It’s a slow day, so I guess I’ll jump on the bandwagon. 1 like = 1 pic of a book in my library, with comments. Going to alternate between read & unread to keep it interesting.
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The title doesn’t quite get the nuances of the original Portuguese (Is There A World To Come?). In answer, the authors look to indigenous Brazilian cosmology for a politics not limited to the human. This cosmopolitics is not a remnant of the past, but the key to future survival.pic.twitter.com/p1cxhBznKA
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What happens when you get an artsy anarchist to compose filler material for your newspaper. Tiny stories illustrating the woes of 19th-century Parisians. Glad to see it’s getting serialised on Twitter by
@novelsin3linespic.twitter.com/ezRhl9IeMC
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Unread (kinda). A lovely hardcover of Tristram Shandy to replace my beat-up Penguin edition. Taking a class on Sterne is one of the reasons I’m now studying literature full-time. I’ll have to find vol. 2 at some point to complete the look.pic.twitter.com/BUR9lbO5BR
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Before wading through Benjamin’s Arcades Project, Buck-Morss provides the best introduction to his thought. Rigorously organised and illustrated, this was a major gateway for me into critical and art theory.pic.twitter.com/qBZCPge11T
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A humanities professor is made redundant, and goes on a jeremiad against the coming mechanisation of the world. Writing almost entirely in future-tense, Brooke-Rose toys with language as much as ideas. An ideal work of metafiction alongside Borges and Calvino.pic.twitter.com/SbFfIXLN7V
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Pynchon is an obvious pick, but I’ve been re-reading Gravity’s Rainbow, and it never ceases to amaze me. It’s one of those books that is daunting, dark, complex, and above all a joy to navigate.pic.twitter.com/i3psTf29n7
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Laura Oldfield Ford’s zine charts the psychic landscapes of London and its slow destruction by neoliberal policy. The 2012 Olympics lurk on the horizon, erasing memories of riots, punks, artists, and working-class communities to make the city presentable and anodyne.pic.twitter.com/HykKQ6reWY
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Been eager to read this for a while. Cyborgs, revolutionaries, and a rampart disrespect for intellectual property. What’s not to like?pic.twitter.com/vpMZZP7Zni
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Speaking of cyborgs, Haraway is an incredible writer, whose manifestos have only grown more pertinent. I’m glad I picked up this volume last year, and wish I’d read her sooner.pic.twitter.com/pyB1UXkzQK
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This has been on my list for years, and I’ve finally picked up a copy. Analysing the millenarians of the Middle Ages as social revolutionaries. Cohn isn’t a radical himself, which lends some distance, despite the connections he draws to contemporary revolutions.pic.twitter.com/ZBTGD4s487
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