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Moses and Civilization - Paul, Robert A. - Yale University Press
  • March 1996
    278 p., 6 1/8 x 9 1/4

    ISBN: 9780300064285
    ISBN-10: 0300064284
  • Cloth: $60.00 tx
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Psychology
Religion
Social Science

Moses and Civilization

The Meaning Behind Freud`s Myth

  • Robert A. Paul
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Winner of the 1996 National Jewish Book Award (in the category of Jewish Thought)

Winner of the 1996 Boyer Prize given by the Society for Psychological Anthropology

Winner of the 1996 Heinz Hartmann Award given by the New York Psychoanalytic Institute

Winner of the best book in cultural anthropology from the American Anthropological Association

Freud's major cultural books, Totem and Taboo and Moses and Monotheism, have long been viewed as failed attempts at historical reconstruction. This book, by an anthropologist and practicing psychoanalyst, offers a brilliant reinterpretation of these works, presenting them instead as versions and unwitting analyses of the great mythic narrative underlying Judeo-Christian civilization, found principally in the Five Books of Moses.

Synthesizing aspects of structural anthropology, symbolic anthropology, evolutionary theory, and psychoanalysis, Robert A. Paul reveals the numerous parallels between Freud's myth of the primal horde and the Torah text. He shows how the primal-horde scenario is the basis for the Christian myth of the life and death of Jesus. And he details the way Freud's myth corresponds to the unconscious fantasy structure of the obsessional personality—a style of personality dynamics Paul sees as essential to maintaining the bureaucratic institutions that make up Western civilization's most distinctive features. Paul thus corrects and completes Freud's project, creating a valid psychoanalytic account of Western civilization that rests not on faulty speculation, as Freud's did, but on a detailed reading of the biblical text and of the legends, folklore, commentaries, and social practices surrounding it.

Robert A. Paul is Charles Howard Candler Professor of Anthropology at Emory University and associate professor in the department of psychiatry there. He served as editor of Ethos: Journal of the Society of Psychological Anthropology (1984-96) and as president of the Society for Cultural Anthropology (1993-95). He is on the teaching faculty of the Emory University Psychoanalytic Institute.

A selection of the Jewish History Book Club

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