
A Primer for Forgetting
Getting Past the Past
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Narrado por:
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Jim Frangione
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De:
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Lewis Hyde
“One of our true superstars of nonfiction” (David Foster Wallace), Lewis Hyde, author of The Gift and Trickster Makes the World, offers a playful and melancholy defense of forgetfulness by exploring the healing effect it can have on the human psyche.
We live in a culture that prizes memory - how much we can store, the quality of what’s preserved, how we might better document and retain the moments of our life while fighting off the nightmare of losing all that we have experienced. But what if forgetfulness were seen not as something to fear - be it in the form of illness or simple absentmindedness - but rather as a blessing, a balm, a path to peace and forgiveness?
A Primer for Forgetting is a remarkable experiment in scholarship, autobiography, and social criticism by the author of the classics The Gift and Trickster Makes This World. It forges a new “history of forgetfulness” by assembling fragments of art and writing from the ancient world to the modern, weighing the potential boons forgetfulness might offer the present moment as a philosophical and political force. It also turns inward, using the author’s own life and memory as a canvas upon which to extol the virtues of a concept too long taken as an evil.
Drawing material from Hesiod to Jorge Luis Borges to Elizabeth Bishop to Archbishop Desmond Tutu, from myths and legends to very real and recent traumas both personal and historical, A Primer for Forgetting is a unique and remarkable synthesis that only Lewis Hyde could have produced.
©2019 by Lewis Hyde. (P)2019 Brilliance Publishing, Inc., all rights reserved.Listeners also enjoyed...




















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This can be accomplished easily in print with some form of demarcation, but there is no mention or the presence of a gong, why it’s there or that it’s not some editorial error. It took me some time to figure this out on my own. Maybe this was Hyde taking an attribute out of his trickster book to leave us wondering the whole time, why in the heck there is a gong. But with so many poorly done audiobooks, I was left thinking that the audiobook got a hack job in editing. It would have been FAR more enjoyable to be let in on the reason for the Gong.
I enjoy Lewis Hyde’s work, I have read “The Gift” “The Trickster” and now this audio book.
For a book on memory I imagine that there is nothing else like it. It is not a typical book, it isn’t written continuously and in a specific direction, it circumambulates in as many ways as it can find around memory and the purpose, function, reason, telos for forgetting.
It leaves you knowing that you have forgotten most everything that you have ever known or experienced, most of this book, and we too, will be forgotten, and maybe remembered again, who knows. It’s a great mystery after all.
I can’t imagine the book being more impactful for what its aim was.
The reason for “the gong” through the whole work.
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Helpful about importance of forgetting
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Unfortunately ruined by bell ringing after every few sentences.
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