User Profile

Jim Brown

jamesjbrownjr@bookwyrm.social

Joined 3 years, 11 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

This link opens in a pop-up window

Jim Brown's books

Currently Reading (View all 5)

2025 Reading Goal

36% complete! Jim Brown has read 19 of 52 books.

Nikil Saval, Sarah M. Whiting: Rage in Harlem (2022, Sternberg Press) 4 stars

"present patterns of confrontation"

No rating

I only recently learned of the work (writing, political leadership, organizing) of Nikil Saval. Ran into this book in a small bookshop and immediately grabbed it after having heard Saval speak at two union-related events in Philly during the last month.

In 1964, in response to police violence in Harlem, June Jordan wrote to Buckminster Fuller to propose a speculative redesign of Harlem. Saval tells that story in a book that is a recreation of a lecture he gave on zoom during Covid restrictions and during his campaign for Pennsylvania Senate (an election he won). It's an interesting story and worth the read.

It's striking to read Jordan's account of what it's like to move through the grid of a city when you feel like you're constantly in the crosshairs:

"Given our goal of a pacific, life-expanding design for human community, we might revise street patterning so that the present …

Hiroko Oyamada, David Boyd: The Factory (Paperback, 2019, New Directions) 4 stars

Vandermeer goes to work

No rating

This book is weird and good. The factory is on an expansive campus with its own strange animals, and the people working jobs there have no clear sense of what they're doing. The description of animals is Vandermeer-esque.

I also appreciate that one character draws a parallel between the factory's campus and the Tokyo Imperial palace, both of which the character speculates might have their own entire ecosystems. The palace is surrounded by a mote, but the boundary around the factory is not so clear (another moment when the book reminded me of Vandermeer/The Southern Reach).

Jerry Mander: In the Absence of the Sacred (Paperback, 1992, Sierra Club Books) 5 stars

You've heard of Neil Postman, but Mander was there too

No rating

15 years ago, I likely would have read this book and rolled my eyes a bit. Now? I'm kinda with Mander:

"Computers, like television, are far more valuable and helpful to the military, to multinational corporations, to international banking, to governments, and institutions of surveillance and control – all of whom use this technology on a scale and with a speed that are beyond our imagining – then they ever will be to you and me." (3)

But beyond this discussion of the damage computers and telecommunications network had done and would do to everyone, Mander is focused on the impact it was having on Indigenous peoples. The effects on Indigenous languages, on traditional storytelling practices, and on communal gathering.

He doesn't get everything right, but This book is worth a read both as a historical document and, honestly, as a way to think about legitimate modes of resistance and …

Yoko Ogawa: The Memory Police (Paperback, 2020, Penguin Random House) 4 stars

A haunting Orwellian novel about the terrors of state surveillance.

On an unnamed island off …

The politics of deleting and disappearing

No rating

The concept of this book was probably more interesting to me than the narrative itself, but the way it deals with the policing of memory is interesting, especially when that process leads to its logical end.