User Profile

Jim Brown

jamesjbrownjr@bookwyrm.social

Joined 3 years, 10 months ago

jamesjbrownjr.net English professor Teaches and studies rhetoric and digital studies Director of the Rutgers-Camden Digital Studies Center (DiSC): digitalstudies.camden.rutgers.edu

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Jim Brown's books

Currently Reading (View all 5)

2025 Reading Goal

28% complete! Jim Brown has read 15 of 52 books.

Jonathan Rauch: Cross Purposes: Christianity's Broken Bargain with Democracy (Yale University Press) No rating

Why the crisis of Christianity has become a crisis for democracy

What happens to American …

Interesting argument, but has blindspots

No rating

I was intrigued to hear an argument that American democracy needs Christianity, and I was especially intrigued to hear it from an openly gay atheist. In all, the book is interesting. The argument basically goes like this: There are things that the U.S. constitution does not deal with (morality, ethics), and there need to be other institutions that step in to handle those things. The bargain between Christianity and the U.S. form of government has been that each will handle what it does best. Of course, that bargain has broken down. The church has become a political entity, and American politics has taken on the look of religious institutions (people worshiping at the alter of red and blue).

Two things Rauch assumes in this book (unsurprisingly, given that he works at a Washington thinktank): that liberalism is a desirable political system/ideology; that capitalism is a desirable economic arrangement. I think …

Solvej Balle, Barbara J. Haveland: On the Calculation of Volume (Book I) (2024, New Directions Publishing Corporation) 4 stars

More than Groundhog Day

No rating

I picked this book up on a whim - I didn't really know anything about it. And now I am excited for Volume 2 and interested in what the translation schedule is for the remaining volumes (8 in total).

Yes, this is a Groundhog Day-like story, but it is much more than that. My favorite parts are when the character works through what it's like to attend to the same day over and over and also when she is trying to understand her relationship to her spouse as she remains stuck in this loop.

"Suddenly I remember the sounds of summer. I remember the creaking of the stairs. You don't hear it when there is moisture in the air, it is never there in winter, but there comes a point in the course of the summer when the stairs start to creak. It has to do with the wood drying …

Zoë Schlanger: The Light Eaters (2024, HarperCollins Publishers) 5 stars

A narrative investigation into the new science of plant intelligence and sentience, from National Association …

For the love of plants

No rating

I skipped around in this book, and I had a difficult time getting into it. To be fair, I am not the target audience. I'm not a science writing person. But I found that Schlanger's discussion of her own love/enthrallment with plants (as well as similar feelings among the scientists she interviewed) was kind of grating after a while. I have noticed this among similar texts - that there is a lot of time talking about the sense of wonder around plants and nature...a lot of discussion of care for houseplants and walks in the garden. It sometimes feels over the top.

Richard Birkett: Donald Rodney (2023, Afterall Publishing) No rating

Detailed look at a work of Digital Art

No rating

In the 1990s, British Artist Donald Rodney worked with collaborators to make Autoicon, a digital work distributed on CD-ROM (there was a web version as well) that "simulate[d] they physical presence and elements of the creative personality" of Rodney. Rodney died of complications from sickle-cell anaemia in 1998, and the piece was published in 2000. The audience interacted with the piece through a chatbot interface, and answers were drawn from Rodney's archive of work.

The book describes this work but also provides broader context for Rodney's work and for the artist collectives he worked with, including Blk Art and others.