ABSTRACT

This book, first published in 1990, summarizes and evaluates the contribution of Martin Buber as a theorist of myth. Buber provides explicit guidelines for understanding and evaluating myths. He describes reality as twofold: people live either in a world of things, to which they relate as a subject controlling its objects, or in a world of self-conscious others, with whom one relates as fellow subjects. Human beings require both types of reality, but also a means of moving from one to the other. Buber understands myths as one such means by which people pass from I-It reality to I-You meeting. In studying myths, he focuses on the myths in the traditions he knows best, but offers his advice and interpretation of mythology and scholarship about mythology generally.

chapter |46 pages

The Student of Myth

chapter |39 pages

Buber on Myth

chapter |52 pages

Buber and the Bible

chapter |43 pages

Buber in Eden

chapter |49 pages

The Exodus

chapter |31 pages

Buber And Hasidic Myth

chapter |50 pages

Myth as Language

chapter |36 pages

Hasidism And Modernity

chapter |21 pages

Evaluating Buber