by Etta D. Jackson ‧ RELEASE DATE: April 27, 2009
While the core concepts are provocative, labyrinthine explanations for connecting them keep the book from appealing to a...
Jackson (The Role of Consciousness in Governance, 2008, etc.) aims to illustrate the importance of recognizing and understanding the presence of women in a patriarchal society.
To explain humankind and woman and man’s places in the universe, Jackson investigates the connection between femininity and masculinity in relation to historical, biological, religious, and mathematical contexts. Among the eight chapters, questions relating to where man/woman has come from and where he/she is going are answered by lifting the curtain of stigma that has traditionally veiled feminine philosophy. Jackson focuses on addressing the interdependent relationship between masculine and feminine and the duality of the two that runs the entirety of the universe. While the issues addressed are enticing, the argument-building concepts might only appeal to a specific, knowledgeable audience. Casual readers—potentially unfamiliar with finer points of the Bible, certain details of astrology, astronomy, Hermeticism, and a wide range of other occult and religious themes—may find themselves unable to follow many of the arguments being championed. For instance, when discussing the “etheric web”—“composed of etheric matter specific to the physical plane [and] a network that is penetrated and animated with fire or golden light”—Jackson introduces such terms as “Builders of Form,” then positions the web as “a counterpart to the nervous system and its ganglia of the human body” without any clear explanation of the juxtaposition. Multiple references are made to other books and theories, and while Jackson usually succeeds in explaining others’ ideas, attempts to combine them with her own views are often erratic and mystifying. The book is most lucid when Jackson explicitly lays out the seven aspects of the feminine, with each aspect listed out and clearly defined, then backed up with coherent historical justifications.
While the core concepts are provocative, labyrinthine explanations for connecting them keep the book from appealing to a wider audience.Pub Date: April 27, 2009
ISBN: 978-1438966816
Page Count: 256
Publisher: AuthorHouse
Review Posted Online: Jan. 30, 2015
Review Program: Kirkus Indie
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by Peter Goldman ‧ RELEASE DATE: Nov. 14, 1994
A fly-in-campaign-headquarters perspective on the last presidential race, written by Newsweek's special election team, several of whose members also worked on Quest for the Presidency 1988 (1989). A portion of this book appeared in a special issue of the magazine, published a day and a half after the last polls closed on November 3, 1992. No candidate is an FDR to his handlers—or so goes the handlers' refrain to Goldman and associates. Bill Clinton's days of whine and roses came in the primaries, as he erupted into rages over staffers' inability to focus attention on his agenda—though questions about his past were what distracted the media from the message of change. Ross Perot was astonished at the enthusiasm sparked by his hint that he would run for president—then unexpectedly indecisive about managing his wild-card challenge to the two-party system. George Bush was too consumed by foreign policy to notice the tremors beneath his once-solid poll standings and disheartened that the only way to retain his office would be through the partisan dustup that won him a first term (and stinging criticism). The beginning of this account offers the hope of a meaningful interpretation of the results, as the authors depict national disgust with deepening recession and with cynical, corrupt incumbents. Before long, however, they resort to horse-race journalism featuring media meisters who groan as their charges stumble from exhaustion. So accustomed are these spin doctors to their craft that now they use it to explain their own campaign roles, as witnessed in the 100-odd pages of strategy memos in the appendix. The Newsweek team has uncovered some sardonic vignettes, to be sure (e.g., callers asking for Jerry Brown's campaign manager were sometimes told that she was chanting at a staff meeting and could not be disturbed), but too often they follow political warriors like James Carville, James Baker, and Ed Rollins as they sulk in their tents. Instead of sounding the ``quiet national crisis'' that upended the old order, the authors have let puffed-up pols strut and fret during their hour upon the stage. (61 b&w photos, not seen)
Pub Date: Nov. 14, 1994
ISBN: 0-89096-644-3
Page Count: 800
Publisher: Texas A&M Univ.
Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Oct. 1, 1994
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More by Nicola Malatesta
BOOK REVIEW
by Peter Goldman with Nicola Malatesta
BOOK REVIEW
by Kathryn Allamong Jacob ‧ RELEASE DATE: Nov. 22, 1994
Jacob reveals that while Washington, D.C.'s cocktail- and dinner-party circuit has changed in its makeup over the last 200 years, its spirit remains the same. Jacob (assistant program director for publications at the National Historical Publications and Records Commission) focuses on three subsets of D.C.'s elite during the Gilded Age, as dubbed by Mark Twain: the Antiques (who later became known as the Cave- Dwellers), the Officials, and the Parvenus. Before the Civil War, the fine old Southern Antique families reigned in society. After the war, with Southern ways and means felled by Confederate defeat, war heroes, Bonanza Kings, and patent profiteers poured into the capital, and the Northern Republican officials who came to administer the restored Union set the social agenda. By the turn of the century, masses of new millionaires had streamed into Washington, which, because of its regular post-election population turnover, was known as the easiest American society to break into. The bankrolls and ballrooms of the nouveaux riches ruled the social pages of the newspapers. In each of the three eras, snubs, scandals, seasonal belles, and supermarriages fed the rumor mill. Interestingly, the First Ladies of the last century suffered some of the same travails as their 20th-century successors: Mary Todd Lincoln was criticized for her expensive clothing tastes, and Julia Grant was caught up in a gold speculation scandal. Despite such occasional juicy historical gossip, the book often resembles a who- was-who catalog. Ultimately, the social gaze Jacob casts upon D.C.'s well-born and well-to-do proves superficial, like a party- goer who describes the setting, the guest list, the seating, the menu, and a few snippets of overheard conversation without ever catching the double entendres. In describing social jockeying in pre-Beltway D.C., Jacob sacrifices incisiveness for comprehensiveness.
Pub Date: Nov. 22, 1994
ISBN: 1-56098-354-X
Page Count: 344
Publisher: N/A
Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Oct. 1, 1994
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