Embracing hope On freedom, responsibility & the meaning of life

Viktor E. Frankl, 1905-1997

Book - 2024

"A highly anticipated, rediscovered collection from Viktor Frankl, published for the first time in the United States, exploring freedom, responsibility, and how we can draw meaning from the temporary nature of our lives"--

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152.4/Frankl
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Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor New Shelf 152.4/Frankl (NEW SHELF) Due Oct 23, 2024
Subjects
Published
Boston : Beacon Press [2024]
Language
English
German
Main Author
Viktor E. Frankl, 1905-1997 (author)
Other Authors
Alexander Vesely, 1974- (writer of foreword), Tobias Esch (writer of introduction), Joelle Young (translator)
Item Description
"First published in Germany as Sinn, Freiheit und Verantwortung in 2023 by Beltz, Weinheim Basel.
Physical Description
xxv, 130 pages ; 23 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN
9780807020432
9780807017708
  • Meaning and responsibility in the face of transience: Conquering transience
  • Ways of finding meaning: Man Alive--Vikor Frankl
  • The crisis of meaning and the eitgeist: Collective neuroses
  • Freedom and responsibility: Existential analysis and the problems of our times.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

The late Viennese psychiatrist and Auschwitz survivor applies his humanistic psychology to the horrors of the Holocaust and modern anomie in this resonant collection of lectures and articles. In a lecture from December 1946, Frankl (Man's Search for Meaning) outlines the roots of a modern worldview that relieves people of "individual responsibility," against which he asserts the individual's power to create meaning, even in the hellish confines of concentration camps. Three other pieces--a 1955 article in an Austrian medical journal, a 1977 interview from a Canadian TV program, and a 1984 lecture--delve deeper into these themes and his "logotherapy," a "meaning-centered approach to mental health" that calls for personal growth through purposeful work, love, and the transcendence of suffering. To illustrate the latter, Frankl provides moving case studies of people who surmounted personal trials, including a young man paralyzed below the neck who took psychology courses--using a stick clenched in his teeth to type--and became a counselor. Though there's a noticeable lack of rigor in Frankl's theorizing, the message is moving and his lyrical prose will stick in readers' minds ("Life is a constant process of dying, the continuous withering away of something... a constant farewell"). It's an inspiring introduction to Frankl's thinking. (Aug.)

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