Bennett first read Beelzebub's Tales in 1948. He regarded it as a work
of superhuman genius, containing expressions of reality, which, by
their very nature, were bound to make severe demands on any reader.
With Gurdjieff's approval, he undertook a series of lectures in London
focusing on the essential meaning of Beelzebub's Tales. More than
commentaries, these "talks" are an invitation into the deeper meanings
of Gurdjieff's enigmatic "tales.” This book was compiled and
arranged soon after the last years of Bennett's life by Anthony Blake.
Now, thirty-years after that initial compilation, Blake gives us a new
foreword with contemporary insights into the visionary message of
Gurdjieff's “tales to his grandson.” Although Bennett's talks were
intended to be a companion to reading and understanding Gurdjieff's
masterwork, Anthony Blake's foreword allows even those unfamiliar with
Gurdjieff's Tales to begin a journey into the depth of its meaning.
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781881408260
Publisert
2016
Utgiver
Vendor
Bennett Books
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter