Oswaldo Costa
Oswaldo Costa
Anyone have an authoritative definition of Paideuma?
originally posted by Oswaldo Costa:
NWR (perhaps): PaideumaAnyone have an authoritative definition of Paideuma?
originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
originally posted by Oswaldo Costa:
NWR (perhaps): PaideumaAnyone have an authoritative definition of Paideuma?
Assuming you've done the google search that will lead you to vague explanations of Frobenius' concept and then how Ezra Pound used it, there's nothing I can add. If you haven't done the search, just google Paideuma meaning and you'll have links to all I know. Given the history of the term, I don't think there can be an "authoritative" definition.
originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
The OED does not have an entry for the word, if that matters.
originally posted by Cole Kendall:
This may provide help to the above problem: https://www.jstor.org/stable/24726807
originally posted by Oswaldo Costa:
originally posted by Cole Kendall:
This may provide help to the above problem: https://www.jstor.org/stable/24726807
Thanks, from that aptly-named source I had found Pound's definition:
In Guide to Kulchur, 57, Pound explains the meaning of Paideuma as follows: “To escape a word or a set of words loaded up with dead association(s), Frobenius uses the term ‘Paideuma’ for the complex of the in-rooted ideas of any period.”
In “For New Paideuma” (Pound) writes: “The term ‘Paideuma’ as used in a dozen German volumes has been given the sense of an active element in the era, the complex of ideas which is in a given time germinal, reaching into the next epoch, but conditioning actively all the thought and action of its own time.” (Selected Prose, 294).
Doesn't provide an "official" definition, but gives a clear sense of what he meant.
originally posted by Tristan Welles:
originally posted by Oswaldo Costa:
originally posted by Cole Kendall:
This may provide help to the above problem: https://www.jstor.org/stable/24726807
Thanks, from that aptly-named source I had found Pound's definition:
In Guide to Kulchur, 57, Pound explains the meaning of Paideuma as follows: “To escape a word or a set of words loaded up with dead association(s), Frobenius uses the term ‘Paideuma’ for the complex of the in-rooted ideas of any period.”
In “For New Paideuma” (Pound) writes: “The term ‘Paideuma’ as used in a dozen German volumes has been given the sense of an active element in the era, the complex of ideas which is in a given time germinal, reaching into the next epoch, but conditioning actively all the thought and action of its own time.” (Selected Prose, 294).
Doesn't provide an "official" definition, but gives a clear sense of what he meant.
I haven't read Pound, but I am guessing he takes his inspiration for 'his' word from the Greek paideia, cf Werner Jäger. And since the translations / inspirations are coming from the antique, rather than the demotic, OED might not make the connection.