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Siddhartha (Version 2)

Audiobook

Siddhartha (Version 2)

Hermann Hesse

A major preoccupation of Hesse in writing Siddhartha was to cure his "sickness with life" (Lebenskrankheit) by immersing himself in Indian philosophy such as that expounded in the Upanishads and the Bhagavad Gita. The reason the second half of the book took so long to write was that Hesse "had not experienced that transcendental state of unity to which Siddhartha aspires. In an attempt to do so, Hesse lived as a virtual semi-recluse and became totally immersed in the sacred teachings of both Hindu and Buddhist scriptures. His intention was to attain to that 'completeness' which, in the novel, is the Buddha's badge of distinction." The novel is structured on three of the traditional stages of life for Hindu males (student (brahmacharin), householder (grihastha) and recluse/renunciate (vanaprastha)) as well as the Buddha's four noble truths (Part One) and eight-fold path (Part Two) which form twelve chapters, the number in the novel. Ralph Freedman mentions how Hesse commented in a letter "[my] Siddhartha does not, in the end, learn true wisdom from any teacher, but from a river that roars in a funny way and from a kindly old fool who always smiles and is secretly a saint." In a lecture about Siddhartha, Hesse claimed "Buddha's way to salvation has often been criticized and doubted, because it is thought to be wholly grounded in cognition. True, but it's not just intellectual cognition, not just learning and knowing, but spiritual experience that can be earned only through strict discipline in a selfless life". Freedman also points out how Siddhartha described Hesse's interior dialectic: "All of the contrasting poles of his life were sharply etched: the restless departures and the search for stillness at home; the diversity of experience and the harmony of a unifying spirit; the security of religious dogma and the anxiety of freedom." Eberhard Ostermann has shown how Hesse, while mixing the religious genre of the legend with that of the modern novel, seeks to reconcile with the double-edged effects of modernization such as individualization, pluralism or self-disciplining. - Summary by Wikipedia

Year of Publication: 1922Genres: Culture & Heritage Fiction
Running Time: 04 hours 32 minutes 06 seconds
#Chapter Name
1
The Nights
The Son of the Brahman
Peter Kuhn
19:40
2
The Nights
With the Samanas
Peter Kuhn
22:59
3
The Nights
Gotama
Peter Kuhn
21:21
4
The Nights
Awakening
Peter Kuhn
10:45
5
The Nights
Kamala
Peter Kuhn
32:09
6
The Nights
With the Childlike People
Peter Kuhn
20:05
7
The Nights
Sansara
Peter Kuhn
22:30
8
The Nights
By the River
Peter Kuhn
28:22
9
The Nights
The Ferryman
Peter Kuhn
28:58
10
The Nights
The Son
Peter Kuhn
21:14
11
The Nights
Om
Peter Kuhn
17:02
12
The Nights
Govinda
Peter Kuhn
27:01

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