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3 Reviews
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5.0 out of 5 stars
A life-changing book from two great thinkers,
By Kile (Atlanta, Georgia) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Projecting the Shadow: The Cyborg Hero in American Film (New Practices of Inquiry) (Paperback)
I had the pleasure of reading this book several years back and of working closely with Drs. Rushing and Frentz. The ideas in their book have continued to influence me personally and professionally even in my field of clinical psychology. If you have interests in spirituality, postmodernism, technology, and/or Jung, or if you simply love science fiction, you will undoubtedly be pleased by the depth of analysis provided by Rushing and Frentz in Projecting the Shadow.
4.0 out of 5 stars
Projecting the Shadow: The Cyborg Hero in American Film,
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This review is from: Projecting the Shadow: The Cyborg Hero in American Film (New Practices of Inquiry) (Paperback)
I used some of this book for a subject I was doing at university. It was very useful and I found it easy to understand in its application of a Jungian perspective on the films discussed.
5.0 out of 5 stars
More here than immediately meets the eye.....,
By Just a guy in Oregon (Portland, Oregon) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Projecting the Shadow: The Cyborg Hero in American Film (New Practices of Inquiry) (Paperback)
This book can be read and enjoyed on the surface for what it is.....analysis of archetypes of human experience as expressed in the dominant method of 'storytelling' in our present culture-the motion picture.
It's entertaining at that and I recommend it. It can also be considered, IMO, as a condensed worldview and deep commentary of the deficiencies in our present culture. This is especially true in the case of our weak or nonexistent male rites of passage. Hey, I could be wrong, but I literally felt the lament of the authors that we have given up so much in order to have our present technological culture. Many times in my life I have also lamented not having a village, wise older men to guide me, and stability from generation to generation. Yah, I looked up at the moon in July '69 and listened on my transistor radio to Neil speaking from the surface.....but we gave up more than most people could ever imagine for these stunts. We gave up our basic humanity. We are not technological beings. We are human beings. Our technology separates us from our humanity. I think the authors sense this. I haven't the academic background to really understand or "grok" this book. My only criticism is that is presupposes knowledge that many readers , myself included, simply don't have. Mildly well educated I'd have to admit that I don't know what "postmodern" and similar terms mean. The academic jargon is not oppressive, actually kind of quaint and interesting, but detracts for the average reader. And....what will all these words man in a few more decades? I wish I had not learned of the existence of this book in the obituary of one of the authors in my quarterly university magazine. I think much more and even better would have grown from her mind, extraordinary sensitivity, and off the scale but humble intellect which I still remember back over the gulf of almost forty years. You did good Janice. I just wish you'd had time to do more. I am glad I read this book and recommend it. By golly time flies. |
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Projecting the Shadow: The Cyborg Hero in American Film (New Practices of Inquiry) by Janice Hocker Rushing (Paperback - December 1, 1995)
$27.50
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