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Occult Elements of the Soul in A Vision

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  • 발행기관
    한국예이츠학회 바로가기
  • 간행물
    한국 예이츠 저널 KCI 등재 바로가기
  • 통권
    제28권 (2007.12)바로가기
  • 페이지
    pp.209-232
  • 저자
    Shin, Hyun-Ho
  • 언어
    영어(ENG)
  • URL
    https://www.earticle.net/Article/A57203

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원문정보

초록

영어
Throughout Yeats's life, his occultism absorbed much of his time and energy. Yeats's occultism supported and enriched his poetry and plays, providing him with themes, the symbols, a philosophy that affirmed recurring self-renewal. Through the development of Yeats's occult thinking, from the Golden Dawn, through Per Amica Silentia Lunae, to A Vision, a continuous, coherent direction can be traced.
Books II and III of A Vision, deal with the nature of the human soul, its different principles, and its progression after death. In "The Completed Symbol," Yeats elaborates on the Four Principles of the soul ― the Husk, the Passionate Body, the Spirit, and the Celestial Body. The Principles find their Unity in the Celestial Body, man's archetype in Heaven.
In "The Soul in Judgement", examining the six after-death states, death, in general, is also presented as a transfer of consciousness from the physical plane to a higher one. During the first three states, or until Beatitude, the Spirit passes each time into a higher state of consciousness; after Beatitude, following the circular pattern of "The Great Wheel," the Spirit lapses slowly into relative unconsciousness.
These six states, like the twenty-eight phases, affect each other, and in each one the Spirit has to act under certain laws. The soul has to pass through all of these states in order to progress and to prepare for its reentry into the physical world.
This belief in the six after-death states stems from the occult sources mainly Theosophy which also teaches that the soul passes through six planes of consciousness after death -- the divine, the monadic, the spiritual, the intuitional, the mental, and the astral plane or plane of passions and emotions.
Yeats uses the lunar cycle to explain the soul's journey between lives. The concept of the Thirteenth Sphere is important because in the occult traditions, the number thirteen is also symbolic of unity and perfection. In A Vision the Thirteenth Sphere represents Unity since in it all antinomies are resolved.
Yeats's view of the soul is directly related to his belief in a universal duality ― the existence of opposite but equal forces that dominate a cycle alternately.

목차

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 Works Cited
 Abstract

저자

  • Shin, Hyun-Ho [ Baekseok Univ. ]

참고문헌

자료제공 : 네이버학술정보

간행물 정보

발행기관

  • 발행기관명
    한국예이츠학회 [The Yeats Society of Korea]
  • 설립연도
    1991
  • 분야
    인문학>영어와문학
  • 소개
    예이츠 및 관련 분야에 대한 회원들의 학문 발전을 도모하고 연구 의욕을 고취시키기 위해 다음과 같은 일을 기획하고 수행함을 그 목적으로 한다. 1) 학술 발표회 및 세미나 개최 2) 학술 정보의 수집과 자료 교환 3) 연구논문집 『한국예이츠저널』(The Yeats Journal of Korea) 발간 4) 회원 상호간의 학문적 교류와 친목 도모

간행물

  • 간행물명
    한국 예이츠 저널 [The Yeats Journal of Korea]
  • 간기
    연3회
  • pISSN
    1226-4946
  • 수록기간
    1991~2026
  • 등재여부
    KCI 등재
  • 십진분류
    KDC 841 DDC 811

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