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Hammering Hot Iron: A Spiritual Critique of Robert Bly's Iron John - Exploring Masculinity & Personal Growth in Modern Society
Hammering Hot Iron: A Spiritual Critique of Robert Bly's Iron John - Exploring Masculinity & Personal Growth in Modern Society
Hammering Hot Iron: A Spiritual Critique of Robert Bly's Iron John - Exploring Masculinity & Personal Growth in Modern Society
Hammering Hot Iron: A Spiritual Critique of Robert Bly's Iron John - Exploring Masculinity & Personal Growth in Modern Society

Hammering Hot Iron: A Spiritual Critique of Robert Bly's Iron John - Exploring Masculinity & Personal Growth in Modern Society

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Hammering Hot Iron is a rare work that raises important questions, draws vital distinctions, and elevates discourse within the spiritual community on the Men’s Movement, Jungian psychology, archetypal and mythological studies, and polytheistic religions. Drawing on the perennial philosophy, the universal expression of absolute truth, Upton offers a metaphysical and cultural critique of Robert Bly's Iron John. Upton adopts Bly’s shadow in the Jungian sense. His intellectual argument is masterfully intertwined with his own personal and spiritual journey, often expressed through original poetry. “The book is excellent. Upton's insights have exposed the shallow philosophical thinking associated with the Men’s Movement, the inadequacy of polytheism as a religious faith, and the bias against Christianity. Hammering Hot Iron does a splended job of critiquing Jungian writers and in showing there is more to God than the archetype of God in the psyche. Thank you for your excellent work in setting the record straight!” — John A. Sanford, Jungian analyst “Charles Upton provides a long-overdue masterful critique of the Men’s Movement, its popularizing heroes, and the archetypal psychology on which it is based. In this marvelously iconoclastic book, Upton articulates the feelings and thoughts of those who have left the movement or are wondering why they are still part of it. He does so with eloquence, wit, and not least, wisdom. —Georg Feuerstein, Ph.D., author of Voices on the Threshold of Tomorrow and Structures of Consciousness Charles Upton is a poet, social activist, and writer of the spiritual path. He is author of many other books published by Sophia Perennis

Reviews

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This is a very good book - if you are lucky enough to find a copy and wish to read and think about real questions this book may be for you. I feel very grateful to the author for this work.Charles Upton challenges Robert Bly's interpretation of the Grimm's fairly tale Iron John, an interpretation which had a strong impact on a generation of confused men looking for answers about what it means to be a man. Upton's critique draws from the perspective of the traditionalist school of writers - notably the French metaphysician Rene Guenon - and presents a profound alternative reading of the fairy tale in which the question of what it means to be a man is eclipsed by the greater question of what it means to be truly human.Upton writes: '...Bly states that his intention is to talk about male initiation alone. My intention is to try and situate this initiation in its greater context, that of the attainment of the fully human state.'

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