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A very detailed analysis of the developments in rural Chinese society over a period of massive upheaval. Provides tremendous insight into the social mechanisms at play, and the interplay of contemporary political movements with the traditional power structures in rural China. For anyone interested in or involved in rural development in China, a drama which is still going on in the 21st century, a must read. Also recommended for anyone interested in the interactions between policy-directed, centrally planned development and the way society responds to it.
Would like to see a similar follow up on the years between the cultural revolution and the present.
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For actor/director and therapist Paul Rebillot, author of "The Call to Adventure," Campbell's work provides a context that he uses to create a ritual structure designed to bring the archetypal hero story into direct contact with here-and-now experience. Propelled by a period of intense personal crisis in the late '60s when he lost touch with ordinary reality, Rebillot discovered firsthand the demons one must face in the quest for wholeness and integration. He is convinced that it is the lack of meaningful rituals of transition and initiation that creates much of the spiritual emptiness of our acquisitive consumer society. In a world currently dominated by biochemical experts who give Prozac to record numbers of patients as part of an enormous medical bureaucracy, he has turned his fascination with the roots of theater, his training in Gestalt psychology, and 25 years as a group leader at Big Sur's Esalen Institute and in Europe into an experiential process that he calls "The Hero's Journey."
The book itself is a combination of Rebillot's story of his development of the process and clear instructions on how to use it. It has been designed as a guidebook either for an individual ritual of self-discoveryor use with a group. Readers of Herman Hesse's Steppenwolf may remember the Magic Theater visited by its protaganist; Rebillot's connected exercises can take a willing reader into an imaginal place as deep and vivid as that.And it's as much fun as you had as a child at play---though this game is one that's been told and played since the childhood of the human race!
Included are beautiful meditations for centering, grounding, and group-bonding as well as a wealth of insights from an artist and healer who has made transformation into a life's work.
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Give me a line and I will sell you my copy for half the price.
So give this merchandising book a try and see how you like it.
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The colour samples are restrictive because variation in luminosity or reflectance are not included. At the same time, however, the stimulus array is also very complex and the labelling task forces the informants to make judgements and choices which they rarely encounter in real life.
The research is unrealistic. How many Europeans would be willing - and able - to classify 350 (!) colour chips?
The colour research of Berlin and Kay (and their followers) is being conducted in "linguistic isolation"; that is, hardly any notice is taken of how colour terms are used by speakers and hearers in every-day interaction. Morphemic, syntactic, semantic (other than naming) or pragmatic issues are not dealt with.
With Berlin and Kay's system it is also easy to make the colours fit the thesis.
While Berlin and Kay's research has revived interest in the subject much effort has gone into defending a flawed theory. For a more frutiful approach see the section on colour terms in Wierzbicka, Anna (1996) Semantics: Primes and Universals. Oxford: Oxford UP.