By the late 60s, the youth culture had discovered that some answers and nourishment could be obtained from an eclectic mixture of the world's religious traditions - leading to some new hungers and questions to contemplate, of course. American and European kids brought up as Protestants and Catholics developed a fascination with Buddhism and Vedantic practices, along with ancient shamanic wisdom and pagan lore. They then blended this exotica with Jesus and other favored heroes retained from the Christian catechism, such as St. Francis of Assisi. The result was a tossed salad of spirituality, which could be sampled and nibbled as needed, in a sort of do-it-yourself approach to individualized religious syncretism.
Book List #2 - Spiritual Awakening
These are just a few of the books which influenced and guided hippy explorations of the soul and spirit.
by Ram Dass (Richard Alpert)
1971
This is the ultimate hippy guidebook. Starting with Dr. Alpert's autobiographical transformation from psychologist into a devotee of yoga and meditation, this unusual book also includes an assemblage of quotable quotes of wisdom, instructions for breathing techniques and yoga postures, and a wonderful bibliography that is probably responsible for the awkward similarity of so many hippy libraries.
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The Sacred Pipeby Black Elk
1953

A generation raised on Hollywood Westerns questioned the cowboy and Indian polarity, and soon embraced the Native American cause. Hippies often consulted this little book to keep it real. Black Elk was an Oglala Lakota medicine man. He was also a performer in Buffalo Bill's Wild West show throughout Europe in 1887, he fought at the battle of Wounded Knee in 1890, and he was a Catholic school teacher in the 1900s. His semi-autobiographical book Black Elk Speaks was published in 1932. He became known for expounding the symbolic purpose and meaning of traditional Sioux ritual, along with his own visions and prophecies. This much slimmer volume, The Sacred Pipe, explains how and why to perform the most sacred of these rites and prayers.
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Zen in the Art of Archery
by Eugen Herrigel
1948

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Autobiography of a Yogi
by Paramahansa Yogananda
1946

Even when regarded crassly as a mere marketing gimmick, this book was a miracle worker. Decent hard-working Christian folk regarded Hinduism with suspicion and disdain, equating it with snake charmers and devil worshippers. When along came this mild-mannered, long haired guru, packing lecture halls across America with his infectious love of God, and his advice about how to experience that love more fully. Yogananda was a hit sensation with the novelty seeking public. The lecture tour was soon followed by publication of this book, which details Yogananda's youthful yearnings and plucky pilgrimages, complete with some mystical miracles. Suddenly the whole Western world had a friendly handle on the holy teachings of India, and the ancient legacy of Brahmanic Hinduism gained a bit of acceptance. After George Harrison read this book in 1966, it inspired The Beatles to take their 1968 trip to Rishikesh, India. As a result, every hippy had to read it - and with a miraculous resurgence, book sales skyrocketed.
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Meetings with Remarkable Men
by G. I. Gurdjieff
(English edition) 1963
Gurdjieff's teachings are notoriously tough to adhere to, and his writings have a

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The Way of Zen
by Alan Watts
1957

Alan Watts was the consummate explainer of Eastern philosophies to Western readers. With a prolific number of books to his credit, he expressed his thorough scholarship - on everything from ancient Chinese divination to the meaning of Easter Sunday - in terms that ordinary lay people could understand. This book outlines the historical background of Zen Buddhism, describes how it is practiced, and discusses its relevance and meaning in the modern world. It is thought that this book was partly responsible for the Buddhist underpinnings of Jack Kerouac's 1958 travelogue, The Dharma Bums. And indeed Alan Watts himself makes an appearance in that novel as the character Arthur Whane. A typical hippy collection might include half a dozen different Alan Watts books. But at least one of them was inevitably The Way of Zen.