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hugh@bookwyrm.social

Joined 4 years, 3 months ago

Anarchism. Knowledge systems. Bioculture.

Librarian from Naarm/Melbourne. Also @hugh@ausglam.space

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hugh's books

Real TBR (View all 7)

Stopped reading (View all 10)

2025 Reading Goal

Success! hugh has read 21 of 20 books.

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Daniel V. Thompson: The Materials and Techniques of Medieval Painting (Paperback, 1970, Dover Publications, Inc.) No rating

Medieval painters built up a tremendous range of technical resources for obtaining brilliance and permanence. …

If a bit of rather poor, lean cheese is soaked in water, and crumbled up and ground with lime and a little water, it makes a sticky, treacly mixture which dries as hard as stone and which, when it is once dry, is not affected by moisture. (Very much the same sort of glue is used now for putting together the wooden parts of aeroplanes.) Among the many troubles which beset medieval paintings in our time, one of the rarest is for the glued joints of the wood to separate; and their strength is largely due to the use of this strange, homely adhesive.

The Materials and Techniques of Medieval Painting by  (Page 31)

Airplanes are made of cheese, you heard it here first.

Mark Fisher: Capitalist Realism (2022, Hunt Publishing Limited, John, Zero Books)

It is easier to imagine the end of the world than the end of capitalism. …

Still relevant, if only we took Mark's advice

Fifteen years ago Mark Fisher laid out why life was so grim, and specifically how normal people experience the contradictions of capitalism. Whilst he was obviously well-read and familiar with political theory and philosophy, the book doesn't assume its audience knows or even needs to know these old arguments. Indeed what I find refreshing about Capitalist Realism is how closely it adheres to an idea of the Real: the Actually Existing Capitalism that Fisher and everyone he was writing to lived within. Fisher uses films many people have seen, songs and musical styles we're familiar with, and a few contemporary political activities that his expected UK audience certainly would have known of. Whilst there are enough references to Žižek to get Fisher cancelled if he'd written it today, this is a not a book filled with jargon and unexplained French philosophy.

The impressive and rather depressing thing about Capitalist …

Ed Yong: An Immense World (Paperback, 2022, The Bodley Head Ltd)

The Earth teems with sights and textures, sounds and vibrations, smells and tastes, electric and …

Amazing

A very dense read because it’s so packed with startling facts, but definitely worth the investment in time. This is really an extraordinary book.

David Sornig: Blue Lake (2018, Scribe Publications) No rating

Perhaps what is missing from the common understanding of the word 'wilderness' is a recognition that the deep character of any place, the foundational structures of the physical world, can't simply be drained away. Unruly, unassimilable wilderness is, in fact, everywhere. In some liminal places, like the Zone, this co-presence of chaos and order is present like a bright fog.

Blue Lake by  (Page 39)

Haruki Murakami, Jay Rubin: The wind-up bird chronicle (2011, Penguin Random House)

I'm about 90% of the way through and now I just ...don't care anymore? This book kind of starts to just drift through a series of unnecessarily upsetting vignettes with no apparent purpose.