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Vol 1, Issue 1, 2002
Vol 1, Issue 2, 2002
Vol 2, Issue 1, 2003
Vol 2, Issue 2, 2003
Vol 3, Issue 1, 2004
Vol 3, Issue 2, 2004
Vol 4, Issue 1, 2005
Vol 4, Issue 2, 2005
Vol 5, Issue 1, 2006
Vol
5, Issue 2, 2006
Vol
6, Issue 1, 2007
Vol
6, Issue 2, 2007
Vol
7, Issue 1, 2008
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About the Cover
The cover reflects my own vision
of what the Womens Health & Urban Life: An International and
Interdisciplinary Journal is about, combined with the sophisticated creative
and technological skills of a professional friend, Dr. David Hillock.
In the cover, we tried to capture the element of urbanization
through the selection of exceptionally well-known images from different
corners of the world. Clockwise, images of the Blue Mosque, The Sydney
Opera House, Taj-Mahal, Christ of Rio, the CN Tower, Hundred Flowers Tower
of Nanchang, The Tower Bridge, Kremlin, Eiffel Tower and the Statue of
Liberty circle an early statue of Bastet (from around 2800 BC). For those
who may need a little brushing up of their knowledge in mythology, Bastet
(a.k.a Bast) is an ancient Egyptian goddess who was originally depicted
as a lioness, but eventually took the form of a woman with a cats
head or a full cat. Bastet was the daughter of RA (the most powerful god
of ancient Egypt a.k.a RE) and revered as the Eyes of RA.
Over about two millennia, Bastet became associated with the moon, and
in her revised depictions, took on the form of a complete domesticated
cat as opposed to her female lioness image of the past. Whether in her
earlier form or in her visual transformation into a domesticated cat-headed
goddess, Bastet has been worshipped by ancient Egyptians as the goddess
of healing, protector of the young, the watcher over the weak and provider
of earthly powers of health. In the cover, we tried to juxtapose the rounded,
asymmetrical, earthy, primal and powerful figure of Bastet on the exclusively
man-made (sic), towering, phallacised symbols of iron, steel, concrete,
glass and clay. I hope, you will like the cover as much as we do as an
intriguing entree to a scholarly journey of manuscripts on womens
health within the context of urban, globalizing life.
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