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WAR AND PEACE IN THE GLOBAL VILLAGE

Actually, Mr. McLuhan is quite old-fashioned. He comes on as a harbinger of the new—his message is that it is necessary to adjust to the idea of change—but in 1840 de Tocqueville had already recognized that change was the primary constant of American life. In this book, McLuhan, a great synthesizer of intellectual data, uses the metaphor of war to explain the effects of technology (i.e., innovation, or change). From such simple truisms as "All human progress is a result of standing on the shoulders of our predecessors," he proceeds to the more sensational notion that "Every new technology necessitates a new war. . . . War is an accelerated program of education—compulsory education for the other party." On the other hand, he points out, as the leaders of both sides intensively study the habits, resources, and psychology of the enemy, "today war, as it were, has become the little red schoolhouse of the global village." Similarly, he sees "education as war" and "clothing as war"—the latter, particularly, is "an anti-environmental gesture." All of which is not greatly instructive to the reader, except perhaps as a rich but incoherent reading list (citations range from B. F. Skinner to the I. Ching, and Finnegans Wake, quoted liberally in the margins, is used as the leitmotif). Visually, the book is less interesting than The Medium is the Massage—Fiore uses the same conglomeration of graphic source material, but the arrangement is less inspired, and a trompe l'oeil is rarely as effective the second (or is it the third?) time round.

Pub Date: Sept. 3, 1968

ISBN: 1584230746

Page Count: 192

Publisher: McGraw-Hill

Review Posted Online: May 21, 2012

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Sept. 1, 1968

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A MARGINAL JEW

VOL. II: RETHINKING THE HISTORICAL JESUS: MENTOR, MESSAGE, AND MIRACLES

This second volume of Meier's magisterial attempt to create a ``consensus document'' about the historical Jesus on which scholars of all faiths could agree makes some tantalizing assertions about Jesus' public ministry. Meier (New Testament Studies/Catholic Univ.) divides this successor to Volume One (subtitled The Roots of the Problem and the Person, 1991) into three parts: an examination of the pervasive effect on Jesus of the life and career of John the Baptist, whom Meier calls Jesus' ``mentor''; an analysis of the centrality to Jesus' message of the concept of the ``kingdom of God''; and an extended discussion of the historicity of Gospel accounts of Jesus' miracles, healings, and exorcisms. Meier uses John the Baptist's career as his starting point, asserting that Jesus not only accepted baptism from the charismatic preacher at the outset of his public ministry, but he also adopted John's themes of the imminent judgment of sinners and the need for reform and repentance as integral parts of his own message. Unlike John, however, Jesus emphasized the coming of the kingdom of God, which he represented as both an approaching eschatological event and, in a mystical way, as being present in the actions, beliefs, and fellowship of the community of believers: ``The kingdom of God is in your midst'' (Luke 17:21). Meier argues that Jesus' preaching of the heavenly kingdom was most manifest in his miraculous works, which Meier inventories in painstaking detail, dividing them into exorcisms, healings, raising of the dead, and ``nature'' miracles, such as walking on water and cursing the fruitless fig tree and causing it to wither. The author concludes that the power of Jesus' message arose from his actual historical fame as a miracle worker as well as from his moral teachings. Scholarly, carefully reasoned, and lucidly written, Meier's portrait of Jesus as a fiery, wonder-working prophet rather than the gentle teacher of Christian tradition may continue the controversy (with believers and nonbelievers alike) initiated in Volume One.

Pub Date: Nov. 1, 1994

ISBN: 0-385-46992-6

Page Count: 1055

Publisher: Doubleday

Review Posted Online: June 24, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Sept. 15, 1994

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THE REBEL JOB

A short, obscure poem very relevant to the chaotic 21st century.

A historian of the ancient Mediterranean world exhumes a controversial poem from the story of Job to help reconcile God’s existence with global calamity.

A retired professor emboldened with age and stirred to action by recent natural disasters, Fisher translated and wrote this work to underscore the importance of dealing with suffering without resorting to fantasy. Because suffer Job did. Recall that the pious man had it all–seven sons, three daughters, a loving wife and his health, not to mention tens of thousands of livestock. Egged on by Satan, who questioned Job’s piety, God took it all away. Framed by Job’s debate with three God-fearing friends, The Rebel Job finds Job in the nadir of his despair, ranting against his very birth, the injustice of his situation and the notion of a just God. This is the second of what Fisher refers to as the two books of Job–Job I and Job II. Embraced by orthodox religious leaders and conservative politicians, the author argues, Job I advances the idea of a just God who rewards good and punishes evil. The latter rages against the concept of divine justice. Unlike the Old Testament Book of Job, this poem does not conclude with God overcompensating Job for his losses and granting him a 140-year lifespan. On the contrary–Fisher’s Job ends on a suitably agnostic note with the protagonist asking, “Who can know the thunder of his might?” The author points out that while we may not fully understand the nature of God, we must love and help the powerless. Thankfully, Fisher pads the 30-page poem with relevant philosophical references–to Nietzsche’s death of God concept, 20th-century works of Joseph Roth and Archibald MacLeish and a keen anecdote of how famous Holocaust survivor Elie Wiesel decried God’s incapacity to stop Nazi death camps. It’s these keen references that make the book much more relevant and contemporary than it would have been on its own.

A short, obscure poem very relevant to the chaotic 21st century.

Pub Date: June 5, 2006

ISBN: 978-1-4257-1496-3

Page Count: -

Publisher: N/A

Review Posted Online: May 23, 2010

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