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August Strindberg (1849–1912) kept a diary from February 1896 in Paris until the summer of 1908 in Stockholm. He referred to his diary from this period as his Occult Diary and used it to help him decipher the world as he experienced it. He read and reread his own notations, adding new interpretations, and deleting others. He also drew on the diary as material for creative expression, transforming isolated events and observations into groundbreaking works of literature.The Occult Diary is published here in its entirety in English translation for the first time, in a final revision by Ann-Charlotte Gavel Adams and with an introduction by Per Stam. The Occult Diary is a key resource for international Strindberg scholars and theater professionals and more broadly for scholars focusing on drama, theater history, stage performance, and literary currents at the turn of the previous century. The diary initiates the reader into the writer’s inner world during a crucial transitional period in his personal and literary life. It documents his readings and observations and gives important clues and information about an ongoing process of artistic reorientation. Strindberg was exploring new ways of looking at, interpreting, and writing about nature, science, art, the occult, and his fellow human beings.
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Colin Wilson and Faculty X --- Swedenborg --- Jan Potocki and the 'Saragossa Manuscript' --- Eliphas Levi --- transcendental magic --- the alchemy of August Strindberg --- Madame B. --- Rudolf Steiner --- Manly Palmer Hall --- Dion Fortune --- Aleister Crowley --- Julius Evola --- Mussolini --- Jung and the Occult --- Ouspensky --- London --- Jean Gebser --- Owen Barfield and the evolution of consciousness --- James Webb --- Occultism
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"Northern Arts is a provocative exploration of Scandinavian literature and art. With intellectual power and deep emotional insights, writer and critic Arnold Weinstein guides us through the most startling works created by the writers and artists of Scandinavia over the past two centuries ... Weinstein uses the concept of "breakthrough"--Boundary smashing, restlessness, and the exploding of traditional forms and values-- as a thematic lens through which to expose the rolling energies and violence that courses through Scandinavian literature and art. Defying preconceptions of Scandinavian culture as depressive or brooding, Weinstein invites us to imagine anew this transformative and innovative tradition of art that continually challenges ideas about the sacred and the profane, family and marriage, children, patriarchy, and personal identity."--Back cover.
Arts, Scandinavian --- Scandinavian arts --- Absurdity. --- Ad nauseam. --- Adolf. --- Allegory. --- Alterity. --- An Anthropologist on Mars. --- Astrid Lindgren. --- August Strindberg. --- Barabbas. --- Bela Lugosi. --- Castration anxiety. --- Castration. --- Central conceit. --- Child abandonment. --- Code word (figure of speech). --- Creation myth. --- Criticism. --- Cubism. --- Depiction. --- Despotism. --- Disgust. --- Echo. --- Edgar Allan Poe. --- Edvard Munch. --- Edward Albee. --- Emanuel Swedenborg. --- Enmeshment. --- Erland Josephson. --- Ernst Josephson. --- Evocation. --- Existentialism. --- Explanation. --- Fairy tale. --- Family resemblance. --- Fanny and Alexander. --- Faust. --- Frauenfrage. --- G. (novel). --- Georges Bataille. --- Good and evil. --- Hamlet's Father. --- Hatred. --- Hubris. --- Humiliation. --- I Wish (manhwa). --- Incest. --- Infanticide. --- Infatuation. --- Ingmar Bergman. --- Irony. --- Jacques Derrida. --- Jean Genet. --- Karl Jaspers. --- Knut Hamsun. --- Libido. --- Literature. --- Little Eyolf. --- Madame Bovary. --- Masturbation. --- Meanness. --- Mills of God. --- Misery (novel). --- Mom and Dad. --- Munch Museum. --- Narrative. --- Negative capability. --- On the Beach (novel). --- Orgy. --- Our Hero. --- Paul Gauguin. --- Pelle the Conqueror. --- Pippi Longstocking. --- Playwright. --- Poetry. --- Pornography. --- Predicament. --- Puffery. --- Religion. --- Ridicule. --- Ronia the Robber's Daughter. --- Rosmersholm. --- Scandinavian literature. --- Superiority (short story). --- Suspension of disbelief. --- Søren Kierkegaard. --- Taunting. --- The Dead Father. --- The Emperor's New Clothes. --- The Ghost Sonata. --- The Marriage of Heaven and Hell. --- The Ultimate Truth. --- Thomas Kuhn. --- Tragicomedy. --- Two Women. --- Vanitas. --- War. --- Warfare. --- When We Dead Awaken. --- William Shakespeare. --- Writing.
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