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America

AmericaAmerica by Jean Baudrillard
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

I am not well-versed in Baudrillard. Nonetheless, it was given as a gift to me, and philosophy is something I am interested in. The comparisons to Roland Barthe’s Empire of Signs is pretty apt. If you’re expecting heavy philosophy, then forget it. If you are expecting a travelogue, as one reviewer said, you should forget that too.

America rests somewhere in the middle. America is a book less about a geographical place than it is a landmark. Baudrillard takes us to the cultural economic center, in an epic tour through America. He is amazed, fascinated by what he sees. He wants to take it all in, so most of the book are his impressions, just knee-jerk reactions, his musings about the logic of a non-geological place. The book America culminates with his descriptions hoovering around an inaccessible center, as he notes how the repetition is more real than the original.

Isn’t the simulacra, the semblance, the image, itself immanent in our experience? The symbols with their non-subjective/non-objective meanings point to so clearer an understanding than the messy reality which appears chaotic, orderly, but chaotic.

But there is an ontology of sorts though, a triad that Baudrillard points out every so often, between poetic phrases and well intentioned observation. He oscillates the point between a proposition, and it’s reversal to end on a mixed view a little subjective, a little objective. This becomes the copy of the original in which our judgement oscillates to settle as if in a dream, where all relations contain their own void.

He examines America in light of this, dwelling much on the American Southwest, Los Angeles and New York, ending of course with Las Vegas, and it’s empty signifiers that only connect to more signifiers. America, where so much is allowed, the center of so much sublime beauty, economic, cultural and political power mirrors itself in its senseless nothingness. The assumption behind repetition, behind representation is that there is a representation of something. With a double, where all the flaws disappear and you get the perfected ideal, that which hides behind or where all the variations of the copy disppear. But that original ideal, the perfect thing the symbols stand for is itself the result of a double, a copy of the flawed and varied originals, the disagreements between actual particulars being averaged out. So the relations are of an ideal nothing reflected from many who are not identical nothing. However, it is this oscillation between a point he makes, examines and then returns to the center that moves us. We experience the simulacra. In this sense, both the copy and the experience. Thus, this simulacra is only noticeable in the processing of it, but not as a thing out there, but only as a thing because we are processing it.

This is where he leaves us, not in the desert, the natural void, or in a casino gambling, continuing to create more and more signs for the effect of creating more and more signs. Both activities are endless, and this creates an indeterminate space, “a privileged, immemorial space, where things lose their shadow, where money loses its value, and where the extreme rarity of traces of what signals to us there leads men to seek the instantaneity of wealth.” Because wealth too, is substanceless, if it can be granted at an instant, so it can be taken away without any material appeal. Of course, you begin too, to see material in this same way, as a copy of itself, without substance or any claim to externality. We are now dealing with absolute universal particulars, whose absoluteness is their limitations. Meaning behind them begin to dissolve, the shadow becoming the ground. We are now in hyperreality.

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The Tent

The TentThe Tent by Margaret Atwood
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

I’m a fan of Margaret Atwood. I wasn’t sure what to expect of this book. While the cover claims it’s a collection of essays, this book is more like a collection of impressions that aren’t formulated into what we may traditionally know of as a narrative (although there are narrative voices)… while at the same time, the collection doesn’t make as much a thesis-point as the traditional anglo-saxon epistemic essay structure. So it’s a little difficult for me to write a review in that sense. I think of this collection more like a palette of colors, or swatch patterns to be saved for future use… most of the ideas in here are of interest, but they don’t connect anywhere and don’t seem to be easily collated into a single narrative impulse.

If you’re looking to be receptive to subtle emotions, and you want to read something without taxing yourself too much, I think this is a good book to read. Since I tend to dive deeply into whatever I read — and try to find how this text allows me to orient myself more or less in the world I already exist in — it was difficult for me to read this book. Despite it’s slim size, I took forever working through it.

I wouldn’t say that the descriptions are misleading, but my expectations were definitely not in line with what I read. From glancing at the other reviews, I am in the minority on this one.

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Meditations on the Tarot: A Journey into Christian Hermeticism

Meditations on the Tarot: A Journey into Christian HermeticismMeditations on the Tarot: A Journey into Christian Hermeticism by Anonymous
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

As creatures of language, we use meaning to tell us who we are, where we are, what we are and how we are to be. This author dives deeply into the meanings of many deep traditions, as is his chosen methodoloy: Christian Hermeneutics. Hermeneutics is the interpretation of text; really trying to get meaning out of words. So very exactly, this author has tasked for himself to find the meaning of traditions (religion, philosophy, linguistics, cultural critics, historical figures, literary figures, writers…), anyone or work of art whose sole function is to tell us who we are, where we are, what we are and how we are to be.

To organize this search, he uses the vehicle of Tarot cards, as a spiritual journey, a transformation of self to be more than self, in order to describe the ascent (or the beginning of such an ascent) to have a deeper holistic grasp of the universe around us. This book is not about fortune-telling.

One of the many spoken and returned to themes (and there are many) is the Jungian subconscious. Because we use our internal filing systems qua archetypes to structure relationships in the world, we have access to the outside only in that way. And in that sense, despite archetypes or despite language, we literally have the world through these forms. These forms, like the Tarot, become the Runic gateway not only to our unconscious but also to the outside.

But also because of using forms, we run the risk of producing relations. Because we live in these form arrangements, we otherwise know these forms as reality. The author warns us, there is a difference between reality and truth. That is to say, don’t get caught up in your world and lose the true union with the universal-all.

Rightly so. In a Hegelian like synthesis (without the chaos of Hegel), this author runs the gambit, a real cornucopia of meanings, picks and chooses, guides our way across them in argument leading us on a possible path, an interpretation of a huge sum of human knowledge to the point at which portals break down, words become invisible and you understand more than yourself… also your ultimate place, where you can’t get knocked down. Literally lodging you so no one can move you from there, you just understand and you are that understanding. No one can beat you talk, or talk you out of yourself. You just are. Nirvana, heaven, you name it, he’s considered it and arranged it here for us to see it. See it all in relation.

A real He-man, fascinating piece of work this art. It took me over a decade to get through this book, with many false starts, interruptions of life, and a need to learn how to read better and be more clear in thought… but also, in a way, an impossible pipe-dream too, don’t you think? To think we can break the noumenal skin that separates the i from the not-i… and then sort of melt into the rest of the world and become 1.

Yet despite this stated goal, when one reads, one gets a better sense of the larger world around us. Transitory in nature, full of riddles, temptations and desires for status — the author shows us how these things are… so we can learn. this author too wants us to be grounded in a humanly, divine way, to be among fellow men. We are to be, in our spiritual quest, better human beings, which is part of being of the world. He shows us this indirectly, discarding and picking up forms, to give us stepping stones to the way.

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Armadillos and Old Lace

Armadillos and Old LaceArmadillos and Old Lace by Kinky Friedman
My rating: 2 of 5 stars

The most amusing part of this book was the language. The hyperbole is simply astounding in its expression. Much else leaves me wanting more. To be honest, the set up and the characterization were wonderful right up to the point at which Kinky is introduced to the case. Basically Kinky comes home and is thrust into a mystery he doesn’t want… such then drives him crazy. I know that Kinky Friedman is often compared to Hunter S Thompson… In form yes. But here there is very little of Thompson’s super-critical awareness of culture: Why are we here? What are we doing? Instead in this mystery Kinky has as as much done to him as he does doing. In otherwords he seems to solve the case simply by being present. So no spoilers here, because there isn’t much to spoil… Maybe I’m spoiled by the hyperactive detective dramas on tv nowadays. In a way this book was pleasant as it as quick, but mainly because it stayed innocent much like a Nancy Drew mystery story. Some danger, some sexuality. Nothing graphic. I think in part, my expectations were off. Still the language is superb. And in that sense isn’t that literally what we read?

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Ask a Medium: Answers to Your Frequently Asked Questions about the Spirit World

Ask a Medium: Answers to Your Frequently Asked Questions about the Spirit WorldAsk a Medium: Answers to Your Frequently Asked Questions about the Spirit World by Rose Vanden Eynden
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

This is a comforting book to read.

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The Meaning of Life

The Meaning of LifeThe Meaning of Life by Terry Eagleton
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

I’ve always admired Terry Eagleton’s concise and clear writing style. So I was very curious as to what he would say when he wrote this book (in the midst of battling cancer). In some ways, I am awestruck by how quickly he is able to get to the heart of such complex philosophies. In other ways I feel let down by Eagleton’s approach.

Eagleton takes a reductionist stance on the question “What is the meaning of life”, at once picking apart the question through choice thinkers. Eagleton’s weakness in this approach is that in his reluctance to commit deeply to examining one approach, he only skims the surface of the question.

While it may be true that “life is what we individually make of it” as he is so quick to end on an analogy of jazz and invention… whereas a philosopher and thinker one should approach a reflective, meta- level answer, weaved between the different structural positions of such thinkers. Instead he is mired in the specific remarks of specific thinkers, preventing his ability to cohere a unique context from which to read this question. By taking all voices equally he obsurates the question and forgets why we even ask it in the first place. He lets his respect for all these brilliant thinkers get in the way presenting any true critiques. Eagleton excuses this lack of commitment to a stance by blaming it as a reflection of the postmodern era. He takes the easy way out, inviting the reader to create their own meaning even while he earlier dismisses this point of view through Aristotle.

So in a sense, this book is aptly named as only an introduction. It is still clearly written but also in a very real way cowardly as he hides behind the different juxtaposed contexts of past thinkers.

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A Grammar of the Multitude: For an Analysis of Contemporary Forms of Life

A Grammar of the Multitude: For an Analysis of Contemporary Forms of Life (Semiotext(e) / Foreign Agents)A Grammar of the Multitude: For an Analysis of Contemporary Forms of Life (Semiotext by Paolo Virno
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Virno develops a pre-class distinction of the masses in this book about the multitude. He does a good job of defining this class in his attempt to solidify new axises in post-Ford capitalism.

While his range of focus was impressive for such a small work, I found most intriguing his collapse of the autonomous spheres (for Marx) of political action, economy and intellect in describing the conditions that characterize the multitude. Why do we work so much? And how are we to understand the Commons in our day and age when so much of our corporate existences are subsumed under the rubric of work. Especially now with our many technologies, our private lives have “publicness without a public sphere”.

In this way, the majority of the work surrounds a refining of what the multitudes are, and how we are all ready in this condition. While he does address how the axises of Marx are no longer conditions of the multitudes — how class itself is no longer adequate to describe our current condition — he does not give us velocity. We do not have an enemy to struggle against, or an aesthetic to attain.

Instead, he seems to leave us lingering among ourselves as a “communism of capital” as he puts it… that the borders of capital no longer lie outside in wilderness but within itself, much like the conclusion reached by Deleuze and Guattari when speaking about the limit of capitalism within itself.

Are we to understand ourselves as being completely sublimated by capitalism? That our condition of infinite labor (perhaps as expected of a fragmented post-modern workforce) relates now to an internal colonization of the Common shared pre-linguistic One inherent in our subjectivity? That while capitalism can only expand by seeking new markets, all “margins are in the center” that our logic of exploiter and exploited is perhaps becoming outdated when we understand our non-localized, non-representative political multitude?

I think Virno’s text is very interesting. He serves better as an exploratory text than a manifesto.. and while he definitely anticipates a becoming- of “the people to come” (which is literally what the multitudes are, a becoming-, a differential that is never fully politically identified) there doesn’t seem much for us to go on in, after recognizing the multitudes.

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A Slight Trick Of The Mind

A Slight Trick Of The MindA Slight Trick Of The Mind by Mitch Cullin
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Modestly unassuming in scope, this work really takes us to another place. An aging Sherlock Holmes must come to terms with his age, and his cosmic loneliness. In being able to reason everything, the logic and observations that helped him in his younger detective work, made him famous. Over the years, tons of people have come to him, wanting investigations, explanations… but he is retired.

Yet now, in his old age, with his fraying faculties, and in the twilight of his memory, he faces his last questions… (after all those he knew, including Dr. Watson have died and gone) in most human of conditions — needing to explain death (accidental or suicide)… and in the process learning about himself and his own lonely life.

This is a basic redemption story, about a man who lives his life by rationality and order despite the arbitrary nature of the universe and all that happens to each of us mortals… needing to come back to terms with something beyond rationality.

It’s not as flashy a story as many, but I heartily recommend it to someone wanting a quiet contemplation.

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Batman: The Long Halloween

Batman: The Long HalloweenBatman: The Long Halloween by Jeph Loeb
My rating: 1 of 5 stars

The artwork is good. The concept is admirable, but I find the plot and the characterization to be superficial. There is none of the trademarks of what makes Batman Batman, the “detective aspect” or the real drama, the descent into madness and horror… The Long Halloween suggests pathos, and presents us with ‘dramatic scenes’ but the presentation is simply there. There is not much build up, things just happen. And then, the comic ends just as it begun. Unsatisfyingly. We don’t see anything about what Catwoman sought, or see that Poison Ivy or the Scarecrow are really that dangerous; somehow the mob keeps them in line just by paying them. So, as a Batman comic it really lacks the hallmarks we expect from a great story.

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The Presidency of Andrew Jackson

The Presidency of Andrew Jackson (American Presidency Series)The Presidency of Andrew Jackson by Donald B. Cole
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Reads as a thorough investigation of the events of Jackson’s presidency. Cole manages to include some very welcome analysis of the complex changes in cabinet and congress while outlining the rise of the American Political Party system. He keeps in focus the many changes that influenced America in this time, as it transforms from an agrarian base to an industrial base. He also accounts for some of the different interpretations of Jackson while keeping a strong focus on how the participants must have viewed themselves in light of the new American Republic (rather than reading backwards on trends).

I rather appreciated this in-depth look at this strong presidential personality… and how successful Jackson was at dealing with the multitude of changes happening in this tumultuous time period… This book definitely makes me want to read more about the other presidents.

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