Barriers
and Boundaries - The Horoscope and the Defences of the Personality
Liz Greene
Review
by Robin Heath
Astrological
Journal, July/August 1996
If
you are one of those people who skips a review if the first sentence
doesn't grab you, then let me immediately tell you that this book
is the nearest thing to attending one of Liz's seminars without actually
being there. A kind of virtual CPA reality, if you like.
The
Centre for Psychological Astrology has boldly entered the publishing
market with this first volume, and if one read Charles Harvey's Notes
in the last Journal, one would understand immediately some of his
prime reasons for wishing to see the standards of astrological publishing
raised. I won't repeat these here, suffice to state that in-depth
astrological debate within the current publishing scene is, in Charles'
view, an endangered species. So, here is an alternative approach -
a brave new venture from CPA Press about the work of one of the most
widely read astrologers. An exciting challenge for any reviewer!
The
book continues in the lineage of the earlier Development of the
Personality series, begun under the earlier Sasportas/Greene CPA
partnership and published by various concerns. The layout and style
will therefore not surprise anyone who has copies of these earlier
volumes. The contents page is much more comprehensive, enabling rapid
location of quite specific material within the seminars covered. The
book is split into two quite distinct halves; Part One, the Psychology
of Defences and their Astrological Significators and Part Two,
Saturn and Chiron as Defence Mechanisms. Both parts are based
on two seminars given to CPA students in Autumn 1994, and thus represent
very contemporary material.
As
I began to read the book I became aware that something stylistically
had changed from those earlier seminar-driven works. There was a more
relaxed feel to the interchanges between tutor and students. There
was far more humour and anecdotal material. There was a feeling that
increased editorial freedom was allowing a more complete shape to
emerge. There was much more contact between the described event, its
atmosphere, its teacher and its purposes. Any reservations I had about
the book looking too much like a textbook quickly evaporated as astrological
expertise was seen intertwined with the psychological, mythological
and historical material to weave an exciting and revealing texture.
One really learns about human life from such a synthesis of disciplines
and expertise and, whether you love or hate psychological astrology,
here we have several real and previously unselected charts of ordinary
people (if there is such a thing) being discussed in-depth and we
are not dealing with abstracted concepts floating about in the air
over the seminar - we are experiencing astrology in action. Such treatment
clearly reveals the meaning and value of Liz Greene's approach because
the owners of the charts, together with the rest of the student audience
are clearly seen to respond to the interactive nature of the dialogue.
The charts of popular figures are also used to prove the general validity
of the material in question.
The
book begins with a concise and snappy account of the "Holy Trinity"
of oral, anal and Oedipal stages of childhood. Freud's model is then
integrated within Liz's unique style of delivery, complete with astrological
and anecdotal examples about human defence mechanisms. Each of these
stages will be projected into adult life and Liz discusses their likely
manifestations, both useful and destructive, and how to recognise
defenses presented to the outside world, and most usefully, the astrologer.
The reader is then given a "defenses by element and sign" and then
a "defenses by planet" treatment, with fine examples and some quite
dynamic interchanges within the group.
Part
Two begins by identifying the quite different defense mechanisms represented
by Saturn and Chiron on a birth chart. It was twenty years since the
world first caught a glimpse of Liz's future role through Saturn,
a New Look at an Old Devil and the work on Saturn presented here acts
rather as an appendix chapter to this seminal work, also demonstrating
that which has been achieved with psychological astrology since the
heady 70's.
The
recent Bath Astrological Seminars included a day with Liz on the subject
of Chiron, which I attended, and I was struck by the realisation that
so much work has also been done with Chiron - another discovery of
the 70's - in order to understand its astrological place within the
scheme of things. The section on Chiron contained here collates this
material and is presented in a most clear and illuminating manner.
The example charts are well chosen and well discussed.
I
had some doubts concerning the style of the book and its text, which
is relentless and rather too much like a galley proof for my taste.
I would have liked some relief in the form of more spaces and,
dare I say it, barriers and boundaries separating key areas of
text and examples. At times, this type of book, resembling the
script in a play, becomes visually monotonous and I would have
preferred the "Liz"
and "Audience" separating paragraphs highlighted in bold text. There
are no "degree" signs superscripted within the text so one finds the
clumsy and unit-less "The progressed Sun is at 20 Cancer". Perhaps
this could be put right in future volumes, for although we all know
what it means, it lays astrology open to criticism if we omit units
from our numbers. Dr Greene also used to provide artwork for her
books and, sadly, this too has disappeared.
It
is too easy to criticise a book for what are, after all, essentially
layout and not contextual faults. These days, image is frequently
more important than content to many publishers and the content of
Barriers and Boundaries is solid gold. CPA Press are to be congratulated
for spreading this quality of astrological material to a much wider
audience than CPA students. This book deserves a place on the shelf
of all practising astrologers and any astrological student (which
we all are) needs to read this material. Thoroughly recommended.
©
Copyright 1996 The
Astrological Association of Great Britain
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