The personal reflections of this essay, raised by my repeated reading and translation of Camus's ... more The personal reflections of this essay, raised by my repeated reading and translation of Camus's mini-essay on Sisyphus, are embedded in attempts to answer the following questions: Of what use is this ancient myth in today's world? Does Sisyphus's story hold any significance for us? What might we learn from this man, from the enormous rock, from "stone itself," from Sisyphus's futile labors? Can I make the myth relevant to my own life, and might I, like Sisyphus, be able to foster my own "higher devotion"? How was Camus able to imagine Sisyphus, in the midst of his hellish labours, happy? My response to Camus's thoughts, particularly his notions of "The Absurd," the "path of sympathy" and exile, are explored in relation to the mini-essay.
The personal reflections of this essay, raised by my repeated reading and translation of Camus's ... more The personal reflections of this essay, raised by my repeated reading and translation of Camus's mini-essay on Sisyphus, are embedded in attempts to answer the following questions: Of what use is this ancient myth in today's world? Does Sisyphus's story hold any significance for us? What might we learn from this man, from the enormous rock, from "stone itself," from Sisyphus's futile labors? Can I make the myth relevant to my own life, and might I, like Sisyphus, be able to foster my own "higher devotion"? How was Camus able to imagine Sisyphus, in the midst of his hellish labours, happy? My response to Camus's thoughts, particularly his notions of "The Absurd," the "path of sympathy" and exile, are explored in relation to the mini-essay.
The personal reflections of this essay, raised by my repeated reading and translation of Camus's ... more The personal reflections of this essay, raised by my repeated reading and translation of Camus's mini-essay on Sisyphus, are embedded in attempts to answer the following questions: Of what use is this ancient myth in today's world? Does Sisyphus's story hold any significance for us? What might we learn from this man, from the enormous rock, from "stone itself," from Sisyphus's futile labors? Can I make the myth relevant to my own life, and might I, like Sisyphus, be able to foster my own "higher devotion"? How was Camus able to imagine Sisyphus, in the midst of his hellish labours, happy? My response to Camus's thoughts, particularly his notions of "The Absurd," the "path of sympathy" and exile, are explored in relation to the mini-essay.
Abstract Jim Bugental has attempted to change a prevalent view that the focus on things objective... more Abstract Jim Bugental has attempted to change a prevalent view that the focus on things objective is always worthwhile and that attention to the realm of our inner awareness is much less, if at all, valuable. In the classroom, in his writing, and in the development and ...
ISBN 0-919387-19-5 Published by Becker Associates, secretariat to the Canadian University and Col... more ISBN 0-919387-19-5 Published by Becker Associates, secretariat to the Canadian University and College Counselling Association ... I. THE ROLE OF COUNSELLING IN THE COLLEGES AND UNIVERSITIES...................................................................................................... 2
abstract Michel Foucault's history of madness is the lens through which this essay views Paul... more abstract Michel Foucault's history of madness is the lens through which this essay views Paul Sayer's fictional monologue of a completely immobile, mute mental hospital patient. The patient's reflections and experiences in an intensive treatment institution bring into ...
... She wrote freely about fantasies, dreams, masturbation, sexual affairs, including lesbianism ... more ... She wrote freely about fantasies, dreams, masturbation, sexual affairs, including lesbianism and bisexuality, penis envy, the primal scene, and oedipal and pre-oedipal stages of development. ... Penis envy, however, is not my essential theme. ...
Canadian J. Criminology & Corrections, Jan 1, 1975
Douze patients hommes dans un h6pital psychiatrique A s6curit6 maximale regoivent des points cont... more Douze patients hommes dans un h6pital psychiatrique A s6curit6 maximale regoivent des points contre un comportement satisfaisant et souhaitable. Les points peuvent s' 6changer contre des articles du commissariat. Des progr~ s significatifs se sont rv16s la suite d'une ...
The personal reflections of this essay, raised by my repeated reading and translation of Camus's ... more The personal reflections of this essay, raised by my repeated reading and translation of Camus's mini-essay on Sisyphus, are embedded in attempts to answer the following questions: Of what use is this ancient myth in today's world? Does Sisyphus's story hold any significance for us? What might we learn from this man, from the enormous rock, from "stone itself," from Sisyphus's futile labors? Can I make the myth relevant to my own life, and might I, like Sisyphus, be able to foster my own "higher devotion"? How was Camus able to imagine Sisyphus, in the midst of his hellish labours, happy? My response to Camus's thoughts, particularly his notions of "The Absurd," the "path of sympathy" and exile, are explored in relation to the mini-essay.
The personal reflections of this essay, raised by my repeated reading and translation of Camus's ... more The personal reflections of this essay, raised by my repeated reading and translation of Camus's mini-essay on Sisyphus, are embedded in attempts to answer the following questions: Of what use is this ancient myth in today's world? Does Sisyphus's story hold any significance for us? What might we learn from this man, from the enormous rock, from "stone itself," from Sisyphus's futile labors? Can I make the myth relevant to my own life, and might I, like Sisyphus, be able to foster my own "higher devotion"? How was Camus able to imagine Sisyphus, in the midst of his hellish labours, happy? My response to Camus's thoughts, particularly his notions of "The Absurd," the "path of sympathy" and exile, are explored in relation to the mini-essay.
The personal reflections of this essay, raised by my repeated reading and translation of Camus's ... more The personal reflections of this essay, raised by my repeated reading and translation of Camus's mini-essay on Sisyphus, are embedded in attempts to answer the following questions: Of what use is this ancient myth in today's world? Does Sisyphus's story hold any significance for us? What might we learn from this man, from the enormous rock, from "stone itself," from Sisyphus's futile labors? Can I make the myth relevant to my own life, and might I, like Sisyphus, be able to foster my own "higher devotion"? How was Camus able to imagine Sisyphus, in the midst of his hellish labours, happy? My response to Camus's thoughts, particularly his notions of "The Absurd," the "path of sympathy" and exile, are explored in relation to the mini-essay.
Abstract Jim Bugental has attempted to change a prevalent view that the focus on things objective... more Abstract Jim Bugental has attempted to change a prevalent view that the focus on things objective is always worthwhile and that attention to the realm of our inner awareness is much less, if at all, valuable. In the classroom, in his writing, and in the development and ...
ISBN 0-919387-19-5 Published by Becker Associates, secretariat to the Canadian University and Col... more ISBN 0-919387-19-5 Published by Becker Associates, secretariat to the Canadian University and College Counselling Association ... I. THE ROLE OF COUNSELLING IN THE COLLEGES AND UNIVERSITIES...................................................................................................... 2
abstract Michel Foucault's history of madness is the lens through which this essay views Paul... more abstract Michel Foucault's history of madness is the lens through which this essay views Paul Sayer's fictional monologue of a completely immobile, mute mental hospital patient. The patient's reflections and experiences in an intensive treatment institution bring into ...
... She wrote freely about fantasies, dreams, masturbation, sexual affairs, including lesbianism ... more ... She wrote freely about fantasies, dreams, masturbation, sexual affairs, including lesbianism and bisexuality, penis envy, the primal scene, and oedipal and pre-oedipal stages of development. ... Penis envy, however, is not my essential theme. ...
Canadian J. Criminology & Corrections, Jan 1, 1975
Douze patients hommes dans un h6pital psychiatrique A s6curit6 maximale regoivent des points cont... more Douze patients hommes dans un h6pital psychiatrique A s6curit6 maximale regoivent des points contre un comportement satisfaisant et souhaitable. Les points peuvent s' 6changer contre des articles du commissariat. Des progr~ s significatifs se sont rv16s la suite d'une ...
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