Bibliography of Swami Vivekananda
A comprehensive list of published works by Swami Vivekananda, the influential Hindu monk who introduced Vedanta and Yoga to the West. His writings and speeches form a foundational body of work for understanding his philosophical and spiritual teachings.
Where the word comes from
"Bibliography" originates from the Greek words "biblion" (book) and "graphein" (to write). The term refers to a list of books or writings, a concept that predates its formalization as a scholarly discipline. Swami Vivekananda's works, though primarily sermons and lectures, constitute a significant literary and philosophical corpus.
In depth
Swami Vivekananda (1863–1902) was an Indian Hindu monk and a key figure in the introduction of Indian philosophies of Vedanta and Yoga to the western world. He was one of the most influential philosophers and social reformers in his contemporary India and the most successful and influential missionaries of Vedanta to the Western world. Indian Nobel laureate poet Rabindranath Tagore's suggested to study the works of Vivekananda to understand India. He also told, in Vivekananda there was nothing negative...
How different paths see it
What it means today
To speak of a "Bibliography of Swami Vivekananda" is to point to a constellation of thought that blazed across continents at the cusp of modernity. It is not merely a catalog of published sermons and letters, but the very architecture of a spiritual bridge constructed between East and West. Vivekananda, a disciple of the enigmatic Sri Ramakrishna, possessed a rare gift for articulating the profound depths of Indian philosophy—Vedanta, Yoga—in language that resonated with the intellectual currents of the late 19th and early 20th centuries. His speeches, particularly those delivered at the Parliament of Religions in Chicago in 1893, were not just eloquent pronouncements; they were seismic shifts in global spiritual discourse, challenging Western assumptions about religion and spirituality.
Scholars like Mircea Eliade, in his explorations of shamanism and the eternal return, would recognize in Vivekananda's teachings a deep engagement with universal spiritual impulses, albeit framed within a specific Indic context. Carl Jung, whose work on archetypes and the collective unconscious sought to find common ground in diverse mythologies, would likely have found in Vivekananda’s emphasis on the divinity within each individual a powerful echo of his own insights into the Self. The compilation of his works, therefore, becomes more than an academic exercise; it is an invitation to engage with a mind that sought to harmonize diverse spiritual traditions, to find the underlying unity in the apparent multiplicity of human experience. His writings are a testament to the enduring relevance of ancient wisdom when presented with clarity, conviction, and a deep understanding of the human condition. They invite us to consider the potential for profound transformation that lies dormant within, awaiting the spark of awakened consciousness.
RELATED_TERMS: Vedanta, Yoga, Advaita Vedanta, Ramakrishna, Parliament of Religions, Hindu philosophy, Indian spirituality
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