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Wild Men in the Looking Glass book cover
Wild Men in the Looking Glass
The Mythic Origins of European Otherness
1995
First Published
3.88
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294
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Long before the age of exploration, wild men inhabited the European imagination. These fascinating, hairy creatures have a long history of representation in art, literature, and folklore, appearing among other guises as satyrs and fauns in ancient Greece, mythical forest - and mountain-dwellers in the Middle Ages, and Shakespeare's Caliban and Cervantes' Cardenio in the Renaissance. Wild folk also captured the attention of naturalists, who investigated homo ferus and homo sylvestris, and philosophers, who elaborated the image of the noble savage. In Wild Men in the Looking Glass, Roger Bartra searches out the roots of the European wild man myth and explores its long evolution. Turning the tables on those who suggest that the primitive peoples "discovered" and colonized by European explorers gave rise to the myth, Bartra finds that the wild man myth preceded and helped shape European reactions to real peoples. Indeed, he shows that the wild man underpins the notion of civilization on which much of Western identity has been based. The man we recognize as "civilized" has not been able to take a single step without the shadow of the wild man at his heel.

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Author

Roger Bartra
Roger Bartra
Author · 10 books

Roger Bartra (Ciudad de México, 1942) se doctoró en la Sorbona de París, y es actualmente investigador emérito de la UNAM. Ha sido profesor invitado en las universidades de California en San Diego, Johns Hopkins, Pompeu Fabra, Rutgers, Stanford y Wisconsin, así como en el Paul Getty Center de Los Ángeles, entre otros lugares. Ha publicado libros sobre las mitologías europeas, como El salvaje en el espejo, El salvaje artificial y Las redes imaginarias del poder político; sobre la crisis de la identidad nacional, como La jaula de la melancolía y La sangre y la tinta; sobre el mito de la melancolía en el mundo occidental, como Cultura y melancolía y El duelo de los ángeles, y sobre los vínculos entre el patrimonio cultural y las redes neuronales, como Antropología del cerebro. En Anagrama también ha publicado su más reciente libro Chamanes y robots.

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