OYENTE

Patrick

  • 16
  • opiniones
  • 0
  • votos útiles
  • 20
  • calificaciones

Odd framing from boring narrator

Total
2 out of 5 stars
Ejecución
1 out of 5 stars
Historia
3 out of 5 stars

Revisado: 12-03-24

Michael Fisher presents a lot of interesting information in this lecture series. The geopolitcal analysis of India is assumption-shattering and worthwhile. Also, background about the indigenous peoples of India and the Indus Vally Civilizaiton is pure fascination. The lecturer, however, is overall pretty bland. And, repeatedly insists on framing history in odd ways. The crux of the matter is that he, in almost every lecture about societies that survive to this day, insists on the equal validity of internal mythology and external historical analysis. I don't mind that he discusses either, but it is jarring to hear a historian list all evidence for what actually happened in the past--and then claim that local legend is just as valid. In no other historical series of lectures have I encountered this approach. To mirror it in an American context it would be like discussing geological evidence for the age of the Earth to be set at billions-of-years-old, and then saying that American Evangelicals claim it is 6,000 years-old. And, to borrow the lecturer's phrase, "This, is something we should consider." The lack of primacy of historical analysis, from a historian, in a historical lecture series was so jarring that finishing the series took months and great difficulty.

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Exceptional in-depth survey of WW1

Total
5 out of 5 stars
Ejecución
5 out of 5 stars
Historia
5 out of 5 stars

Revisado: 11-19-24

Dr. Liulevicius gives and incredibly overview of the causes leading up to the war, its progression, and the aftermath. In a very well-structured course, he examines how WW1 reshaped the world of the 19th Century into the world of the 20th and 21st Century both in terms of modern maps of Europe/the Middle East, but also in terms of the ideological conflicts that festered into WW2 and the Cold War.

Many of the topics covered in this lecture could of course be their own college course, but as far as a survey course--I couldn't have asked for more. Economies, home fronts, rationalizations behind causes, propoganda, daily life, ideology, changing war goals, and more--this course covers them all. I highly recommend.

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King's Epic Not a Fave--excellent production

Total
4 out of 5 stars
Ejecución
5 out of 5 stars
Historia
4 out of 5 stars

Revisado: 11-19-24

Stephen King is on the record as remarking that "the Stand is not my favorite out of the novels I've ever written, but fans most often tell me that it is theirs". I agree with King--having read many of his books, this one doesn't seem to strike me in the same way as "Salem's Lot", "Fairy Tale", or the "Dark Tower". There is a noticeable lack of any compelling female characters. That said, it is a very good novel--better than most modern novels I've been reading. It tells a fascinating tale about the disintegration of pre-21st century America under the stress of widespread disease. The work really feels like 3 novels--one a collection of short stories during the fall (my favorite), the second a tale about how people reorganize under duress, and a third about the showdown between Good and Evil in a classic-King standoff. I think the production is very well done in this edition, but the novel itself feels dated and occassionally even sexist (there are seemingly no rational women in the entire work). All told, a fun read, and if you want to try this version--it's worth the "credit".

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Excellent performance; novel seems over-hyped

Total
4 out of 5 stars
Ejecución
5 out of 5 stars
Historia
3 out of 5 stars

Revisado: 02-12-24

The reader does an amazing job with the many, odd characters in Bulgakov's famous novel. Behemoth is especially memorable, but all the characters' voices seem evocative of their attitude and supported by nuances in the original writing. Any complaint I have about the story is simply a misunderstanding about why this novel is praised as one of the best of the 20th Century. It seemed to take a very long time to get to no point at all, and the second part seemed almost entirely disconnected from the first. After the majority of the novel is spent repeatedly watching Satan rip off Russians in the exact same way, the only compelling narrative remains the love story between the titular characters, the Master and Margarita. Perhaps I'm just a dull reader, but not one of my favorite works of Russian prose--or any prose for that matter.

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Good series on modern Russian History, intro-level

Total
4 out of 5 stars
Ejecución
4 out of 5 stars
Historia
5 out of 5 stars

Revisado: 02-12-24

I thought the professor in charge of the lectures did a good job conveying general themes of Russian history, and I learned a LOT about the foundations of the modern state known as Russia. It seemed like some lectures were too in-depth at the expense of the total course (notably the 2 or 3 lectures about schools of thought in the intelligensia in 18th/19th century Russia). I would have preferred more than 15 minutes about World War 2--perhaps some statistics about the devastation suffered during that period. The discussions of the contrarian nature of much of Russian history--grozne & t'schische Tsars; change through central authority, etc.--was extremely well done. I learned the most about Russia from the 1400s-1860s. in a perfect world, the lecture series would cover from 1000-2000, but that would require many more lectures.

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Classic King and Excellent Reader

Total
5 out of 5 stars
Ejecución
5 out of 5 stars
Historia
5 out of 5 stars

Revisado: 02-12-24

King is back at it with a novel that will make you cry, laugh, and hate the Big Bad Evil Guy. Wonderfully woven into his typical imagination are clever nuances connecting Grimm's Fairy Tales, Disney movies, the rest of the Dark Tower universe, and the opus of HP Lovecraft. The reader gives and amazing performance realistically portraying men, women, and things' always with appropriate energy and clarity. I especially loved his Night Soldier voices.

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Best zombie novel, a compelling poli-sci novel

Total
5 out of 5 stars
Ejecución
5 out of 5 stars
Historia
5 out of 5 stars

Revisado: 12-12-23

WWZ is one of the best political science novels I've ever read--no wonder it sat at the top of Amazon's polictical science novel sell-list for years. This expanded audiobook finally brings in the "lost" chapters that were left out of the original audiobook. An amazing cast delivers incredible performances and only rarely do the celebrity readers fail to bring the characters to life in a compelling way. I recommend the title to everyone, because it tells the story of zombie near-apocalypse from a realistic, nuanced approach of: "How would this affect, us, as human beings? Could we survive? How would the political, economic, social, and personal lanscape of the world and the people living in it change." 6 stars out of 5

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Narrator obsessed with personal achievements

Total
3 out of 5 stars
Ejecución
3 out of 5 stars
Historia
3 out of 5 stars

Revisado: 12-12-23

This course is longer than almost any other Great Courses title I've listened to. A frustrating fact when the reader realizes that the narrator, Richard Baum, often goes on 5-15 minute digressions in his lectures to explain how *he* was present at key moments in Chinese history. It's almost as if his primary goal is to convince the reader of Richard Baum's role in modern China. Baum also blatantly biases course content and pace to his own personal interest. Giving Mao Zedong something liek 6-8 lectures--many of which cover only one year of Mao's reign. This is supposed to be a survey, and I can reduce most of the content in his 4-6 hour celebration of Mao Zedong into 4-6 sentences.

That said, the course does accomplish its main objectives: informing the reader about many of the most formative events and people in modern Chinese history. I learned a lot, and I'm glad I listened to this series of lectures. I just wish someone else had written it.

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Interesting, but odd ending

Total
4 out of 5 stars
Ejecución
3 out of 5 stars
Historia
4 out of 5 stars

Revisado: 03-14-23

This is a pretty fascinating survey of many ancient Mediterranean religions beginning in prehistory/Stone Ages, and ending with the generally Christian Mediterranean under the Byzantines. No religion is treated exhaustively and much effort is devoted to comparing the similarities and difference in different religions. The book is a gold mine of interesting nuggets on early-Med religious culture and heritage. Examining the "God of Israel" in the historical/political context also seemed fascinating.

Main complaints are:
1) This professor talks SLOWLY (I often had the book at 1.7x speed, and it sounded like a normal conversation). He is also repetitive, which is often useful with unfamiliar names, but more generally just compounds with the SLOW to be frustrating. Also, his jokes are pretty bad. lol

2) Holland's treatment of Christianity is pretty weird. I've got a degree in classical studies, my partner has a PhD in it... neither of us have ever heard someone refer to early Christianity as "the Jesus movement", as Holland inexplicably and painfully does for years. There is also an entire lecture in the series devoted to explaining how none of the gospels should be used to account for a historical reading of Jesus--before Holland then uses the gospels to make historical claims about Jesus. Finally, the treatment of Christianity is even stranger seeing as he repeatedly talks about the bias of sources when discussing Christian history/myth, when he had earlier (for every other religion) used equally-biased, often nationalized mythic stories. The pagan stories are treated as inherently valuable for learning about the cultures. Their bias is almost-never mentioned. But, Christian writings (or writings about Christians) are treated entirely differently. Odd.

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Yet another excellent series from Harl

Total
5 out of 5 stars
Ejecución
5 out of 5 stars
Historia
5 out of 5 stars

Revisado: 03-14-23

Harl's energetic lectures truly meet his goal to "redefine" what it means to be a Viking in this compelling (and sweeping) cruise through Viking history--which spans from Bronze Age Scandinavia to about 1400. It is a fascinating look at what conditions first separated Scandinavians from the continental Germanic tribes, their later invasions/settlements from North America to Russia, and the subsequent Christianization and local assimilation that created the national identities of a vast number of Eurasian states.

Really, no complaints. This series can only be money-well-spent.

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