User Profile

Jim Brown

jamesjbrownjr@bookwyrm.social

Joined 3 years, 4 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

2024 Reading Goal

48% complete! Jim Brown has read 34 of 70 books.

Philip Glahn, Cary Levine: Future Is Present (2024, MIT Press) No rating

1980s Net Artists were doing much cooler shit with technology than we are

No rating

This is a detailed study of Mobile Image, an artist group that built innovative projects using telecommunications in the 1980s and 1990s. Super detailed account of their experiments with satellite technology, videoconferencing, BBSs.

Most importantly, if you've seen the hullabaloo about the "portal" in NYC, you should know that Mobile Image built that in 1980 - a live, synchronous video connection between LA and NYC. It was called A Hole in Space and there's footage on YouTube.

Kazuo Ishiguro: The Remains of the Day (2010, Faber & Faber, Limited) 4 stars

mundanity and tedium made dramatic

No rating

This is the second of Ishiguro's I've read (the other was Klara and the Sun), and I'm struck with how much his characters love to revel in tedium. In this book, it's done to comedic effect often (since the narrator is obsessed with the details of what makes a "good butler" or what counts as "dignity"). But it then surprisingly dips into a love story and Nazi sympathizers. The book is deep in the weeds of something that seems ridiculous while all of these other more important things are happening around the edges. In the end, it works.

reviewed Kokoro by Natsume Sōseki (Penguin classics)

Natsume Sōseki: Kokoro (2010, Penguin Books) 4 stars

No collection of Japanese literature is complete without Natsume Soseki's Kokoro, his most famous novel …

two books in one

No rating

The introduction to my edition says that the third part of this book was initially its own thing, and that makes a lot of sense. The first two parts of the book offer a kind of nest for the last part of the narrative.

An intergenerational story, which seems to be a trend in the 20th Century Japanese fiction I've read. Bleak also...kind of another trend. I have tended to link both of those things to WWII, but this one was published in 1914, so that theory doesn't hold up.

Helen Phillips: Hum (EBook, Simon & Schuster) 3 stars

From the National Book Award–longlisted author of The Need comes an extraordinary novel about a …

not what I expected

No rating

I bought this book because Jeff VanderMeer blurbed it. It was not what I expected. All the issues with tech (AI, privacy, virality, inequity and inequality, the difficulties of parenting in a world of devices) are right on the surface. The book reads like YA fiction, but it doesn't appear to be marketed that way. I skimmed through to the end to figure out the narrative payoff, but mostly this book just wasn't what I was expecting.