Photo de l'auteur

Nancy Hathaway

Auteur de The Unicorn

6 oeuvres 707 utilisateurs 6 critiques

A propos de l'auteur

Nancy Hathaway's books include "The Friendly Guide to the Universe" & "The Unicorn." She lives in New York City. (Bowker Author Biography)

Comprend les noms: Nancy Hathaway

Œuvres de Nancy Hathaway

The Unicorn (1980) 391 exemplaires
The Friendly Guide to the Universe (1994) 117 exemplaires
The Friendly Guide to Mythology (2000) 97 exemplaires
Native American Portraits (1990) 95 exemplaires
Thanksgiving Crafts and Cookbook (1979) 5 exemplaires
Halloween Crafts and Cookbook (1979) 2 exemplaires

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Nom canonique
Hathaway, Nancy
Date de naissance
1946-12-01
Sexe
female
Nationalité
USA
Études
Columbia University (MA)
Professions
journalist
teacher

Membres

Critiques

A fascinating collection of photographs of American Indians from roughly the Civil War to World War I, after many had been confined to reservation lands. Most of the images are from American Indians living in the Southwest and West. Some of the photographs were staged to represent white America’s stereotypes of American Indians, but many others were taken in more naturalistic settings. Regardless, the photos capture some of the diversity among American Indians and reveals their humanity in ways that textbooks have often failed to do. The main problem with the book is the text that accompanies the photos. Much of it is about the photographers instead of their subjects; some of the text describing the photographs is flat-out wrong. Still, the images are so compelling that is worth the time to slowly flip through the book page by page and take in what the images have to offer.… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
klinkd | 1 autre critique | Feb 16, 2017 |
The Lion and the Unicorn, by Nancy Hathaway is the story of the king of Friesland, who wanted to give his daughter, Isabel, a unicorn, the symbol of purity, as a wedding gift. Although she had always been good and dutiful, after her wedding she would ride off on her unicorn and visit many suitors, the most important name Bartholomew. He always fought in her honor, the most important of his battles being against a lion. They both fought bravely and were evenly matched, but then he threatened the lion, and it surrendered. He rode upon it and became known as the Knight of the Lion.
He is told Isabel is dead, and he mourns her. She is still alive, but she is also told that her knight is dead, and she weeps until she passes out. The messenger who gave her the news steals her away. He imprisons her in a cave guarded by a dragon.
Bartholomew hears of her true fate, and goes to fight the dragon, atop his lion, but he cannot best it. In comes the unicorn, and stabs the dragon with his horn. Isabel is rescued, and the two return to the castle on their respective steeds. The spurned husband, who also tried to kill the dragon, was badly burned and has locked himself in a tower forever.
Wow, this is a terrible message, and it does not even make sense! If unicorns represent purity, then Isabel and the unicorn are poorly matched. She basically cheats on her husband and rides away with her lover. The lion is supposed to represent courage and valor, but Bartholomew cannot even slay the dragon! The unicorn has to get the job done.
The story is about courtly love, but it feels very sordid. The message here is not a good one for anybody. And, as I just explained, it does not even make sense. It does have elements of female empowerment, which did not exist in the time it was conceived. Yet, the infidelity feels sordid, because the husband totally loses. I do not recommend it.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
Purr4kitty2003 | 2 autres critiques | Jul 24, 2010 |
Memorably recorded by photographers, the Indians appear here as artwork cannot portray them. Black and white portraits of Indians of North America from the Kurt Koegler collection. Photographed between the Civil War and World War I.
 
Signalé
earthwind | 1 autre critique | Jul 13, 2010 |
This reprint from 1980 contains beautiful illustrations and paintings, but did lack somewhat in the text. The stories and history were fascinating and provide a worldwide view of the mythical creature (well, as we now consider it...), however some chapters or sections did not tie together or flow well within the book. I also would have liked if the layout was better. As it is, the pictures rarely if ever had anything to do with the text on any one page. So I either had to keep reading the text to keep the thread of ideas, or stop and take in the unrelated pictures and break the flow.

Overall, a good introduction to all the multiple stories and sources of the unicorn throughout the world.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
amarie | 2 autres critiques | Jan 5, 2010 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
6
Membres
707
Popularité
#35,840
Évaluation
½ 3.8
Critiques
6
ISBN
18
Langues
2

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