Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Reviews
- Essays
- Letters
- Sinister Wisdom, 11, fall 1970
- Village Voice, October 1972
- Signs, winter 1977
- Signs, II:4, 1977
- Frontiers, IV:2, 1979
- Chrysalis, No. 9, fall 1979
- “Feminist Review,” The New Women's Times, February 29–March 13 1980
- Gay Community Center Newsletter, July 1980
- Women and SF: Three Letters
- Written to Venom, November 27 1981
- Sojourner, 10:8, June 1985
- The Women's Review of Books, II:9, June 1995
- The Women's Review of Books, III:6, March 1986
- The Seattle Source, April 11 1986
- The Women's Review of Books, III:12, September 1986
- The Women's Review of Books, IV:10–11, July/August 1987
- Lesbian Ethics, 2:3, summer 1987
- Gay Community News, January 22–28 1989
- The Women's Review of Books, VI:7, April 1989
- SFRA Newsletter, No. 172, November 1989
- Extrapolation, 31:1, spring 1990
- Publication of the Modern Language Association, March 1992
- Sojourner: The Women's Forum, September 1993
- The Lesbian Review of Books, I:3, 1995
- Index of Books and Authors Reviewed
Gay Community News, January 22–28 1989
from Letters
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Reviews
- Essays
- Letters
- Sinister Wisdom, 11, fall 1970
- Village Voice, October 1972
- Signs, winter 1977
- Signs, II:4, 1977
- Frontiers, IV:2, 1979
- Chrysalis, No. 9, fall 1979
- “Feminist Review,” The New Women's Times, February 29–March 13 1980
- Gay Community Center Newsletter, July 1980
- Women and SF: Three Letters
- Written to Venom, November 27 1981
- Sojourner, 10:8, June 1985
- The Women's Review of Books, II:9, June 1995
- The Women's Review of Books, III:6, March 1986
- The Seattle Source, April 11 1986
- The Women's Review of Books, III:12, September 1986
- The Women's Review of Books, IV:10–11, July/August 1987
- Lesbian Ethics, 2:3, summer 1987
- Gay Community News, January 22–28 1989
- The Women's Review of Books, VI:7, April 1989
- SFRA Newsletter, No. 172, November 1989
- Extrapolation, 31:1, spring 1990
- Publication of the Modern Language Association, March 1992
- Sojourner: The Women's Forum, September 1993
- The Lesbian Review of Books, I:3, 1995
- Index of Books and Authors Reviewed
Summary
Dear GCN
There must be New Age believers who make more sense than Chris Griscom (author of Ecstasy Is a New Frequency: Teachings of the Life), but those I know are all too like her, at least in what they are willing to believe. In order to believe that the universe is just and kindly, people will tolerate any sort of silliness and confusion. The New Age believers I meet have come from some form of white American Protestantism and I – like Duncan Mitchel (see GCN, Nov. 6–12, 1988) – see Griscom and Shirley Maclaine's beliefs as a disguised form of Christianity: obsessed with individual salvation, unaware of history, justifying its own contradictions, appealing to mystery and faith, and lacking in community and social conscience.
Don't understand it? Have faith! Don't believe it? Have faith! Or as one young woman said to me when she found out I didn't believe in God, “But you ought to try,” as if belief were an athletic feat like running a fourminute mile.
I'm an atheist. I had an entirely secular upbringing, but with the emphasis on ethics and social action typical of the secular Jews of my parents' generation, in whom Messianic fervor had been transformed into a passionate determination to understand the world and an equally passionate commitment to changing it for the better. I'm also someone who's had many experiences of what I can only call mysticism during my teens and twenties: a feeling of unity with the natural world and even moments in which I “knew” (in ways I could never recall afterwards or describe) that space and time were – I use such language for lack of a better – illusions. This sort of experience turns up in the literary records of all sorts of religions and while the experience is remarkably the same in all accounts (or almost all) it is used by particular mystics to “prove” the truth of their own particular religious belief. In short, it has no necessary connection with the facts of that creed nor does it – in my experience – have any connection with morality of the ordinary kind.
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- The Country You Have Never SeenEssays and Reviews, pp. 286 - 287Publisher: Liverpool University PressPrint publication year: 2007