Owens Books


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Owens Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

Owens
The Acquisition of Irish: A Case Study (Multilingual Matters Series, No. 72)
Published in Paperback by Multilingual Matters Limited (1991-05)
Author: Maire Owens
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Average review score:

Greatest book I ever read!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2000-05-08
This is the best book I've ever seen about celtic languages. I recomend to read it for you too.

Owens
The Adaptive Design of the Human Psyche: Psychoanalysis, Evolutionary Biology, and the Therapeutic Process
Published in Hardcover by The Guilford Press (1992-09-25)
Authors: Malcolm Owen Slavin and Daniel Kriegman
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Average review score:

Psychoanalysis & Evolutionary Biology: Read it!
Helpful Votes: 23 out of 24 total.
Review Date: 1997-12-09
BOOK REVIEW The Adaptive Design of the Human Psyche: Psychoanalysis, Evolutionary Biology and the Therapeutic Process By Malcolm Slavin and Daniel Kriegman by Don Greif, Ph.D. The Adaptive Design of the Human Psyche: Psychoanalysis, Evolutionary Biology and the Therapeutic Process, by Malcolm Slavin and Daniel Kriegman, is a profound and creative work and an awesome accomplishment. The fact that it is brilliant is almost beside the point. For what Slavin and Kriegman have accomplished in this book is that they have come as close as anyone writing from a psychoanalytic point of view has ever come to capturing the essential nature of the human condition. They have provided a highly compelling and lucid description of human nature, in all of its complexity and paradoxicalness, that is inspiring and moving. It is also hard to read. But, and this is an understatement, it is well worth the effort. I can almost guarantee that you will be richly rewarded if you invest the time and energy necessary to understand what Slavin and Kriegman are saying. They use an adaptive theoretical framework, one which is largely based on contemporary evolutionary biology, as a vantage point from which to critically examine the basic premises about human nature which are contained within each of the two major psychoanalytic paradigms -- the classical and relational narrative traditions. Using an evolutionary framework, they elucidate the two narratives= respective assumptions about the nature of the human psyche and of the relational world, and they reveal the important truths about human nature and the psyche contained within each tradition. Through a process of examining and deconstructing important metaphors from both classical and relational traditions (repression, endogenous drives, and the true self) into their basic meanings, and then reconstructing those meanings into an evolutionary narrative, Slavin and Kriegman provide a new paradigm for psychoanalysis, one that synthesizes the essential truths contained in each narrative into a comprehensive framework or whole. The new evolutionary narrative which results appears to embrace, in a way that has not been achieved before, the inherently valid pieces of each narrative tradition. The evolutionary narrative which results from this synthesis depicts human beings, according to Slavin and Kriegman, "as innately individualistic and innately social; as endowed with inherently selfish, aggressively self-promoting aims, as well as an equally primary altruistic disposition toward those whose interests we share. We are, in short, never destined to attain the kind of highly autonomous individuality enshrined in the classical tradition, nor are we the "social animal" of the relational vision. We are essentially "semisocial" beings whose nature, or self-structure and motivational system, is inherently divided between eternally conflicting aims." (p. 281) Since Slavin and Kriegman use an evolutionary framework to evaluate the validity of the basic premises of the classical and relational models, one must wonder about the validity of evolutionary theory itself. It seems that evolutionary theory has widespread acceptance and credibility within the scientific world. It is perhaps close to having attained the same status as more familiar and broadly accepted scientific theories. In the November issue of Natural History the evolutionary biologist Jared Diamond stated the following: "As for the claim that evolution is an unproved theory, that's nonsense. Evolution is a fact, established with the same degree of confidence as our theory' of the round earth, our germ theory' of disease, and the atomic theory' of matter. Yes, there is lively debate about the particular evolutionary mechanisms that caused particular changes, but the existence of evolutionary change is not in doubt" (p. 19). For the purpose of evaluating Slavin and Kriegman's ideas, it is significant to note that evolutionary biological theory has a far different scientific status than psychoanalytic theory. As a scientific theory psychoanalysis has achieved little credibility in its first hundred years. It has achieved far more credibility as a method of treating psychological problems, and there its adherents consist mainly of its beneficiaries, that is, those who have gained personally from it, or from its offspring, psychoanalytic psychotherapy. It is contemporary evolutionary biological theory, largely through the work of Robert Trivers, that has vastly increased our understanding of the social environment. It is this theory that is most relevant to Slavin and Kriegman's work and to psychoanalysis, for it is understanding those forces that shape social evolution that has made it possible for Slavin and Kriegman to fulfill an aim that Freud sought but failed to achieve; mainly, to link the universal, underlying features of internal psychic structure to ancestral interpersonal experience. Slavin and Kriegman demonstrate that those psychodynamic features that comprise our "deep structure," such as the capacities for repression, regression, and transference, have evolved over the course of millions of years as adaptations to our environment, in particular to the unique and complex realities in our social or relational environment. The complex inner design of the human psyche has been shaped by the same forces that operate within the natural world to shape living organisms, mainly those that constitute natural selection. The basic universal features of the human psyche are a result of their having conferred an adaptive advantage on our ancestors; those humans who had these features were more successful at negotiating the complex relations dilemmas and paradoxes that faced them and were more successful, ultimately, at reproducing and surviving in that social environment. Robert Langs, in an article in the October 1993 issue of Contemporary Psychoanalysis, ("Psychoanalysis: Narrative Myth. or Narrative Science") criticizes Slavin and Kriegman for adopting a teleological position in their use of certain concepts. Referring to their conceptualization of repression as serving to safeguard aspects of an individual's "true self" so that they can be retrieved when relational conditions change, Langs states, "The ideas of a true self (all moments of selfhood are interactional in nature) and of the goal of self-actualization are teleological no matter how they are stated" (p. 580). It seems clear that Langs has not understood several central ideas in Slavin and Kriegman's book nor, it seems, has he understood evolutionary theory. Slavin and Kriegman see the existence of something like the "true self," some core, "endogenous" or independent source of motivation, not as an end in itself, but rather as a basic feature of the human psyche, part of its deep structural, adaptive design that has evolved over millions of years as a functional solution to a highly challenging and complex dilemma that has faced (and continues to face) the human child since the time of our prehuman ancestors, namely how to construct a self in a world where it is highly dependent for its identity on others whose interests not only overlap and converge but also necessarily diverge and, at times, conflict with its own. Slavin and Kriegman state, "Evolutionary theory suggests that even responsive, attuned, facilitative familial environments will inevitably be characterized by a highly ambiguous mixture of overlapping mutual interests, intrinsic conflict, and ongoing deception" (p. 121). Slavin and Kriegman believe that the "true self...may signify a dimension of our overall adaptive design...that seems to provide us with an absolutely critical source of information about our individual interests" (p. 176). In their view "a design element such as [the true self] became a critical, functional necessity for a species in which our s

Owens
Adoption in Old Babylonian Nippur and the Archive of Mannum-Mesu-Lissur (Mesopotamian Civilizations, Vol 3) (Mesopotamian Civilizations, Vol 3)
Published in Hardcover by Eisenbrauns (1991-08-01)
Authors: Elizabeth Caecilia Stone, David I. Owen, and John R. Mitchell
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A Fascinating Look at Ancient Mesopotamian Adoption
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-06
This book is not an exhaustive study of ancient Mesopotamian adoptions; rather it is a study of a group of related texts many of which deal with adoption. The work contains photographs and hand drawn copies of the texts as well as transliterations and translations of the documents. The work is aimed at a scholarly, rather than a general, audience.

One fascianting fact that emerges from this study is that many adoptions are not adoptions as we would think of them. These adoptions were strictly economic transactions between adult adopters and adoptees and were not designed to add a child to a family.

This study is thorough, yet concise and comes highly recomended.

Owens
Agee on Film: v. 2
Published in Hardcover by Peter Owen Ltd (1965-02)
Author: James Agee
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Average review score:

Taken from the book's back cover
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2004-03-20
Five film scripts by the author of A Death in the family:

Noa Noa
The African queen
The Night of the Hunter
The Bride Comes to Yellow sky
The Blue Hotel

As Gerald Weales wrote in The Commonweal, this volume "should be attractive not simply to students of film, but to anyone who really looks at the screen once he gets past the box-office."
James Agee was from 1941 to 1948 the movie critic for Time and from 1942 to 1948 he wrote the film column for The Nation. He then went to Hollywood and began writing the scripts collected here for such directors as John Huston and Charles Laughton. In 1958, three years after his death, his novel A Death in the Family was awarded the Pulitzer Prize. Agee's film criticism is available as a Beacon Paperback under the title, Agee on Film: Reviews and Comments.

Owens
Air Accident Investigation
Published in Paperback by Sutton Publishing (2006-11-30)
Author: David Owen
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You have a pick aviation collections shouldn't miss.
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-10-15
This post-911 new edition comes from a former aerospace engineer, who reviews aviation accidents and their causes, examining how each major accident was affected by weather, pilot error, metal fatigue or maintenance issues. Crucial incidents are reconstructed with an eye to solving puzzles and even those which received intense media profile reveal new angles in Owen's investigation. Add advice on industry changes and you have a pick aviation collections shouldn't miss.

Diane C. Donovan
California Bookwatch

Owens
Albania in the Twentieth Century, A History: Volume I: Albania and King Zog, 1908-39 (Albania in the Twentieth Century: a History)
Published in Hardcover by I. B. Tauris (2005-07-22)
Author: Owen Pearson
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A genuine masterpiece of Albanian history in English!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-02-21
This is no doubt the first concise and complete history of the modern Albanian state ever published in English. The book's structure is in chronological order of events following the years of independence to the consolidation of the Albania state and Albanian Monarchy. Mr. Pearson gives a realistic and vivid depiction of Albanian political personalities of the time and the overall political environment. The book is objective and free of any domestic or international political biases, which is difficult to maintain given the regions turbulent past - the author should be complimented on his efforts in this aspect. Anyone interested in Albanian studies, Balkan or Eastern European history should own this book! I highly recommend it!

Owens
Alberta & Freedom (Peter Owen Modern Classics)
Published in Paperback by Peter Owen Publishers (2008-02-11)
Author: Cora Sandel
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Average review score:

The struggle to write
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2000-09-14
This, the second book in the Alberta trilogy, breaks with the past in more ways than one. While the first book concerned itself with the struggles of an adolescent girl growing up in a cold and alienating small town in Northern Norway, the first book examines Alberta's life seven years later. She is now a woman living on the fringe of the expatriate artist community in Paris, and she struggles to maintain her autonomy, develop her voice as a writer, and stave off crushing loneliness and poverty. Sandel is a master of Norwegian prose fiction, and although Alberta's situation is often desperate, the writing is always exquisite.

Owens
Alberta and Jacob (Peter Owen Modern Classic)
Published in Paperback by Peter Owen Publishers (2004-01)
Authors: Cora Sandel and Elizabeth Rokkan
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Average review score:

northern light
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2001-03-23
This is the quiet, intense story of an adolescent girl who struggles to gain autonomy in an oppressive family and narrow-minded town north of the arctic circle in Norway. The story (originally published in 1926) is set in the narrow confines of the bourgeoisie at the end of the nineteenth century, and the desperation of the main character, Alberte, is palpable. Cora Sandel (pseudonym for Sara Fabricius, 1880-1974) is considered to be one of the greatest Scandinavian novelists of the twentieth century, but is virtually unknown abroad. Despite the seriousness of the novel, it manages to delight most readers because of the brilliance of Sandel's prose. A must read for folks who love twentieth century women writers.

Owens
Album of Science: Physical Sciences in the Twentieth Century
Published in Hardcover by Charles Scribner's Sons (1989-08-01)
Author: Owen Gingerich
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Average review score:

A fine volume (and series)for science teachers & enthusiasts
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 1998-11-14
The final volume of the Album of Science maintains the high standards of the series. Not by itself an history of science, the "Album" series nevertheless fills an important need in this subject.

These books contribute, through a masterful selection of photographs and drawings, a sense of life and adventure to the sometimes dry topic of science history. Science teachers and science buffs should have this resource on their shelves.

I endorse this volume and the Album of Science series in general. Too few people know these fine books exist. While The Album of Science is expensive, it is well worth it.

Owens
Albuquerque in Our Time: 30 Voices, 300 Years
Published in Paperback by Museum of New Mexico Press (2006-04-22)
Author: Debra Hughes
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Average review score:

Albuquerque in Our Time: 30 Voices, 300 Years
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-02-05
An excellent history of the City of Albuquerque. I found the book entertaining, informative and very well researched. I recommend the book to anyone interested in the history of New Mexico.


Books-Under-Review-->Reference-->Biography-->O-->Owens-->33
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