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Quintessence...Realizing the Archaic Future
 
 
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Quintessence...Realizing the Archaic Future [Paperback]

Mary Daly (Author)
2.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)

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Book Description

October 5, 1999
A Radical Elemental Feminist Manifesto

A new book from "an extraordinary woman and . . . the foremost feminist theoretician in the U.S." (The New York Times).

"Suffused with her inimitable word play and stunning intelligence, and embodying a balance of mysticism and critical theory, Daly's clarion call to uncover the quintessence of the universe is quite an intriguing tune." -On the Issues

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Editorial Reviews

Review

Brave and perceptive naming of what we're all facing on this planet, here at the end of the millennium.--Lise Weil, Women's Review of Books

"This is Mary Daly's masterpiece. In Western tradition, her only near-equal is the poet William Blake. Daly is a philosopher/artist of great strength and grace."--Andrea Dworkin

"This explosion by the principal progenitor of radical feminism is sure to infuriate those she has already enraged and endear her more deeply to those who will hear within her frantic, fierce-and often funny-manifesto a terrible and timely word. In this highly charged text, she looks back and forward at the same time and issues an urgent summons: 'Biophiliacs unite!' No one who worries about the present direction of genetics and cloning can afford to miss this important book."--Harvey Cox, author of Fire from Heaven

"Suffused by her inimitable word play and stunning intelligence, . . . Daly's clarion call to uncover the quintessence of the universe is quite an intriguing tune."--Elizabeth Millard, On the Issues

"[Quintessence] . . . examines the tremendous abuses women face at the end of the twentieth century, yet offers a "Far-Out Vision and Hope for Wanderlusting Women."--deJoly, Womyn's Words

"When Daly is angry, she is never simply angry. She leads beyond the anger to the joy."--Carol Anne Douglas, Off Our Backs

About the Author

Mary Daly is the passionately acclaimed, sometimes denounced, and always controversial radical feminist "philosopher, theologian, mythologist, explorer, pirate, warrior, witch, fairy and leprechaun" (The New York Times Book Review), whose writing is "alive with creative energy, impelled by an urgency of vision and infused with the 'outlandish reality that is present in everyday occurrences'" (Mary Jo Weaver, The New York Times Book Review). Her "feminist fire and brimstone . . . shocks and angers us to a new edge of feminism" (Valerie Miner, San Francisco Chronicle). Daly is professor of theology at Boston College.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 304 pages
  • Publisher: Beacon Press (October 5, 1999)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0807067911
  • ISBN-13: 978-0807067918
  • Product Dimensions: 6 x 0.8 x 9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 14.4 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 2.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,191,411 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

 

Customer Reviews

6 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
2.3 out of 5 stars (6 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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6 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Not for literalists and the insecure, September 18, 2009
This review is from: Quintessence...Realizing the Archaic Future (Paperback)
Mary Daly writes at the mythic level, not the literal level. She creates a grand stage for important ideas and then presents those ideas from their extended extremes in order to provoke thought about those issues within minds that are closed by conformity and the inability to think outside of dominant culture's narrow boundaries of acceptability. Her ideas act as if small bombs that serve to dislodge mental/emotional stagnation. Her writing provokes reaction, and our reactions serve as mirrors for us to see our defensiveness and insecure spots more clearly, as well as those areas of ourselves that have shriveled on our vine of Life that grows stunted in our death-worshipping, vulturous, corporate-dominated, greed-focused culture. Like all good mythic literature, we need to set aside our defenses and reactivity in order to really hear the message. This is what makes mythic writing so powerful and effective.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars funny and hopeful, July 24, 2011
This review is from: Quintessence...Realizing the Archaic Future (Paperback)
It is interesting to me that some reviewers are saying Mary Daly "exterminated" men in this book. Calling it hate speech; calling her a nazi. First of all men are not a minority in danger of institutional oppression as some other idiot reviewers propose. This is a book. She is writing a story which is not the same as her doing something, and furthermore in her story no one is murdered. People become extinct in the book. If someone wrote a book in which people living an unsustainable lifestyle became extinct would you call them nazi's? This is a book of theory and fiction. It is a story that draws attention to oppression and unlearning the dominant culture. Thinking big and juicy.
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25 of 44 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars "Purity and strength", December 21, 2001
By 
Laon (moon-lit Surry Hills) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Quintessence...Realizing the Archaic Future (Paperback)
Nobody, especially not its fans, would deny that the neo-Nazi fantasy _The Turner Diaries_ is hate literature. There's even a moment where the author fantasises my extermination: he describes the body of a white intellectual who rejected notions of racial solidarity, swinging from a rope attached to a streetlight. That's me and my kind, right there.

Funnily enough, I also get exterminated in Mary Daly's _Quintessence_. So do all my women friends, though they even use the "feminist" word despite the damage done to that word's reputation by Daly, Dworkin and others.

Why extermination? Because, it seems, we are "snools", in Daly's bizarre jargon, because we reserve the right to criticise ideas that don't make sense, "phallocrats" because we support democracy instead of Daly's "gynocracy", "necrophiles" because we think science and technology are on the whole good things, without being uncritical about their use. My women friends' feminism is different from Daly's, so they are "totalled women" and "fembots".

Note how many of Daly's "dis/covered words" express hatred, from "snool" to "snot boy". And Daly's writing is shockingly bad, a mix of cutesie neologisms - "crone-logical", "be-witching" etc - in praise of an elect of lesbian separatists, along with name-calling abuse of her enemies, almost the entire "man-infested" human species. As Daly's outcasts, we probably wouldn't want to live in the mindless and passionless utopia Daly prescribes and describes in _Quintessence_, but that's okay, because Daly wants us dead.

In the following quote, a sample from _Quintessence'_s holocaust fantasy, Daly's narrator, "I", is "Anonyma", a Mary Daly fan from 50 years in the future, who has brought Daly forward in time to survey the world her books brought about:

" "Are there men and boys on the other continents?" [Mary] asked.

"Yes," I said. "But ... the world today is Gynocratic and Gynocentric. ... The Earth's transformation has required that her inhabitants grow through profound psychic changes. Those who were not able to grow could not endure in the purity and strength of the New energy field..."

"Are you saying that men who insisted on clinging to patriarchal beliefs and behaviors became obsolete and 'died off'?" asked Mary.

"Yes, they rapidly became extinct," I said.

"And what became of the patriarchally assimilated women who identified with the roles and rules of patriarchy?" asked Mary.

I answered, "Those women who refused to release themselves from the phallocratic dependencies and habits that had been embedded in them under the old system were in effect refusing to evolve. So they also could not survive in the New energy field." " [End quote.]

So only a few male survivors, and since "patriarchal beliefs and behaviours" turn out to include heterosexuality, interest in science, rationality and various other thought-crimes and desire-crimes, that's most women dead too. So much death, without the slightest tinge of regret in Daly's prose: who's the necrophile?

Daly says our extermination occurs in the next 50 years, so it is not caused by our failure to reproduce while Daly's parthenogenic lesbians flourish and thrive: that unlikely development would take many, many generations. To "extinguish" us all in 50 years means killing the living. The instrument of our execution is Daly's "New energy field", which is fatal to those of us who lack, in Daly's strikingly Hitlerian turn of phrase, "purity and strength".

Impure and weak people may find it interesting, then, that Daly really is interested in "New energy fields". In the November 2001 issue of _Philosophy Today_ she waxed enthusiastic about Rupert Sheldrake's morpho-genetic or morphic field. Given _Quintessence-_'s fantasy of extinction by energy field, it's perhaps reassuring that Sheldrake's field has the scientific credibility of Reich's orgone accumulators (ie "none"). But what can we make of a political work that celebrates the imagined extermination of all who are not pure and strong? What do we make of its author? Is Daly merely a joke, an embarrassment to her own cause and a gift to the right-wing media that drags out cases like Daly and Dworkin whenever they want to make feminism look ridiculous? Or should she be held responsible when what she writes is hate literature as much as _The Turner Diaries_ and other neo-Nazi tracts? Or do we make liberal excuses: "this is a damaged person, who cannot be held morally accountable when she strikes out ineffectually at those around her"?

It's a serious question about responsibilities, and I don't know the answer. On the whole, though I know Daly would dislike this option most, I favour the liberal option. Daly causes more damage to her own causes than to anything else. That was a pity when the implosion of Daly's own credibility took out a fair chunk of feminism's credibility with her, though the excesses of her most dogmatic followers were also to blame for that. Daly is a key part of the reason why the most powerful political movement of the 1970s had become politically inert and ineffectual by the 1990s, as it still is, and that was a disservice to us all except for feminism's enemies. But these days her advocacy damages only the fringe to which she is still attached.

Still, Daly believes in naming her enemies, and perhaps it would show respect to name her philosophy too, though it's not necessary to in/vent a (child)ish jar-gone, a/kin to Daly's own, to find the name. _Quntessence_'s lesbian separatist utopia, where superior people reproduce themselves by parthenogenesis without risking their moral or genetic purity by sexual contact with inferior beings, where there are no divergent ideas or dissent, where most of the inferior beings (men and women who like men) have been exterminated, except for a few tame specimens "on other continents", is not a variant of feminism. It's a variant of fascism. We can laugh or apologise or condemn, but let's call it what it is.

Cheers!

Laon

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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
creative courage, fifth cause, archaic past, elemental spirits, fifth province, fifth direction, cosmic comments, temporal diaspora, concerning chapter, patriarchal era
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Wild Women, The Fifth Spiral Galaxy, Fifth Dimension, Elemental Feminist Genius, Re-awakening the X-Factor, Archaic Future, New York, Final Cause, Elemental Women, Virginia Woolf, Canny Women, Dis-covering the Light of Quintessence, Memories of the Future, Women's Studies, The First Sex, Promise Keepers, Anonyma Network, Found Continent, United States, Future Foresisters, Earth Changes, Fifth Element, Elemental Genius, Three Guineas, Women's Center
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Front Cover | Table of Contents | First Pages | Index | Back Cover | Surprise Me!
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