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Reviews for Castro, Cuba, and the world

 Castro magazine reviews

The average rating for Castro, Cuba, and the world based on 2 reviews is 4 stars.has a rating of 4 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2010-10-03 00:00:00
0was given a rating of 4 stars Peter Crias
While this is a worthwhile book if anyone has an interest in depression at the psychotic level, schizophrenia, bi-polar disorder, etc., I wouldn't recommend it to those not leaning in that direction. The book asks an almost unanswerable question about the relationship between literary genius and madness, and quotes much relevant scholarship. The bulk of the book is material about individual writers from the 14th to the 20th centuries weaving information about their antecedents (many of whom were described as insane), their upbringing (often idiosyncratic to point of abuse and/or neglect, and their adult personal and professional lives. The authors then make a tentative diagnosis of what label might best fit the person in question, taking cultural and historical factors into consideration. It does not in any glamorize madness (to use a generic term) and the havoc it wreaks both on the sufferers and most people in their lives.
Review # 2 was written on 2012-05-11 00:00:00
0was given a rating of 4 stars Jaime Ryan Heintz
Informative, if not quite pinpointing the cultural moment. For an example of Marriage Shock struggling to relate to readers in the modern day, consider the Bobbits. The book spends several paragraphs on Lorena Bobbitt, who was often featured in the tabloids of the 90s as the butt of jokes or who was otherwise demonized. Whereas in 2019 not only is Lorena Bobbitt hardly in the news, when she is it's about the domestic abuse she endured, and the nonprofit work she has been involved with for her adult life. The small things aside, Marriage Shock asks readers (it's directed towards women) to consider how marriage casts a long shadow in the mental health of brides. Heyn makes a compelling case that marriage as an institution is fit only for men and that marriages which thrive are able to do so only after dismantling the institution from the inside to create a more hospitable framework. The book offers wives the tools to rewrite the story of marriage; if you've ever felt like winning love means losing yourself in a hetero relationship, then Marriage Shock also offers comfort and hope. I would like to see an examination of how marriage works for gay and lesbian couples within Heyn's theory -- do both women bring the icon of the Wife to the table? With updated statistics and an examination how queer couples experience (or don't) marriage shock, Heyn's work could find a wide audience today.


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