Since humans first gazed upward, the moon has hung in
the sky virtually unchanged, entrancing generations of
poets, artists and scientists. Once worshipped as a
deity, often thought to cause madness, now known to
manipulate our tides and much else besides, humanity's
relationship with the moon has been ever-changing; the
one constant has been our continued fascination with it.
Moon gives a comprehensive account of our lunar
companion's significance, tracing its origins out of a
collision with Earth and following its rich cultural
resonance in the worlds of literature, art, religion and
politics. The moon's story is also humanity's own story:
it gave humans the ability to organize time, dividing
the year into months and ordaining the dates of
festivals such as Easter, Ramadan and the Chinese New
Year. Its moderating effect on the earth's spin could
mean that without the moon life may never have been able
to evolve. Edgar Williams shows how the interdependence
of moon and Earth also finds its unwitting parallel in
the realm of culture, where the moon has constantly
found it itself embedded in our preoccupations, whether
in the worship of Elizabeth i as Diana, moon goddess, or
in the long-lived dream that humans will one day
populate its surface. Moon tells a succinct, witty and
informative tale of everything lunar, filled with
entertaining anecdotes about what the moon has meant to
us. For sky-gazers everywhere, Moon is not to be
missed. |
|