Alan Sondheim on Sat, 19 Nov 2005 10:31:16 +0100 (CET) |
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<nettime> New - Reviews of books I like: |
Reviews of books I like: (Unnecessary proem from the low road:) On webartery, I wrote this in the heat of a discussion: "This is coming home with a vengeance, as the federal budget here cuts back on food stamps and student loans, and FEMA tells victims to get out of their hotels in two weeks - they have no place to go - after all the talk about 'the poor' - whoever 'they' are - and 'their' appearance after Katrina. This is utterly obscene in the so-called richest nation on earth - the poor are again out of sight - how often can we starve them? Capital is about this; this is its symptom (and in a sense, it's only one). And while the 'poor' may be redefined and fined (for that matter), most of the people in this horror of a country are now hurting financially, there's close to starvation elsewhere as well, and we continue our slaughter (excuse me, Iraq 'nation building') under the aegis of another word. capital = 'freedom.' Freedom's just an ugly word for something left to use..." And within this, on the margins, trembled discourse continues, the following are books I have found useful, wonderful at times, worthy of your attention. Again, I've received the O'Reilly books gratis; I ask for ones I feel capable of reviewing, and that might well be of use to those actively engaged in online culture/art. Ambient Findability, Peter Morville, O'Reilly, 2005. My brother, who is in GIS, found this of great interest, as do I. The book examines the se- mantics of search in relation to communality, ambiance. There's something wonderfully primordial about it - a kind of relocating of human intention- ality after the savanna. At one point of course, all members of a group were known to each other; culture changed all of this with its implica- tions of unknowable and unknowing others. The web performs a kind of familiality for us; we're back in-relation, even with strangers. Ambient Findability charts in practical (i.e. the phenomenology of del.icio.us), psychological ('Social Life of Metadata'), and theoretical ('Language and Representation') terms. In Morville's book, all of these intermix. I did find the material on marketing, as well as issues of privacy, depressing; transparency always plays into power. As a model, however - as a vision of what's occurring, sticking close to the real online/offline world - the book is great. Recommended, along w/ Marx's 1842 notebooks. Linux Desktop Pocket Guide, David Brickner, O'Reilly, 2005. This covers distributions, protocols, desktops, etc. etc. mostly for the beginner, but not entirely. It's one of the Pocket Guide series, which are relatively cheap for O'Reilly (usually $9.95 or $10.00 in other words, another marketing ploy), and quite useful. If you're using Linux already, there are two indispensable books, as most of us know - Linux in a Nutshell (compendium of commands and everything else, now a relatively huge nut- shell), and Running Linux. Get the latest editions. As an intro, or desktop reading Linux Desktop is fine. I'd also recommend the ones on sed and awk; vi; google; and so forth. By the way, why review O'Reilly books? I'm committed to their seriousness and I'm poor. The two aren't contradictory. Over the years I keep return- ing to them; they don't tend to date quickly - the older stuff for example on peer-to-peer, or the various unix handbooks, are still current in a lot of ways. I like Peachpit Press for specific software. I haven't found much use for anything else, except for specialized texts like Wolfram's enor- mous Mathematica book. - Now for the third and last of the O'Reilly's, but not the least - Windows XP Cookbook, Robbie Allen and Preston Gralla, Windows XP Cookbook, 2005. Okay, where to start? I use WinXP a great deal; everyone else I know uses Mac (I do at times as well). I like the OS - I find it stable, and there are an incredible number of applications for it. On my notebook, I can run up to 10 Quicktime videos at once on it, without crashing the system, with good file management, and with other apps and directories opening and closing - all necessary for laptop performance. I hate the policies of MS, don't like the proprietary outlook (or Outlook for that matter, which I don't use - most of the time, like now, I'm in a unix telnet shell or on my linux PDA), but the media stuff works great. In any case, O'Reilly has followed suit with a huge number of books on WinXP, some of which I've reviewed before. You can only use so many! (Most of what anyone has to do in the beginning is tweak and tweak and tweak - WinXP out of the box is unbelievably clumsy. But the tweaking isn't hard, the registry isn't that scary, etc.) So the Cookbook, with 'Over 325 Recipes,' is one of the latest in the Cookbook series; it's designed for 'Power Users and Administrators,' which means there's a huge amount of information on command-line stuff - which is the heart, as far as I'm concerned, of WinXP, DOS or no-DOS. (Yes, no-DOS.) There are explanations of the obvious - the 'Classic' Windows look and ClearType, but there is a lot of excellent material on performance tuning, logs, routing and wire- less, registry mechanics, and so forth. It's perfect if you're a sysadmin with a network; I'm not, but still have used a lot of the material directly. There are sections on anonymous surfing, RSS feeds, and there's VBScript throughout. Recommended, along with books such as Windows XP Hacks. I've purchased some of these directly; since I'm in WinXP so much (if just as a portal at times), I need to get the maximum out of the system. Eduardo Kac, Telepresence & Bio Art, Networking Humans, Rabbits, & Robots, Michigan, 2005. This is a fantastic book - not so much for the transgenic rabbit (which is been played/overplayed/reoverplayed endlessly) as for all of the essays together, bringing new media history to light (no pun intended, well yes). The older material - 'The Aesthetics of Tele- communications,' 'The Internet and the Future of Art,' 'Beyond the Screen: Interactive Art,' etc. - are clear, filled with examples, the very stuff that leads to dreams. I was most impressed by his work 'The Eighth Day' (which he described recently at the Society for Literature, Science and the Arts Conf. in Chicago); there is a full description. Like Stelarc, I think Kac touches a raw nerve, and it's through the clarity of his work/ writing/presentations, that it becomes more than art, useful for the rest of us. Stelarc, The Monograph, edited by Marquard Smith w/ a forward by William Gibson, MIT, 2005, because here's the other end of the nerve, or the primal end (of which there are others, of course, but these are _nerves_ grounded on and offline). Stelarc's name came up at the conference; at this point, like the rabbit (_qua_ bunny), his work is close to over- determination through no one's fault - it's just clear, theatrical like Beuys or Abramovich, and serves as a touchstone for our pseudo-prosthetic pseudo-cyborg pseudo-cyberspatial selves. Its very overdetermination gives way to analysis here, which is all to the better. I find the work itself both enthralling, male-oriented (which of course has been covered up, or released), and oddly 19th-century in its presentation of the (male) body as obdurate, inert (reminds me of Clement Rosset on reality); no matter how wired we are, at least at this point in time, we're grounded by wires, wireless, hydraulics, gloves, electricity, etc. etc. - to be jacked in is to be part of the steam-locomotive (un)conscious. For better or worse, I think we need this book. One minor point, the Kroker's 'We Are All Stelarcs Now' - but we're not; in fact, we're increasingly like the victims of Katrina. I get tired of technophilic hyperbole; I don't believe for a second that 'Stelarc futures our body.' - instead, in the US, the now underfunded Superfund sites of industrial pollution literally gone amuck, do. I suppose I'm bankrupt, not theory, but theory divorced from that same Rossetian idiotic real leads to hyperbolics of electronic gadgetry as cultural foundation. (Btw I love the Kroker's work.) Two books quickly mentioned, resonant with one another, important to projects dealing with language and codework; one of these I'm also reviewing for the American Book Review in the future): The Tantric Tradition, Agehananda Bharati, Anchor, 1965. Bharati was born Austrian, became a monk, taught in the anthro. department of Syracuse. I've read this before, as well as Bharati's The Ochre Robe; this is the best book I've seen, period, on mantra, mantric language, and phenomeno- logy. It's not easy-going, and Bharati's arrogant (I think w/ reason). The logic of mantra is described; there are references to the analytic tradi- tion in philosophy that informs the work to a great extent. I think books like these (as well as books on Nya'ya for example) are really necessary to understand Buddhist/Hindu philosophies and logics. It's also an amazing read. Echolalias, On the Forgetting of Language, Daniel Heller-Roazen, Zone, 2005, full review forthcoming. This is wonderful! - the interferences among language, syntax, semantics, phonemics - the edges of phonemics in relation to the rest - anyone concerned with codework will find a great deal here - the microsound or granularity of languaging, a history and phenomenology which need far more attention. The book is organized into short chapters dealing with such things as Exclamations, Thresholds, Strata, Endangered Phonemes, and Schizophonetics. More later. At the SLSA conference, there were continuous references to William James, The Principles of Psychology, and Darwin. You can buy the former second- hand as two Dover volumes, fairly inexpensively. James emphasizes stream- ing (shades of Stein), process over product, flux of stasis. Gerald Edelman (whose theory of reentry among other things earned him the Nobel) mentioned both - James as a precursor and antidote to traditional AI or other hard-wiring approaches to the mind, and Darwin in relation to 'neural Darwinism,' competitions among groups of cells in development. Edelman's book, wider than the sky, the phenomenal gift of consciousness,' presents a lay guide to his theory, which fascinates me. But Darwin and James were really _everywhere_ at the conference - not in terms of 'intelligent design' - which is not only idiotic but self-contradictory (_this_ world is an example of either?) - but in relation to an increased interested in biogenetics and non-mechanistic nano-technology/culture in relation to cultural production in general. (Another reference that might interest you - C.K. Waddington, who was behind the Towards a Theoretical Biology conference in the 60s. He's a bit of the culture behind Edelman's science, I think. I asked E. about W.; he said his work was metaphorical - they knew each other. I remember that stuff about the epigenetic land- scape, chreods, etc. Anyway check it out.) Life Histories of North American Birds, 20 volumes, Arthur Cleveland Bent, Dover reissues from the 1920s. These are naturalist works; I'm not sure if they're still in print, but if you get a chance, buy one or all of the volumes. They're intensely descriptive and anecdotal, as well as filled with ethological materials. Azure is taking an online course on Ornitholo- gy from Cornell University (highly worthwhile); the textbook still recommends the series. I have one before me on 'Woodcocks, Sandpipers, Godwits, Snipes, Phalaropes, and Others' - Life Histories of North American Shore Birds, Part One. Along the same line, with incessant detail but not quite as interesting, is Birds of the New York Area, John Bull, Harper, 1964. The best work I've seen on ornithology by the way is the one used for the Cornell course - Handbook of Bird Biology, published by the Cornell Lab of ornithology. Coming of Age in Cyberspace, David S. Bennahum, Basic 1998. I literally devoured this, realizing all I had missed growing up before the digital revolution. He does better than anyone I've read at describing the interior life of glowing tubes, screens, digital readouts, anything that whispered to you of the other, maternal, surrounding, powerful, capable of dialog with even the loneliest. The descriptions of computer labs are also some of the best I've read. The book is easy to find, and should be, I think, required reading, well before the theoretical sets in. I like Turkle's work as well for similar reasons, although more analytical of course. Some shorter comments - Somewhere I have the Letters of the Younger Pliny in a Penguin edition; I've more or less finished it, and it's one of my favorite books of the period. The humanity (even given slavery, etc.) / humanism at work shows what hasn't been gained in two millennia. The letters are simply beautiful - not only the eyewitness description of the eruption at Pompey, but also materials on Roman customs and life in general. Another short text worth looking at again - Rudolf Otto's The Idea of the Holy - there's also a book by Philip Almond, Rudolf Otto, An Introduction to His Philosophical Theology. This might be read in relation to mantra, glossolalia, etc. (see above); the idea of the numinous, etc. is quite useful, although I always have trouble with Christology. The Moment of Complexity, Emerging Network Culture, Mark C. Taylor, Chicago 2001 - I'm reading this now, pleased with the references to Wolfram etc. - certainly an antidote to Imagologies which for me was next to useless - I love Edwin Morgan - his translation of Mayakovsky into Scottish is terrific. He edited Scottish Satirical Verse for Carcanet in 1980. (Odd deja vu - I may have mentioned this before). The book has incredible energy, and is more fun than Otto, even more fun than Ruskin - who I also want to mention - read his biography, read things like Ethics of the Dust in relation to it - and you're off and running. I'm also not sure if I've mentioned Eugene O'Neill's Dynamo, Horace Liver- ight, 1929, but I think it's somewhat of a critical text in relation to American thought vis-a-vis Chaplin, mechanism, etc. It's one of the oddest plays I've read - heavily influenced I think by German expressionism. Electricity itself, and an odd humming (humans/dynamo) constitute the literal driving force among libidos, spirtualities, and finance. If you find it, pick it up. I think it's also available online, but I'm not positive. Meanwhile the dogs of the US House of Representatives are screaming at each other, 82 died of violence in Iraq, and maybe more of us here at 'home' (such as it is) are realizing the slaughterhouse mentality of our so-called elected warlords... # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net