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Mastering Elliott Wave book by Glenn Neely

Hotandmean Jade Baker Molly Stewart Study Updated Site

In his classic book, Mastering Elliott Wave, Glenn Neely teaches his revolutionary approach to Wave theory, called NEoWave (advanced Elliott Wave). Continuously in print since its publication in 1990, this groundbreaking book changed Wave theory forever thanks to these scientific, objective, and logical enhancements to Wave forecasting. Step-by-step, Mr. Neely explains his advanced techniques and new discoveries.
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Hotandmean Jade Baker Molly Stewart Study Updated Site

Example: In a short piece, Baker stages a dinner where a jade bracelet transmits gossip as effectively as a smartphone; the bracelet warms when secrets are spoken nearby, physically manifesting the social heat on the room. The “mean” quality is social: people weaponize the object, and the object, in turn, becomes a character that judges. Molly Stewart (here evoked as a cultural critic and scholar) revisits older scholarship that treated artifacts like jade as static cultural signifiers. Stewart updates the study by applying intersectional, ecological, and postcolonial lenses: she asks not only who owned jade, but who mined it, who profited, and what environments were reshaped to yield it. In Stewart’s updated study, jade’s “heat” is economic—demand that accelerates extraction—and its “meanness” is structural—laws and markets that render laborers invisible.

In a compact, vivid turn of phrase—“hotandmean jade”—we can find a metaphor that threads through recent cultural scholarship, the work of two contemporary writers, and an updated study that reframes how we read objects, personas, and power. This essay treats “hotandmean jade” as an emblem: a green gemstone rendered with contradictory heat and edge, a character type who is both alluring and ruthless, and a scholarly update that reorients earlier readings toward intersectional and material concerns. The phrase as object: jade that's “hot and mean” Jade traditionally carries associations of coolness, longevity, and classical value. Calling it “hotandmean” deliberately violates those associations. The adjective “hot” introduces temporality, desire, and urgency; “mean” signals danger, agency, or social cruelty. Together they produce a useful cross-sensory paradox: an object that promises preservation yet radiates immediate force. hotandmean jade baker molly stewart study updated

Example: imagine a museum label rewritten for a Ming dynasty pendant: instead of “Symbol of status and longevity,” the updated interpretation reads, “Once cool to the touch, this pendant became hot with the weight of illicit trade and mean with the violence that manufactured its value.” The object now carries social thermodynamics—heat as contagion of labor and conflict, meanness as the moral hardness of extraction. If we place a contemporary writer named Baker (fictional composite) within this frame, Baker’s prose specializes in surfaces that barely conceal sharp interiors. Baker writes characters who are fashionable and destructive: a protagonist wears jade as armor, reflecting status while cutting ties with empathy. Baker’s scenes often pivot on the tactile—how jewelry heats against the skin in a humid apartment or how an heirloom’s luster masks a history of betrayal. Example: In a short piece, Baker stages a

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Mastering Elliott Wave
Copyright © 1990 by Glenn Neely
All rights reserved including the right of reproduction in whole or in part in any form or by any means without permission from the publisher.

Disclaimer: "Mastering Elliott Wave" in an independently produced product of the Elliott Wave Institute. Every effort has been made to supply complete and accurate information. However, neither the author, the Elliott Wave Institute, nor anyone else associated with this publication shall be liable for any liability, loss, or damage directly or indirectly caused or alleged to be caused by this book. All ideas and material presented are entirely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of the publisher or bookseller.

Warning: All commodity trades, patterns, charts, systems, etc., discussed in this book are for illustrative purposes only and are not to be construed as specific advisory recommendations. No method of trading or investing is foolproof or without difficulty. Therefore, always proceed with caution before investing and realize that past performance of a trading system or technique is no guarantee of future investment success.

Glenn Neely author of Mastering Elliott Wave

Glenn Neely

Author of Mastering Elliott Wave

Glenn Neely read about the Elliott Wave principle in 1982 and was fascinated by its implications. Since then, he has devoted his career to mastering Elliott Wave. In fact, his revolutionary NEoWave technology is the result of his decades-long commitment to perfecting Wave analysis and forecasting.

In 1990, he published his advanced technologies in Mastering Elliott Wave, where he presents, step by step, his scientific method of Wave forecasting.

Mr. Neely continues to teach courses in advanced Elliott Wave. Other services include his NEoWave Forecasting service (based on Wave analysis) and his Neely River TRADING service (based on his revolutionary trading technology, Neely River Theory.)

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