sosie posted:
i honestly dream about a real man, a fantastic and amazing individual who might someday emerge who would have the wherewithall to put an end to me
If you "dream about a real man, a fantastic and amazing individual", then throw out the modernist nonsense that you're reading and pick up a copy of Plutarch's Lives. You will never find come in contact with golden-souled men if all you do is flick through the writings of some 20th century academic.
sosie posted:
i honestly dream about a real man, a fantastic and amazing individual who might someday emerge who would have the wherewithall to put an end to me
ill do it
Lykourgos posted:sosie posted:
i honestly dream about a real man, a fantastic and amazing individual who might someday emerge who would have the wherewithall to put an end to meIf you "dream about a real man, a fantastic and amazing individual", then throw out the modernist nonsense that you're reading and pick up a copy of Plutarch's Lives. You will never find come in contact with golden-souled men if all you do is flick through the writings of some 20th century academic.
this
It was a bumper year for rare bookselling. The combined total of AbeBooks’ top 10 most expensive sales during 2011 is $220,330. The November sale of Karl Marx’s Das Kapital for $51,739 was the year’s most significant transaction on AbeBooks and one that sparked many wry smiles.
1. Das Kapital, Kritik der politischen Oekonomie by Karl Marx - $51, 739
The first edition (in three volumes) with the first published in 1867 by Otto Meissner.
deadken posted:
shakespeare., bithchth
same. lear.
gyrofry posted:
if i have a daughter im naming her goneril
my old jamaican gran's name is cordelia so i gotta go with that
Edited by futurewidow ()
full disclosure though: i lived in kingston for like 8 years total so they play the tragically hip constantly
shennong posted:
im reading demanding the impossible and it pretty well written. it's also pretty revealing of how eurocentric the 'accepted' intellectual tradition of anarchism is. its sort of weird reading about marginal european thinkers who were basically just bourgies having a wank about a utopia they thought of or whatever while there were genuinely acephalous groups with communal property etc all over the world that dont get a mention?? theres one chapter on daoism and then its pretty much just white ppl up till the 20th century, lol. didnt even mention nongjia
haha anarchists love daoism
i'm also always surprised about is how little western anarchists talk about asian anarchism. like the average anarchist activist knows about FAI in catalonia and the makhnovists in ukraine and so on, but almost nothing about the korean anarchist communist federation, which established an autonomous region in china's northeast for a few years that contained a few million people.
on the other hand i don't really like when people talk about the daoists or the taiping tianguo as being anarchists because it seems like stretching the word a bit.
we got cars mate (if you wait years and spend a zillion kuai on a license plate and oh if we need the air clean then you can only drive on certain days and and and)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9FrHGAd_yto&feature=relmfu
i'm going to relisten to it sometime just to really get a grip on why i dislike it, but do you lot reckon it's (a) bad and the prof is ignorant/careless, or (b) simplified to an amazing degree because it's an introduction, and i am wrong to expect much out of a uni class.
Edited by gyrofry ()
gyrofry posted:
I went through the Yale video lectures on critical theory a few months ago - prof. Paul Fry. some good stuff some bad, but the prof had some super annoying mannerisms. I was mainly interested in the section on the Frankfurt school, but his treatment was pretty superficial - although granted it was a survey/intro
yes i think ive seen those too, and i agree with your assessment. i also viewed the one on the history of france 1871-present which was quite good all things considered, and the one on milton, personally mostly focusing on the subset covering paradise lost, paradise regained, and samson agonistes, which was excellent, for what it was
aerdil posted:
you dont go to an ivy league school as an undergraduate to get an education, u go to get networking + a high paying establishment job
Also to get the piece of paper required to get another piece of paper to be qualified to do a job that by all rights has little to do with any of those pieces of paper
gyrofry posted:
I went through the Yale video lectures on critical theory a few months ago - prof. Paul Fry. some good stuff some bad, but the prof had some super annoying mannerisms. I was mainly interested in the section on the Frankfurt school, but his treatment was pretty superficial - although granted it was a survey/intro
lol yeah i listened to the podcasts of these over the summer, on the tube going to a party, listening to whiny nasal voice american dude talking about theory words, jesus christ, what the fuck am i. the one on lacan was kinda useful though as a basic grounding
deadken posted:
lol yeah i listened to the podcasts of these over the summer, on the tube going to a party, listening to whiny nasal voice american dude talking about theory words, jesus christ, what the fuck am i. the one on lacan was kinda useful though as a basic grounding
i dont know if it comes through on the podcast versions, or really if its even just an artifact of my particular speakers trying to render that particular audio, but there was a constant digital background gurgle like the great atari war was going on just outside the yale campus
* rapenovels