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Quest for the Red Sulphur: The Life of Ibn 'Arabi (Islamic Texts Society Golden Palm)

DOC Quest for the Red Sulphur: The Life of Ibn 'Arabi (Islamic Texts Society Golden Palm) by Claude Addas in History

Description

The book is written in the context of China's guerrilla war against Japanese occupiers; this conflict is mentioned often by Mao. In this book Mao discusses the differences between guerrilla and "orthodox" military forces; as well as how such forces can work together for a common goal. Other topics covered include propaganda and political concerns; the formation of guerrilla units; the qualities of a good guerrilla officer; discipline in a guerrilla army; and guerrilla bases. Text: English (translation) Original Language: Chinese


#3426327 in Books 1993-12-01Original language:FrenchPDF # 1 9.25 x 1.10 x 6.00l; 1.55 #File Name: 0946621446348 pages


Review
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Five StarsBy KoKoOne of my favorite books. Tends to be expensive; but well worth it.17 of 21 people found the following review helpful. Tedious in the extremeBy B. BraunI bought this book in high hopes of learning more about sufism and about Ibn 'Arabi. The cover art is fabulous; and the title quite provocative; with its alchemical implications (which would be highly relevant to this time period). Yet what the red sulphur means in this instance is not chemical at all; but a person of rare worth; which is what 'Arabi spent his life seeking; and also what he apparently became; at least to many students. Author Addas adds a few pages here and there of general historical background; mostly about Andalusia and Islamic Spain which had reached its pinnacle right around the lifetime of 'Arabi. But by far most of the book is the painful recounting of who 'Arabi met; who he might have met; or possibly not met; where he went; what month it may have been; what other scholars got wrong about the year or location of one of these speculations or facts; and other endless tedious detail. For scholars; this may be rich and fertile material; for the general reader it is not. And most unfortunately; in marked contrast to the nitpicking historiography; there is neither a properly critical attitude towards the endless grandiloquent claims 'Arabi made about talking with Jesus; to God; being the second coming of Muhammad; being one of the four pillars of Islam; taking night journeys to heaven and so forth and so on; nor does this book present a truly inspired rendition of 'Arabi's philosophy; as one might find in "The Garden of Truth: The Vision and Promise of Sufism; Islam's Mystical Tradition"; by Seyyed Hossein Nasr; at least in its first few chapters. The Garden of Truth: The Vision and Promise of Sufism; Islam's Mystical Tradition1 of 2 people found the following review helpful. Ibn Arabi lifeBy FaithWonderful Book.Will be re-reading several times over. There is some much info to correlate with Ibn Arabi's previous works.

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