Kritikak eta Iruzkinak

Crash

blitzcrankbop@wyrmsign.org

duela 7 hilabete, 3 aste(e)an batu zen

Phd student, video editor, dog parent, lover of punk music, DIY or die.

Part of this account is documenting what I'm reading for school/my dissertation.

Esteka hau laster-leiho batean zabalduko da

(e)k David Graeber(r)en Direct Action liburuaren kritika egin du

David Graeber: Direct Action (Paperback, 2009, AK Press) Baloraziorik ez

Direct Action: An Ethnography offers a lengthy, traditional anthropological account of anarchist organizing efforts, with …

Mess of a lovely book

Baloraziorik ez

I admittedly only skimmed over the first section of this book (the ethnography portion). However, I really enjoyed reading the second part. It's not that Graeber goes into anything I didn't already know about punk, anarchist, DIY movements. Instead I think he connects his insights really beautifully to larger concepts and moments in history in a way that is accessible and coherent.

I appreciated how he interrogated moral panics around anarchists and certain ill conceived stereotypes as well as certain contradictions and paradox's within the movement.

Fred Turner: From counterculture to cyberculture (Paperback, 2006, University of Chicago Press) 4 izar

In the early 1960s, computers haunted the American popular imagination. Bleak tools of the cold …

Review of 'From counterculture to cyberculture' on 'Goodreads'

4 izar

I echo the review below that posits this is a relatively sad story. It made me curious to think what the author thinks now over 15 years later and how much computers and the internet have strayed from the countercultural ideologies he accounts for.


Overall I liked the book. It helped me understand cybernetics, a concept I struggled to grasp prior to reading this book. It started to get a bit tedious and ponderous like he was explaining the same things over and over again, I felt like, at times, he could have made the chapters quite a bit shorter. Nonetheless, I do appreciate this book and think it's an important read for people studying the history of computers and the Internet.

Andrew Marantz: Antisocial: Online Extremists, Techno-Utopians, and the Hijacking of the American Conversation (2019, Viking) 4 izar

Review of 'Antisocial: Online Extremists, Techno-Utopians, and the Hijacking of the American Conversation' on 'Goodreads'

4 izar

Very enjoyable read. My one qualm is that I wish there was some kind of conclusion chapter that gave a deeper analysis of the stories he shares in the book. The book almost functions as an ethnography, where each chapter is about a different person. I would have been interested in reading something where the author reflects on the experiences and maybe puts some theoretical historical analysis on it.

The chapter I enjoyed reading the most was "the emptiness." The glossary at the end is really helpful too.