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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Fionnáin's books

Currently Reading (View all 9)

started reading Practice by Robin Wall Kimmerer (Kinship: Belonging In A World Of Relations, #5)

Robin Wall Kimmerer, Gavin Van Horn, John Hausdoerffer: Practice (Paperback, 2021, Center for Humans and Nature Press) No rating

Part of the 5-Volume Set 2022 Nautilus Book Award Gold Medal Winner: Ecology & Environment …

Finally getting around to the last of this 5-part volume, on practice of kinship. I brought this because I'm on a train today and it's pocket-sized!

Eduardo Kohn: How Forests Think Toward An Anthropology Beyond The Human (2013, University of California Press)

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

Thoughtful but confused

How Forests Think tries to present an anthropology beyond the human. It situates itself in writer Eduardo Kohn's years spent among the Runa in Ecuador. The Runa have close linguistic and cultural relationships with the forest creatures and plants surrounding them in the rainforest. Kohn posits that we can learn a more-than-human way of doing anthropology by learning to listen to these relationships.

Although the context is fascinating, and the methodology is urgent, I felt the book never really justified its many claims to be creating an anthropology beyond the human. It still felt for a large part as the voice of a western observer in a non-western culture, and while this is the truth it also feels like maybe it can never work without some other level of collaboration. The writing is also very heavy and does not flow, even though there are poetic moments at the beginning …

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, …

Haunting ghost stories

I read Things We Lost in the Fire, Mariana Enriquez' collection of short stories translated into English not long after it came out in 2017, having found it in a library and taken a chance on it. The visceral and beautifully written horror stories astounded me. And the way that she embeds political and social critique is pitch perfect. After such a brilliant debut I worried that a second book might prove to be a repetition or just nowhere near the same quality. I haven't yet read the lauded The Dangers of Smoking in Bed (her debut in Spanish but second collection translated to English), but this, her third, certainly did not disappoint me.

A Sunny Place for Shady People is literary horror. Across 12 short stories, very few events of any great drama takes place, but strong characters and realistic settings bring everything to life. In each …

Anne O'Dowd: Straw, hay & rushes in irish folk tradition (Paperback, 2022, Irish Academic Press) No rating

The humble organic materials of straw, hay and rushes were utilised throughout the centuries in …

I spotted this in the museum of country life bookshop during a visit and ordered a copy on inter-library loan into my library. I then forgot all about it and the day before the copy arrived, a friend loaned me a copy of the book on a whim saying I'd like it. Nice synchronicity, so I've started reading both copies.

Kate Yeh Chiu, Jia Yi Gu: Material Acts (Hardcover, Craft Contemporary) No rating

Material Acts is an interdisciplinary research initiative exploring the intersections of architecture, craft, and science …

A gift last year from my brother after he attended this exhibition in LA, that I'm just getting around to now.

Kim Stanley Robinson, Kim Stanley Robinson, Simon Saito: Ministry for the Future (Paperback, 2021, orbit)

The Ministry for the Future is a masterpiece of the imagination, using fictional eyewitness accounts …

My sister gave this to me for Christmas a few years ago. In truth I rarely enjoy science fiction so I've kept putting off reading this, but have decided to at least have a go at it.

Eduardo Kohn: How Forests Think Toward An Anthropology Beyond The Human (2013, University of California Press)

"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!