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$78.36
81. Jesus' Emotions in the Fourth
$173.19
82. Jesus and Land: Sacred and Social
$111.47
83. Submission within the Godhead
$28.71
84. Reform of the Ministry: A Study
$50.98
85. Architecture and Utopia in the
$41.69
86. Islam and Christian Religion &
 
$120.91
87. Theme of Temple Christology in
88. Paul and Ancient Views of Sexual
 
89. The religion of to-morrow: A study
 
90. Sociology of Religion: Types of
$199.00
91. The Medieval Heritage in Early
$36.43
92. Islam and Christian Theology:
93. Greek and Roman Mythology (World
$57.38
94. Revolutionary Ideology and Islamic
$126.92
95. Corruption and Redemption of Creation:
$37.27
96. Islam and Christian Theology:
 
97. The mystery-religions and Christianity;:
$138.99
98. Richard Hooker and the English
$16.62
99. An Introduction to Medieval Jewish
$19.99
100. Lost Delta Found: Rediscovering

81. Jesus' Emotions in the Fourth Gospel (Library of New Testament Studies)
by Stephen Voorwinde
Hardcover: 352 Pages (2005-11-01)
list price: US$170.00 -- used & new: US$78.36
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Asin: 0567030261
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This book seeks to discuss John's references to Jesus' emotions in the light of the current debate regarding Johannie Christology. The Fourth Gospel refers to Jesus' love, joy, and zeal. At times it also portrays him as troubled, deeply moved, and in tears. Do these expressions of emotion underscore Jesus' humanity or his divinity? The study is set against the background of the emotions of God as found in earlier Jewish literature, as well as against that of the emotions of Jesus in the Synoptics and the remainder of the New Testament. Voorwinde argues that the covenant provides the most consistent perspective for viewing both the emotions of Yahweh in the Old Testament and the emotions of Jesus in the Gospels. The Johannine Jesus is found to fulfil the hitherto incompatible roles of covenant Lord and covenant sacrifice. Rather than being expressive only of his humanity Jesus' emotions are also found to underscore his divinity. This is due to the unique genius of this Gospel with its paradoxical presentation of Jesus whose divinity is manifested most eloquently in his weakness, suffering, and death.Only his tears at the grave of Lazarus can be explained as a human emotion pure and simple. All the other emotions, because of their strong connections to the cross, highlight both Jesus' humanity and divinity, albeit for various reasons and in highly nuanced ways. ... Read more


82. Jesus and Land: Sacred and Social Space in Second Temple Judaism (Library of New Testament Studies)
by Karen J. Wenell
Hardcover: 192 Pages (2007-08-28)
list price: US$155.00 -- used & new: US$173.19
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Asin: 0567031152
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Beliefs about land, or the Abrahamic land promise, were an important part of Second Temple Judaism. Within the Roman Empire, the reality of life for Jews 'in the land' was different from the experience of Jews in the Diaspora. Among the diverse expressions of Judaism that flourished in the land prior to the revolt, there are indications that Jesus paid attention to the relationship between God, people and land. However, there are marked differences between Jesus' millenarian vision of sacred space and that of other groups at that time. The methodology employed in Wenell's study views religious space as having both sacred and social aspects and draws upon insights from sociology and social anthropology. It focuses on three main areas, all of which are relevant to beliefs about 'the land': temple, purity and the twelve. A comparative approach with other first century groups reveals Jesus as a prophetic figure who does not focus on a temple as the centre of God's kingdom, nor on purity as the means of maintaining group identity in the sacredness of the land.Instead, Jesus takes up land imagery in calling a group of twelve disciples in a prophetic and symbolic action with implications for Jesus' vision of sacred space and the social organization of that space. Both positively and negatively, Jesus' attitude toward the three areas of temple, purity and twelve points to unique aspects of his message and to distinctive beliefs poignantly relevant to the Abrahamic promise of the land. ... Read more


83. Submission within the Godhead and the Church in the Epistle to the Philippians: An Exegetical and Theological Examination of the Concept of Submission ... 2 and 3 (Library of New Testament Studies)
by M. Sydney Park
Hardcover: 224 Pages (2007-08-21)
list price: US$155.00 -- used & new: US$111.47
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Asin: 056704551X
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While the notion of submission (particularly women's submission) has been the focus in not only biblical studies and feminist theology but also in church structure and in the wider context of modern Christian culture, little attention has been given to the theme academically.

Deviating from the general tendency to seek answers to the issue of women's submission from creation accounts, this research focuses on Philippians 2:6-11 as the primary text and reason for embracing submission as the defining characteristic of a Christian community.The argument for submission is thus based on soteriology and ethics of the cross rather than creation.Thus, submission is an integral notion not only for women but all Christians.

In this way, the rights language of feminist theology is addressed as well as the claims to male headship which reflect a concern for the right to rule rather than that of Christ's self-sacrifice (submission) in Philippians 2:6-11.Both attempts to attain power and retain power stand in direct opposition to the image of Christ in Philippians 2:6-11.Simultaneously, the notion of submission does not preclude equality or even authority: all three are present in Philippians 2:6-11.Christ voluntarily submits out of his equality with God and later is endowed with God's own authority in 2:9-11.

This study shows that the three notions of submission, equality and authority are not as neatly compartmentalized as many assume. ... Read more


84. Reform of the Ministry: A Study in the Work of Roland Allen (Roland Allen Library)
by Roland Allen
Paperback: 236 Pages (2003-06-26)
list price: US$39.50 -- used & new: US$28.71
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Asin: 0718891031
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Short description: No one was more radically critical of the ministry and the inherited Church policy that surrounds it than Allen, whose prophetic writings constantly challenge the whole mission of the Christian Church, and his writings on the subject are collected here. ... Read more


85. Architecture and Utopia in the Temple Era (The Library of Second Temple Studies)
by Michael Chyutin
Hardcover: 304 Pages (2005-12-15)
list price: US$215.00 -- used & new: US$50.98
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Asin: 0567030547
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This book proposes a new reconstruction of the Temple, which differs from conventional descriptions in Jewish literary sources during the First and Second Temple eras.

 

Individual descriptions of the Temple are examined independently and the influence of earlier descriptions on subsequent ones is considered. Detailed architectural diagrams and three-dimensional models accompany the different reconstructions of the temple.

... Read more

86. Islam and Christian Religion & Spirituality: A Study of the Interpretation of Theological Ideas in the Two Religion & Spiritualitys - Part 2 - Vol.1 (Library of Ecclesiastical History) (Pt. II, v. 1)
by James Windrow Sweetman
Paperback: 368 Pages (2002-01-09)
list price: US$49.00 -- used & new: US$41.69
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Asin: 0227172019
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Short description: A ground-breaking study in four volumes of the inter-relation between the theological teaching of Islam and the theological content in the teaching of the Christian Fathers and of mediaeval theologians. ... Read more


87. Theme of Temple Christology in John's Gospel (Library of New Testament Studies)
by Stephen Um
 Hardcover: 256 Pages (2006-10-31)
list price: US$170.00 -- used & new: US$120.91
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Asin: 0567042243
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In the past, most scholars have interpreted water as a symbol for revelation. In this thesis, Stephen Um argues against that pervasive view. He believes that the evidence indicates more precisely that the most conventional way of describing water in early Judaism was the life-giving usage (e.g. original Eden, the present age, and the new creational age). He goes on in Chapter 3 to examine the concept of 'Spirit' and his findings refute the restrictive definition which some scholars have advocated: 'Spirit' is shown to be a powerful agent for creative and eschatological life rather than a mere communicative organ inspiring charismatic revelation or prophecy. John not only recognized the strong Jewish association of water and Spirit with the future new creation, but also remarkably combined these two distinct Jewish traditions to produce the image of Spirit as the source of eschatological life. Water, representing a supply of abundant life, was developed by the Deutero-Isaiah passages and by eschatological Temple references (Ezek 47:1-12; Joel 4:18; Zech 14:8), describing a new creational place of blessedness.Um posits that if a person experiences the reality of eschatological life by the new creational power of the Spirit, then that individual would be able to participate in the exclusive worship of God because he or she recognizes the unique divine identity of God, who is Spirit. ... Read more


88. Paul and Ancient Views of Sexual Desire: Paul?s Sexual Ethics in 1 Thessalonians 4, 1 Corinthians 7 and Romans 1 (Library of New Testament Studies)
by J Edward Ellis
Hardcover: 208 Pages (2007-08-08)
list price: US$130.00
Isbn: 0567045382
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"Paul and Ancient Views of Sexual Desire" refutes the argument put forward by some biblical scholars that Paul, in his sexual ethics, is in partial agreement with a current of thought in the Graeco-Roman world that condemns sexual desire and advocates the elimination of such desire from marital sex. Ellis argues not only against this line of thought but also the attendant notion that this way of thinking underlies Paul's comments on homosexual activity in Romans 1. Through close analysis of numerous ancient passages relating to sexual desire, Ellis demonstrates that ancient thinkers tend to condemn not sexual desire in itself but excessive sexual desire and lack of self-control and, furthermore, that ancient auditors would have been unlikely to see condemnation of sexual desire in Paul's words in "1 Thessalonians 4" or "1 Corinthians 7". ... Read more


89. The religion of to-morrow: A study in the evolution of religious thought ([New thought library])
by W. J Colville
 Unknown Binding: 320 Pages (1917)

Asin: B0008BKO52
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90. Sociology of Religion: Types of Religious Man v. 4: A Study of Christendom (International Library of Society)
by Werner Stark
 Hardcover: 367 Pages (1969-12)

Isbn: 0710066406
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91. The Medieval Heritage in Early Modern Metaphysics and Modal Theory, 1400-1700 (The New Synthese Historical Library)
Paperback: 352 Pages (2010-11-02)
list price: US$199.00 -- used & new: US$199.00
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Asin: 9048164273
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This volume explores key aspects of the transmission of learning and the transformation of thought from the late Middle Ages to the early modern period. The topics dealt with include metaphysics as a science, the rise of probabilistic modality, freedom of the human will, as well as the role and validity of logical reasoning in speculative theology. The volume will be of interest to scholars who work on medieval and early modern philosophy, theology, and intellectual history.

... Read more

92. Islam and Christian Theology: A Study of the Interpretation of Theological Ideas in the Two Religions - Part 2 - Vol.2 (Library of Ecclesiastical History)
by James Windrow Sweetman
Paperback: 368 Pages (2003-03-28)
list price: US$49.00 -- used & new: US$36.43
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Asin: 0227172035
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Short descritption: A ground-breaking study in four volumes of the inter-relation between the theological teaching of Islam and the theological content in the teaching of the Christian Fathers and of mediaeval theologians. ... Read more


93. Greek and Roman Mythology (World History)
by Don Nardo
Library Binding: 112 Pages (1997-09)
list price: US$27.45
Isbn: 1560063084
Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars
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Examines the historical development of Greco-Roman mythology, its heroes, and its influence on the history of Western civilization. ... Read more

Customer Reviews (2)

3-0 out of 5 stars Heyy
I think this book was okay it wasn't always that exciting to me. i really maybe didnt like this book.

5-0 out of 5 stars Splendid Work
Don Nardo has published numerous books about the ancient world, and all of the ones I have seen are excellent.This one is no exception.From the strikingly attractive cover to Nardo's well-worded retellings of the myths, to his expert commentary, to the fulsome bibliography, this volume is a must for junior high and high school students seeking a rounded education in the history of Western culture and literature.Taechers will no doubt use this book with confidence and constructive results. ... Read more


94. Revolutionary Ideology and Islamic Militancy: The Iranian Revolution and Interpretations of the Quran (International Library of Iranian Studies)
by Najibullah Lafraie
Hardcover: 256 Pages (2009-03-15)
list price: US$97.00 -- used & new: US$57.38
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Asin: 1845110633
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The "war on terror" tends to circumscribe crucial developments in the Islamic world within a narrow definition of "Islamic terrorism." This partial and incomplete perspective fails to comprehend the links between today’s scenario and the Iranian revolution of 1979--a revolution fought in the name of God and spearheaded by religious scholars. It is vital to examine the relationship between religious and revolutionary ideologies and the revolutionary potentials of Islamic teachings. In a penetrating new study, Najibullha Lafraie examines how revolutionary ideologies function, and applies these insights to the Quran and its interpreters in the vanguard of the Iranian revolution. By unpacking these discourses, Lafraie develops and refines the concept of a "Quranic" revolutionary ideology. Revolutionary Ideology and Islamic Militancy delineates the different ways in which the Quran was used to mobilize action in 1979, and in so doing provides a context for understanding today’s Islamist movements.

... Read more

95. Corruption and Redemption of Creation: Nature in Romans 8.19-22 and Jewish Apocalyptic Literature (Library of New Testament Studies)
by Harry Hahne
Hardcover: 288 Pages (2007-01-23)
list price: US$170.00 -- used & new: US$126.92
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Asin: 0567030555
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Nature plays an important and often neglected role in Jewish apocalypses. Most Second Temple Jewish apocalypses (ca. 200 BC - AD 100) do not oppose the material world, but view nature as damaged by human and angelic sin. Rather than expecting God to destroy the world, many look forward to God's dramatic eschatological deliverance of nature from corruption. Although "Romans 8:19-22" was not written in the genre of an apocalypse, it shares the basic apocalyptic worldview. The Apostle Paul follows that stream of apocalyptic thought that looks forward to the transformation of creation by an eschatological divine act, the reversal of the damage caused by sin, and the perfection of nature to share glory with redeemed humanity. A comparison of nature in Jewish apocalypses and "Romans 8:19-22" reveals important insights into the theology of early Judaism and its influence on early Christian thought. ... Read more


96. Islam and Christian Theology: A Study of the Interpretation of Theological Ideas in the Two Religions - Part 1 - Vol.1 (Library of Ecclesiastical History) (Pt. 1, v. 1)
by James Windrow Sweetman
Paperback: 232 Pages (2002-09-01)
list price: US$52.50 -- used & new: US$37.27
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Asin: 0227171977
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Short description: A ground-breaking study in four volumes of the inter-relation between the theological teaching of Islam and the theological content in the teaching of the Christian Fathers and of mediaeval theologians. ... Read more


97. The mystery-religions and Christianity;: A study in the religious background of early Christianity (University library of comparative religion)
by Samuel Angus
 Hardcover: 359 Pages (1966)

Asin: B0006BOSHE
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98. Richard Hooker and the English Reformation (Studies in Early Modern Religious Reforms)
Hardcover: 360 Pages (2003-11-30)
list price: US$199.00 -- used & new: US$138.99
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Asin: 1402017049
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This collection of seventeen essays addresses the substance ofRichard Hooker's achievement as a theologian and philosopher in thecontext of principal themes of English Reformation thought. Hooker hasbeen variously described as a Protestant scholastic, RenaissanceAristotelian, Erasmian humanist, Thomist, moderate Calvinist, andfounder of a distinctive new theological method. The main thrust ofthese essays is to weigh such protean claims against careful readingsof his oeuvre. Five principal loci of Reformation discourse areaddressed: 1) the relation between the "orders" of Grace and Nature;2) the doctrines of Providence and Predestination; 3) the Church andthe liturgy; 4) sacramental theology; and 5) the polemicalcut-and-thrust of the late-Elizabethan context. Scholars, seminarians,and students alike will find that this volume offers a fresh, criticalillumination of Hooker's distinctive contribution to sixteenth-centuryreligious reform. ... Read more


99. An Introduction to Medieval Jewish Philosophy (International Library of Historical Studies)
by Daniel Rynhold
Paperback: 272 Pages (2009-04-15)
list price: US$34.00 -- used & new: US$16.62
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Asin: 1845117484
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Human civilization will be forever indebted to the great thinkers of Jewish philosophy's golden age. Moses Maimonedes, Levi Gersonides, Judah Halevi, Saadia Gaon, Hasdai Crescas and their like grappled with some of the most challenging metaphysical issues, while the profundity of their solutions continue to engage philosophers today. Did God create the world? Can human freedom be reconciled with divine foreknowledge? What is the nature of the good life? Focusing on the central philosophical questions of the Middle Ages, Daniel Rynhold offers a concise introduction to topics such as God and creation, human freewill, biblical prophecy, the Commandments, the divine attributes and immortality. Structured around themes that form the common "syllabus" of medieval Jewish philosophy, each chapter builds a debate around a particular topic and in so doing utilizes the arguments of the chief philosophical figures of the medieval era. Explaining all concepts in a clear, non-technical fashion, the book also provides suggestions for further reading at the end of each chapter. The first dedicated textbook to introduce the great richness of medieval Jewish philosophy as a whole, this lively and comprehensive survey is the ideal introduction for undergraduate students of the subject as well as the interested general reader.

... Read more

100. Lost Delta Found: Rediscovering the Fisk University-Library of Congress Coahoma County Study, 1941-1942
by John W. Work, Lewis Wade Jones, Samuel C. Adams Jr.
Hardcover: 316 Pages (2005-08-05)
list price: US$29.95 -- used & new: US$19.99
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Asin: 0826514855
Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars
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This remarkable book recovers three invaluable perspectives, long thought to have been lost, on the culture and music of the Mississippi Delta.

In 1941 and ’42 African American scholars from Fisk University—among them the noted composer and musicologist John W. Work, sociologist Lewis Wade Jones, and graduate student Samuel C. Adams, Jr.—joined folklorist Alan Lomax of the Library of Congress on research trips to Coahoma County, Mississippi. Their mission was to explore the musical habits and history of the black community there and "to document adequately the cultural and social backgrounds for music in the community." Among the fruits of the project were the earliest recordings by the legendary blues singer and guitarist Muddy Waters. The hallmark of the study was to have been a joint publication of its findings by Fisk and the Library of Congress. However, the field notes and manuscripts by the Fisk researchers became lost in Washington. Lomax’s own book drawing on the project’s findings, The Land Where the Blue sBegan, did not appear until 1993, and although it won a National Book Critics Circle Award, it was flawed by a number of historical inaccuracies.

Recently uncovered by author and filmmaker Robert Gordon, the writings, interviews, notes, and musical transcriptions produced by Work, Jones, and Adams in the Coahoma County study now appear in print for the first time. Their work captures, with compelling immediacy, a place, a people, a way of life, and a set of rich musical traditions as they existed sixty years ago. Until the surfacing of these documents, Lomax’s perspective was all that was known of the Coahoma County project and its research. Now, at last, the voices of the other contributors can be heard.

Including essays by Bruce Nemerov and Gordon on the careers and contributions of Work, Jones, and Adams, Lost Delta Found will become an indispensable historical resource, as marvelously readable as it is enlightening. ... Read more

Customer Reviews (7)

5-0 out of 5 stars Brilliant!
"A brilliant work as the editors restore the research of Fisk University scholars who joined Alan Lomax in Coahoma County, Mississippi to document the social and cultural historyof the amazing music by Muddy Waters and others. Like the ending in the movie "Raiders of the Lost Ark" their research was lost in the Library of Congress archives until rescued in recent years."

5-0 out of 5 stars the songs
To read some of these reviews, you'd think the introduction to the material was more important than the substance of the book - source material, copies of many previously unpublished songs in John Work's own handwriting, an essay that gives you the pulse and taste of life in the delta in 1941. "Down by the Green Apple Tree," a children's song collected from Sarah Teague, is worth the price of the book.I'm grateful to everyone who collected the songs, which to me are 99% of the whole point anyway. To give this book one star because you are quibbling with academic interpretations is to miss the whole point of the book - to revive the material itself, and to honor the people who created and sang it. The authors' intention is to celebrate John Work's contribution, not to denigrate Alan Lomax'.

"Down by the green apple tree, where the grass grows so sweet
Miss Julie, Miss Julie, your true love is dead
He wrote you a letter to turn back your head
Down by the green apple tree..."

1-0 out of 5 stars Revisionist scholars
Revisionist scholarship is red hot, and no one, it seems, can escape its flame.All great men and women of the past, and especially liberal icons such as Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt and Martin Luther King are charred, act by act, word by word, until only the ashes are left.In the music field, there are similar targets, with Woody Guthrie and Alan Lomax tied high on the burning stake.One can only wonder (but not for long, their faces and grimaces are so very familiar to us) who is behind the systematic rewriting of cultural history of which this book is a prime example.

1-0 out of 5 stars Lost Delta Assassinated
An edition of the writings of the joint Fisk University-Library of Congress Cohahoma project undertaken in the 1940s is long overdue and would have been most welcome. Unfortunately, Lost Delta Found is sloppily and tendentiously edited. Most disgracefully, Robert Gordon and Bruce Nemerov, themselves white, create a highly biased, falsified frame for the valuable writings they present by means of omission of key information, selective quotations, and bogus insinuations of romanticism and racism against Alan Lomax that pervade their editorial apparatus. They fail to duly credit Lomax with courage in initiating an unprecidented bi-racial study of a hotbed of racial discontent in the heart of Mississippi Delta plantation country in the 1941-42 Jim Crow South. They omit mention of the fact that Lomax and his wife were arrested and briefly jailed for fraternizing with black sharecroppers. They also don't mention that the Dixiecrat US congress cut out all arts funding in spring of 1942 while the study was going on, specifically prohibiting federal arts workers from collecting statistical information and and making field recordings of folk songs. It is to be hoped that some day a fair and factually accurate edition of the Coahoma Project materials will appear - one that reproduces all the relevant historical documentation. Tragically, the publication of this book may prevent that from happening.

Claim [in Lost Delta Found]: The Coahoma study was composer John Work's idea and was appropriated by Alan Lomax and the Library of Congress.

Fact: In 1940, Fisk Professor John Work proposed a study of ballad origins after a disastrous fire in Natchez, Mississippi. The grant application to fund it (written by Fisk President Thomas Johnson, not John Work, to a foundation in New York) was turned down. A year later, during a visit by Lomax to present a concert at Fisk, President Johnson, Sociologist Charles S. Johnson, and Lomax proposed a different, joint Fisk-Library of Congress field recording project, centered in Clarksdale (in Coahoma), using sociology students to gather data. Alan Lomax wrote the application and questionnaire for the study. Gordon and Nemerov supply no evidence that Lomax knew of Work's earlier Natchez fire proposal much less "stole" it. (Funds for the Coahoma study came from Charles Seeger's Pan American Union, under the War Department - information they omit).

Claim: The Land Where the Blues Began is Alan Lomax's version of the Coahoma Study.

Fact: Land Where the Blues Began, a memoir written in 1993, when Lomax was in his seventies, covers Lomax's field recording experience from 1933 through the 1970s.

Claim: In Land Where the Blues Began, Alan Lomax slighted the contributions of his African-American collaborators on the Coahoma Study -- Lewis Jones, Samuel Adams, and John Work.

Fact: Alan Lomax thanked and mentioned them (especially Lewis Jones) over 18 times and at considerable length, including in the formal acknowledgements of Land Where the Blues Began.

Claim [In Lost Delta Found]: Alan Lomax was not a Southerner and therefore had "romantic ideas" about the South.

Fact: Alan Lomax was a Southerner and a life-long champion of civil rights. The editors of Lost Delta Found smear his character (there are over 70 mentions of Lomax in the introductions and index, all derogatory) when they insinuate that he was a crypto-racist and "romantic' who did not acknowledge his black co-workers (when in fact he did so over and over). They also don't mention the fact that Lomax and Lewis Jones collaborated again in the early 1960s.

Claim: [In Lost Delta Found] Alan Lomax's Land Where the Blues Began has many inaccuracies "the most important of which" was his omission of mention of the August, 1941, preliminary Coahoma trip undertaken by Lomax and Work.

Fact: Lomax's omission of the 1941 preliminary trip in the Coahoma study is arguably a narrative expedient, not an error. No other "inaccuracy" in Land Where the Blues Began is identified. That all of Lomax's Library of Congress Coahoma recordings are, and have always been, acurately dated, with full and proper credit to participants (including Work) is not acknowledged by Gordon and Nemerov.

Claim [in Lost Delta Found]: Lomax ought to have edited the Coahoma study after leaving the employ of the Library of Congress.

Fact: The study was interrupted by US entrance into World War II. Alan Lomax's ethical obligation to the study ended after he left the Library in 1942 to join the army.

Claim: After the war, Alan Lomax and the Library of Congress suppressed the results of the Coahoma study when they lost or "filed away" the one extant manuscript of John Work's essay about the project.

Fact: Letters in the Library of Congress state that in 1943 the Library sent John Work multiple copies of his unfinished Coahoma manuscript drafts (along with mimeographed copies) after he wrote that he himself had lost them. After 1945, study participants had permission from Fisk and the Library to use the Coahoma material in their own writings. Lewis Jones used the material in completing his sociology degree; and in December, 1947, participant Samuel Adams published an article (albeit brief) about his Coahoma work in 'Social Forces' (pp. 202-205). In 1958, John Work wrote to the Library of Congress asking for permission to write a book based his Coahoma essay and received a go-ahead. He did not mention that his manuscript was "lost" at that time, suggesting that at that time he possessed copies of his own writings. None of this information, all on public record and available to any diligent researcher, appears in Lost Delta Found.

Claim [made by a reviewer]: Alan Lomax's black colleagues urged him to record newer, gospel music rather than older call-and-response spirituals.

Fact: The only "evidence" for this is Robert Gordon's highly implausible suggestion in Lost Delta Found that John Work's classified index of 68 spirituals collected during the Coahoma project constitutes a coded "hidden message" (a' la Leo Strauss) criticizing the emphasis on collecting spirituals. It especially strains credulity, since Work himself was a noted enthusiast of (nearly extinct) black string band and sacred harp music.(There is little point in collecting material that is widely commercially available.)

Claim [in Lost Delta Found]: John Work "anticipated the blues as poetry movement by ten years."
Fact: Harlem renaissance writers Sterling Brown, James Weldon Johnson, Langston Hughes, and Alain Locke championed blues as poetry ten years *before* John Work.

5-0 out of 5 stars Essential!
This book takes a critical, but not cruel, look at Alan Lomax's scholarly work in recording some of the black music of the south.Lomax, in his celebrated treatise on his travels in the South, mostly neglected to mention his research associates, black scholars from Fisk University in Nashville.

Lomax's focus of the research trip described in this book was to find old black spirituals and work songs, which, of course, weren't really being sung any more, with black culture moving further toward modern gospel music.Lomax, despite the urgings of his colleagues, was looking for something that no longer existed.However, far from villainizing Lomax, the authors of this book celebrate his victories and hail him as the true American hero that he is, while also bringing to light another pair of American heroes, Lomax's black guides.

The book is well-written and easy to read, not overly scholarly, and most anyone with any interest in blues, gospel, delta music, American black music, American folklore, African-American culture and American traditional music in general will enjoy this book and find themselves using it as a crucial reference. ... Read more


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