of 5 starsPractical discussion and a Spiritual ClassicSeptember 20, 2010
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The Gita is an old friend...So is the Mahatma. One, a book of instruction from ancient wisdom; The other, thoughts from a life of learning on the path... A life from our own time. Go to this book if you want a companion on the journey. I am grateful.

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Gandhi's Passion: The Life and Legacy of Mahatma Gandhi (9780195156348): Stanley Wolpert: Books

Amazon.com: Gandhi's Passion: The Life and Legacy of Mahatma Gandhi 

(9780195156348): Stanley Wolpert: Books





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Gandhi's Passion: The Life and Legacy of Mahatma Gandhi Paperback – November 28, 2002
by Stanley Wolpert (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars 23 customer reviews






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More than half a century after his death, Mahatma Gandhi continues to inspire millions throughout the world. Yet modern India, most strikingly in its decision to join the nuclear arms race, seems to have abandoned much of his nonviolent vision. Inspired by recent events in India, Stanley Wolpert offers this subtle and profound biography of India's "Great Soul."

Wolpert compellingly chronicles the life of Mahatma Gandhi from his early days as a child of privilege to his humble rise to power and his assassination at the hands of a man of his own faith. This trajectory, like that of Christ, was the result of Gandhi's passion: his conscious courting of suffering as the means to reach divine truth. From his early campaigns to stop discrimination in South Africa to his leadership of a people's revolution to end the British imperial domination of India, Gandhi emerges as a man of inner conflicts obscured by his political genius and moral vision. Influenced early on by nonviolent teachings in Hinduism, Jainism, Christianity, and Buddhism, he came to insist on the primacy of love for one's adversary in any conflict as the invincible power for change. His unyielding opposition to intolerance and oppression would inspire India like no leader since the Buddha--creating a legacy that would encourage Martin Luther King, Jr., Nelson Mandela, and other global leaders to demand a better world through peaceful civil disobedience.

By boldly considering Gandhi the man, rather than the living god depicted by his disciples, Wolpert provides an unprecedented representation of Gandhi's personality and the profound complexities that compelled his actions and brought freedom to India.
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Editorial Reviews

Review



"The fruit of more than 50 years of reflection by a distinguished Asian scholar, Wolpert's biography cuts through the misconceptions surrounding the father of modern India, untangling the complex relationship between his personal spirituality and his public influence."--Booklist


"A dense, comprehensive survey of the events of Gandhi's life, tracing his metamorphosis from pampered child to 'great soul'....A clear-eyed chronicle of an exemplary life....Appropriately complex biography, deftly maintaining a balance of sophistication and explication."--Kirkus Reviews


"In reminding us of the details of his extraordinary life, Stanley Wolpert has done the Mahatma--and all of us--a signal service."--The Washinton Post Book World


"There have been many books about Gandhi, including those by the subject himself. What has always been needed is a full, literate account by someone closely familiar with India and Indian history who is also an accomplished writer and historian. This, we now have. Henceforth no one can claim knowledge of one of the greatest and most enigmatic figures of the last century who hasn't read it. And, I might add, no one will read it without interest and approval."--John Kenneth Galbraith


"An excellent introduction to the work of the most compelling of 20th century leaders."--The Christian Century


"[Wolpert] presents what many other biographers have failed to supply: a rationale for the indisputably great leader's seeming inconsistencies."--The Associated Press





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About the Author



Stanley Wolpert is Distinguished Professor of South Asian History Emeritus at the University of California, Los Angeles. He has published twenty books on South Asia, including Nehru: A Tryst with Destiny, A New History of India, and Jinnah of Pakistan.



Product details

Paperback: 336 pages
Publisher: Oxford University Press (November 28, 2002)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 019515634X
ISBN-13: 978-0195156348
Product Dimensions: 9.2 x 0.9 x 6.1 inches
Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
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pbrown

5.0 out of 5 starsA compelling readApril 20, 2014
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I had never read anything about Ghandi so I was very interested in learning more about his life and political career. The book was very well written but at times did come off as a bit of a "hero-worship" effort, discussing but downplaying Ghandi's very strange relationship with his wife and often tumultous relationships with his sons. The author does give a very detailed account of Ghandi's efforts and the incredible challenges to overcome during the 25 years preceding India's independence in 1947, providing a lot of detail on the political players and the British viewpoint throughout the years. Recommended highly for anyone who has an interest in understanding this very unique historic figure.


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Anand Velayudhan

3.0 out of 5 stars

Yet an other political biography of Gandhi!January 26, 2007
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Overwhelmed by the hundreds of books already available scrutinizing, criticizing and or eulogizing the controversial life of Gandhi, Wolpert's dilemma when he thought of writing a book about Gandhi was what would he write that others have not written yet. Nevertheless, after so much introspection he has decided to write this book tempted by the significance of Gandhi's teachings in the wake of India's nuclear test of 1998. But, unfortunately, his attempt is falling woefully short of providing any new information on the life of Gandhi or is unable to challenge a critical mind on the life of one of the great and yet controversial figures of the 20th century.

In his work, Wolpert portrays a dutiful Gandhi of esteemed ideas and vision. But by often succumbing to Gandhi's saintly aura, Wolpert is unable to provide valuable insight from a historian's perspective on the circumstances and events leading to the spiritual development of Gandhi that we saw in him starting in South Africa, a topic that not many historians (may be except Judith Brown) tried their hands on and succeeded. Without any analysis of that sort, his work is nothing but yet another addition to the mundane category of political biography of Gandhi.

Contrary to the popular belief that Gandhi is the culprit for the partition, Wolpert has given many proofs from history for how the partition could not have been avoided despite Gandhi's many overtures and thus was absolving Gandhi completely from the crime. While that should be the right thing to do, Wolpert is also pointing out Gandhi's reluctance to listen to C.R. Das's (one of Gandhi's staunch supporters) candid and most plausible plea to Gandhi to accept Jinnah's proposal and work towards a peaceful partition. Gandhi who knew British's indifference to India's plea for political reforms after the First World War was not quite optimistic nor was he willing to sway from his stubborn position on the idea of unified India. Then at the end, Gandhi was completely sidelined by Nehru from the final politics of Mountbatten and was not even been consulted for his advice on partition. Wolpert could have done an excellent comparative study on the positive impacts of a partition with the whole Muslim population transmigrating leaving India's fate in the hands of its Hindu majority who nonetheless is the true denizen of the land. None of the historians I know have used this lost chance judiciously in repudiating Gandhi for not having taken that stance when Jinnah could not be budged from his insistence on partition. The partition should not had to be bloody had the leaders of both India and Britain shown more patience and done more planning. Though the freedom may have come late, the constitutional method for achieving India's freedom would have been less bloody.

Another `failure' that is blamed on Gandhi and which Wolpert roughly touched on is his handling of his family affairs. When he was trying to bring up a whole country in line with his principles, doing anything contrary for his children would be very un-Gandhian, and none can deny the fact that he loved all his kids and given basic education and support. One has to look into the details of the events leading to the alienation of some of his kids before putting blame on Gandhi. Wolpert having surely known some of these events has not attempted to put blame on Gandhi. In his wife's case, Gandhi had given complete liberty for her to break away from him if she chosen so. Kasturba, being an illiterate and having nothing to stand on her own, have nothing else to do than supporting her husband. It was too late by the time Gandhi realized that a man devoted to the service of people should never have a family or indulge in pleasures.

Gandhi had many qualms for western civilization but was not quite so for industrialization. What he against was machines stealing the jobs of millions of India's idle hands. He found imperative that these idle hands had to be employed first before bringing in machines. In fact Gandhi said that he was not against machines and would welcome it for anything that is beyond the capacity of people. He was wary about accepting a civilization, of which industrialization is a part of, that was (still is) in it's infancy in the place of a seasoned civilization that is thousands of years old. Gandhi's was a vision in which everything had its own time and place. For him one step at a time was good enough.

Even for freedom, Gandhi gave a proper time and place for its happening. He asked what difference it makes whether India is ruled by British or Indians as long as both have little knowledge of the real problems of India. Gandhi had a clear vision of India's future where both India and Britain work together as equal partners in a commonwealth enterprise not in a system of masters and slaves. Jalianwala Bagh massacre, Rowlatt act and the atrocities that followed in Punjab made him realize that British was not willing to see India on par and there started his opposition to the crown. Wolpert is unable to substantiate this most crucial transformation of Gandhi's political life that had had far reaching repercussions in the India's freedom struggle.

On the controversial topic of Gandhi's experiments with girls, Wolpert is groping in the dark unable to grasp the spiritual and psychological connotations of such experiments. One would have to believe that Gandhi never had any physical relations with any of his female disciples because none of the historians have made any indication on the contrary. In Manu's (one of the girls with whom he slept) book on Gandhi too she considered him only as her own `Mother'.

Wolpert's work is not devoid of blemishes either. He seems to have mistaken the meaning of Surendranath (in Hindu mythology it means king of all skies) as `Surrender Not' while referring to Surendranath Banerjea, a foremost political leader of British India. The fact is `Surrender Not' is the nickname that the British had given to Surendranath Banerjea (because Surendranath sounded more like `Surrender Not' when pronounced by the British) for his steadfast support for political reforms in British India. On another occasion Wolpert erroneously assumed Gandhi a true nationalist as early as in 1905 while referring him for indirectly supporting the British rule in the West Bengal by the statement Gandhi made in which he said it was the responsibility of British to quell the communal riots that broke out in Bengal in the wake of the partition, than blaming British for the partition itself. Gandhi considered himself as a true British loyalist as late as 1919 and on no account his loyalty to the crown had ever been questioned as early as in 1905.

Topics on Gandhi should not have to run out especially when our world is in such a sad state of affairs (I am not trying to be cynical here) in spite of all the `advancements' we made. What we need is a new generation of writers who have gone through the effects of modern wars, proliferations of nuclear weapons, impact of globalization, disintegration of morals, effects of depletion of natural resources, environmental pollution, economical imbalance, starvation of millions etc. to take a fresh look at his teachings and interpret them in the context of aforementioned impacts in the world. Gandhi said that so much advancement is made in the field of `violence' and equal amount of advancement could be made in the field of `non-violence' also. What Gandhi did was laying the foundation of that institute. Sadly, in the last 50 years since his death, not many studies have been conducted in that institute.

Despite its cerebral shortcomings, Wolpert's book on Gandhi could be recommended for anyone who is looking for a rudimentary introduction to Gandhi and the struggle in which he was part of during the early 20th century.
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F. Andrews

5.0 out of 5 starsA life which has become a voice crying in the desertAugust 14, 2012
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Somewhere in the present time, we have lost the lesson that Gandhi lived - not to mention Dr. Martin Luther King. This book describes Gandhi as a simple man who was human - but with a vision and commitment that he just wouldn't let go of. Where is that commitment now?


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Joyce Van Dermark
4.0 out of 5 starsVery revealing.December 10, 2012
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This book is the most definitive one I've read on Gandhi. His incredible life and works were amazing. I learned a lot about this long suffering, compassionate man, who with all his faults, was a force for peace in this world.


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Privacy preferred

4.0 out of 5 starsGandhi's PassionApril 20, 2013
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A very informative book about the situation in India under colonial rule and what Gandhi eventually accomplished. He gave up a life as a member of a rich family and shared with the poor. His concern was especially to lift up the Untouchables and free India to become an independent country. At least some parts of the world have changed for the better since he was arrested in South Africa because he was "colored".


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