SNAKEWOMAN, Issue 11


Book Description

Created by acclaimed filmmaker Shekhar Kapur, (Elizabeth; Golden Age; Four Feathers). Jessica Peterson's life used to be ordinary. And then, suddenly, it wasn't. In the blink of an eye, she went from dive-bar waitress to reincarnated goddess, the 'Snake Woman'. Since then, things have never been more different. She hunts and is simultaneously hunted by the 68, a secret society composed of the reincarnated souls of the British explorers who desecrated the snake-goddess' temple in the jungles of India over 300 years ago. James Harker, head of the 68, has been secretly mentoring Jessica, but now she rejects him and his world, hoping to escape her murderous tendencies and reclaim the direction of her life. But as the modern-day incarnation of her ancient mate comes to the fore, will she be able to turn her back on destiny? Don't miss the beginning of this NEW MINISERIES. Perfect for new readers!




SNAKEWOMAN, Issue 2


Book Description

Created by acclaimed filmmaker Shekhar Kapur, (Elizabeth; Golden Age; Four Feathers). STUDENT...WAITRESS....MASS-MURDERER...JESSICA PETERSON IS THE SNAKE WOMAN. After a lifetime of being hunted by the Snakewoman, the reincarnated soul of Captain Jonathan Harker remembers the dark past of his previous lives, and the many times he has been murdered by the Snakewoman. Now the predator has become the prey, as Captain Harker hunts down the Snakewoman's last incarnation, intent on revenge.




The Global White Snake


Book Description

Tracing the history and adaptation of one of China's foundational texts




The Historical Enigma of the Snake Woman from Antiquity to the 21st Century


Book Description

This book provides an exploration of the historical conditions that gradually defined subordinating symbols and conflictual values in social relations between the sexes. It reveals how snakes and the gelid eyes of Medusa—the archetypical snake-woman—have reverberated across the visual arts and written sources throughout the ages in association with negative emotions: fear, anger, scorn and shame. The outcomes and implications of the disturbing correlation between the dangerous female gaze, the malignitas of the snake and the lethal power of menstruation that have been woven through the fabric of the Western imaginary are analysed here. This analysis reveals an intriguing history of female reptilian hybrids—from the pleasing Minoan snake goddesses to the depressing Gorgon, Echidna, Amazons, Eve, Melusine, Basilisk, Poison-Damsel, Catoblepas and Sadako/Samara—and gives the reader an opportunity to explore things that never happened but have always been.




Snake Woman


Book Description

A plane crash in 1966 in the Amazon rainforest, an orphan baby, and the legend of the Brazilian forest giant Sucuri. These elements are intertwined in romance, fiction, and suspense on Wiliomar Abreu work. The plot takes place in different cities in the state of California in the United States, where the police officer Ketlim McGray, who hides a supernatural anomaly, was prevented to have a loving relationship with the love of her life. Next to the great doctor and adoptive father John McGray, Ketlim goes in search of the past trying to figure out the hidden puzzle that prevented her from living her great love.







The Snake Woman of Ipanema


Book Description

When Maggie Dalton finds a slaughtered black cockerel on her car, Tonia, her maid, says, "Someone means you harm." Jon Dalton's affair with a Brazilian woman is skewing Maggie's soul. She broods on the occult. Beneath the surface of Rio de Janeiro’s good life runs the cult of spiritism, brought over 450 years ago by captive slaves from West Africa. Far from her Michigan home, Maggie learns of that Brazil when she seeks her answers from the priestess who rules the underground. Only Tonia realizes where Maggie is headed. She is terrified, yet conscience compels her to follow. Through a torturous path, she tracks Maggie from Rio de Janeiro north to Salvador, the cradle of Brazilian spiritism. Maggie meets the healer, Cabral, revered by the hopeless, and Tonia does battle for Maggie's soul. The knife turns. The knife always turns.




China from the Ruins of Athens and Rome


Book Description

Fascinated and often baffled by China, Anglophone writers have turned to classics to provide interpretative paradigms and narrative shape to inform their understanding. This volume reveals key insights into British cosmopolitanism, which sought its bearings in the ancient past in encounters with Qing Dynasty China.




Snakes in American Culture


Book Description

The literature on snakes is manifold but overwhelmingly centered on the natural sciences. Little has been published about them in the fields of popular culture or the history of medicine. Focusing primarily on American culture and history from the 1800s, this study draws on a wide range of sources--including newspaper archives, medical journals, and archives from the Smithsonian Institute--to examine the complex relationship between snakes and humans.




Vital Issues


Book Description

Vital Issues presents an annotated scholarly edition of the weekly columns Charlotte Perkins Gilman, the most prominent American feminist intellectual during the early twentieth century, contributed in 1904 to the Boston Woman’s Journal, the leading journal of the US woman’s movement. At the height of her career in 1904, Charlotte Perkins Gilman contributed dozens of essays to the Boston Woman’s Journal, “the only Voice of the Woman’s Movement in this country, if not the world,” as she later declared. Gilman aimed to transform “the whole woman movement” because she believed the right to vote was a necessary but insufficient goal. Her weekly column presumed that “the woman’s movement is larger than the suffrage movement and includes it; and that the very cause to which this paper is devoted will be most advanced by a more inclusive treatment.” These essays silhouette the foundations of her feminism and anticipate much of her subsequent writing.