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Re:Current Reading (first century thread) (1 viewing) (1) Guest
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TOPIC: Re:Current Reading (first century thread)
#148020
Nil Arshavin
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Liverpool & Fond Feelings for Doncaster Rovers Gender: Male Dan Ackroyd apparently It's complicated Location: Fair City
posted 01-12-2008 15:16

 
Random question for Pawlu, do you run Another Liverpool Thing or have input into it?
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#150176
posted 04-12-2008 19:59

 
Progressing with Lessing (heh) and really liking it. Have finished Cornel West's Democracy Matters, which was pretty good, but pretty slight, and am now also engrossed in Hervé This' fascinating Molecular Gastronomy.
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#150398
Lodzubelieveit
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Everton, Sevilla, Roma, Schalke Gender: Male Location: Sabadell Birthdate: 1978-03-02
posted 05-12-2008 11:12

 
Sovereign by CJ Sansom. Good stuff.
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#151537
posted 08-12-2008 11:29

 
SO, I finished The Golden Notebook.

Hmm.

I liked much of it a very great deal. The treatment of madness, of political dislocation, of professional cynicism and psychological non-linearity are all very well-handled.

But, er, the sex.

I totally get that it was revolutionary for sex and sexual/psychosexual motivation to be talked about so frankly and honestly from a woman's point of view, for the sexuality of women to be presented in such a detailed and realistic manner.

But it isn't revolutionary any more. And while others have learned to do that, they've also managed to what Lessing (here, at least) can't - to also present males as rounded sexual beings, rather than barely thinking automata.

It may well accurately communicate the phenomenology of 1950s women in that regard, but it's... disconcerting.
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#151892
pawlu
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Liverpool Gender: Male Il Re Calcio Location: Malta
posted 08-12-2008 22:00

 
To Nil Arshavin: yes but I've replied in more detail via pm.

Cheers
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#154261
posted 13-12-2008 17:49

 
I'm reading David Foster Wallace's Brief Interviews with Hideous Men which is breathtakingly wonderful stuff. Also some stuff on Moral Realism and Feminist Biology.
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#159024
loose cannon
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posted 24-12-2008 23:07

 
I've just finished 'The Writing on the Wall'', Will Hutton's book about China and where it's headed, published in 2007, it has been overtaken by events - the financial meltdown he feared has taken place but the US has elected a president with a lot of potential - it is still relevant if you wish to understand the Chinese economy and the political and economic conundrum they are facing.
Bottom line: China - big internal problems ahead...

Well worth a read.
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Last Edit: 24-12-2008 23:09 By loose cannon.
 
#159246
Antonio Gramsci
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TFC Tom Hanks (sorry, Ly) Gramsci's Kingdom Those gingery things with cinnamon icing.  Mmm.... The Republic of Love In God We Trust; All Others Require Data Doolittle Location: Home in the NarcoPetroSuperpower Birthdate: 1970-03-31
posted 27-12-2008 03:49

 
Manuel Murillo Toro wrote:
QUOTE:
I'm reading David Foster Wallace's Brief Interviews with Hideous Men which is breathtakingly wonderful stuff. Also some stuff on Moral Realism and Feminist Biology.


OK, I'll bite: what's feminist biology about?
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#159308
BrunoMaggiore
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posted 27-12-2008 16:05

 
Got the new Landmark Herodotus for Christmas in beautiful hardcover. It is as nice a book as you could ask for- don't think I'll be able to put it down, it seems to have derailed my other reading. Great intro by Rosalind Thomas and of course the very thorough annotations and maps & illustrations throughout. Wish I'd had this edition the first time I approached classical lit.

How about a Landmark Livy, Tacitus, Arrian and Plutarch while you're at it?
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#159345
posted 27-12-2008 18:49

 
Antonio - there are three main sorts of Feminist Philosophy of Science. Feminist empiricism points to occasions when masculinist/male assumptions have obscured or missed the correct interpretation of scientific phenomena. Feminist standpoint theory alleges that some scientific insights may only be accessible in the first place, at least in the context of discovery, to members of particular communities - including that of women. Feminist postmodernism goes still further, arguing that truth is particular to individual communities, and that no overarching collective consensus is possible or desirable. Feminist empiricism is pretty obviously correct. Standpoint theory probably is too, depending on how strongly you construe it. Feminist PoMo is mostly silly and likely self-contradictory. Not that those are, by its lights, necessarily legitimate criticisms...

Any or all of these can be applied to biology. For instance, a lot of the assumptions about human evolutionary history have "man the hunter" as the active agent on whom selection is acting, and to whose needs our current bodies are adapted - this has been more recently challenged by (somewhat rhetorical) reconstructions of "woman the gatherer", demonstrating that at least equally plausible alternative and female-centred selective explanations are available. Another example is the long-standing practice of seeing the sperm, rather than the ovum, as the disproportionately active, or "difference-making" gamete - compare the idea that all foeti "are female" until the Y gene kicks into effect.

Have finished that and the DFW - am now reading Steve French's Science and Ian Hacking's Representing and Intervening as PhilScience lecture-writing prep, and a Selected Poems by Paul Celan.
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Last Edit: 27-12-2008 18:50 By Manuel Murillo Toro.
 
#159748
pawlu
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Liverpool Gender: Male Il Re Calcio Location: Malta
posted 29-12-2008 06:18

 
Given the current fantastic (for us) sterling to euro rate, I'm going to splash out on a number of books namely Blind Side, Running With Legends and either one of The Ball is Round and When Friday Comes.

Some people have already spoken about Blind Side in another thread but I've just read an excerpt and completely loved it so am going to take a risk. Any opinions about the other books though?
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#160171
Antonio Gramsci
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TFC Tom Hanks (sorry, Ly) Gramsci's Kingdom Those gingery things with cinnamon icing.  Mmm.... The Republic of Love In God We Trust; All Others Require Data Doolittle Location: Home in the NarcoPetroSuperpower Birthdate: 1970-03-31
posted 30-12-2008 13:58

 
Cheers, Toro. Based on that description I'd probably stop at feminist empiricism as being wirth reading, but perhaps I don't unerstand the standpoint stuff well enough.

Pawlu: you cannot possibly go wrong buying The Ball is Round.
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#162876
Antonio Gramsci
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TFC Tom Hanks (sorry, Ly) Gramsci's Kingdom Those gingery things with cinnamon icing.  Mmm.... The Republic of Love In God We Trust; All Others Require Data Doolittle Location: Home in the NarcoPetroSuperpower Birthdate: 1970-03-31
posted 07-01-2009 07:44

 
Not much reading over the hols - too much work and family and other stuff. But in the last week or so I managed to get properly busy and read Nixonland, which is absolute pure fucking genius, and Bernard-Henri Levi's Left in Dark Times which I suspect is crap but don't know enough about French politics to tell. Certainly, it's the kind of book I'd like to have a bunch of OTFers around to discuss it with.

Also, Iain Banks' Feersum Endjinn, which is the first of his novels to which I would give a resounding "meh".
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#163205
posted 07-01-2009 18:32

 
Still going with the Celan, not really digging it. Finished Nancy Cartwright's (no, not that one) How The Laws of Physics Lie, and am now also reading an odd Dutch engineering/art thing on Lightness.
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