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The Hermetic Library Blog Faint gibbering heard from somewhere near the restricted stacks Menu Skip to content Hermetic Library Blog Hermetic Library Reading Room Anthology Postal Potlatch Visual Audio Video Arts and Letters Goods and Services Calendar Events Hermetic Library About Contact Participate Become a Patron Features Fellows Figures Forms Reflections Hrmtc Underground Blog Email List Tumblog Pitch an Idea Seeking Others Request for Help Suggest Something Submit to the Zine Request for Help Seeking Others Omnium Gatherum: 11nov2020 To view this content, you must be a member of Hermetic's Patreon at $5 or more Unlock with Patreon Already a qualifying Patreon member? Refresh to access this content. November 11, 2020 Omnium Gatherum: 8nov2020 To view this content, you must be a member of Hermetic's Patreon at $5 or more Unlock with Patreon Already a qualifying Patreon member? Refresh to access this content. November 8, 2020 There was nothing more to happen; everything had already happened except for one trifle which would be over soon. Charles Williams, Descent Into Hell [ Bookshop , Amazon ] November 6, 2020 Let every man make known what kind of government would command his respect, and that will be one step toward obtaining it. Henry David Thoreau, Civil Disobedience [ Bookshop , Amazon ] November 6, 2020 The poets and artists and philosophers, resistance activists, secret scouts and troublemakers, had become, as they must, soldiers. China Miéville, The Last Days of New Paris: A Novel [ Bookshop , Amazon , Publisher ] November 6, 2020 People may start out with an initial prejudice against tyrants; but when tyrants or would-be tyrants treat them to adrenalin-releasing propaganda about the wickedness of their enemies—particularly of enemies weak enough to be persecuted—they are ready to follow him with enthusiasm. Aldous Huxley, Brave New World Revisited [ Bookshop , Amazon , Publisher ] November 6, 2020 The Kingdom and the Glory Hermetic Library Fellow T Polyphilus reviews The Kingdom and the Glory: For a Theological Genealogy of Economy and Government [ Bookshop , Amazon , Publisher ] by Giorgio Agamben, translated by Lorenzo Chiesa with Matteo Mandarini. The Kingdom and the Glory was issued a short while before The Sacrament of Language , but in the plan of Agamben’s Homo Sacer project, the first book follows the second, and that is the sequence in which I read them. They are closely connected in theme, exploring points in which concepts cross or transcend the boundaries between the theological and the political. The Kingdom and the Glory is a much larger undertaking in both scope and scale. The work of the book is a Foucauldian (i.e. neo-Nietzschean) genealogy of “glory” as an operator in the conceptual justification of “economy” and “government”–that is, in the theological and political registers, respectively. (The ancient theological sense of “economy” is distinct from its modern significance.) It touches on esoteric fields such as Gnosticism, Neoplatonism, Kabbalah, and Grail legendry. But it also traces its concerns through the vertebral canon of philosophy from Aristotle through Heidegger, as well as the entire span of Christian theology. As The Sacrament of Language was trained on the performative language of the oath, so The Kingdom and the Glory in large measure revolves around the nature and function of acclamation . Section 8.19 in particular is a valuable inquiry into amen as “the acclamation par excellence” of Christian liturgy. Some of the political consequences of the insights in this 2007 book seem to cast light on the fragility of the legislative function in putative democracies like that of Germany in the first part of the 20th century or the United States in the 21st. The sovereignty of the people is inadequately manifested by the legislature, which allows for the usurpation of its “kingdom” by the “government” of the executive, and the collapse of what Agamben calls in theology “the providential machine.” My hat is off to translators Chiesa and Mandarini, not only for making Agamben intelligible in English, and for keeping track of the various linguistic registers among which he navigates, but for introducing me to two English words. In the course of reading this book, I learned tralatitious (152) and epenetic (246). Also, I forgive them for using mythologeme in lieu of mytheme (106). Consistent with my prior reading of Agamben, I found this book difficult and rewarding. This entry was posted in Hermetic Library Reading Room and tagged book , Giorgio Agamben , Lorenzo Chiesa , Matteo Mandarini , Political , review , T Polyphilus on November 6, 2020 by John Griogair Bell . The Snake, the Crocodile, and the Dog Hermetic Library Fellow T Polyphilus reviews The Snake, the Crocodile, and the Dog [ Bookshop , Amazon , Publisher ] by Elizabeth Peters. This seventh volume of the adventures of Victorian Egyptologist Amelia Peabody Emerson is very much a serial installment. It is hard to imagine enjoying it much without having read several of the earlier books, especially The Crocodile on the Sandbank , Lion in the Valley , and The Last Camel Died at Noon . In fact, this text frequently deploys the advertising footnote : dropping the title of a previous novel into the bottom margin of the page in order to explicate an allusion to earlier adventures. The feature reminds me of nothing so much as 1960s and 70s Marvel comic books, with the continuity cross-references jammed into the corners of panels. The Snake, the Crocodile, and the Dog also continues author Peters’ metafictional jockeying of material from H. Rider Haggard. This time, she introduces Leo Vincey–a character whose name is lifted from the protagonist of Haggard’s She . The occasional line drawings introduced in The Last Camel Died at Noon do not persist in The Snake , but there are still several maps to help the reader understand the path of the expedition. The maps are clear, but it’s hard to refer to them, because they are inserted individually in the course of the text, and there is no table or index to note their locations. On a related issue, the “Editor’s Note” at the beginning refers quite inaccurately to a glossary appendix on “page 339,” evidently failing to account for the revised pagination of the paperback edition I read. I was a little worried by the addition of yet another dependent to the Emerson household at the end of the previous book, and I wondered how an exciting pace could be maintained in the face of such elaborate parental concerns. Peters thankfully managed to have the Emersons leave the children in England for the 1898 archaeological expedition to Egypt in The Snake , and the occasional letters from young Ramses provide excellent comic relief, as well as a clever supplementary plot-line. The relief is necessary, in my view, because of the circumstance of Radcliffe Emerson’s traumatic amnesia, which gives this story more tension and sadness than were typical of the earlier volumes. The resolution of the plot involves multiple “reveals,” the later of which certainly caught me off-guard. But there’s also an intimation of a significant plot point undetected by the narrating sleuth Amelia herself. I’m sure it will be fulfilled in later stories. This entry was posted in Hermetic Library Reading Room and tagged book , Elizabeth Peters , Mystery & Detective - Cozy - General , Mystery & Detective - Historical , Mystery & Detective - Women Sleuths , review , T Polyphilus on November 6, 2020 by John Griogair Bell . The Mystical Marriage Hermetic Library Fellow T Polyphilus reviews The Mystical Marriage: Symbol and Meaning of the Human Experience [ Amazon ] by Gerhard Wehr, translated by Jill Sutcliffe. The Mystical Marriage is mostly a historical survey of Western religious and esoteric traditions oriented toward marital symbolism and the Jungian notion of the conjunctio . As an introductory survey, it is suitably wide, but not at all deep. T...
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