a
weekly column by
Robert Westbrook |
|||
|
Escape
From Freedom Recently, I found a copy of Fromm’s book at a library sale; I devoured it with interest, and it more than lived up to my expectations. Born in Frankfurt, Germany in 1900, Fromm, who was Jewish, came to the United States in 1933 to escape the Nazis and teach at the Chicago Psychoanalytic Institute. Escape From Freedom is loosely focused on Fascism, the social/psychological reasons why Germans accepted Hitler, but the work ranges far and wide and is every bit as applicable today as when it was written. This is the first book in years I found myself underlining, and I bet you will too – intriguing ideas that suddenly illuminate whole areas of human experience. Fromm starts Escape From Freedom in the European Middle Ages, societies in which everyone knew their place. There was no freedom, no individualism, but a certain comfort to live in a fixed universe. All this began to fall apart with the start of modern capitalism in the 14th century. Suddenly, man had new opportunities to live unfettered lives, but they also had insecurity, anxiety, and a sense of powerlessness, worries that too often led to hostility and resentment. This is the downside of freedom, the lack of security, a sense of living and dying without clearly established boundaries. Human beings seek the illusion of certainty, and here lies the temptation to exchange our freedom for some dictator or canned philosophy that tells us exactly what we must, and mustn’t, do.
And what about life in the United States, land of supposed “freedom?” In the final chapter, Fromm takes a hard look at his adopted country and shows how conformity and the acceptance of unanalyzed cultural norms are the current form of escape. We are driven by advertising and implanted ideas of what constitutes success and failure that are every bit as much a slave master as an actual dictator. In fact, freedom is not easy; it takes a personal commitment, a real quest for knowledge to arrive finally at a place where we have creative, living relationship with the world. Erich Fromm’s conception of freedom bears much in common with Zen Buddhism – as one of his later books, Zen Buddhism and Psychoanalysis, makes clear. He urges us simply to live in the moment, to love, work, and be connected, without preconceptions, with all living things. Escape
From Freedom should be basic reading for anyone who wants to understand
human life on our planet. This is a book that overflows with brilliant,
lucid ideas that will change how you think about your life. Luckily,
it is available today in a variety of editions, hardcover and soft,
and will hopefully remain so forever. |
|||
| Please E-Mail us your thoughts and feedbacks to bookreview@bookbravo.com. | |||
| <<<Previous | >>> Next | >>> Table of Content <<< | |||
| Search and comparison shop for: New Books | Used Books | Music | Movie | Magzine | Help | |||
|
Books mentioned in this review: |
|||
BookBravo.com is an AddALL.com affiliated site. All Rights Reserved. AddAll.com/BookBravo.com. © 2003 |
|||