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OverviewA pile of seeds, a tuft of wool, a vessel of water, a closed box What happens when the heroes disappear, when the battle for the city is over, when you return to the island and find a box in your hands? There was an instruction once that told us why the box should never be opened. But you don't believe those stories anymore. You always open the box. After Ithaca is a non-fiction work - part memoir, part essay, part travelogue - that follows a real life journey of descent in a world on the tip of crisis. It is set in the Peruvian rainforest, in the backrooms of Suffolk towns, in Japan, in France, Australia, in the desert borderlands, in borrowed houses and Occupy tents, in kitchens and burial chambers, underneath a lemon tree on an abandoned terrace... The book revolves around the four initiatory tasks of Psyche, set by Venus, the goddess of love and justice: four territories that map this search for meaning and coherence in a time of fall. Each chapter starts with a memory of place as a clue to the investigation: the recovery of a relationship with wild nature, with being human, a kind of archaeology for the pieces of self that lie missing beneath a broken storyline, like the sherds of a pot. It is a personal story and also a social story, about the relinquishment of a certain world, that looks at writing as an existential practice: showing how myth can be a techne for finding our lost voice, our medicine of how to put a crooked thing straight. How to pull ourselves out of the wreckage, and start again. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Charlotte Du CannPublisher: Greenbank Book Imprint: Greenbank Book Dimensions: Width: 15.60cm , Height: 1.50cm , Length: 23.40cm Weight: 0.399kg ISBN: 9781896559834ISBN 10: 1896559832 Pages: 256 Publication Date: 31 March 2022 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In stock We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviews... quite remarkable. Turning her back on a society living on the surface, Charlotte Du Cann goes very deep indeed -- deep into time, but also place, identity, gritty reality. Thoreau strove for 'the solid earth! the actual world! the common sense! Contact! Contact!, ' and I think this author has taken up that good work and brought it into our fateful, flickering time. - Bill McKibben, author The Flag, the Cross, and the Station Wagon, founder of 350.org Du Cann's stunning interweaving of myth, history, culture and stories from the land take us deep into ourselves, to places we have never been and most crucially towards the Earth and each other... This is a beautiful, smart and generous book. - Joanna Pocock, author of Surrender: The Call of the American West This beautiful and powerfully written book illuminates and challenges the stories we choose to live by in these times. Offering no easy answers but - as in all the best old myths - asking all the right questions, After Ithaca is a work of rare clarity, a fierce and necessary hymn to the human capacity for transformation. - Sharon Blackie, author of If Women Rose Rooted Author Information"Charlotte Du Cann is a writer, editor and co-director of the Dark Mountain Project. She also teaches collaborative non-fiction, and radical kinship with the other-than-human world.In 1991 she left her life as a London features and fashion journalist with a one-way ticket to Mexico. After travelling for a decade, she settled on the East Anglian coast to write a sequence of books about reconnecting with the Earth. The first of these ""52 Flowers That Shook My World - A Radical Return to Earth"" was published in 2012 by Two Ravens Press.Charlotte has published five works of non-fiction, ranging from a collection of essays about food and society, ""Offal and the New Brutalism"" (Heinemann) to the travelogue, ""Reality Is the Bug That Bit Me in the Galapagos"" (Flamingo). More recently, she has written about activism, myth and cultural change for the New York Times, the Guardian, Noema and openDemocracy. She co-founded the grassroots newspaper Transition Free Press and edited ""Playing for Time - Making Art as if the World Mattered"" (with author Lucy Neal), a handbook about community arts practice (Oberon Books). She is presently working on a collective Dark Mountain book about the ancestral solar year called ""Eight Fires""." Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |