Thursday, September 23, 2010

The American Soul

 

"While Needleman clearly finds much to love about America, he balances our light with our darkness, our genuine good will and spirituality with our great crimes of slavery and the genocidal abuse of the American Indian.... Needleman's latest work gives open-minded readers a new set of spiritual role models and much valuable food for thought at a crucial moment."

Publishers Weekly
 
Read the full review. 
Read Publisher's Weekly's interview with Jacob Needleman.

Soul Searching: A book looks to great minds of the past to illuminate the present.
Read Shepherd Bliss's review of
The American Soul in MetroActive
.

Philosophical and Spiritual Aspects of American Life Examined in Next Year’s Book In Common
The American Soul selected as 2003-2004 Book in Common at CSU: Read the Chico State University Press Release.

The American Soul 

At the heart of The American Soul is a call to rediscover the timeless truths hidden within the founding vision of the American nation. Embedded in the ideals of democracy, individual liberty and freedom of conscience is a view of human nature that echoes essential aspects of the wisdom that has guided every great civilization of the world. Free of all religious and philosophical dogma, and liberated from all historical and political clichés, this uniquely American vision has the power to speak again to the modern world's need for meaning and community.

Throughout the book, Jacob Needleman takes a new sounding of the inner beliefs and spiritual sensibilities of the great iconic figures of American history. His uniquely conceived portraits show us Washington as the great symbol of selfless impartiality; Jefferson as the embodiment of the communal search for truth, Franklin as the seeker of knowledge in two worlds. Lincoln emerges as the incarnation of the ideal of the individual; Frederick Douglass as the voice of America's conscience; the story of the Iroquois constitution reveals the cosmic dimensions of our own ideal of democracy.

Needleman shows how the crimes and defeats of America-slavery, the destruction of the culture of the American Indian, the Vietnam war-cry out for a clear vision of America asleep to its own spiritual essence, while bringing home the depth of what America owes to its own people and to the earth itself.

Finally, following an illuminating discussion of what we need to learn from America's all but forgotten early mystical communities, Needleman concludes with a resounding call, echoing Walt Whitman's quest for a new American mythology, to understand what is truly eternal and indestructible in the American vision.
 
Download complete chapters (pdf)


Look inside this book on Amazon.com

NEW VIDEO: Watch an 8-minute segment of Inspired by America.
 
Inspired by America: 

Inspired by America — a dramatic blend of live chamber music, original film and spoken word — is a collaboration of the Cypress String Quartet, best-selling author Jacob Needleman and Emmy Award-winning film producer Michael Schwarz.

Watch an 8-minute segment of Inspired by America.


This event will take place accross the country and is currently scheduled through April 2008. Click here for more information.
 
Listen to Jacob Needleman on KQED: On April 3, 2007 Michael Krasny interviewed Jacob Needleman about his book The American Soul. Click here to link to KQED and listen to the audiocast.

Online Lecture: The Tribune-Herald interviewed Jacob Needleman after he spoke to about 80 people about the meaning of America and his book, The American Soul, at Baylor University’s Mayborn Museum on June 13, 2006. The entire 1 1/2 hour lecture is available online at www.BaylorTv.com.


Two Dreams of America

"Then, what of the American dream? Is it a vision or an illusion? Do we need to deepen this dream or awaken from it?
Can anyone doubt the importance of this question? In one form or another, it is a question that has been gathering strength for decades, and it now stands squarely in the path not only of every American, but, such is the planetary influence of America, of every man and woman in the world. What really is America? What does America mean?
To think well and truly about this question, we need to relate it to the deepest inner questions that mankind can ask."

— Jacob Needleman, Two Dreams of America