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Readers of both genders and all generations will find timeless innocence and age-old wisdom in the scrawling, sprawling words of Sabrina Ward Harrison. The format here is a personal journal in which Harrison allows readers to be privy to her colorful pages of free-flowing collages, photographs, and wildly handwritten words. Harrison explores many of the typical questions, confusions, and insights that accompany the journey from adolescence to womanhood. At times her angst feels a tad clichéd ("I am afraid to show you who I really am, because if I show you who I really am, you might not like it--and that's all I got."), but her gutsy presentation and honesty make her words feel fresh and hard-earned, especially in passages such as this:
I think God leaves me alone to let me find my own strength because no one else can give it to me. Sometimes it is very lonely. But I know the lonely times teach me the most. I must let go in order to let anything in. No one can love me, for me. Take a big walk protected in the trees. I miss the time before today.
Harrison is a gifted writer with an inspiring amount of heart-on-her-sleeve honesty. She even has the maturity to quote two of the big Ws--Walt Whitman and Woody Allen--with equal panache. But more importantly, she earns her readers' trust and hearts. As a result, Harrison is a woman to watch and a writer to follow. --Gail Hudson
Book Description
"We are all facing choices that define us. No choice, however messy, is without importance in the overall picture of our lives. We all at our own age have to claim something, even if it is only our own confusion. I am in the middle of growing up and into myself. This book is my life in progress."
Spilling Open: The Art of Becoming Yourself is the creative expression of one young woman's attempt to understand herself as she grows into adulthood. Sabrina Ward Harrison shares her private journal and art, offering us lessons in life and empowerment that resonate with fresh, youthful wisdom.
Written when Harrison was between the ages of eighteen and twenty-one, Spilling Open captures the artist's journey of self-discovery with a powerful and courageous voice. This book is an intimate and moving picture of what it means to enter a contemporary adult world that is filled with contradictions about womanhood. Harrison reveals with tender honesty that, in spite of the women's movement, she has found more questions than answers about growing up female.
Harrison's writing and multimedia art explore questions about love, faith, growing pains, being true, peer groups, and identity. A truly unique experience, Spilling Open will help open your heart and your mind.
Customer Reviews:
spilling open.......2007-07-03
best book everywhere..i take it everywhere with me, its a wake up call to life i think/
This book changed my life........2006-10-04
I was given a copy of this book when I was twenty and it honestly changed my life. It made me realize that I wasn't alone in the thoughts, doubts, fears, and "aches of inadequacy" that I was going through. This book is an open heart spilled onto the page/canvas and any young woman going through life with any amount of uncertainty and lonliness will benefit tremendously from just being with this book.
Insightful and Thought Provoking.......2006-07-06
Sabrina Ward Harrison writes with intention, inspiring one to think and feel more deeply. Her work is creative, artistic, spiritual and intelligent. She writes-creates with a thoughtful balance. The only challenge is, at times, being able to read what she has written as it is overlaid on photography and collage.
Spilling Open: The Art of Becoming Yourself.......2006-03-04
A look inside the author through her journal. Beautiful color. Inspiring...
oh, the worries of thighs.......2006-02-22
Sabrina artistically articulates her own struggles as well as those of every woman (thighs, inadequacies, facades). She shows life for what it is: a combination of joys, fears, feelings, and struggles. And what came from it is beauty. Simple, touching, and real.
Book Description
The author reveals his passionate experiences with a female Tantric master who taught him the suppressed practices of her ancient order.
In 1968 Daniel Odier left Europe for the Himalayas, searching for a master who could help him go where texts and intellectual searching could no longer take him. He wanted everything: the wisdom and spirituality gained from the life of an ascetic and the beauty, love, and sensuality of a life of passion. He found both in Shivaic Tantrism, the secret spiritual path that seeks to transcend ego and rediscover the divine by embracing the passions. In an isolated Himalayan forest Odier met Devi, a great yogini who would take him on a mystical journey like none he had ever imagined. At times taking him beyond the limits of sexual experience, at times threatening him with destruction, she taught him what it is to truly be alive and to know the divine nature of absolute love.
This is the personal memoir of one of France's most honored writers.
Tantrism is the only ancient philosophy to survive all historical upheavals, invasions, and influences to reach us intact by uninterrupted transmission from master to disciple, and the only one to retain the image of the Great Goddess as the ultimate source of power.
Customer Reviews:
Great on Every Level.......2007-03-22
This book is a great read. It works as a story, as instruction, and as literature. Can't recommend it highly enough.
Deeper into life.......2006-08-18
It says a lot about the personal qualities of Daniel Odier that he was accepted by a skilful teacher from a true tradition of Tantra, and was also able to pursue the teaching, over years of practice, to its realization.
Mystical sex is certainly a part of this book -- Odier makes no secret of this interest as he begins his quest -- but as his learning continues, he and his search grow beyond it. The story is both fascinating and inspiring. When finally he is given his sexual initiation, he has abandoned the sexual quest, so that what he actually receives is an initiation into absolute love. Paradoxically, it is only at this point that he can truly enter the sexual experience -- and truly enter, as well, every other experience of human life.
Although some may wonder if it all really happened, the story rings true because it continually relates the struggle to overcome the ego. The absolute love of Odier's teacher allows her to place her willing but unsuspecting student, time after time, in exactly the situation which will push his ego to its limits. He must give up grabby goals, self-preservation and mental chatter each time. His ultimate reward is the awareness of this love: the great goal of the mystic, a union with all that exists. There are parallels with Buddhist meditation teachings, and the story also recalls certain words of the Bible, for example that perfect love casts out fear, or that we must lose the world in order to gain the Kingdom.
Through it all, the key is perfect awareness of the present moment, inner and outer. There is certainly sex in the book, including a wonderful (and discreet) description of a Tantric sex act which demystifies the subject for Westerners who have only had the works of non-initiates to read up to now. (Western students of tantra-sex who have attended workshops will recall learning to become more fully present to themselves and their partners.) Daniel Odier's story offers this and far more, not only sex but also the constant partners of sex: life, death and above all love.
I read the original French version, but the English translation is also very clear.
one man's spiritual Tantric quest.......2006-04-27
In this story of his personal spiritual quest to find a Tantric master, Odier, a young man, wanders through India where an unusual, sometimes disastrous, sequence of events leads him deep in the forest to yogini Lalita Devi. Over a period of months, Odier undergoes a series of trials, tests, and rituals of purification that culminate in a sacred sex initiation in which he experiences the awakening of the kundalini, and the joining of the divine forces of Shiva and Shakti.
A Gift of Liberation From a Master.......2001-11-15
That is what the essance of Tantra is. Daniel Odier writes about his search to find a Master to recieve this ancient and secretive teaching from. On the verge of giving up he retreats to a small village in India where, almost seemingly by accident, he finds a great Yogini Tantric Master, Devi, in the forest. She agrees to take him on as a student and so begins Daniel's immersion into a whole new way of experiencing the world.
The transmission of Tantric tradition is very personal. Devi puts Daniel through a variety of tests to strengthen the bond and trust between them. She warns him at the outset of this journey that doubts about himself, anger and even hatred of her could manifest during their work together. As Daniel progresses, and the master/student bond is solidified, Devi's teachings become more deep and subtle. The final part of his time spent with Devi involves his initiation into the Tantric ritual sex, the joining of Shiva and Shakti, causing the rising of the Kundalini(a sacred spiritual force that purifies the body for deeper spiritual attainment).
Daniel not only shares his experience of Devi and what she taught him, but tells how he came back to the 'real world' to use what he learned. Not always an easy task.
A fairly good book, a beautiful story of the student/master relationship, and it's not too wordy either. A basic knowlege of Hinduism is a real plus when reading this.
Excellent story and the teaching.......2000-11-09
Although I have been on my path of `enlightenment' for a very short time, I have had a chance to read through numerous publications (Power of Now, Tao Te Ching, Flow, Wisdom of Vedas) and other, I found this one to be a more realistic teaching. The answer to the eternal question of where to find happiness is answered for you on a very practical level, just like The Lost Gospel (as far as I heard). The difficult part is incorporating the teaching into your every day life that is if you really want to do that in the first place.
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In Quest Of The Absolute
Erich Franz ,
Peter Blum ,
Kasmir Malavich , and
Ad Reinhardt
Manufacturer: Peter Blum Edition
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Binding: Hardcover
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ASIN: 093587514X
Release Date: 1998-04-02 |
Book Description
Artwork by Kasmir Malavich, Ad Reinhardt. Text by Erich Franz, Peter Blum.
Book Description
Novel. "Balzac depicts more forcefully than anyone else ever has the way a whole life and a whole family can be destroyed when an individual is taken over by unbridled passion"-Gustave Lanson. In Balzac's classic study of obsession, a chance meeting changes Balthazar Claes' life as it introduces him to alchemy and initiates his quest of the absolute. Throughout, our sympathy is equally divided between Balthazar's single-minded determination to push back the frontiers of knowledge at whatever price, and the ruin of his family. THE QUEST OF THE ABSOLUTE was first published in France in 1834 and appears in a new edition from Dedalus, translated by Ellen Marriage and with an afterword and chronology by Christopher Smith.
Customer Reviews:
A Flamand portrait.......2007-03-03
A Flamand portrait of the ups and downs on a burgeois family whose head turns deranged about chemical research. The title is not about any moral or philosophical absolute but about the "absolute basic element" that will allow him to transform substances like the good old philosophical stone of the alchemists. Most of the book is about the wreckage that this guy puts on his family while ruining his family a couple times, but the other main characters , his wife, daughter, a pure gentle guy in love with his daughter and a cold and calculating notary public who's also interested in the daughter are quite original, live and real.
Exactly like Flamand paintings it is warm, soft, slow but charming.
On the down side Balzac, being an outsider to science, shows not to have a clear distinction in his mind between a scientist and a crackpot.
Philosophal Stone and psychology.......2002-01-13
You'll have to like slow-rated stories... but that one will seduce you! There's some fantastic in it, with the famous quest of the Philosophal Stone. And also many psychology, with the interaction of all those souls living together in a rich house in Belgium.
The first pages of that book are VERY important, explaining WHY Balzac just does not like to enter his novels "in medias res". Of course he takes his time to explain... So the reticent Balzac reader may understand better the writer. Not bad, eh?
Customer Reviews:
To Dream the Impossible Dream.......2007-08-11
Caleb Carr (a historian whose penetrating insight I have always admired) and James Chace deliver a fascinating analysis of the development American foreign policy, and offer a compelling explanation for the abandonment of the principles expounded in Washington's Farewell Address.
They postulate that events in the oft-forgotten War of 1812 with Great Britain, a mere 16 years after Washington's retirement, so wounded the psyche of infant republic that it caused a shift from the "great rule of conduct...when we will take such an attitude as will cause the neutrality we may at any time resolve upon to be scrupulously respected" to what in modern times we call "Projection of Force."
The traumatic event? When a contingent of Royal Marines landed, razed Washington DC, sent the President and other officers scurrying off into the night, while the US military ... did nothing in particular. This, needless to say, freaked the country out. Carr and Chace see this as a "Tipping Point," and in scholarly fashion go on to chronicle the history of the United States through its conflicts with Mexico and Spain in the 19th century.
It, of course, doesn't stop there. They show how we continued throughout the 20th century to, against the warnings of Washington, "forego the advantages of so peculiar a situation [and] quit our own to stand upon foreign ground." How we "by interweaving our destiny [and] entangl[ing] our peace and prosperity in the toils of European ambition, rivalship, interest, humour, [and] caprice" find ourselves -- well, where we are today -- chasing windmills in the quest for absolute security.
It is amazing how two Georges can be so different. Read it.
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Quest for the Absolute: The Philosophical Vision of Joseph Marechal
Anthony M. Matteo
Manufacturer: Northern Illinois Univ Pr
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover
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ASIN: 087580165X |
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The Alkahest, the Quest of the Absolute
Honore de Balzac
Manufacturer: Dodo Press
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ASIN: 1406505838 |
Book Description
"'From this unimpeachable experiment,' he cried, 'I deduce the existence of the Alkahest, the Absolute,--a substance common to all created things, differentiated by one primary force. Such is the net meaning and position of the problem of the Absolute, which appears to me to be solvable. In it we find the mysterious Ternary, before whose shrine humanity has knelt from the dawn of ages.
Download Description
There is a house at Douai in the rue de Paris, whose aspect, interior arrangements, and details have preserved, to a greater degree than those of other domiciles, the characteristics of the old Flemish buildings, so naively adapted to the patriarchal manners and customs of that excellent land. Before describing this house it may be well, in the interest of other writers, to explain the necessity for such didactic preliminaries, - since they have roused a protest from certain ignorant and voracious readers who want emotions without undergoing the generating process, the flower without the seed, the child without gestation. Is Art supposed to have higher powers than Nature?
The events of human existence, whether public or private, are so closely allied to architecture that the majority of observers can reconstruct nations and individuals, in their habits and ways of life, from the remains of public monuments or the relics of a home. Archaeology is to social nature what comparative anatomy is to organized nature. A mosaic tells the tale of a society, as the skeleton of an ichthyosaurus opens up a creative epoch. All things are linked together, and all are therefore deducible. Causes suggest effects, effects lead back to causes. Science resuscitates even the warts of the past ages.
Book Description
The present work also contains the stories entitled: Commission in Lunacy; Unknown Masterpiece; Christ in Flanders; Melmoth Reconciled; The Red House; and The Atheist's Mass. Illustrated. Honore de Balzac was considered the greatest novelist of France and was the founder of the realistic novel. His novels sought to demonstrate the molding effect of social environment on the raw material of human personality. His novels have more than 2,000 characters from all phases of contemporary life.
Customer Reviews:
Excellent Anthology.......2005-12-20
Balzac guided European fiction away from the overriding influence of Walter Scott and the Gothic school, by showing that modern life could be recounted as vividly as Scott recounted his historical tales, and that mystery and intrigue did not need ghosts and crumbling castles for props. Maupassant, Flaubert and Zola were writers of the next generation who were directly influenced by him, and Marcel Proust (that other weaver of a great tapestry) acknowledged his influence.
He is worth reading for pleasure as well as for his influence on European literature.
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Heathcliff in Concert
George Gately
Manufacturer: Ace Books
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
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ASIN: 0441322077 |
Book Description
A compilation of hilarious essays that confront the road to midlife.
Customer Reviews:
Get ready to laugh!!!.......2006-05-12
Lee is one of the funniest people I know. I mean it when I say get ready to laugh.
This is an absolute humor classic!.......2005-01-07
Every one in awhile I find a book that far exceeds my expectations and becomes a personal favorite. When I was stocking up for reading material to take on vacation, one of the books I picked up was Falling Flesh Just Ahead And Other Signs On The Road Towards Midlife by Lee Potts. It was sitting there with a number of other paperbacks, the title looked funny, and some of the chapters looked amusing upon a quick glance. Little did I know how much I'd like this book...
You know you're into a good one when you start laughing out loud during the introduction. When the wife asks "what's so funny?" by page 2, it's a sure-fire hit. Lee Potts, a woman examining her move into "middle age", wrote this back in 1998. She's probably best compared to someone like Dave Barry without being so outlandish. Her writing style is laugh-out-loud funny, and everyone (male OR female) will be able to either relate or understand her observations. Reading her thoughts about her doctor palpitating her breasts during an exam ("This is the true definition of getting old, having to pay a man to feel my breasts") or reliving her attempt to shape up (gaining a gap between her thighs, only to find out her butt had sagged and now showed through) had me wishing the book would go on for 300 pages instead of the mere 165 it has. Unfortunately I can't see that she's written anything else. Too bad, as I'd be lining up to read it.
This may be the first book that both my wife and I have read and enjoyed equally. It's probably the funniest book I've read in the past year or so.
Absolutely the funniest book I've ever read!.......1999-07-26
Lee's Falling Flesh Just Ahead is the funniest book I've ever read. Her humor makes you realize that it's okay to laugh at yourself and not take yourself too seriously. I bought seven additional copies, after reading mine, to give to friends. They all loved it! In this competitive world, women can place themselves under more pressure than ever before. At the same time, we have these strange things going on in our bodies. We can easily forget that there may be a very simple explanation. Instead, we become paranoid, and more stressed out. Lee Potts helps put things back into their proper perspective. One should read this book every six months, at least, just to remind ourselves that it's okay to laugh!
made me laugh out loud!!!.......1998-11-18
This book was right on - with exact details of the FUN of being a baby boomer that is close to 40. I laughed out loud at many of the comparasions. I love it!!
Without a doubt, the funniest book I have ever read!.......1998-05-05
The only disappointment to be found in Falling Flesh Ahead is reaching the last page. I did not want it to end! Lee Potts has apparently remained completely undetected as she lurked in my bedroom, bathroom, and within many of my social encounters. I laughed so hard I had tears streaming down my face and my husband refused to remain in the room with me. This is an absolute MUST READ and I have already ordered 7 more to give as gifts. I am ten years older than the author, but found her book to be insightful, wildly funny, and refreshing. I read it at one sitting on Sunday night, and I am still chuckling. What a picker upper! Please, Ms. Potts, MORE - SOON!
Customer Reviews:
Simply Amazing Hendrix Tribute !!!.......2007-03-16
i feel compelled to add my endorsement of this truly beauty-full tribute to Jimi Hendrix's artistry as the other reviews do not emphasize enough how wonder-full the CD of Jimi's home recordings are... as beauty-full as the book's cover & contents are to the eye- it is the CD that leaves me in awe of Jimi Hendrix as a creative composer !!! the simple, naked portrait of a genius at work creating the foundations of some of his finest music & poetry is tremendously educational as well as inspiringly wonder-full for any other guitarist & songwriter to listen to as well as experience... it reminds any admiring artist how much simple, hard work is involved in the labore of Love that is the basis a genius's legacy... one is able to observe the creative process of Hendrix's genius as you can hear him attempting to evolve his creations before going into the studio to extrapolate them into "Electric Church" anthems... it is simply amazing to experience Jimi so nakedly raw & working soul-lovingly on music that would later become his legend !!! i love the artwork in the book & i adore the book's cover portrait BUT it is the CD that makes this exquisite package "essentially vital" to anyone who truly adores this genius's exceptional talents & treasures... "Fly On, My Sweet Angel"
Jimi Hendrix and Bill Sienkiewicz .......2004-11-06
...are a great match. The paint is everywhere. It goes out in every direction, it folds back in on itself, it darts from realism to quick cartoon. It's alive and insane. It is, of course, everything you'd expect from Bill. I should have been LISTENING to Hendrix while reading it, but I didn't have to. It was in the painting.
Not to mention the text. Martin Green chronicles the major events of Jimi's life, to the detail of which order the songs came, where were the major concert appearances, what was Jimi trying to accomplish with each album. For me, not being that familiar with the facts, but loving the songs, it was really interesting. You empathize with Jimi. He may have been a rock god, but you get the sense that his short life was never particularly easy.
As insanely abstract as Sinz. can get, the likeness he nails of Jimi is uncanny. It's obvious the artist really enjoyed painting him. There's about 1,000 beautiful paintings of Hendrix in this book. Some realistic, some hallucinogenic, some celebratory, and some sad.
Rarely is this kind of comment said about a book...but the typesetting is great. Many comics don't even experiment with the lettering, it's just functional. But reality is, that it's too big a part of the experience to not inject some art into it. That's why movies spend millions on sound. Anyway, in this book, the lettering's just really intelligent. Hats off to letterer Bobbi Bongard with (I would imagine) much help from Sienkiewicz.
One last touch I really like is the use of Hendrix's lyrics to accent the story. Every few pages, a scene from Jimi's life is accompanied by song lyrics. Often these were lyrics I was familiar with (Bold As Love, Freedom, Foxy Lady, Angel), but they're in a whole new light when set against the major events in his life. I can only suppose that Martin Green "guessed" at what many of the connections between Jimi's lyrics and his experiences, but I quite sure he often guessed right.
A great read. I look forward to reading it again. This would be a great gift for someone who might not read a lot of comics, but loves rock. In another few passes, it may be my favorite work by Bill.
Comics are for the Sunday Paper, not Jimi Hendrix.......2003-03-27
This one left me a bit short. I actually saw Jimi Hendrix perform at the Cafe Wa in Greenwich Village, NY. Also saw his 1968 Experience concerts in Hartford at the Bushnell Memorial concert hall and outdoors at the Hollywood Bowl, Hollywood, CA and he was amazing! This comic depiction is not completely accurate and since I was there it does not hit home for me since the information is off and not overly complete. Nice try, collectable, but not for the purist Hendrix fan. The CD which comes inside rear cover is a nice touch and bonus almost worth the price of the book. I even found a mint copy of this book missing the CD, pouch there unopened, but missing the CD in error!
Bill Sienkiewicz at his best.......2002-08-03
Even if comics are not your thing, the art of Bill Sienkiewicz should win you over to buy this book. About 140 pages of fully painted and truly outstanding art, make this book a landmark even in Sienkiewicz' oeuvre. It is a special delight to see him experimenting with mixed media and the computer and break out of the traditional constraints of the comics medium.
As far as the quality of the biographical facts is concerned, let's suffice to say that a more than fair amount of research has been done, but that the presentation of the material is pretty biased. Of course Hendrix was always a saintly and lovable guy. He never had a serious drugs problem and when he was busted for drugs possession he was obviously framed. What did him in finally were certainly not his drug habits but the Big Bad Suits of the record companies and his fiendish Agent, who conspired to impose an inhuman touring scheme on the poor artist, who finally died of sheer exhaustion (helped along maybe by a sleeping pill or two...). You get the picture...
where is it?.......2002-02-11
Well i would if it was ever delivered to me but is has not yet been and it was ordered about 3 weeks ago
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Dev. of Audiovisual Landscape
University of Luton
Manufacturer: University of Luton Press
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover
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ASIN: 1860205275 |
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- I meant 5 stars Capitalism versus workers white, workers Black, immigrants too
- A brilliant look at racial division of labor in America
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American Work: Four Centuries of Black and White Labor
Jacqueline Jones
Manufacturer: W. W. Norton & Company, Inc.
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
Workplace
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ASIN: 0393318338 |
Book Description
This is history at its best-the epic, often tragic story of success and failure on the uneven playing fields of American labor, rooted in painstaking research and passionately alive to its present-day implications for a just society. Jacqueline Jones shows unmistakably how nearly every significant social transformation in American history (from bound to free labor, from farm work to factory work, from a blue-collar to a white-collar economy) rolled back the hard-won advances of those African Americans who had managed to gain footholds in various jobs and industries. This is a story not of simple ideological "racism" but of politics and economics interacting to determine what kind of work was "suitable" for which groups. Here is a "useful and sobering" (Kirkus Reviews) account of why the connection between success and the work ethic was severed long ago for a substantial number of Americans. American Work goes far beyond the easy sloganeering of the current debates on affirmative action and welfare versus workfare to inform those debates with rich historical context and compelling insight.
Customer Reviews:
I meant 5 stars Capitalism versus workers white, workers Black, immigrants too.......2007-02-02
This is a history of working people in American. While it focuses on on Black/white racism has been used, it provides important information about the conditions of all working people since the earliest days of settlement. I found Jones' discussion of attempts to exploit Native Americans as slaves and indentured servants to be particularly illuminated. Jones also talks about the extensive systems of limiting the freedom of working people through contracts of indenture, peonage, and other forms that limited freedom of whites and black as well, as the continued manipulation of the image of what labor Blacks could accomplish to divide workers and deepen the exploitation of all.
While I believe Jones' strength is her discussion of the colonial period and the AnteBellum North, her discussion of the selective urbanization and industrialization of African Americans since World War II is outstanding. She shows how the system of defacto segregation and continued discrimination is the based for African American poverty today.
Most interestingly, she discusses the similarlity between the ways that current immigrants, with and without papers, are oppressed and colonial systems of binding labor.
From this well-documented history, you understand that throughout its history, Capitalism in America has never allowed any real freedom to workers that wasn't taken in struggle, and how crucial racism is to both the past and present of this country.
A brilliant look at racial division of labor in America.......1999-10-13
BEST BOOK ever written, in my experienced opinion. All people craving info. on racial divisions(and aren't we all?) should pick up this classic text. It ingeniously describes the evolution of the working classes in America. And who said work was BORING? Not this kind. This would make the perfect gift for your grandmother, but more importantly, for yourself. A riveting journey into the soul, not to be missed by any history buff. American Work is true to its name, it was written by an American, cause shes gotta work.
Books:
- Step-by-Step Knifemaking: You Can Do It!
- Strapless
- Street Art: The Spray Files
- Strong Arts, Strong Schools: The Promising Potential and Shortsighted Disregard of the Arts in American Schooling
- The Alchemy of MirrorMask
- The Art of 3-D Computer Animation and Effects, Third Edition
- The Art of Amazement
- The Art of Fashion Draping
- The Art of Reading: Forty Illustrators Celebrate RIF's 40th Anniversary
- The Art of Shen Ku: The Ultimate Traveler's Guide : The First Intergalactic Artform of the Entire Universe
Books Index
Books Home
Recommended Books
- The Killing Zone: How & Why Pilots Die
- The Lord of the Rings Online: Shadows of Angmar
- Symbiosis: Mechanisms and Model Systems
- Slaughterhouse-Five
- The Portrait in Clay
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- The King Ranch Quarter Horses, and Something of the Ranch and the Men That Bred Them: And Something
- The Comics: Before 1945
- The Bathroom, the Kitchen, and the Aesthetics of Waste
- The House in Amalfi