Charles Upton (poet) explained

Birth Date:13 December 1948
Occupation:Poet, writer, and esotericist

Charles Upton (born December 13, 1948) is an American poet and esotericist.

Life

Born in San Francisco, Charles Upton grew up in Marin County, California. He attended Catholic schools. He attended UC Davis for four days, but left as the Counterculture was more interesting to him.

Career

In San Francisco, Upton met the poet Lew Welch, who became his mentor. Welch helped him publish his first two volumes of poetry, Panic Grass and Time Raid with City Lights when he was 19 years old. Although he is much younger than most of the Beat poets, scholars still count him among their number because of these first two volumes of poetry.[1]

After his first two volumes of poems were published, Upton became involved with the Sanctuary Movement for Central American refugees. He produced and distributed a video, Through the Needle's Eye, containing testimonies of refugees.

In the late 1980s he was briefly involved with the "magical populism" of the New Age peace movement. He studied group dreamwork and dream networking.

Under his wife's influence, Upton became interested in the metaphysics of the Traditionalist or Perennialist School (the followers of Rene Guenon, Ananda Coomaraswamy and Frithjof Schuon). In 1988 he joined a traditional Sufi order. He continues to be identified with this Traditionalist school.

His papers are held at University of Connecticut.[2]

Activism

In 2013 Charles Upton conceived of The Covenants Initiative, based on the book The Covenants of the Prophet Muhammad with the Christians of the World by his colleague Dr. John Andrew Morrow. The Covenants Initiative urges Muslims to abide by the covenants concluded between Muhammad and the Christian communities of his time.[3] Upton and Morrow joined a panel at the seventh Parliament of the World's Religions at Toronto in November, 2018 to speak about the covenants and the initiative. Also in November, 2018, the covenants and the book The Covenants of the Prophet Muhammad with the Christians of the World were cited at length by the Supreme Court of Pakistan in their decision to acquit the Christian woman Asia Bibi on charges of blasphemy.[4] [5]

Marriage and family

Upton married fellow poet Jennifer Doane.[6] They lived in a house a block away from where Upton grew up in Marin County, California for many years. They currently live in Lexington, Kentucky.[7]

Reception

Reviewing The Virtues of the Prophet for the journal Philosophy East and West in January 2010, Muhammad Ahsen notes that Upton (who is a traditionalist) only makes passing reference to the modern era, which the author describes as a source of evil, whereas the reviewer suggests that given the example set by the Prophet Muhammad, the Muslim has nothing to fear about modernity.[8] The reviewer also queries Upton's "treatment of evil, with which the Commanding Self (Nafs Ammara) seems to be equated." The reviewer instead suggests that we might look upon the Commanding Self – our human impulses – as "ethically and religiously neutral", "by themselves neither good nor evil". The reviewer "admires Upton's love for the Prophet and understands his commitment to Sufism", but concludes that "a systematic and analytic treatment of this issue along with a classical approach to exegeses of Qur'anic verses would have greatly enhanced the scope of this work."

Going on to review Reflections of Tasawwuf, Ahsen concludes that "[the] book represents a popular trend nowadays in the understanding of Sufism and Islam, but it has to be said that it has little connection with orthodox Islam or with a careful philosophical analysis of either Islam or Sufism. Nonetheless, readers will find much to reflect on in the author's comments and poems, and his attractive style does manage to make the book palatable to read, albeit not so easy to analyze."

Writing about The Words of God to Prophet Muhammad, in the American Journal of Islam and Society in 2017, Shabbir A. Abbas is critical of the third and final part of the book which consists of commentaries on the preceding sayings (aḥādīth), by Upton (who is also a Sufi mystic).[9] He is of the opinion that "Although rather alluring, these commentaries prolong the work unnecessarily. When combined with the Arabic and Morrow’s translation, the text becomes rather long-winded," and that, the sayings being "rather lengthy and advisory in nature, not to mention self-explanatory, there is little need to try and derive any esoteric meaning for them."[10]

Reacting to Upton's YouTube video entitled "The Psychic and Spiritual Dangers of AI", Carlos Perona Calvete wrote in The European Conservative that "this video provides the most thorough understanding of AI and contemporary 'big data' crunching technology from a spiritual perspective I have encountered" and calling it "a delineation of relevant concepts so penetrating as to deserve canonical status in the analysis of, and resistance to, the denaturing developments of post-modern global civilization."

Works

Editor

Anthologies

Journal articles

See also

Notes

  1. News: Calvete . Carlos Perona . When A.I. Prompts Back . 10 May 2023 . European Conservative . April 14, 2023.
  2. Web site: Charles Upton Papers . . 16 November 2009 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20090801085905/http://doddcenter.uconn.edu/findaids/Upton/MSS20030017.html . August 1, 2009 . mdy .
  3. Web site: Covenants of the Prophet Muhammad Offered at the Parliament of the World's Religions . Morrow . Dr. John Andrew . https://web.archive.org/web/20221208222530/https://www.themuslimpost.com/covenants-of-the-prophet-muhammad-offered-at-the-parliament-of-the-worlds-religions/ . 8 December 2022 . live . The Muslim Post . November 12, 2018 . 11 May 2023 . en.
  4. Web site: Pakistan Frees Asia Bibi from Blasphemy Death Sentence. 31 October 2018. Christianity Today. en. 31 October 2018. Asif . Aqeel . https://web.archive.org/web/20230205072332/https://www.christianitytoday.com/news/2018/october/asia-bibi-free-pakistan-blasphemy-death-supreme-court.html . 5 February 2023 . live .
  5. Web site: Covenantal Theology: Can Muhammad's Ancient Promise Inspire Muslim-Christian Peace Today? . 21 December 2018 . . en. 31 October 2018 . Jayson . Casper . https://web.archive.org/web/20220617071124/https://www.christianitytoday.com/news/2018/december/asia-bibi-muhammad-covenant-christians-pakistan-court.html . 17 June 2022 . live .
  6. Web site: Teachers and Contributors . November 16, 2009 . https://web.archive.org/web/20080821133344/http://seriousseekers.com/Teachers%20and%20Contributors/teachers_priority_1_traditionalandfriends/teachers_contributors_Upton_c.htm . August 21, 2008 . dead . mdy-all .
  7. Web site: Shadow of the Rose the Esoterism of the Romantic Tradition, Charles Upton, Jennifer - Sophia Perennis Books - . 2009-11-16 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20100524082201/http://www.sophiaperennis.com/shop/perennis/21.html . May 24, 2010 . mdy .
  8. Ahsen . Muhammad . January 2010 . Review of The Virtues of the Prophet: A Young Muslim's Guide to the Greater Jihad: The War against the Passions, by Charles Upton; and of Reflections of Tasawwuf: Essays, Poems and Narratives on Sufi Themes, by Charles Upton . . 60 . 1 . 133–135 . 10.1353/pew.0.0083 . 40469172 . 143974619 . 10 May 2023.
  9. Abbas . Shabbir A. . 2017 . The Words of God to Prophet Muhammad . American Journal of Islam and Society . 34 . 2 . 102–104 . . PDF download . 11 May 2023 . 10.35632/ajis.v34i2.780 . https://web.archive.org/web/20230511100432/https://www.ajis.org/index.php/ajiss/article/download/780/111/955 . 11 May 2023 . live. free .
  10. For more information about taʾwīl, a symbolic and allegorical form of interpretation of the "deeper" or "hidden" meanings of the Quran and the hadiths (sayings) attributed to the Islamic prophet Muhammad, see: Sookhdeo . Patrick . Winter 2006 . Issues of Interpreting the Koran and Hadith . Connections . . 5 . 3 . 57–81 . 10.11610/Connections.05.3.06 . 26323255 . free .
  11. Upton . Charles . 2009 . Homer, Poet of Maya . Eye of the Heart . 4 . 87–96 . . 11 May 2023 . https://web.archive.org/web/20220329090434/https://www.latrobe.edu.au/humanities/huss-documents/Eye-of-the-Heart-issue4-2009.pdf . 29 March 2022 . live.

External links