Col. James V. Young spent almost twenty years in Asia; including fourteen in Korea. Here; he writes with the expertise of an old Korea hand about a period that saw South Korea develop from an agrarian economy to a modern industrial state. Young volunteered in 1969 for a new program aimed at creating area specialists within the military. In 1975; after four years of training in Korean language and culture; he witnessed how American diplomats convinced Park ChungHee; the South Korean president; not to develop his own nuclear weapons. Later; from the perspective of a military attaché; Young saw the mistrust that characterized U.S.Korean relations during the 1970s. He provides new insights into the behindthescenes efforts to derail President Jimmy Carter’s troop withdrawal policies and argues that the United States was caught flatfooted by such crucial episodes as the coup of 1979 and the 12/12 Incident. Young’s memoir straddles the line between military and diplomatic history and offers entertaining and often humorous stories. Those interested in the region; the issues; and military life off the battlefield will value this book.
#1703538 in Books Counterpoint 2000-05 2000-05-02Original language:EnglishPDF # 1 9.02 x .74 x 5.98l; 1.00 #File Name: 1582430802320 pages
Review
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful. The negative reviews are outstanding only in their demonstrated ignorance of both the topic and this bookBy B. F. MooneyIt is worth a read. The late Dr. Taylor has written a thoughtful and in-depth account of America's Shadow Culture. Decide for yourself if the book has merit. Don't be misled by the myopia of others.33 of 35 people found the following review helpful. New light on the Shadow cultureBy A CustomerThe author's comments on the vitriol from the first reviewer of this book reinforce my earlier suspicions about that person's "shadow" agenda. The above "review" is a clear abuse of the privilege offered by in that it does not refer to the book's content but serves only as a personal whetstone for that individual's puerile and vindictive ax-grinding. It is therefore worthless as a review and should be deleted by the webmasters. That said; onto the more relevant matter of "Shadow Culture":Taylor's articulation of the origins and history of one of the three main streams of psychology is an original and highly readable overview of the third stream of alternative spirituality and psychology (the other two being academic and clinical) which; in my 24 years of reading on the subject; has never been so well integrated into one volume. As a historian of Psychology and Psychiatry at Harvard; Taylor is a uniquely qualified "white-water raft guide" through the turbulent waters of these streams. We discover that the so-called New Age did not appear fully formed from the brow of the 1960s; but is merely the third irruption of this stream into our cultural consciousness - this time on a global scale; forming what Maslow called; "a world personality... that can adapt to a variety of different cultures but the essence of which transcends the limits of any given culture." (p.269) The latter part of the book; where Taylor explains the division of Humanistic Psychology into three subparts: Transpersonal Psaychology; Somatic and experiential therapies; and the radical "therapies" from which emerged anti-psychiatry; critical thinking and the human sciences; should be required reading for all psychology students. A further fragmentation of Transpersonal Psychology is then outlined; divided into Grof's research in altered states; Wilber's "theory of everything" models; and the third and largest group of leaderless people without any one center; single worldview or model; making changes in the crucible of their own daily lives. (This "transmodern" group - estimated at around 44 million in North America-was described in a survey of the emerging "Integral Culture" (Noetic Science Review; Spring 1996).) Taylor ends by envisioning a new era of cross-cultural fertilization between East and West; embracing multiple epistemoligies on their own terms and undistorted; this time around; by politically correct cliques of white "sensitive" white new agers from Marin County (my own opinon; supported by W.I. Thompson's book; "Coming into Being" - an excellent companion to this book). Taylor views psychology as a much needed foundation for ALL "knowledge accumulation" incorporating an "iconography of the transcendent" presently lacking in current mainstream psychology. This may lead to a multi-perspectival study of all streams into an "integral psychology" which in turn; this reviewer hopes; may be eventually be replaced by a more radical term... "Psychology".I almost gave this book a 4-star rating instead of 5 as the publisher failed to include an index - a major oversight in a book so rich in references. However Taylor does provide footnotes to each chapter. I hope they rectify this in the next edition. For the record; I am neither a neighbor; relative nor colleague of Dr. Taylor.41 of 43 people found the following review helpful. A remarkable hisotory of American's visionary tradition.By A Customer"Boring"--the pet phrase of the adolescent who's "little gray cells" have been overstretched by too much stimulation--is far from a correct portrayal of this fine book. It is a deeply intelligent; constantly fascinating; and highly readable account of the entire sweep of American spirituality; folk psychology; and the American visionary tradition from their beginnings in colonial days. From the visionaries and mystics of early 1700s; to the Quakers and Shakers; to Swedenborg; Blavatsky; and the New England Transcendentalists; and on to the Americanization of Jung and Freud; and finally to the modern transpersonal psychologies and spiritually inspired alternative therapies; this is a record of the passions and history of American spiritual life never before recorded with such clarity. Don't be fooled by trash reviews written by rash undergraduates (of all ages). This is a story without precedent; a landmark in American spiritual and intellectual history written by one of the foremost historians of our age.