User Profile

Fionnáin

fionnain@bookwyrm.social

Joined 4 years, 3 months ago

I arrange things into artworks, including paint, wood, plastic, raspberry pi, people, words, dialogues, arduino, sensors, web tech, light and code.

I use words other people have written to help guide these projects, so I read as often as I can. Most of what I read is literature (fiction) or nonfiction on philosophy, art theory, ethics and technology.

Also on Mastodon.

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Eduardo Kohn: How Forests Think Toward An Anthropology Beyond The Human (2013, University of California Press) No rating

"Can forests think? Do dogs dream? In this astonishing book, Eduardo Kohn challenges the very …

A glass flask is as much about what it is as it is about what it is not; it is as much about the vessel blown into form by the glassmaker — and all the material qualities and technological, political, and socioeconomic histories that made that act of creation possible — as it is about the specific geometry of absence that it comes to delimit. Certain kinds of reactions can take place in that flask because of all the others that are excluded from it.

How Forests Think Toward An Anthropology Beyond The Human by  (Page 35)

This section on absence is interesting. I've never thought about technologies for what they exclude by being in the world, more what they create or change.

Mariana Enriquez: A Sunny Place for Shady People (Paperback, 2024, Granta Books)

On the shores of this river, all the birds that fly, drink, perch on branches, …

I bought this with the end of a gift voucher I received from a friend. I loved Enriquez' debut collection of short stories, Things We Lost in the Fire, and was delighted to find this one on the book shelves. Also, it's an appropriate time to read some horror stories!

Sheila Armstrong: Falling Animals (Hardcover, 2023, Bloomsbury Publishing Plc)

On an isolated beach set against a lonely, windswept coastline, a pale figure sits serenely …

Treading shallow water

Sheila Armstrong's debut novel is about a real-life mystery. A John Doe was found in 2009 sitting calmly on Rosses Point beach in Sligo, Ireland. Tracing his family or identity took years, and this novel takes on this strange and sad story.

Each chapter is written from a different person's perspective: those who found the body, investigated its mystery, and those who were on a boat that crashed ashore in the 1990s. Introducing a new character every chapter is a brave approach that could suit this tale of a village and a body, but the execution is a little clunky. Each person is given a back-story including very obvious moments of trauma or trial that alter their lives in very literal ways. Human beings aren't usually like this, and the result ends up feeling like an exercise in writing lots of characters for a play or television, without producing …

Colum McCann: Twist (Paperback, 2025, Bloomsbury Publishing)

"Anthony Fennell, an Irish journalist and playwright, is assigned to cover the story of the …

The cables that bind us

Colum McCann has no fear of taking on novels that involve years of research. Previous works Let The Great World Spin and Apeirogon manage to tie together many fragmented stories and characters into a coherent whole. In Twist, McCann takes a different approach: an insular first-person narrative in a story about subsea cables and the internet.

The first half of the book works very well. Our protagonist, Anthony Fennell, is a writer recovering from past addiction issues. He has been commissioned to write an article for a magazine about subsea cable repair, and gains a berth on a cable repair ship after a major break in a cable off Ghana. He is an unreliable narrator, becoming obsessed with the lead cable repair technician and his love, an actress who is working in England on tour. While at sea, his addictions resurface, not in substance abuse but in data …

Olga Tokarczuk: Flights (2017)

Flights is a 2007 fragmentary novel by the Polish author Olga Tokarczuk. It was originally …

A story from the perspective of travel

Flights is a story where the protagonist seems to be travel itself. Billed as a novel, the book is split into many short chapters, some only a paragraph long, some many pages. Each chapter visits a specific moment of travel, or some part of the books other linked themes: preservation of bodies, colonialism and hierarchy, or disconnection and disregard of women.

I adore Olga Tokarczuk's writing. Her understanding of the craft and her breadth of imagination are a wonder, and her worldview is so respectfully and carefully entangled in her books that she is one of very few authors I read who can open new worlds in her works. So many moments of this book will stay with me. She builds worlds in moments and then discards them just as rapidly, as if all the stories were constructed out the window of an airplane leaving the runway. Her observations …

Mario Schulze, Sarine Waltenspül: String Figures (Paperback, 2025, Museum Tinguely Basel)

A playful interweaving of connections between history and the present and between world regions and …

A beautiful, coherent tangle

String figures are temporary artworks made from string, very often known in the western world through the associated children's game 'cat's cradle'. They are a storytelling device, using shapes made from string. Their potential was recently popularised by philosopher Donna Haraway, but their history stretches back centuries and they are still found in almost every country in the world, albeit less common than they may have once been in many cultures. In the early 20th Century, film, photographs and the actual string figures were collected from many places featured in this book, including the Solomon Islands, Nigeria, Brazil and Greenland. These artefacts were collated by western anthropologists for European museums, one colonial hand recording their history while the other erased it.

This book, String Figures, is the research result of an exhibition held in Switzerland in 2024. It combines essays by anthropologists, artists, and other researchers to form …

Eduardo Kohn: How Forests Think Toward An Anthropology Beyond The Human (2013, University of California Press) No rating

"Can forests think? Do dogs dream? In this astonishing book, Eduardo Kohn challenges the very …

Got this from the library after wanting to read it for a long time. It has been referenced in a fair few books I've read.

Colum McCann: Twist (Paperback, 2025, Bloomsbury Publishing)

"Anthony Fennell, an Irish journalist and playwright, is assigned to cover the story of the …

I am a big fan of McCann's writing, and am doin project on subsea cables, so I pushed this to the top of my list.

Nesrine Malik: We Need New Stories - the Myths That Subvert Freedom (2022, Norton & Company Limited, W. W.)

We Need New Stories is a non-fiction book written by journalist and author Nesrine Malik …

I enjoy this writing style and agree with the premise, but I feel I'm deeper into this ethic than the book is offering so am not getting much from it. I stopped reading on the third chapter.

Mario Schulze, Sarine Waltenspül: String Figures (Paperback, 2025, Museum Tinguely Basel)

A playful interweaving of connections between history and the present and between world regions and …

A recurring topic in the literature is that of string figure collections being established in anticipation of the danger of the art dying out...While this colonial diagnosis of cultures on the verge of extinction which needed to be collected may be questioned as following an evolutionary paradigm, what seems clear is that the colonial project as well as modernization in general may eventually have led to alterations in the local appreciation or role of string figures.

String Figures by , (Page 163)

From the essay Hesitant Hands on Similar Loops by Mareile Flitsch, pp151-167 – this observation reflects what I see of postcolonial countries discarding ideas because they are considered old fashioned, and thus a symbol of poverty, including processes and objects of real beauty and deep labour.