The Atrocity Exhibition
Title | The Atrocity Exhibition PDF eBook |
Author | J. G. Ballard |
Publisher | HarperCollins UK |
Pages | 23 |
Release | 2009-10-15 |
Genre | Fiction |
ISBN | 0007322194 |
First published in 1970 and widely regarded as a prophetic masterpiece, this is a groundbreaking experimental novel by the acclaimed author of ‘Crash’ and ‘Super-Cannes’.
Why I Want to Fuck Ronald Reagan
Title | Why I Want to Fuck Ronald Reagan PDF eBook |
Author | J. G. Ballard |
Publisher | |
Pages | 14 |
Release | 1988 |
Genre | |
ISBN |
Atrocity Exhibition
Title | Atrocity Exhibition PDF eBook |
Author | Brad Evans |
Publisher | |
Pages | 0 |
Release | 2019-02-19 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 9781940660462 |
Writings from the foremost chronicler of violence in our times, a fundamental issue for the future of the human race, looked at from every angle.
Heroes
Title | Heroes PDF eBook |
Author | Franco Berardi |
Publisher | Verso Books |
Pages | 195 |
Release | 2015-02-03 |
Genre | Philosophy |
ISBN | 1781687528 |
What is the relationship between capitalism and mental health? Through an exhilarating mix of philosophical and psychoanalytical theory and reportage - from the suicide epidemic in Korea to the wave of American mass murders - the prominent Italian thinker Franco Berardi Bifo traces the social roots of the mental malaise of our age. His darkest and most unsettling book to date, Berardi proposes dystopian irony as a strategy to disentangle ourselves from the deadly embrace of the neoliberalism.
Exhibiting Atrocity
Title | Exhibiting Atrocity PDF eBook |
Author | Amy Sodaro |
Publisher | Rutgers University Press |
Pages | 227 |
Release | 2018-01-23 |
Genre | Architecture |
ISBN | 0813592178 |
Today, nearly any group or nation with violence in its past has constructed or is planning a memorial museum as a mechanism for confronting past trauma, often together with truth commissions, trials, and/or other symbolic or material reparations. Exhibiting Atrocity documents the emergence of the memorial museum as a new cultural form of commemoration, and analyzes its use in efforts to come to terms with past political violence and to promote democracy and human rights. Through a global comparative approach, Amy Sodaro uses in-depth case studies of five exemplary memorial museums that commemorate a range of violent pasts and allow for a chronological and global examination of the trend: the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, DC; the House of Terror in Budapest, Hungary; the Kigali Genocide Memorial Centre in Rwanda; the Museum of Memory and Human Rights in Santiago, Chile; and the National September 11 Memorial Museum in New York. Together, these case studies illustrate the historical emergence and global spread of the memorial museum and show how this new cultural form of commemoration is intended to be used in contemporary societies around the world.
Spinal Catastrophism
Title | Spinal Catastrophism PDF eBook |
Author | Thomas Moynihan |
Publisher | MIT Press |
Pages | 353 |
Release | 2019-12-03 |
Genre | Philosophy |
ISBN | 1913029638 |
The historical continuity of spinal catastrophism, traced across multiform encounters between philosophy, psychology, biology, and geology. Drawing on cryptic intimations in the work of J. G. Ballard, Georges Bataille, William Burroughs, André Leroi-Gourhan, Elaine Morgan, and Friedrich Nietzsche, in the late twentieth century Daniel Barker formulated the axioms of spinal catastrophism: If human morphology, upright posture, and the possibility of language are the ramified accidents of natural history, then psychic ailments are ultimately afflictions of the spine, which itself is a scale model of biogenetic trauma, a portable map of the catastrophic events that shaped that atrocity exhibition of evolutionary traumata, the sick orthograde talking mammal. Tracing its provenance through the biological notions of phylogeny and “organic memory” that fueled early psychoanalysis, back into idealism, nature philosophy, and romanticism, and across multiform encounters between philosophy, psychology, biology, and geology, Thomas Moynihan reveals the historical continuity of spinal catastrophism. From psychoanalysis and myth to geology and neuroanatomy, from bioanalysis to chronopathy, from spinal colonies of proto-minds to the retroparasitism of the CNS, from “railway spine” to Elizabeth Taylor's lost gill-slits, this extravagantly comprehensive philosophical adventure uses the spinal cord as a guiding thread to rediscover forgotten pathways in modern thought. Moynihan demonstrates that, far from being an fanciful notion rendered obsolete by advances in biology, spinal catastrophism dramatizes fundamental philosophical problematics of time, identity, continuity, and the transcendental that remain central to any attempt to reconcile human experience with natural history.
J.G. Ballard
Title | J.G. Ballard PDF eBook |
Author | Peter Brigg |
Publisher | Wildside Press LLC |
Pages | 142 |
Release | 1985-01-01 |
Genre | Reference |
ISBN | 0916732835 |
Peter Brigg examines the life and work of British author J.G. Ballard, from his science fiction to his mainstream fiction. Starmont Reader's Guide 26.