gloss: Two shirtless men embracing in a river (Queer love)
Wednesday reading, on a Wednesday.


The Nakano Thrift Shop, Hiromi Kawakami (trans. Allison Markin Powell). This is a quiet, odd book that observes the actions and stories of various people who work at a cluttered secondhand store in the Tokyo exurbs. I almost called it "meditative", in line with its quietness (and a cliche of Japanese lit), but it isn't. It is distinctly not ruminative; there is very little reflection and consideration going on. What it is, is carefully observed, down to how someone's scent shifts as he takes a seat and what a woman's eyelids look like when she winks. Characters are as carefully examined as the mundane objects that come through the store; emotions are felt, but rarely explained. Traits, insights, tics: all these aspects of characterization bob up out of dark waters briefly, before sinking away.

In the final chapter, when Hitomi, the narrator, has been out of touch with the shop denizens for a few years, she wonders:
Could Takeo have died on the side of a road?

That would serve him right! I thought at the idea of such a thing. But my smugness was soon dampened by the realization of how troublesome it was, just to feel that way—how troublesome it was, really, just to be alive. I wanted nothing to do with love! I wanted the stiffness in my shoulders to go away. I could probably put a bit of money into savings this month. These thoughts drifted by one by one, like tiny bubbles.
This sense of thoughts and emotions happening, only to pass, characterizes the book as a whole.

The narrative resists some easy shortcuts, particularly in making the characters more likeable/appealing. Hitomi states the absence/negative of positive emotions a few times: she is not fond of her boss, she does not empathize with an older woman. These negations are neither hostile nor off-putting; their absence does not imply the presence of bad feeling. They are simply factual. A book that wanted to please its reader, tug some heartstrings, be quirky and cute, would, for example, make her very fond of Mr. Nakano in his pom-pom cap and complicated love life.

I am currently reading Penelope Fitzgerald's Offshore.

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In Now We Fight for the Future: It's Time to Become a Radical, Joshua Hill describes both how we got to the current moment (ever-growing inequality and the atrophying of civic life beyond voting) and what is necessary in order to move forward. Referring to Grace Lee Boggs, he writes, "Protest is not enough. We need visionary organizing, both in that we must tell a different story and in that we must deliberately build organizations that work to transform society. The story we have to tell is both about solidarity and our enemies."

Sarah Schulman's forthcoming book describes solidarity like this: "Solidarity is the essential human process of recognizing that other people are real and their experiences matter. It is based in learning to evaluate the state of the world by the collective, and not only by our own individual experience. Solidarity is the action behind the revelation that each of us, individually, are not the only people with dreams."
gloss: (TLT: we had beef)
It's Reading Wednesday. I've been reading.

book review
Bear Season, Emma Fairclough. I heard about this short novel on Bsky, when its publisher nominated it for the just-launched Small Spec Book Awards. Everything about the book sounded right up my alley: young female scholar goes to Alaska's wilderness to meet Bear and encounters an isolated old lady survivalist, and her disappearance becomes a viral phenomenon. Further, the story is told from different perspectives, including the scholar's doctoral thesis. meh )

online reads, lit & creativity edition
34 Transformative Prompts to Unlock Your Writing, Courtesy Kelly Link: “The times when I’m happiest while writing are those times when I’ve invented a problem or a complication that needs solving.”

Imaginary Countries: Some thoughts on teaching the writing of speculative fiction, by Alexander Chee. I really like his revision of the concept of a story's structural "climax" into "what cannot be taken back", and, overall, I think the set of questions he has an author ask is wonderful. I'm not all that into his reading list, only because it's so heavy on (if not thoroughly) speculative-sprinkled literary fiction rather than directly speculative. Maybe I'm just needlessly grumpy on that.

The secret ingredient to coming up with good ideas for a story. I really like this essay, even though its style is definitely not to my taste and I'm not nearly as knowledgable about video games as the author expects. It's pitched, too, to an unusual demographic: people who want to be creative but aren't (yet). I think because I'm so much not in the target readership, its points and arguments got to me sideways, and I'm glad I read it.

Ngũgĩ wa Thiong’o: three days with a giant of African literature.

15 Black Transfeminine Novelists You Should Read. This list is amazing.

Art Lives Between the Hard Lines of Perceived Reality: an interview with Indra Das. This interview is just wonderful, particularly this passage:
"But I love it when dream logic infects the hard lines of perceived reality, making it more fluid. Art lives there, whether realist or not, because it’s all imagined, it all comes from that dream space, our yearning to grasp all that we cannot understand about ourselves, all that we cannot perceive about the universe, our wonder and terror and sadness, and place it in a simulacrum of ‘reality’, as our brains do every night when we dream."
The interplay of constructed and believable, artificial and real, is something I never stop thinking about.

Liliana Colanzi: “The literature of irreality let me sink into a stranger world”. I haven't had a chance to write up my thoughts on Colanzi's story collection, You Glow in the Dark, which I read earlier this month, but I have to; it changed me, and keeps working at me. This interview with her is phenomenal.

The Sentence as a Space for Living: Prose Architecture. Renee Gladman just keeps blowing my mind and putting it back together in different shapes.

Five Books That Conjure Entirely New Worlds: The best-written stories can make readers feel as if they have passed through mundane states of being and been brought over to another universe. This short listicle by Jeff VanderMeer is so good.

“Those Folks Never Had Their Lights Turned Off.” On the Literary Importance of Highlighting the Haves and the Have-Nots: From Barroom Chats with Raymond Carver to the Aperçus of Thomas Piketty, Douglas Unger Explores Class Consciousness in American Letters. I hate the expression "haves and have nots" when, as the subtitle makes clear, this is about class, but the essay itself is a great look at how artists' material circumstances affects what they say and how they say it.

Contemporary Literary Novels Are Haunted by the Absence of Money: Naomi Kanakia Wonders Why Nobody Talks About the Thing We All Need. This is pretty good, if glib and kind of too breezy.
I think this lack of clarity about money arises because the stories literary authors want to tell are fundamentally upper-middle and upper-class stories.[...] For whatever reason, authors of literary fiction seem very invested in creating dramas of the meritocracy: stories about the internal, emotional turmoil of talented people who, it is assumed, deserve all their current or future success.
gloss: Two Palestinian boys flash the peace sign while holding their fluffy cat Lulu (Palestine)
title from "Siege," The Silence That Remains by Ghassan Zaqtan, trans. Fady Joudah

The Failure of Liberal Zionism: Israel has behaved exactly as its harshest critics predicted.

Your Crisis of Faith is not My Concern (There’s a Genocide Going on), Steve Salaita.
Understanding the Zionist mentality means acknowledging a kind of logic beyond the emotional capacity of functional human beings.

All the cruelty livestreamed onto our electronic devices has undone the old political order.  There are no more liberal Zionists, lowkey Zionists, cultural Zionists, soft Zionists, progressive Zionists, apathetic Zionists, ambivalent Zionists, non-Zionists, or post-Zionists.  Now only two categories matter: Zionist and anti-Zionist.
 
I might go so far as to argue that not identifying as anti-Zionist is itself a form of Zionism, which I suppose is another way of saying that ignorance of or indifference to Gaza is unacceptable. 

Joe Biden Chose This Catastrophic Path Every Step of the Way: What’s happening in the Middle East was enabled by a president with ideological priors, aides who failed to push back, and a cheerleading media establishment. (The New Republic)

Inside the State Department’s Weapons Pipeline to Israel: Leaked cables and emails show how the agency’s top officers dismissed internal evidence of Israelis misusing American-made bombs and worked around the clock to rush more out while the Gaza death toll mounted. (ProPublica)

'Relentless’ Israeli Attacks on Gaza Medical Workers Are War Crime, U.N. Panel Says: The report, which does not have the force of law, found that the Israeli military had engaged in deliberate assaults on hospitals and other health care providers. (NYT gift link)

Lebanese medical body calls on WHO, UN to stop Israeli 'massacre' of healthcare system. (Middle East Eye)

65 Doctors, Nurses and Paramedics: What We Saw in Gaza (NYT archive link)
Nearly every day I was there, I saw a new young child who had been shot in the head or the chest, virtually all of whom went on to die. Thirteen in total. At the time, I assumed this had to be the work of a particularly sadistic soldier located nearby. But after returning home, I met an emergency medicine physician who had worked in a different hospital in Gaza two months before me. “I couldn’t believe the number of kids I saw shot in the head,” I told him. To my surprise, he responded: “Yeah, me, too. Every single day.”

‘We're dead alive’: A year of living, reporting the war on Gaza. (Al Jazeera)

The Killings They Tweeted: An Airwars investigation: In the largest public analysis of Israeli military strike footage, Airwars, in collaboration with Sky News, reviewed hundreds of clips of strikes the IDF said were targeting Hamas and other militant groups in Gaza that were posted on official military social media accounts in the first month of the war. Despite the grainy videos published with few details on targets or locations, Airwars matched 17 strikes to specific geo-coordinates where our researchers had tracked Palestinians killed or injured. In these strikes alone, more than 400 civilians were reported killed.

Dearborn Mayor Calls “Bullshit” on Biden’s Attempts to Stop Israel’s Wars: “We have funerals that we’re attending on a daily basis for loved ones that we’ve lost overseas.”

Consequences of Nasrallah, Tariq Ali.

Open Letter from American Medical Professionals Who Served in Gaza: We are 99 American physicians, surgeons, nurse practitioners, nurses, and midwives who have volunteered in the Gaza Strip since October 7, 2023. Combined, we spent 254 weeks volunteering in Gaza’s hospitals and clinics.

“Starving Gaza”: Al Jazeera Film Shows U.S. Keeps Arming Israel as It Uses Hunger as a Weapon of War. (Democracy Now)

‘No place to go’: As Israel bombs Lebanon, African migrants feel abandoned: Seeking safety from Israeli strikes, many foreign domestic workers face additional hurdles of displacement and discrimination. (Al Jazeera)

‘They Hit Everyone and Anyone’: From Lebanon, residents share what life has been like since Israel launched its attack. (NY Magazine)

Israel's war on Lebanon: The trauma of watching the 'Hollywood movie' from afar. To the West's press, thrilled at the spectacle, Israel's sadistic acts were 'audacious', the innocent dead mere film extras. For this Lebanese abroad, the cognitive dissonance is immense. (Middle East Eye)

U.S. Jewish Institutions Are Purging Their Staffs of Anti-Zionists: A months-long investigation found even the smallest hints of dissent are often met with unemployment. (In These Times)

Tenured Jewish Professor Says She’s Been Fired for Pro-Palestinian Speech; Pennsylvania’s Muhlenberg College may have become the first institution since Oct. 7 to oust a tenured faculty member for such statements, though the professor is appealing the decision and still receiving a salary.
“I wasn’t fired for anything I said in the classroom. I was fired because of a charge brought by a student I had never met, let alone taught, who had been surveying my social media account for months. This isn’t about student safety, this is about silencing dissent. We are witnessing a new McCarthyism and we should all be terrified of its implications.”
gloss: close-up of colourful fallen autumn leaves in water (fall)
Ahead of Anniversary, Artists Urge Brooklyn Museum to Stand With Palestine: Cultural workers say the museum must “end its silence” on Israel’s violence in Gaza and the Occupied West Bank in a new open letter. (Hyperallergic)

Jewish Currents Live: Dionne Brand & Adania Shibli in Conversation. Two greats making, talking, history.

The Appalling Attack on Ta-Nehisi Coates Is a Massive Media Failing: It is not antisemitic to defend Palestinian human rights. And it’s past time for more American Jews to say so to correct a media that’s lost the thread. (The New Republic)

Three civilians killed in Israeli airstrike on Damascus: State media, including the 175th journalist killed since last October 7.

Free speech hypocrisy at Wash U. Uni president has welcomed Nazis and assigned controversial readings, but will brook no pro-Palestine speech. (The Hill)

Resistance Was Ghassan Kanafani’s Only Story. I really liked this introductory biographical sketch of one of my heroes. (Jacobin)

The Fascism in Us All. From 2018, an essay written in the wake of Hurricane Florence and people's intense anti-looting sentiments. The carceral state deputizes everyone into its maintenance, whether that is snitching on looters, blaming residents in blue states for their fate, or prioritizing one's imaginary comfort above someone else's fundamental rights. The cruelty is the point, the division of the collective into the atomized and lost.
gloss: Two shirtless men embracing in a river (Queer love)
some links

New York magazine (archive link): The Return of Ta-Nehisi Coates: A decade after “The Case for Reparations,” he is ready to take on Israel, Palestine, and the American media. in his new book,
he lays forth the case that the Israeli occupation is a moral crime, one that has been all but covered up by the West. He writes, “I don’t think I ever, in my life, felt the glare of racism burn stranger and more intense than in Israel.”
Haaretz: New Evidence Reveals Netanyahu's Relentless Efforts to Block Hostage Deal, Report Shows: 'Torpedo the Deal': Israel's Channel 12 News exclusive report features new documents and previously unheard conversations showing Netanyahu's efforts to sabotage any hostage deal.

ProPublica: Israel Deliberately Blocked Humanitarian Aid to Gaza, Two Government Bodies Concluded. Antony Blinken Rejected Them: Blinken told Congress, “We do not currently assess that the Israeli government is prohibiting or otherwise restricting” aid, even though the U.S. Agency for International Development and others had determined that Israel had broken the law.

Al Jazeera: Israel is deliberately targeting journalists in Gaza: Experts: Press freedom groups point to a pattern of killing clearly identified journalists.

Hell World: Your death will serve as its own justification. Jake Romm explores the (inadequate, contradictory) definitions of "terrorist" in the wake of the pager explosions in Lebanon late last week.
So what, then, is a terrorist if they cannot be meaningfully distinguished from the very states that claim to fight them? Terrorist is perhaps best understood as a kind of empty signifier: a word with no fixed meaning, but with a more or less reliable function in Western discourse nonetheless.... The word, Said suggests, acts as a moral short circuit which enables us to treat those who we have designated terrorists, literally, like animals: beings which are incapable of political-goal oriented activity, who are driven by irrational hatreds and with whom rational communication is not possible and who, if they pose a danger, must be eradicated.
The definitional capacity of "animal" to include "must be eradicated" is also directly useful for looking at Vance and Trump's Springfield lies.

New Means: A man was lynched last night: Honoring Marcellus Khaliifah Williams and building a world without state violence.

Innocence Project: For Marcellus Williams, Who Was on Death Row for 24 Years, Poetry Was a Lifeline: Some of his most meaningful pieces are the ones he wrote to support and remember others facing execution.
gloss: (Val)
I've read three books since I last posted reviews (one terrible, one decent, one phenomenal) but I'm not sure how/whether to write those thoughts up. And I have a lot of links that I've been saving but for whatever reason just haven't posted. Here are some of the most important (I guess, however that would be calculated).

The Shapes of Grief: Witnessing the unbearable, Christina Sharpe.
I can't do justice to this piece; it just deserves to be read and reread a lot. This passage crystallizes the overriding concern:
Meaning is in crisis. And we are embroiled, everywhere, in contests over meaning—which are also contests of power, contests over living. And dying.
Sharpe offers multiple approaches to considering this contest, including spatial/architectural, gestural, and graphic. I don't know, it's just amazing.

*

A whole slew of articles and essays on the Springfield blood libels:
  • What A Lie Is For.
    This piece, by David J. Roth in Defector, is superb, one of the best political essays I've read. He summarized it on Bsky like this: "'It's lying in the sense that they're knowingly saying something untrue, and it's I guess sort of trolling. But mostly this is a way of signaling that they don't care, and that they intend to do/take what they want regardless." I think that distinction between spectacularly instrumentalized lying and trolling is really important. The trolling is a precondition for this sort of reality-shattering move, but it's not the same.
  • How the Trump Campaign Ran With Rumors About Pet-Eating Migrants—After Being Told They Weren’t True. (This is the MSN repost of the paywalled WSJ investigation.)
  • Why Trump’s lies about Haitians are different: "Trump says nasty things about immigrants all the time. But these ones have disturbingly specific Nazi parallels."
  • JD Vance is bad at this: The online culture newsletter Garbage Day has a great breakdown of how the lie incubated and was spread. It includes this fantastic sentence about Vance not-recanting: "[The incident] was also, as Sam Rosenfeld, a professor at Colgate University, put it, yet another example of Vance’s 'reflexive instinct to intellectualize his own debasement.'"
  • How Lies About Pet Eating Turned Into Bomb Threats: "The racist fantasizing about Haitian immigrants eating pets emerged from the same right-wing ecosystem that produced the violent threats against Drag Story Hour. The playbook is almost identical."

Your regular selection of AI Is Shit, WtF Are We Doing? Stop That!:
gloss: (hrmmm)
I was all set to do the meme about The Last Five Fics Titled from Songs. When I counted them back, however, I only got to mid-July. I guess I've been on a song-titling kick? They're all super-meaningful, though, I swear.

Anyway, here's the latest:
wear the circle in my sleep (1200w)
Ancient Greek Religion & Lore | Ariadne | Fringe Science AU
The Knossos Project overleaps the tired boundaries of knowledge and discipline in its passionate pursuit of innovation in weapons systems.
This was a pinch hit for the Mad Science flash exchange. For someone who doesn't get fairy-tale retellings, I certainly am growing more and more fascinated by SF/F riffs on Greek myths. This takes its title from Throwing Muses's phenomenal song "Hook in Her Head" which has been a part of my brain for more than thirty years. I wanted to use the song title, actually, but I was worried it would be a spoiler somehow.

More links:
Robot controlled by a king oyster mushroom blends living organisms and machines. This is so cool and also just so freaky.

50,000-year-old tree resin revealing 'sophisticated technological processes' could rewrite history of ancient human expansion

Orc is Man To Orc. "We’re going to ask a question with some unsettling resonances for Anglo-American history and culture:  not what is an orc, but why is an orc? What does it take—narratively and materially—to create an entire race of enemies?"

Concrete clickbait: next time you share a spomenik photo, think about what it means: Photos of Yugoslav monuments known as spomeniks are often shared online, exoticised and wrenched from context. But now, argues Owen Hatherley, it is vital that we make the effort to understand what they truly represent.

My Secret Weapon Against the Attention Economy: When you reread the same poem over and over again, you stop scrolling along the surface and dive deep beneath it. I intended to start doing this last Sunday, the first of the month, then, like the neurotic idiot I am, foundered on the rocks of deciding which poem.

When Did All the Recipes Get ‘Garlicky’?: Before calling a recipe “leeky” or “lemony” was a joke, these descriptors were a revelation. I went into this article thinking it would explain the whole late-20teens trends of "brothy bean" recipes, but its topic is actually shifts in naming recipes, which is also fascinating. I still want to understand brothy beans, though.

Magic and Lawlessness, a good essay arguing against hard magic systems and rigid worldbuilding.
gloss: (Kino - this place is death)
Why Did Canada’s Top Art Gallery Push Out a Visionary Curator?. Phenomenal reporting on Wanda Nanibush, decolonizing Canadian institutions, donor relations, and solidarity amongst global liberation movements.

Trump acknowledges losing the 2020 election 'by a whisker': The former president admitted during a podcast appearance that he did not win the election against Biden, while saying later that it "was a fraud."

Trump promoted another Truth Social account that calls for killing his political opponents

Donald Trump Has Triggered A Groyper Meltdown. lol I say, lol.

Vibeocracy: Kamala is Brat. Brat is Kamala. I am going insane.

Trust the Disgust: On the Death of Joy

The Fracture of Good Order: Philip and Daniel Berrigan’s ministry of risk (The Baffler, limited free articles).
But when pro-Palestinian protesters obstruct a highway or blockade a weapons manufacturer, their immediate goal isn’t to enlighten the mythical median voter. They’re looking to halt, however briefly, the system’s functioning and jolt an anesthetized body politic out of its stupor. It’s these types of actions, on the vanguard of protest, that trouble the manufacture of consent by the pro-war media and Washington establishment.
The unpublished genocide diaries of Refaat Alareer.

'Stepping away from the role of offering hope to others': How Israel's history of violence stole Palestinian artist Malak Mattar's joy for colour: Malak Mattar's powerful and distinctive art portrays the struggles of Palestinians amid Israel's ongoing genocide in Gaza.

Gaza Reduced to 42 Million Tonnes of Rubble. What Will It Take to Rebuild?. Among other fantastic info visualizations, this piece makes great use of comparative satellite images.

Scientists are closing in on the true, horrifying scale of death and disease in Gaza. From the text: "The Lancet medical journal recently published an estimate of deaths in Gaza from several respected scientists, who outline their process of estimation (comparison with similar conflicts) and final numbers. They estimate that about 186,000 total deaths could be attributable to the current conflict in Gaza, which is roughly 7.9% of its population, by mid-June 2024."

Linguistics for Liberation or for Domination?: The battle at MIT over a linguistics course on Haiti, Palestine, Israel and the war on Gaza.

Northwestern Suspends Journalism Professor Steven Thrasher After Gaza Solidarity Protest. “What they don’t like is that I am now applying the same social justice journalism principles that I’ve applied to race and that I’ve applied to LGBTQ people, to COVID and HIV, that I was now applying those to Palestine,” says Thrasher, author of The Viral Underclass.

US woman indicted for attempt to drown 3-year-old Palestinian-American girl: Elizabeth Wolf, 42, has been charged with attempted capital murder for attack on 3-year-old in swimming pool in Texas.

The unbearable heaviness of climate coloniality. From the abstract: The extremely uneven and inequitable impacts of climate change mean that differently-located people experience, respond to, and cope with the climate crisis and related vulnerabilities in radically different ways. The coloniality of climate seeps through everyday life across space and time, weighing down and curtailing opportunities and possibilities through global racial capitalism, colonial dispossessions, and climate debts.

'Anything that can be built can be taken down': The largest dam removal in US history is complete – what happens next?: The Klamath River is free of four huge dams for the first time in generations. But for the Yurok tribe, the river's restoration is only just beginning – starting with 18 billion seeds.
gloss: sea princess leaning into toward sexy lady (Namora likes the ladies)
Reading post, all-fiction edition.

Brainwashing, murder, mother-daughter beauty pageants, teen lesbian awakenings in the glow of a Catholic church's stained glass (the same red as Dior 999, as worn by fembot assssins), and the ghosts of double-exposure photos: Candice Wuehle's Monarch is a stunning novel.

This isn't a book with a "trauma plot"; the protagonist is not, in place of telling a story, revealed to have a really terrible, heartrending backstory. Instead, this book's actual structure recapitulates and dramatizes the manifold effects of trauma on the psyche. ... )

I think, at least, [personal profile] fiachairecht and [personal profile] meikuree, this might be of interest?

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I also finished Shisi's Little Mushroom v2. I loved this book for its strange, very bleak post-apocalyptic future. Humanity is on the verge of disappearing, and the authoritarian response to protect it is brutal; meanwhile, mutated monsters roam the wilds. One shape-changing monster, a little mushroom that somehow became sentient, goes to the human stronghold in search of his stolen spore. There, he's irresistibly drawn to the Chief Authoritarian Asshole, who has the power to kill on sight anyone who might be infected by monsters.

Their relationship was the one part of the book that didn't work for me. I think that's probably because I'm not all that familiar with, or interested in, certain key danmei ship dynamics? Chief guy is cold and sarcastic and often - in the mushroom's own words! - "bullies" the mushroom. (But of course he is also drawn to the mushroom's purity and innocence.) And the mushroom is kind of into the bullying? Or, at least, he takes it even as it really hurts him.

Volume 2 opens up the story's world from the one human stronghold, and also develops some alternative ways of living and understanding. It goes beyond the human/monster binary and revises the original understanding of the crisis from one of genetic contamination to a quantum resonance (or something). I actually really got into watching the various scientists doing their thing throughout the book, working as hard as possible to understand why the world was falling apart. That attention to, and respect for, the process of research is not something you see all that often in SF/F.

The translation is serviceable, and sometimes even quite lovely (the poor punctuation, not so much). I grew very fond of the mushroom and supporting characters, and I admire the world a lot. It's worth checking out; there's a lot that will stay with me for a long while.

*

"Against the Grain", very short fiction, surpassingly beautiful and sad (in a register SF/F rarely reaches) by Lindz mcleod, who has quickly become one of my favourite writers. (Also check out their "The Brides, the Hunted", which does so many weird gender twisty things in so few, well-honed words.) I wish I could write like this. :/
gloss: (Queer: Lil Nas X limpwrist)
Let America Be Your Periphery: Republicans and Democrats are both hellbent on exterminating Palestinians. At best they’re merely indifferent to the extermination. Let’s not allow them to also kill our imagination
I’m probably not alone in sometimes feeling overwhelmed and pessimistic, but there’s one thing I insist on:  we cannot let the genocide kill our imagination.  It’s tempting to seek some kind of relief in the shadow of celebrity politicians, but we have to think beyond what is sold to us as pragmatism because Palestinians deserve better than cynicism or dissimulation. 
Not everything we do will tangibly affect Palestine’s liberation, but each act should nevertheless be calibrated toward the possibility of Palestine’s liberation. 
This is probably the best, most energizing statement I've read on what it means to imagine better, and the passage about "relief in celebrity politicians" is giving me so much to think about in terms of how people abrogate/reassign personal ethics into parasocial fictions and fandoms.

Another way out: The Democratic Party’s rightward shift on immigration—from Vietnam to Gaza: We must not let electoral politics curtail our ability to imagine better worlds worth fighting for and building together.

Democrats Need to Stop Trashing Palestinian Voters if They Want to Win: Palestinian Americans have learned that the Democratic Party will bomb your homeland, kill your family, use your own money to do it, and still expect your vote.
Despite what many people might say, the genocide is not a “single issue” or an isolated phenomenon. It is a devastating sequence of events that fundamentally changes how you view the world. If Democrats lose the upcoming presidential election, it will not be the fault of Palestinians and Palestinian Americans who have begged and pleaded with our elected officials for months to stop killing our families.
Gus Walz Is Not Your Inspiration Porn: MAGA Republicans’ comments about Gov. Tim Walz’s son were clearly vile. Democrats’ responses were hurtful in a more subtle way. Benevolent othering is still bullshit.

The toll of America’s anti-trans war: To understand how the anti-trans agenda could reshape all of our lives, The 19th set out to examine how the laws and rhetoric behind it are impacting Americans.

‘I wouldn’t wish this on anyone’: the food delivery riders living in ‘caravan shantytowns’ in Bristol: Gig economy workers for Deliveroo and Uber Eats in the city are living in appalling conditions, while putting in long hours, earning low pay and facing mental health problem.

Your use of AI is directly harming the environment I live in. Whenever I see AI-generated icons and "art" on my network page, I want to throw something. How are people still blithely using this incredibly shitty, hugely harmful tech??
gloss: Two Palestinian boys flash the peace sign while holding their fluffy cat Lulu (Palestine)
My reading Wednesday post was getting unwieldy (more than usual, that is), so here is the first part.

This Kickstarter, closing tomorrow (8/22) afternoon, is amazing: Anti-Caste Speculative Fiction: "An anthology of weird, fantastic, supernatural, Dalit futurist, & magical realist fiction by writers from South Asia and the diaspora." There's an option to add-on some funds to ensure that a physical copy goes to a library in India.

*

Bombed hospitals, buried children: we have become numb to Gaza’s destruction: "As we are saturated with horror, it gets normalized – and Israel’s assault continues unfettered. A Palestinian American poet on dehumanization." (My only question with this framing is whether the brutaility was ever not normalized in the west.)

Welcome to Hell: The Israeli Prison System as a Network of Torture Camps. Comprehensive report produced by (and it sucks that I need to emphasize this) the Israeli non-profit B'tselem.

The contrast in courage is astonishing: "A staggering number of journalists in Gaza have been killed by Israel. Many of them purposefully assassinated then slandered as "terrorists" in death. 160 and counting in fact. It's an ignominious record. More than the number of journalists killed in World War II, the Vietnam War, and in Ukraine combined." And their US comrades don't give a shit.

Emmy body defends nomination of Gaza journalist Bisan Owda after 150 industry pros call for it to be revoked: "It found no evidence to corroborate reports detailed in a letter asking for Owda’s nomination to be rescinded."

As Democrats Party, Doctors Beg the World to Listen to Gaza: “The reason we cry tears isn’t sadness anymore. It’s the feeling that we have no ability to get the most powerful country in the world to stop the bombs.”

Our job is to protect student curiosity: "When students organize a protest, even when they are not defending human rights, they are always engaging in an intellectual as well as moral experiment."

Election Deniers Secretly Pushed Rule That Would Make It Easier to Delay Certification of Georgia’s Election Results: "On Monday, the GOP-controlled State Election Board is poised to adopt the rule, which would potentially allow county officials, including one who secretly backed the rule, to throw the election results of the swing state into chaos this fall."

Review of Raymond Geuss's Not Thinking Like a Liberal.
gloss: lady troll seen from the back (HS: Kanaya)
Media Wednesday rolls around again. I miss reading fiction.

tv
We happened across Acting Good one night last week—it looks like CTV is filling its schedule rather desultorily while the Olympics are on. Anyway, it's a delightful, surreal sitcom set in a northern Manitoba community and I can't wait to watch the rest of it.

Speaking of Canadian sitcoms I love that no one cares about, Children Ruin Everything is on Netflix Canada. I hope it's on other Netflices.

books
Road to Ruin, Hana Lee (2024). A courier on a magic motorcycle, wearing a saurian skull as a helmet, travels across a post-apocalyptic wasteland to deliver love letters between two people, both of whom she is in love with. That's the pitch, and it got me about a quarter of the way in before I had to stop. I'm mentioning it here because I think it might work very well for other people. I really wanted it to work for me! But two things put me off: am i idiosyncratic or pretentious? signs point to yes )

online reads
Wall Street Journal still can’t confirm January story about UNRWA in Gaza. Utterly despicable.
'Amid the chaos of far-right protests and violence I saw the best of Bristol': In the face of violence, ordinary people put themselves in harm's way to protect others. I loved this piece on ordinary resistance to surging fascism.
The Center won't beat Fascism. Will not and, let's be honest, cannot.
Playing the Victim. Another excellent personal post about this weekend's pogroms.
• From Scientific American, a very important opinion piece that is beautifully well-cited: The U.K.’s Cass Review Badly Fails Trans Children: A politicized review into transgender medicine in the National Health Service has upended lives in the U.K.—and threatens to spread harm across the globe. This passage is especially good: "Instead of helping young people, the review has caused enormous harm to children and their families, to democratic discourse and to wider principles of scientific endeavour. There is an urgent need to critically examine the actual context and findings of the report."
Historic federal aid addresses discrimination for thousands of Black farmers after years of delay: The U.S. Department of Agriculture has sent out long-awaited payments to minority farmers and others in need of aid. But some say it’s not enough.
For the Tuscarora, Recognition Has Been A 40-Year Fight: The Tuscarora people of North Carolina want official state recognition as a tribe, but centuries of history and politics stand in their way.
Willing to Die for MrBeast (and $5 Million): The contestants in the internet star’s “Beast Games” expected outlandish challenges and signed contracts that acknowledged risks of serious injury and death. Still, few were prepared for the conditions on set. (gift link ♥)
Reuters: We bought everything needed to make $3 million worth of fentanyl: All it took was $3,600 and a web browser. The reporting on this is exquisite.
A National Tenants Union Has Arrived: Local tenants unions are officially teaming up, to the terror of big landlords.. I've seen what tenants unions can do and I hope this just gets bigger and better.
Workers’ union, former lightkeepers concerned with Coast Guard’s decision to destaff B.C. lighthouses. Awful, stupid decision! (Responses I've seen are all "they're all automated in other countries!". These are adjacent to/in the midst of parks and often serve as significant aid in emergencies. Also, people shouldn't just randomly lose their homes and the fact that other countries do it differently is immaterial. blargh)
Four Friends, Two Marriages, One Affair — and a Shelf of Books Dissecting It: A tale of literature and treachery. (Archive link) This story is both weirdly fascinating and deeply annoying. I think the writers' approach to art as autobiographical + careerist, as small stakes as personal interactions among people just like you, simply doesn't make any sense to me any longer. The anecdote wherein Ann Beattie didn't want to read one book because she cared about her friend is so interesting, particularly the guy's baffled reaction.
How David Weber Orders a Pizza: hilarious, and an excellent vaccine against the temptation to over-explain.
• Short fiction: The Skin Keeper, Jan Stinchcomb. I am usually about the last person you'd want reading a fairy-tale riff or retelling, but this one floored me. I wish I knew how it worked, how to do that.

*
[community profile] battleshipex reveals will happen overnight. Not sure how I feel about things.
gloss: Maggie and Hopey love each other! (Locas!)
Battleship ate my reading time, so other than rereading HCA's "The Little Mermaid," I didn't finish anything this week. And when I made the mistake of checking my network page on Reading Wednesday, I came across two obnoxiously wrong book opinions and got mad and had to go away. bah I should not care! Why do I care.

*

Two pieces that consider, to greater and lesser extents, the predominance of the 'trauma plot' in contemporary television. I think they work very well together, particularly in drawing attention to how the trauma plot can individualize/personalize stories to such an extent that institutional critique or systemic analysis becomes impossible. Further, these ideas apply to literature and how it is structured every bit as much as TV.
* The Past Is Never Dead: On TV’s Backstory Problem (LARB)
* ‘The Bear’ Misses What’s Truly Toxic About Fine Dining (Defector; archive link)

*
[personal profile] muccamukk linked this: "The Carol Shields Prize for Fiction is looking for everyone's Five Favourite Fiction Books of the 21st Century by Women and Non-binary Writers in Canada and the United States. (Link goes to google form.)" But then the form says works that were published in the US and Canada, so are writers from other countries eligible? I can't tell. Anyway, my mind has been tying itself in knots trying to come up with a shortlist. So far I have ... )

*
It's the second "boss battle" round of [community profile] battleshipex and, just as with the first, something about this means that I am creatively paralyzed and unlikely to come up with anything. I really don't like my brain sometimes. /o\
gloss: girl playing dressup spirals into the void (HS: Roxy in the void spiral)
My laptop died and it's very difficult to compose here on the tablet's screen so I'm probably going to be (more) scarce. I didn't manage to sign up for [community profile] everywoman but there isn't much if anything I could write, so that's fine. I was going to default on the robot flash, but I already have two(!) gifts there, so I don't feel right about that. Tiptapping for 300+ words ig.

Anyway, here are some recent reads that I can't stop thinking about:

  • Hello stranger. Written by one of my literary (and local) heroes, this piece has haunted me since I first read it. How do you keep going? How.
  • An essential and timely guide to organizing against antisemitism: "A new book brings much-needed clarity to the debate on antisemitism, and how the fight against it is tied to our collective liberation."
  • Acts of Language: "Amid the actual violence of Israel's assault on Gaza, why have so many writers treated pro-Palestine speech as a threat?" (archive link)
    This focus on the speech used tο support Palestinian rights does more than obscure the context in which protesters are speaking; it also obscures the reality about which they speak. I believe in the power and importance of language. But what is happening is not primarily about language. Words are not weapons of mass destruction: when we encourage others to use language with care, we should be sure to do the same ourselves. Some metaphors are inappropriate in some contexts. The context here is a quantity of ammunition dropped on Gaza that is equivalent to more than three times that of the atom bomb dropped on Hiroshima. A high proportion of those bombs were US-made and supplied. Those bombs were not made of language, and they certainly were not metaphors.
gloss: (KA)
Media Wednesday is a chonky catch-up.

books


Towards the middle of last month, I suddenly got into the idea of completing a reading bingo card from the r/Fantasy community. I had almost all the squares filled just with things I'd happened to read, but I needed "Superheroes". At the same time, I wanted to participate in the Trans Rights Readathon. I ended up starting and throwing away about three or four trans superhero stories. It's grim out there.

The Meister of Decimen City, Brenna Raney (2023). This book is about Rex, a supergenius and sometime supervillain; she neither understands nor accepts the traditional narratives about who gets to be a hero and what makes a villain. ... )

I'm Afraid of Men, Vivek Shraya (2018). This blew me away. Shraya deftly laces together memoir, narrative voices and grounded theory as she examines just how much what we think is masculinity is founded on, depends on, domination, violence, and exploitation.

Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, Mark Twain (1885). Despite *a lot* of factors, including my father teaching this novel and taking us more than once to visit Twain's home, I'd never read it; ... )

online reads


“The Small Press World is About to Fall Apart.” On the Collapse of Small Press Distribution. This is very, very bad.

*

I don't particularly care for Brandon Taylor's fiction and I find his online persona deeply obnoxious, yet I continue to subscribe to his newsletter as a sort of loathe-read (not quite hate but definitely not positive). Last fall, he mentioned writing a big piece on Zola's Les Rougon-Macquart, which is what spurred me to tackle the series. He published the essay a week or so ago; I'm linking it along with his first critical piece on Zola: zola was kind of a zaddy, no?: millennials are so into zola right now (2021) and Is it even good?: Brandon Taylor reads Zola. I'm glad he discusses the determinism in Zola's naturalism, if only because that's the factor that put me off in the abstract (actually reading the novels resolved that problem). Anyway.

Rather like Taylor, Lauren Oyler is a terminally-online millennial writer with a pretty inflated sense of self-importance that, combined with the affectation of enervated cynicism favoured by terminally-online millennials, makes for unpleasant, unenlightening reading. Ann Manov's review of Oyler's essay collection -- Star Struck: Lauren Oyler’s meditations on Goodreads, anxiety, and gossip -- is fantastic. ... )

*

For some reason, I am strangely fascinated by the development of cozy fantasy as a thing. I don't like any that I've read but the discourse is both compelling and deeply irritating. I think I'm interested in large part not because the genre is suddenly dominant, but because how we talk about genres and their qualities can reveal so much about what we want and expect and *assume* is true of the literary landscape. Reading posts in r/CozyFantasy is like doing real-time discourse analysis, where recs are contested because a book might mention war or sex or something else NOT COZY and therefore the entire work is deemed un-cozy.

Here are some recent pieces on the phenomenon:
  • Considering the cosy turn in SFF: who gets to be comforted? I'm not really sure what Bourke is trying to say in this piece; if anything, she just seems to be setting out various terms. The question in the title isn't raised until the penultimate paragraph and never actually addressed.
  • On Cozy SFF by [personal profile] forestofglory. Talks about valuing domestic labour, but that really isn't something I see in the works of this subgenre -- which seem to be much more interested in the appeal of small-business ownership for some reason.
  • 3 things: dune 2, long weekend blahs, cozy vs. grimdark sff: a reaction post to the previous essay. The opposition of "cozy" to "grimdark" just feels like an update on hopepunk vs grimdark, which doesn't (for me) get at the attraction readers seem to feel for the genre.
gloss: superhero hit over the head with a book (academia)
Media Wednesday is still text-based.

books
• Tamora Pierce, Sandry's Book (Circle of Magic #1; 1997): this was fantastic. The kids are real and rough-edged, the world is *big* and richly-detailed, and the magic feels true and strange. I especially love the plant magic, and the overall emphasis on small, useful things. Like this bit of dialogue: “This - odd power that I have, that you have, it’s not like that of university mages. They draw a design on the ground, mumble a few words, and get results. Not us. Our magic only works as well as the things it passes through.”

• PC Hodgell, God Stalk (1982), is first in a still-ongoing series. I'm not sure why I'd never heard of Hodgell before quite recently, given my fondness for weirdness in both cities and magic. This book, which opens with an amnesiac woman wandering the city streets during the phantasmagoric Feast of the Dead Gods(!!), is wonderfully bonkers and also just very good. It's Dickensian in its attention to the city's lives and ways, and Hodgell trusts the reader to keep up through several subplots and unspoken jokes with a confidence that feels absent from more contemporary books, where things seem to get over-explained. Jame, the protagonist, would not be out of place in any other high fantasy epic -- dark, secret past, lots of unbidden special powers, driven by a need to belong -- except, since she's female, she's probably dismissed as a Mary Sue. I loved her and all her queer charisma (more than one female character is overtly attracted to her, and the two kisses from male characters she gets felt more like assault than sensuality). She's curious and very kind, determined to hold up the principle of honor that her culture values so much, even though she really doesn't know much more about where she's from or who she is.

Also, there is the whole Gorgo the Lugubrious subplot, whereby Jame tests faith vs reality and in doing so, manages to kill a dying god. Then she works like hell to bring him back.

I am currently about halfway through Poe's The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym of Nantucket (1838). It is bizarre as hell, full of death imagery and bleeding hands, possibly-rabid dogs and mutinies, and then chapter-long digressions into best practices for stowage.

online reads
[personal profile] meikuree linked this post by Elizabeth Knox: "In purgatory stories are street lamps". I know that her preference for difficult work over escapist won't go down well, and her division between "genre" and "literary" is too stark to work, but I found a lot to value in her exploration of what she calls "kitset language". Calling some prose "transparent" is an ideological move, because *nothing* is transparent; we don't notice "transparent" prose, she argues, because it consists of "phrases we’ve all heard before":
The kitset phrase is unexceptional; you don’t have to think about it, it’s efficient that way. It’s lubricating language, you slide on through, there’s the story, but it isn’t offering any resistance, and it hasn’t any gravity that you can use to change your own trajectory.
Such prose leads the reader in a specific direction; it accomplishes a lot (work that I often feel should be done by the development of the story itself) while pretending to be invisible.
gloss: woman in front of birch tree looking to the right (P&R: Ann new leaf)
Media Wednesday has a lot of feelings about Art.

reading
Over the weekend, I finished Hardinge's Unraveller. In this world, spidery-trickster-fae both help and hinder human activities; one of the main things they do is give "curse eggs" to people who are angry/looking for justice. Only one person has the ability to unravel a curse once it's cast; he, along with a girl he rescued ("rescued"), travels around helping the cursed. ... )

Next, I read In the Forests of Serre (2003), by Patricia McKillip. This was sort of an odd choice for me, because as much as I love some McKillip (Forgotten Beasts of Eld and Changeling Sea), I truly, madly, deeply dislike two of its constituent elements: straightforward fairy-tale retellings and stories about (the power of) stories. I tend to find both things shallow and twee, more affirmatory of the reader's self-image and preconceptions than challenging, and basically smug and cringey.

But! Instead, this book that is, in one sense, about a princess and Baba Yaga and two wizards and a heartbroken prince and the Firebird, is extraordinary. It is beautifully written. It is movingly, convincingly characterized. It is intricately structured, meditating on various meanings of doubles and mirrors, desire and duty, and meaning itself. It's just phenomenal.

I'm currently reading (about ~50 pages in) The Fox Wife by Yangsze Choo. Set in 1908 Manchuria, it seems to be a murder mystery with two narrative strands: one a first-person account by an old fox spirit taking the form of a young human woman who is hunting for the man who murdered her child, the other third-person about a human male detective named Bao. I love it so far; the fox's voice is wry and deadpan—"Now I knew where Bektu Nikan was, I just had to figure out how to get there. It’s said that foxes are deterred by running water. This isn’t true, though we tend to be horribly seasick; it would be most troublesome if Bektu had run away to Japan"—while Bao is both dogged and lonely.

online reads
Here's a nice piece on one of my longtime faves, Bernard Malamud.

Can a Work of Art Shaped by Western Obsessions Ever Be Truly Decolonial? Zanele Muholi’s Oeuvre Is A Perfect Case Study: "One writer situates the practice of South African Artist Zanele Muholi within a society slouching towards homogeneity":
[W]hat I call flat photography is not about the Internet, but reflects, visually, the logics of visibility, publicity, and digestibility that developed online throughout the 2000s.

Flat photography—of which Muholi’s work is a prime example—is often born from the global connections of Web 2.0, but speaks to a Western audience. It is vaguely democratic, rich in easy-to-parse symbolism, and fluent in the trends and language of digital culture.

viewing
We finally watched American Fiction on Friday night. It's been way too long since we shared a piece of art that we both loved so much and got so much from; I missed this feeling more than I realized. The film is both hilarious and compelling, really moving with incredible performances. It's also a carefully-balanced mix of realist emotion and self-aware artifice in terms of structure—one of my favourite combinations in art, honestly.
gloss: (ayo snack)
Reading & the rest of life update.

books
The Steerswoman, Rosemary Kirstein (1989). I finished it; I won't be continuing the series.
The Diving Pool, Yoko Ogawa (2008). I put this down after the first (of three) story. It's exceedingly creepy, very accomplished and deeply upsetting in its deadpan awfulness; I couldn't take any more. (It's interesting, maybe, how I loved Walking Practice's overt horror, but the quieter, more realistic psychological horror here was too much for me.)
The Bread Builders: Hearth Loaves and Masonry Ovens, Daniel Wing and Alan Scott (1999). This was research for something I'm probably not going to end up writing. It's superb! Very detailed in technical terms as well as historical depth and sociological insight. It did make me long for bread, however.

I am currently reading Frances Hardinge's Unraveller, which so far is every bit as delightful and compelling as everything else I've read by her. I actually can't get over how a book that's nominally "middle-grade" is offering more evocative and sustained descriptions of a magical forest and much more complicated political situations than Premee Mohamed's Butcher of the Forest managed.

online reads
This article from Ad Age—"Inside Cerave's Super Bowl Influencer Campaign"—is fascinating and disgusting all at once. The level to which social media "reality" is manipulated, both in advance and in real time, is, I think, vastly underestimated by most people.

"Lyla June on the Forest as Farm": this is a wonderful article on indigineity, diversity, and sustenance.

viewing
I'm getting impatient with watching things again, so while I've watched s5 of GBBO (Norman! ♥!), that's it.

writing
I did not make the S2B2 deadline I wanted to do. I am not writing at all and I hate it, but I guess not enough to do things differently.

crafting
I finished another sock test knit a few days ago, and I think it's my favourite knit in years. Something about the combination of yarn and pattern just clicked perfectly. I do wish my photos were better, but my camera sucks and I don't have sock blockers. :/
gloss: (Queer nerd)
I misread the reveals time/date for WDLF and thought it was 12:00AM EST today/last night, but it's 10:00PM MST tonight. (Maybe, if the last two PHs are posted.) I only have a couple things revealing, but I guess I was vaguely looking forward to maybe getting a kudos or two/actually having new work out there. Maybe tonight/tomorrow. never mind! )

While I'm here, I wanted to recommend this week's issue of JP Brammer's newsletter, I Need So Much Love. Reorienting perspective and finding connection in what you've long seen-but-never-perceived are hard things to do, but necessary and beautiful: I think there is so much love built right into the ordinary things, the things we rarely stop to consider. It doesn’t have to be a grandfather, or a parent, or a friend, or a partner. So many of the things I enjoy and find value in exist because someone out there, more often than not a complete stranger, cared. Someone thought it was a fight worth fighting, a dream worth pursuing, to bring something into this world that someone else would benefit from in some way. I need to keep repeating this to myself.

Also cool: Sight & Sound's 101 hidden gems: the greatest films you’ve never seen. Malcolm Harris is putting together a GDoc with streaming links.
gloss: (KA)
I haven't finished a book in a few weeks. One thing that has been on my mind is a Bsky post (though the sentiment is not unique to that platform, obviously) encouraging readers to leave reviews, because "they're good for authors". I feel caught between contradictory positions: on one hand, there is the social-media relationship with an author, where you enjoy pictures of their dog, make enthusiastic noises about their latest excerpt, maybe reblog a link to their newest story, while on the other hand, there's the reading space, where I'm not really thinking about the author so much as my relationship with the text. I don't want to link my "reviews" that are posted here to my social media presence, partly because feelings could get hurt.

Anyway, I've been trying to read a book that, thanks to social media, I'd been looking forward to for months, only for it to be a huge, wearying slog. And the other book I've been trying to read, Tchaikovsky's City of Last Chances, is just not very good at the things I care about. The characterization is programmatic, pretty self-consciously so — here is the idealistic student activist, here is the streetsmart thug — and I can't make much forward progress. Plus, there's a bad guy from the utopian socialists literally named Hegelsy.

Here are some pieces that I have read recently, first fiction, then non.

online reads
Early Signs of Life. Despite a few wobbles toward sentimentality, this flash story is quite strong and moving.
I Sexually Identify As the “I Sexually Identify As An Attack Helicopter” Controversy, June Martin. Wow. This could have been trite, just superficially clever, but it's not; it's powerful and unsettling, just like its inspiration.
We Don’t Want Kids, Catherine Roberts. Very weird, pretty intense.

The Story is (Not) Yours, the November installment of indie author Magen Cubed's newsletter, is an essay I'm going to be thinking about for a long time. She considers ephemerality as well as trauma, and how both conditions inform her art and her ways of thinking about art. The fact that she welcomes her first book no longer existing resonated strongly; on and off for months now, I've daydreamed about deleting all my fanfic. Just embracing its transience; I already lost many works, mostly (>100) but not all BtVS, that never made it to AO3.

But the passage that struck me hardest in the essay is this one, about personal vision (or w/e):
For me, art should be selfish. Self-obsessed. You should follow your every impulse and desire to create something that feels like sitting around inside your head when I open it up to flip between its pages. Every quirk and kink and eccentricity laid bare. It sounds so wanton to put it like that, but it's just because, in the moment, when reading something that feels so much like its maker, the experience is electric.
At first, I kind of hated this point. It reminds me too much of, first, the whole thing about self-branding as a content creator artist, and, second, of a take that's been going around, that as a counter to AI-generated dreck, creators should be as weird and idiosyncratic and kinky as possible. From there, it's about a hop and a half to ffa-style "iddiness" as the highest aesthetic value. ... )

The H-Word: Bartleby and the Weird, by Zachary Gillan, makes a very convincing case for Melville's 1853 story as part of the big-W Weird genre:
Bartleby is, in other words, in his own realist(ish) way, a locus of irruption, of weirdness crowding into the world and unsettling things. His insistent refrain “I would prefer not to” becomes infectious, an early example of the weird horror commonplace of memetic, awful knowledge or language.
I really enjoy intellectual exercises like this, reading backwards, the way Mieke Bal does in Quoting Caravaggio. I was also pretty psyched to read Gillan on epistemic uncertainty as key to the Weird—"[t]his root impossibility of knowing or understanding makes weird fiction the fiction of epistemological collapse. It’s what best captures the anxiety of living in an unknowable and alienating world"—because it nicely confirmed my reading of Mohamed's These Lifeless Things.
(Cyber)Punk is Dead. This uses layout and text effects to admirable effect, and makes some powerful points.
Article defending private-equity involvement in autism services retracted: Nearly two-thirds of the article’s references appear to not exist. AI's only function is as a machine of lies and damage.

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