ReVision Publishing
Envisioning...Revisioning
Envisioning...Revisioning
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Volume 30, Numbers 1 & 2
Double Issue: Revisioning...Envisioning
Table of Contents:
Bronson, Jackson-Paton, Jaenke, Kremer, Montouri, & Rubik: Statement from the Editors
Jaenke: Editor's Essay: Earth, Dreams, Body
Jackson-Paton: Editor's Essay: Rituals of Inquiry; or, Looking for 'Culture and Truth'
Krippner & Feinstein: A Mythological Approach to Transpersonal Psycholtherapy
Kremer: Northern Light Ancestors
Castro de Ali: Artist in Residence
Pelicci: Growth and Transformation among Women Healers
Ferrer: Beyond Monogamy and Polyamory: A New Vision of Intimate Relationships for the Twenty-First Century
Watson-Gegeo: Children With Knives: When Theory Becomes Ideology
Slater: Are Boys Being Trained for Obsolescence?
Mendenhall: A Radical Approach to Delinquency Reform
Kesner & Pritzker: Therapeutic Horseback Riding With Children Placed In The Foster Care System
Low: Creativity and Intention in Evolution
Sheffield: Haiku and other poems
This is the current issue of ReVision: A Journal of Consciousness and Transformation. We are publishing again, after a hiatus. Led by a new editorial board, ReVision publishes with a commitment to the future of humanity and the Earth, ReVision emphasizes the transformative dimensions of current and traditional thought and practice. ReVision advances inquiry and reflection especially focused on the fields presently identified as philosophy, religion, psychology, social theory, science, anthropology, education, organizational transformation, and the arts. We seek to explore new models of transdisciplinary, interdisciplinary, multicultural, dialogical, and socially engaged inquiry, frontier science, as well as ancient ways of knowing, and to bring such work to bear on what appear to be the fundamental issues of our times through a variety of written and artistic modalities. In the interests of renewal and fresh vision, we strive to engage in conversation a diversity of perspectives and discourses which have often been kept separate, including those identified with terms such as Western and Eastern; indigenous and nonindigenous; Northern and Southern; feminine and masculine; intellectual, practical, and spiritual; local and global; young and old.
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