Conceptions of Dreaming from Homer to 1800
By (Author) G. W. Pigman III
Anthem Press
Anthem Press
31st January 2019
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
154.6309
Hardback
294
Width 153mm, Height 229mm, Spine 26mm
454g
Conceptions of Dreaming from Homer to 1800is an intellectual history of conceptions of dreaming during the period of the `admonitory dream' (Homer through the eighteenth century) with an epilogue on the two most important dream theorists at the turn of the twentieth century, Sigmund Freud and Sante De Sanctis. The admonitory dream is thought to predict the future accurately and supernaturally, reveal things unknown in the present or warn the dreamer to do or not to do something. Today it probably remains the most popular conception of the dream worldwide, but since the end of the eighteenth century scholarly and scientific study has become more interested in what dreams are and how they work rather than in which dreams reveal the future, how and their interpretation. Conceptions of Dreaming from Homer to 1800traces the history of the admonitory dream and alternative conceptions of dreaming, especially Aristotle's and the Aristotelian traditions.
G. W. Pigman III is professor of English at the California Institute of Technology, USA. He is the author of Grief and English Renaissance Elegy (1985), editor of A Hundreth Sundrie Flowres (2000), and editor and translator of Giovanni Gioviano Pontanos The Virtues and Vices of Speech (forthcoming).