Avian Illuminations: A Cultural History of Birds

(Author)
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Product Details
Price
$42.00  $39.06
Publisher
Reaktion Books
Publish Date
Pages
456
Dimensions
6.2 X 9.3 X 1.2 inches | 2.55 pounds
Language
English
Type
Hardcover
EAN/UPC
9781789144321

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About the Author
Boria Sax teaches at Sing Sing Correctional Facility and online in the graduate literature program at Mercy College. He is the author of many books, including City of Ravens, Imaginary Animals, and Dinomania, the last two also published by Reaktion Books.
Reviews
"Speaking of birds, I spent an hour recently . . . paging through a wonderful book: Avian Illuminations: A Cultural History of Birds by Boria Sax. It focuses on the role of birds in history, art, philosophy, religion. Think about how much birds figure into our world and imagination. The Phoenix arising from the ashes. The Thunderbird of Pacific Northwest Haida culture. The Harpy of Greek mythology."-- "Akron Beacon Journal"
"Birds can go wherever they want, muses Sax in Avian Illuminations, his wide-ranging, wistful history of human connections with the bird world, from the first drawings on cave walls to Rachel Carson's dire warnings. Some birds may beat their wings, some might just prefer to let themselves be carried by the wind. It is almost impossible, writes Sax, 'to imagine this sort of freedom.'"--Christoph Irmscher "Wall Street Journal"
"Magnificently illustrated, this is a superb overview of our long and rich association with our feathered friends."-- "Alauda Journal"
"A fascinating exploration of those ecstatic moments when a human becomes enraptured by contemplation of a bird--moments that, as Sax explains, can approach a religious level of intensity. I never imagined that birds had occupied so many roles in human lives and imaginings and through such a deep swath of history. An inspiring and fascinating read."--Clive Wynne, professor of psychology and animal studies, University of Arizona, coauthor of Animal Cognition and author of Dog is Love
"Beautifully illustrated, Avian Illuminations is a superb overview of humanity's long and rich association with our avian companions." -- "Birdbooker Report"
"The wonderful Avian Illuminations traces in rich and fascinating detail the cultural relationships between humans and birds through history, philosophy, religion, and art. This is a book for difficult times--it entertains, educates, elucidates, and, in its assessment of what might be necessary to repair a damaged world, gives us hope."--Esther Woolfson, author of Corvus: A Life with Birds and Between Light and Storm: How We Live with Other Species
"Sax has long been my most trusted guide to understanding the complex relationships between humans and animals. In Avian Illuminations . . . he weaves a complex portrait of the symbolic richness of our portrayals of birds throughout history and myth."--Ceridwen Dovey, author of Blood Kin and Only the Animals
"A beautifully written intellectual treat that will delight anyone interested in the feathered creatures we share our world with."--Hal Herzog, author of Some We Love, Some We Hate, Some We Eat: Why It's So Hard to Think Straight About Animals
"Captivating and graced with exquisite illustrations, Sax's Avian Illuminations blends history, folklore, art, literature, and ornithology to explain why birds are such an integral part of human dreams and aspirations. . . . Avian Illuminations, with its rich content and glorious illustrations, educates, entertains, and aims a body-blow to human pride with its reminder that when birds reigned as dinosaurs, human ancestors were still 'relatively small marsupial-like balls of fur.'"-- "Foreword Reviews, Starred Review"
"Birds have provided models in almost every aspect of human culture. Their songs inspired our music; their courtship rituals, our dance; their plumage, our fashion. . . . Avian illuminations by Sax covers the vast range of practices that diverse cultures have taken from birds with extraordinary thoroughness. It also goes beyond listing the colorful array of practices and motifs in isolation to show how they have provided much of the emotional and intellectual foundation of human culture."--Roberto Marchesini, director, Centro Studi Filosofia Postumanista (Center for Posthuman Philosophy), author of Over the Human: Post-humanism and the Concept of Animal Epiphany
"In Avian Illuminations, Sax, with the deep probing intellect of a renaissance scholar, reveals how human culture has been informed and shaped by birds. His history covers thousands of years and has something special for everyone, whether a poet, artist, historian, folklorist, falconer, or birder."--John Marzluff, author of Welcome to Subirdia, Gifts of the Crow, and In Search of Meadowlarks
"Sax says his overall purpose in the book is 'to show how intimately our bonds with birds are bound up in the matrix of ideas, practices, fears, and hopes that make up what we call "human civilization."' In fact, he believes 'these interconnections are so profound . . . that a world without birds would effectively mean the end of humankind, even if we continued to pass on some approximation of our DNA.' To this end, he draws on a rich assemblage of examples from ornithology, history, folklore, literature, popular culture, and graphic arts to weave together what he calls his 'bird's nest' of facts, stories, myths, and images."-- "Times Literary Supplement"