Robert Eisler influenced Freud, addressed the Senate on policy, spent 15 months in concentration camps, and died in obscurity. This podcast tells his story.
My biography of Robert Eisler, art thief, art historian, aristocrat, concentration camp prisoner, economist, historian of religions, philosopher, and agnostic Jewish Catholic, is now available from Palgrave.
https://t.co/hJVYTPjuDc
"Robert Eisler's life sounds like something Thomas Pynchon and Roberto Bolaño might have brainstormed for a shared character."
🗣️@McLemee discusses A Very Square Peg: The Strange and Remarkable Life of the Polymath Robert Eisler (@averysquarepeg) ⬇
https://t.co/Uq0n0dfFaV
New bonus episode out today where I speak with Marshall Poe about the podcast! Plus the whole thing now has its own page. Thanks to @NewBooksNetwork for helping promote the series this week! https://t.co/y5KrM7OugF
In this episode, we finish the story of Robert Eisler with his last days in London, when he was denied his job at Oxford, interned at the Isle of Man, refused UK citizenship, and wrote on astrology, folklore, and lycanthropy. @NewBooksNetwork https://t.co/y5KrM7OugF
@NewBooksNetwork
In this episode, we talk about the 15 months Eisler spent in Dachau and Buchenwald, which inspired Man into Wolf. We also learn about an SS Officer who, in a bit of poetic justice, was expelled for plagiarizing Eisler's work on Jesus.
https://t.co/O79WFC2n8N
In this week's episode, Eisler attempts a psychoanalytic interpretation of a vision of Jesus experienced by a very unusual man (whom he never even meets). This is where the story gets really strange. @NewBooksNetwork
https://t.co/IsfBR32ENL
In this week's episode, "Negative Interest," I discuss Eisler's ingenious dual currency monetary system with @mileskimball, his connection to Eranos + Carl Jung, his theory that heretic wrote John's Gospel, and a poem he wrote in a dream. @NewBooksNetwork https://t.co/5Ph2RHJLse
@noah_nonsense@NewBooksNetwork Right again! The Leeming book is in the show notes (though I never could work out an interview with Kate, try as I might). But Eisler is the subject of the podcast, not Josephus, and his writings on the manuscripts in the 20s and 30s are a big part of his intellectual biography.
Out today, episode #5: The Slavonic Josephus, in which I tackle the complicated philological arguments about a 15th century manuscript believed to be a Slavonic translation of a poor Greek translation of an Aramaic description of Jesus. 😬 @NewBooksNetwork
@noah_nonsense@NewBooksNetwork Very true! I said "believed to be," but not by me- By Robert Eisler & Alexander Berendts. It's a fascinating story. But you're correct, the philology (as I understand it) does not support an Aramaic source text or even a Greek-poorly-translated-from-Aramaic one as Eisler thought.
New blog post!
The next instalment of our 'Warburg Institute Recommends' series is now live.
From podcasts to an online planetarium, take a look at what @Warburg_Library colleagues are recommending
https://t.co/Yzd1kLoak3
Ep. 4: "Women's Coats and Beach Cabanas in Light of the History of Religions; or, The Nebbish Philologist" is out now! Learn about Eisler's strained relationships with Aby Warburg, Gershom Scholem, and Walter Benjamin. https://t.co/WXkox84jKx @NewBooksNetwork@Warburg_Library
"Divination systems are sensemaking tools". This is from @ferdinando_MED 's fine @BoingBoing review of a new book from a data scientist and classicist that compares astrology to our reliance on unreliable statistical forecasts in economics, medicine, etc. https://t.co/sLQqSF8gDG
In tomorrow's episode of A VERY SQUARE PEG we look at Robert Eisler's tense relationships w/art historian Aby Warburg and Kabbalah scholar Gershom Scholem and reassess his infamous 1926 meeting w/ Scholem and Walter Benjamin @NewBooksNetwork@Warburg_Library