>THE DREAM OF CULTURE: Essays on Culture’s Elusiveness 
>NEWLY AVAILABLE! 
>THE DREAM OF CULTURE: Essays on Culture’s Elusiveness 
>By Howard F. Stein 
>
> 
>COLLEGE INSTRUCTORS may receive a free copy of this exciting, groundbreaking 
>book. Simply respond to this email indicating you will request that your 
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> Pages:  440 pages
>Publisher: 
>  Library of Social Science/Psyche Press
>Author: 
>  Howard F. Stein
>Paperback: 
>  List Price $39.99 
>  ISBN: 1885809034 
>Hardcover: 
>  List Price $59.95 
>  ISBN: 1885809026
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>
>We want as many people as possible to read this exciting, groundbreaking book. 
>Therefore, we are offering a free copy to college instructors if you will 
>simply ask your library to order a copy. Please respond to this email—write to 
>[email protected]—providing your name and the name of your 
>college or university. We will send you a free electronic copy of the entire 
>book (identical to the physical copy, including the front & back cover). 
>"Howard Stein has one of the finest minds engaged in the study of culture in 
>our time. He has the capacity to see straight through to the meaning of 
>things, and to understand it and express it with precision—a quality people 
>used to refer to as genius. This wide ranging book is a feast." 
>  —Howard S. Schwartz, Oakland University, author of  Narcissistic Process and 
>Corporate Decay
>"Howard Stein is one of the world’s most original thinkers in the human 
>sciences." 
>  —Robert Endleman, Ph.D., author of  Psyche and Society
>________________________________
> 
>About the Author: Howard F. Stein is Professor at the University of Oklahoma 
>Health Sciences Center, Department of Family and Preventive Medicine. He is 
>the author of 26 books and over 250 published papers and chapters.   
>Morpheus introduces The Matrix to Neo: "You’ve felt your entire life that 
>there’s something wrong with the world. You don’t know what it is, but it’s 
>there, like a splinter in your mind, driving you mad."
>Don’t many of us have a similar feeling each day as we witness a strange, 
>bizarre world presented to us as "reality"? Is it sufficient to "critique" 
>this world? Perhaps more radical inquiry is called for.
>In The Dream of Culture, renowned anthropologist Howard Stein interrogates the 
>shared fantasy in which we are immersed: the dream we call reality.
>We urge you to read this exciting, groundbreaking book. 
>Culture as a Dream
>This book attempts to unravel a paradox: namely, that human beings, for most 
>of our lives, and human culture, for most of its history, strive to keep 
>emotionally and intellectually asleep while priding ourselves on being wide 
>awake. Just as the work of dreaming is to safeguard sleep, much of the work of 
>culture is likewise to keep us from thinking, feeling, or knowing too much 
>during waking hours. 
>
>Much of culture is not "like" dreaming, in the sense of poetic license’s love 
>of fantastic simile. Nor is it mere analogy. It is day’s counterpart to night. 
>In culture, ours is the tragic conceit to dream that we are not dreaming and 
>to make wakefulness the most heinous sin. Dreaming together is our sensing 
>together—consensus—in cultural groups. Culture is our dreaming while we are 
>wide awake.
>The work of culture is also the work of dreams. "Reality" is far more elusive 
>than we dare admit. We weave our tenuous net over anxiety’s abyss with the 
>substance of dreaming. To say this is not to stretch some metaphor or take 
>literary license. People in groups, awake, do with their shared symbolic and 
>ritual materials, their technology and their environment what we each do while 
>asleep: wish what we may dare and disguise our wishes; contrive our forbidden 
>victories and stage our defeats; attempt to master what we have found 
>overwhelming.
>If night dreaming takes place on a screen upon which are projected our 
>unconscious wishes, fantasies, and feelings, our day dreaming is constructed 
>and projected upon a screen we objectify and call "culture" or "society." We 
>project these "hopes and fears of all the years"—as the tender Christmas 
>carol, "O Little Town of Bethlehem" so yearningly sings—upon and into the 
>social symbols and institutions of politics, religion, law, cosmology, 
>economics, and so on.
>Culture as a Symbolic Object
We construe culture as an independent, self-standing entity beyond ourselves—a 
symbolic object to which we imagine we belong. We transfer feelings from our 
earliest mothering figures, families and memories to groups—in which we try to 
capture safety and security—to make us again feel at one with our parental 
nurturers and protectors. 
>In "culture shock" and "future shock," the loss of culture—which represents a 
>catastrophic crisis of identity—is experienced as object-loss. Culture (or 
>group) is represented as a fantasized maternal object with which tribalists 
>feel themselves to be inextricably tied and upon which they feel themselves to 
>be wholly dependent.
>We want as many people as possible to read this exciting, groundbreaking book. 
>Therefore, we are offering a free copy to college instructors if you will 
>simply ask your library to order a copy. Please respond to this email—write to 
>[email protected]—providing your name and the name of your 
>college or university. We will send you a free electronic copy of the entire 
>book (identical to the physical copy, including the front & back cover). 
>Culture is experienced as a "dual unity" whose "body" the tribalist does not 
>distinguish from his/her very selfhood. It is little wonder that tribalists 
>and anthropologists alike commit the fallacy of misplaced concreteness in 
>their conceptualizations of culture: one truly experiences his/her group to be 
>"superorganic"—transcending the self yet part of the (symbiotic) self.
>In this formulation, loss of culture is the fantasized loss of an environment 
>that mirrors and embodies the "goodness" upon which one depends. 
>"Culture"—experienced as an entity—is one member of a class of symbolic 
>objects whose psychic function is to represent and perpetuate object relations 
>that have been disrupted by death or other forms of loss. The subject of 
>culture shock is the experience of estrangement from—loss and "death" 
>of—culture, as though it were an object, or object representation.
>Culture as Shared Fantasy
>How may we account for these collective representations that give rise to 
>various forms of reality? Richard Koenigsberg suggests that cultural ideas, 
>beliefs and values may be viewed as an "institutionalization and social 
>embodiment of primal human phantasies." He proposes that we carefully comb the 
>cultural texts for primary process imagery embedded in official culture, for 
>those parapraxes and metaphors that make their incursion into ordinary 
>language. For instance, in his content analysis of Hitler's ideology as 
>expressed in published works, speeches, and secret writings, Koenigsberg 
>states as his methodological premise that "the frequency with which a given 
>idea or association appears reflects the centrality of such an element within 
>the framework of [the] belief system."
>Culture as Projection
>In The Ego and the Id, Freud wrote: "The ego is first and foremost a bodily 
>ego; it is not merely a surface entity, but is itself the projection of a 
>surface." Extending this formulation, I argue that just as the ego uses the 
>body as a battlefield upon which to play out, displace, and project dangers 
>and wishes too great to incorporate into itself, the ego likewise uses society 
>and nature as a surface upon which to project and represent itself. In Life 
>against Death, Norman O. Brown wrote that "Human culture is a set of 
>projections of the repressed unconscious. Like the transference, human culture 
>exists in order to project the infantile complexes onto concrete reality, 
>where they can be seen and mastered."
>We want as many people as possible to read this exciting, groundbreaking book. 
>Therefore, we are offering a free copy to college instructors if you will 
>simply ask your library to order a copy. Please respond to this email—write to 
>[email protected]—providing your name and the name of your 
>college or university. We will send you a free electronic copy of the entire 
>book (identical to the physical copy, including the front & back cover). 
>
>The Dream of Culture: Essays on Culture’s Elusiveness 
>
>Table of Contents  
>
>We want as many people as possible to read this exciting, groundbreaking book. 
>Therefore, we are offering a free copy to college instructors if you will 
>simply ask your library to order a copy. Please respond to this email—write to 
>[email protected]—providing your name and the name of your 
>college or university. We will send you a free electronic copy of the entire 
>book (identical to the physical copy, including the front & back cover).      
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