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A Prince of Our Disorder: The Life of T.E. Lawrence Paperback – January 1, 1978
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherLittle Brown & Co
- Publication dateJanuary 1, 1978
- ISBN-100316542296
- ISBN-13978-0316542296
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Product details
- Publisher : Little Brown & Co (January 1, 1978)
- Language : English
- ISBN-10 : 0316542296
- ISBN-13 : 978-0316542296
- Item Weight : 1.15 pounds
- Best Sellers Rank: #4,510,261 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #20,396 in Author Biographies
- #30,439 in Military Leader Biographies
- #104,732 in Engineering (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Esteemed professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School and Pulitzer Prize-winning author John E. Mack M.D. (October 4, 1929 - Sep 27, 2004) spent his career examining how a sense of connection develops across cultures and between individuals, and how these connections alter people's worldviews.
His best known book on this theme, for which he won the Pulitzer Prize in 1977, is A Prince of Our Disorder, a biography of British officer T. E. Lawrence (who became known as ''Lawrence of Arabia''). He also interviewed political leaders and citizens of the Soviet Union and Israel/Palestine in the study of ethno-national conflict and the Cold War.
His interest in different worldviews was not limited to the terrestrial; for more than ten years he studied people who reported a connection existed between themselves and ''aliens''. Two books detailed how these ''alien encounters'' had affected the way people regarded the world - including heightening their sense of spirituality and their environmental concern. These were widely reported in the media as a simple endorsement of the reality of alien encounters, and he endured an inquiry by Harvard to determine whether this research met the standards of a Harvard professor. (The medical school ultimately ''reaffirmed Dr. Mack's academic freedom to study what he wishes and to state his opinions without impediment.'')
Mack's interest in the transformational aspects of extraordinary experiences corresponded to his own belief that the Western world requires a shift away from a primarily materialist worldview. This worldview, he suggested in his many writings, was the root cause of the Cold War, regional conflict, and the global ecological crisis. He advocated a shift towards a transpersonal worldview that embraced some elements of Eastern spiritual and philosophical traditions which emphasized a sense of ''connection''; Mack believed such a shift could alter the path of the world towards a more sustainable future.
Mack passed away at the age of 74 in London, England.
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But there is a larger worry. Exactly how much can we know about another person? How much do we need to know, for instance, about the relatively short period of Lawrence's life and participation/leadership during the Arab revolt than what Lawrence avers beautifully in the 1922 Oxford edition of Seven Pillars of Wisdom, echoing the book of Ecclesiastes: "Those who dream by night in the dusty recesses of their minds wake in the day to find that all was vanity; but the dreamers of the day are dangerous men, for they may act their own dream with open eyes, and make it possible. This I did."?
I suppose it depends upon how enthralled you are with Lawrence's life and his endeavours, as related by Mack. So, it's all rather subjective, as I think Mack, and certainly Lawrence, would agree. So, here are my impressions: Lawrence, as an associate said of him, was "a modern Percival" who steeped himself in Provencal poetry, did major archaeological work before the war at the sites of the Crusades, carried out guerilla raids during the "Arab Revolt" and then withdrew from the modern world, all in keeping with a deeply engrained notion of chastity, service and self-abnegation. As Mack thoroughly shows here, one simply can't separate - as most try to do - the Lawrence of Arabia who was a figure on the world stage, and the one who changed his name several times, joined the RAF as a ranker, drove his motorcycles at top speeds without a helmet, became an expert speed-boat mechanic and paid a burly Scotsman to flagellate him brutally on several occasions. They're all of a piece. Aside from his motorcycle, he disdained material possessions, and gave whatever money he might have had to fellow airmen in need, and touched nearly all who knew him with his unworldly generosity - except, and this is important, some of the officers under whom he served as a ranker. In short, he WAS a sort of modern Percival, with an oddly medieval mindset, and his actions, such as they were, were quite in keeping with that mindset.
Cue back to why I think it important that the officers didn't like him. I think this is key to understanding why such an anachronistic figure remains a hero to many in the 21st Century. In "acting out his dream with open eyes," Lawrence ignored, snubbed or found ways around those who were placed over him in the chain of command. And, put it down to what you will, he got away with it. That's why the modern world remains fascinated by him. This modern Percival actually had a meeting with King George V in which he turned down a knighthood. Only his own personal Holy Grail would do. And the baubles offered by a modern king were just that. In short, though Lawrence was, au fond, backwards looking, he became, and remains for many, that very modern invention, the anti-hero, "a prince of our disorder" as historian Irving Howe put it.
It's a credit to Mack that he leaves the "question" of Lawrence unresolved or, rather, leaves the reader to make of this extremely readable book about an extremely remarkable man what he/she will. Ultimately, the question of personal identity remains an elusive mystery.
Shortly before his fatal motorcycle crash, a ship contractor told him that "you'll break your blinking neck on that thing." This modern Percival replied, "Well, better than dying in bed", mounted his modern steed and roared off. His brief will left two copies of Shelley's poetry, one for his younger brother, one for his solicitor.
So sad for all of us that our leaders are not of the same introspective type. Dr. Mack comments in his introduction that "The destructive leader, and the eagerness of a large segment of the population to identify with him, comprise one of the central threats -- if not the greatest threat -- that faces human society. There is perhaps an increasing unwillingness to entrust our well-being and our lives to individuals and characters we do not understand and whose ultimate purposes we are ignorant of." Let's hope so.
Jeremy Wilson's massive biography "Lawrence of Arabia" may better satisfy military readers interested in extensive contemporary document citations, and includes much more detail on Lawrence's Cairo years. Wilson also has a better set of photographs. The 1922 Oxford full text of "Seven Pillars of Wisdom," edited by Jeremy and Nicole Wilson and available from Castle Hill Press in the UK, is most highly recommended to all who find "T.E.L." fascinating.
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A surprising character, narrated for us by a talented author who has done his very best to paint "The Real Picture" of this extraordinary man, with all the contradictions that this implies.
A valuable read, which I shall certainly go back to.





