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The Art of Cruelty
The Art of Cruelty: A Reckoning | Maggie Nelson
Discusses whether the brutal imagery present in today's reality and entertainment will shock society into a less alienated state and help create a just social order or whether focusing on representations of cruelty simply makes society more cruel. 10,000 first printing.
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AnneCecilie
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#WeeklyForecast

Finish The Art of Cruelty and start Braiding Sweetgrass

I‘m currently reading Lessons in Chemistry and want to finish that, and start Acting Class.

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Woozy-Shooz
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Maggie Nelson works magic. This book disabused me of many of my undergraduate pretensions and preoccupations. Not that I don‘t like a lot of the art and artists that she takes to task, like Artaud, it‘s just that I never bothered to ask myself the seemingly simple question of why and how is cruelty somehow deep and primordial as opposed to say, love?

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Vikz
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#listeningto this via #scribe. Interesting listening

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Arbol
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Been listening/reading to this of and on for about at week and have been struggling. The narrator is overdoing it so much I can't hear what she's saying past her forced musicality. It's completely wrong for the topic. Will probably switch to pbk as I keep wanting to highlight and make notes anyway.

readordierachel A bad or inappropriate narrator can really ruin a book. Hate when that happens. 5y
11 likes1 comment
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shortsarahrose
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Pickpick

I‘m not sure I have the exact words to express what I think of this work. It will take me some time to process. A reread (on paper) may one day be necessary to better grapple with her ideas.

More academic/less personal than Bluets or The Argonauts, but still personal. A familiarity with modern/contemporary art (especially performance art) is recommended, though this work spans so much more than that.

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shortsarahrose
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I am not yet done with Maggie Nelson (this time on #audio)

3 likes1 stack add
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SarahEvonne
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Maggie Nelson deserves only the most carefully composed Litsy post.

10 likes4 stack adds
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Devonhdunn
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"Often I think people ask these questions because they are afraid that there is no drive that, when pushed to its outer limits, does not invite or at least graze its extinction."

2 likes1 stack add