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Love's Immensity: Mystics on the Endless Life
Scott Cairns is convinced that "the words of the mystics sacramentally partake of the Word Himself, and as such are inexhaustible, generative powers." These selections are unified in their common claim that Love is the most compelling name of God, and also the most apt attribute of the Holy One in Whom we live and move and have our being. In that spirit, Cairns offers Love's Immensity as "a mere taste of the bountiful feast that awaits any who would pursue a life of faith and prayer, equipped with both the holy scriptures and the holy tradition that surrounds them.".
Price: $13.06
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Restoring Colorado River Ecosystems: A Troubled Sense of Immensity
Over the past century, humans have molded the Colorado River to serve their own needs, resulting in significant impacts to the river and its ecosystems Today, many scientists, public officials, and citizens hope to restore some of the lost resources in portions of the river and its surrounding lands. Environmental restoration on the scale of the Colorado River basin is immensely challenging; in addition to an almost overwhelming array of technical difficulties, it is fraught with perplexing questions about the appropriate goals of restoration and the extent to which environmental restoration must be balanced against environmental changes designed to promote and sustain human economic development. Restoring Colorado River Ecosystems explores the many questions and challenges surrounding the issue of large-scale restoration of the Colorado River basin, and of large-scale restoration in general. Robert W. Adler evaluates the relationships among the laws, policies, and institutions governing use and management of the Colorado River for human benefit and those designed to protect and restore the river and its environment. He examines and critiques the often challenging interactions among law, science, economics, and politics within which restoration efforts must operate. Ultimately, he suggests that a broad concept of “restoration” is needed to navigate those uncertain waters, and to strike an appropriate balance between human and environmental needs. While the book is primarily about restoration of Colorado River ecosystems, it is also about uncertainty, conflict, competing values, and the nature, pace, and implications of environmental change. It is about our place in the natural environment, and whether there are limits to that presence we ought to respect. And it is about our responsibility to the ecosystems we live in and use. .
Price: $31.47
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The Immensity of the Here and Now: A Novel of 9.11
Throughout his career, prize-winning author Paul West has reimagined the lives of some of history’s most intriguing figures In his newest novel, The Immensity of the Here and Now, he brings his creative vision to bear on the defining event of our time: the terrorist attacks of 9.11. West gives voice to two men: Shrop, who struggles to recover his memory and the philosophical "grid" in which he slip-cased the world—both lost with the destruction of the Twin Towers; and Quent, the war-wounded therapist who tries to restore Shrop’s identity, but loses his own grip on reality in the process. Both men, pushed beyond their limits in the aftermath of 9.11, become symbols of what the I Ching calls "Brilliance Injured." With the exhilarating prose that has become his trademark, West evokes a world crippled by terror and fueled by rage. The Immensity of the Here and Now is a moving and profound meditation on the tragedy of 9.11, spun out in a dialogue between these two men. West brings to the subject his unparalleled skill as an observer, his uncanny ability to fill the gap between the telling and the event, and the verbal alchemy that has made him one of the world’s most critically acclaimed writers..
Price: $22.99
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Mont-Saint-Michel: Immensity (Imago Mundi)
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Heartless Immensity: Literature, Culture, and Geography in Antebellum America
As the size of the United States more than doubled during the first half of the nineteenth century, a powerful current of anxiety ran alongside the well-documented optimism about national expansion. Heartless Immensity tells the story of how Americans made sense of their country’s constantly fluctuating borders and its annexation of vast new territories. Anne Baker looks at a variety of sources, including letters, speeches, newspaper editorials, schoolbooks, as well as visual and literary works of art. These cultural artifacts suggest that the country’s anxiety was fueled primarily by two concerns: fears about the size of the nation as a threat to democracy, and about the incorporation of nonwhite, non-Protestant regions. These fears had a consistent and influential presence until after the Civil War, functioning as vital catalysts for the explosion of literary creativity known as the “American Renaissance,” including the work of Melville, Thoreau, and Fuller, among others. Building on extensive archival research as well as insights from cultural geographers and theorists of nationhood, Heartless Immensity demonstrates that national expansion had a far more complicated, multifaceted impact on antebellum American culture than has previously been recognized. Baker shows that Americans developed a variety of linguistic strategies for imagining the form of the United States and its position in relation to other geopolitical entities. Comparisons to European empires, biblical allusions, body politic metaphors, and metaphors derived from science all reflected—and often attempted to assuage—fears that the nation was becoming either monstrously large or else misshapen in ways that threatened cherished beliefs and national self-images. Heartless Immensity argues that, in order to understand the nation’s shift from republic to empire and to understand American culture in a global context, it is first necessary to pay close attention to the processes by which the physical entity known as the United States came into being. This impressively thorough study will make a valuable contribution to the fields of American studies and literary studies. Anne Baker is Assistant Professor of English at North Carolina State University. .
Price: $59.00
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