Data: ===== Title: Dreaming the Dark -- Magic, Sex & Politics Author: Starhawk Publisher: Beacon Press (Unitarian Universalist Association) 25 Beacon Street Boston, MA 02108 USA Copyright: 1982 (Miriam Simos) ISBN: 0-8070-1001-4 Price: 7,95 USD paperback Dreaming the Dark is for groups, and the individuals within them. It's about power and its distribution. Contents: ========= Prologue: Dreaming the Dark Power-Over and Power-From-Within Thought-forms: Magic as Language The Ethics of Magic Reclaiming Personal Power: Magic as Will Goddesses and Gods: The Landscape of the Culture Building Community: Processes for Groups Circles and Webs: Groups Structures Sex and Politics Ritual as Bonding: Action as Ritual Epilogue Appendix A: The Burning Times: Notes on a Crucial Period of History Appendix B: Tools for Groups Appendix C: Chants and Songs Notes and Sources The author: =========== Starhawk is a very famous Californian witch. She's also a political activist and a non-violence trainer, not to mention counsellor. Her most well-known book is Spiral Dance. She's also the author of Truth or Dare and the utopical novel The Fifth Sacred Thing. Her mundane name is Miriam Simos, but her books are all published under the name Starhawk. The chapters: ============= Already in the prologue Starhawk's excellent writing skills are noticeable. The chapter is about how and why Dreaming the Dark (DTD) came to be, and what Starhawk wants with it. The first chapter introduces the concepts power-over and power-from-within. The second chapter is about language, about how language affects us. It's about context, abstract and tangible, about how power speaks, and how we can use the language to further our own purposes. The third chapter is about ethics. Important ideas are the beer can principle and the self-hater. The fourth chapter deals with our personal Will and the choices we make. It includes the story about how Joy claims her own Will. The fifth chapter is about goddesses and gods and their place in our culture. It contains a utopical text about how a private company could accomodate the children of their employees in their office building. The sixth chapter gives some processes to help building community in already existing groups. The seventh chapter deals with groups structures. It talks about how roles can be cast within groups, with or without the consent of the people involved. The eight chapter is about sexuality and gender. It includes some powerful sexual/body exercises for individuals. The ninth and final chapter is about how groups can use ritual to bond or to get something done. The epilogue is just that. Appendix A is called The Burning Times: Notes on a Crucial Period of History. It's about the burning of women in Europe (mainly) accused for witchcraft, but also about people of other religions than mainstream Christianity who suffered. The scholarship in this chapter is debatable. Appendix B gives more tools for groups and appendix C contains chants and songs including scores. Personal opinion: ================= Starhawk is an excellent writer. Her prose is smooth and rythmical, it's a joy to read her, and before you've noticed it you've read a chapter and a half when you were only looking for a quote. Quotes is another issue: If you're ever in need for a quote for your .signature, this book is chokefull of them. I'm not part of any spiritual group, but the advise Starhawk gives works well on an individual level, too. I can imagine that it would be hard to make a non-witch group use the tools and processes in the book, but I haven't tried. If there's anything about this book that I don't like, it's Appendix A. For one thing the scholarship in it doesn't hold water, and for another I think that just as when Jews dwell too much on the Holocaust, we tend to become paranoid if we dwell too much on the Burning Times. Of course this doesn't mean that we should deny it, but lets remember that it's a long time since, and that if we let our perceptions of random contemporary Christians be coloured by this appendix, we are inviting a self-fulfilling prophecy. Conclusion: =========== Maybe this book isn't as essential as Spiral Dance, but it is and has been very influential in the NeoPagan community. I recommend it for anyone who is interested in how power works and can work. --Ceci (93-12-11)