Affiliates
| Works by
Kathleen Harrison
(Aka Kat Harrison) (Artist,
Ethnobotanist, Illustrator,
Photographer, Writer) |
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Profile created January 26, 2008
Note:
Kathleen (Kat) Harrison is co-founder and director of
Botanical Dimensions.
She was the wife of
Terence McKenna.
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Victorian Tales of Cannabis (2000)
(Note Kat's name reads "Katherine Harrison McKenna" on the cover of the
book.)
CD. A fully orchestrated production conceived by Faustin and Brian of
Sound Photosynthesis of stories by Bayard Taylor,
Louisa May Alcott and other
Victorian period writers audio-animated that will surprise and delight
you. Terence reads the male voice and Kat reads the female story line and
they are accompanied by an audio-illuminated full cast of characters.
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Visionary Plant Consciousness: The Shamanic Teachings of the Plant World
(2007), J. P. Harpignies, ed.
23 leading experts reveal the ways that psychoactive plants
allow nature’s “voice” to speak to humans and what this communication
means for our future
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Presents the specific “human-plant interconnection”
revealed by visionary plants
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Explores the relevance of plant-induced visions and
shamanic teachings to humanity’s environmental crisis
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With contributions from
Alex Grey, Andrew Weil,
Charles S. Grob,
Dale Pendell,
Dennis McKenna, Edison Saraiva,
M.D., Ethan Nadelmann, Ph.D.,
Florencio Siquera de Caralho,
Francis Huxley, Jeffrey Bronfman,
Jeremy Narby,
John Mohawk,
Kat Harrison, Katsi Cook,
Luis Eduardo Luna, Ph.D.,
Marcellus Bear
Heart Williams, Michael Pollan,
Michael Stewartt, Paul Stamets,
Terence McKenna, and Wade Davis.
Visionary plants have long served indigenous peoples and
their shamans as enhancers of perception, thinking, and healing. These
plants can also be important guides to the reality of the natural world
and how we can live harmoniously in it.
In Visionary Plant Consciousness, editor J. P. Harpignies has
gathered presentations from the Bioneers annual conference of
environmental and social visionaries that explore how plant
consciousness affects the human condition. Twenty-three leading
ethnobotanists, anthropologists, medical researchers, and cultural and
religious figures present their understandings of the nature of
psychoactive plants and their significant connection to humans. What
they reveal is that these plants may help us access the profound
intelligence in nature--the “mind of nature”--that we must learn to
understand in order to survive our ecologically destructive way of life.
Sisters of the Extreme: Women Writing on the Drug Experience, Including Charlotte Bronte, Louisa May
Alcott, Anais Nin, Maya Angelou, Billie Holiday, Nina Hagen, Carrie Fisher, and
Others (2000),
Cynthia Palmer and Michael Horowitz, eds.
An anthology of writings by some of the most
influential women in history on the often misunderstood and
misrepresented female drug experience.
With great honesty, bravery, and frankness, women from diverse
backgrounds write about their drug experiences.
Women have been experimenting with drugs since prehistoric times, and
yet published accounts of their views on the drug experience have been
relegated to either antiseptic sociological studies or sensationalized
stories splashed across the tabloids. The media has given us an
enduring, but inaccurate, stereotype of a female drug user: passive,
addicted, exploited, degraded, promiscuous. But the selections in this
anthology--penned by such famous names as Billie Holiday,
Anais Nin,
Maya Angelou, and Carrie Fisher --
show us that the real experiences of women are anything but
stereotypical.
Sisters of the Extreme provides us with writings by women from
diverse occupations and backgrounds, from prostitute to physician, who
through their use of drugs dared cross the boundaries set by
society--often doing so with the hope of expanding themselves and their
vision of the world. Whether with LSD,
peyote,
cocaine, heroin,
MDMA, or
marijuana,
these women have sought to reach, through their experimentation, other
levels of consciousness. Sometimes their quests have brought unexpected
rewards, other times great suffering and misfortune. But wherever their
trips have left them, these women have lived courageously--if sometimes
dangerously--and written about their journeys eloquently.
Includes The Leaves of the Shepherdess by
Kat Harrison.
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