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Atticus (Hardcover)
Juno Jakob; Foreword by Dr. Thomas Richardson
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R525
Discovery Miles 5 250
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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In 2002, Governor General Michael Jeffrey stated that 'we
Australians had everything under control in Phuoc Tuy Province'.
This referred not only to military control, but to the policy of
'pacification' employed by the Republic of Vietnam and external
'Free World' allies such as the US and Australia. In the hopes of
stemming the tide of Communism, pacification aimed to win the
allegiance of the populace through political, economic and social
reform. In this new work, Thomas Richardson explores the 1st
Australian Task Force's (1ATF) implementation of this policy in
Phuoc Tuy between 1966 and 1972. Using material from US and
Australian archives, as well as newly translated Vietnamese
histories, Destroy and Build: Pacification in Phuoc Tuy, 1966-1972
challenges the accepted historiography of the Western forces' fight
against insurgency in Vietnam.
Exploring the relationship between the eight extraordinary vessels,
and the zangfu and extraordinary organs, this ground-breaking book
provides a new way of looking at the deep connection between the
flow of qi through the primary channels, the placement of the
confluent points of the extraordinary vessels along the primary
channel system, and Daoist conceptions of the evolution of
consciousness. He emphasizes the importance of the dai mai channel
in integration. The author points to direct relationships between
the primary channels, the extraordinary channels, and the zangfu
and extraordinary organs which demonstrate a deep, underlying, and
continuous connection between the individual and their environment,
a continuous connection to Heaven above and Earth below, and,
perhaps most importantly, an underlying drive of the channel
systems to continually, experientially bring us back to the
transcendent unity that we are always a part of, the natural state.
This book will enlarge the perspective of Chinese medicine
practitioners, and martial artists, and prompt new approaches to
treatment.
Hogg played a significant role in the success and notoriety of
Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, the 'Maga', as the magazine came to
be known among the contributors, founded in 1817 by the Edinburgh
publisher and bookseller, William Blackwood. Hogg's relationships
with Blackwood, the magazine, and the major contributors were
central to both his literary and personal life. From 1817 until his
death in 1835 he published nearly 115 works in Blackwood's
Magazine. His contributions showcase the diversity of his talent
and his achievement as a writer; his published works include a
great variety of songs and lyric poetry, narrative and dramatic
poetry, sketches of rural and farming life, review essays, ballads,
short stories, satirical pieces, and even a 'screed' on politics.
This edition for the first time collects Hogg's 'Maga'
publications, as well as provides a comprehensive introduction to
Hogg's connection with Blackwood's and full explanatory and textual
notes to the works.
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How to Read (Paperback)
Thomas Richardson
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R390
R319
Discovery Miles 3 190
Save R71 (18%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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