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The Reckoning – How #Metoo is Changing Australia by Jess Hill

The Reckoning – How #Metoo is Changing Australia by Jess Hill

June 27, 2023 – Thornbury

The weird thing about the Australian news is that everything seems filtered, muffled, refracted through politics of politeness and prime time manners. Brittany Higgins, Grace Tame, Christian Porter and the other stories that have floated off and on our screens in between COVID news — those who we marched for, have seemed frankly so thinly reported that their stories have been just enough to evoke discussion and doubts.

Not after reading this.

#19
January 16, 2025
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Intact – A Defence of the Unmodified Body by Clare Chambers

Intact – A Defence of the Unmodified Body by Clare Chambers

June 26, 2023 – Thornbury

So I have actually read books this year despite failing to post! I seem to be reading a lot of philosophy? Starting with this, which I heard about via Jessica DeFino.

Clare Chambers is interested in why some body modifications are "good" and others "bad", and how we might look at different forms of body modification — from cochlear implants to mastectomies to bodybuilding to makeup to circumcisions — and draw out a theory of ethics.

#18
January 16, 2025
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The Argonauts by Maggie Nelson

The Argonauts by Maggie Nelson

January 3, 2022 – Chum Creek

I don't want to have kids, but I'm increasingly interested in motherhood and its role in feminism and its ability to transform women.

There's something about it that appeals to me on a level of radical politics, bodily autonomy, care and community. There's something that's clearly radical in getting familiar with the trauma and viscera of birth, which is often edited out. There's something important about labour and (re)production that is deeply political.

#17
January 16, 2025
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Stone Fruit by Lee Lai

Stone Fruit by Lee Lai

December 26, 2022 – Chum Creek

Leigh brought this to Christmas, I just devoured it in a couple sittings. Such a good reminder of the rich and charming experience of graphic novels. This is an exploration of family through the eyes of a creative, cheeky, adventurous child - and the stories of the women in her life finding themselves through love, grief, care and family. Makes me want to draw again.

#16
January 16, 2025
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Ways of Being by James Bridle

Ways of Being by James Bridle

December 26, 2922 – Chum Creek

At family Christmas in the Yarra Valley I think every person would have loved this book. My mum, a science teacher, my dad, a history buff, my sister who works at CSIRO and her partner, an artist, as well as Christopher, an engineer.

I loved New Dark Age and knew I'd love this too. Bridle uses his beautifully curious writing style to take you on a journey from a DIY self driving car to cheeky octopus behaviour to plant communication, an internet of animals and a history of non binary computing. This is a book deeply interested in what it means to be intelligent, human, artificial, animal, plans or ecological. Whether other intelligences exist in ways so different from our own that we perhaps fail to perceive them, as an alien might mistake us for simple livestock.

#15
January 16, 2025
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Eggshell Skull by Bri Lee

Eggshell Skull by Bri Lee

July 28, 2022 – London

I feel like the content of this book has been carefully avoided in its publicity in some ways — I was not really expecting it to go where it went.

In the paperback it's a delightful light pink. The title refers to a legal concept about the nature of a victim, but without that context appears poetic; the illustration and the text on the cover gives it a kind of girl power energy that led me to think this was a kind of self help book. It's not.

#14
January 16, 2025
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Station Eleven by Emily St John Mandel

Station Eleven by Emily St John Mandel

June 28, 2022 – Bridlington

Not a bad book to read while being covid positive on the back gardens of friends and family in England in summer.

Haven't read much fiction recently so this was a nice change. I really enjoyed the writing style, and the story itself crosses over with our current pandemic reality a few times but primarily paints a picture of a post apocalyptic world, where electricity, the internet and civilisation in general have ceased to exist after most of the human population is wiped out.

#13
January 16, 2025
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The Right to Sex by Amia Srinivasan

The Right to Sex by Amia Srinivasan

May 16, 2022 – Thornbury

Finished this last week with an old man reading over my shoulder on the plane. Hope he enjoyed it.

As I understand it the eponymous essay that this book started with was a response to the Brock Turner case, which has occupied many pages in recent feminist literature. That essay is good, although the following, more freeform reflection on the backlash to that essay is probably more interesting.

#12
January 16, 2025
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Come As You Are – The Surprising New Science That WIll Transform Your Sex Life by Emily Nagoski PhD

Come As You Are – The Surprising New Science That WIll Transform Your Sex Life by Emily Nagoski PhD

April 18, 2022 – Thornbury

I'm not joking when I say everyone needs to read this as soon as possible.

I consider myself pretty sex positive and open minded, but after reading this book, the amount of misinformation I have discovered I had sitting around in my subconscious is a lot more than I could have expected. I am glad to have swept a little of it out.

#11
January 16, 2025
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Against Empathy – The Case for Rational Compassion by Paul Bloom

Against Empathy – The Case for Rational Compassion by Paul Bloom

April 6, 2022 – Thornbury

I'm a typical leftie nerd so I listen to Sam Harris and Very Bad Wizards and have always found Bloom quite engaging. This is my first of his books and it's close to my heart as a designer in tech.

Let's clear up the obvious spiciness: Bloom is talking about the difference between "I feel things that I think other people feel" and proper cognitive empathy. As in the former bad, the latter ok. But more than this, he argues that empathy, as heartwarming as it is, is shipped with some serious bugs: it's biased, with much more if it given to those similar to us, and it's irrational, and in particular, innumerate, tricking us into privileging the plight of one over the more utilitarian many.

#10
January 16, 2025
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Bullshit Jobs – The Rise of Pointless Work and what we can do about it by David Graeber

Bullshit Jobs – The Rise of Pointless Work and what we can do about it by David Graeber

March 25, 2022 – Thornbury

Such a good book to read in the lead up to starting a new job...

This starts with an inventory of different types of bullshit jobs, interwoven with testimonies of various people. Kind of amusing. But when I got past this section and into the real guts of this book I put it down and said out loud, "Wow, this just got super interesting."

#9
January 16, 2025
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Tomorrow Sex will be Good Again – Women and Desire in the Age of Consent by Katherine Angel

Tomorrow Sex will be Good Again – Women and Desire in the Age of Consent by Katherine Angel

February 17, 2022 – Thornbury

I picked this up because the concept is intriguing: that sexual response is fundamentally different for women. This book tries to unpick a few tricky knots which I may or may not be able to communicate properly here.

In its most controversial argument, it argues that affirmative consent is problematic because it requires a kind of self knowledge that may not be possible. "Do I want this?" isa question Angel believes we sometimes can't answer as well as the law believes we can, and moreover, sometimes its ambiguity and fuzziness is inherently erotic.

#8
January 16, 2025
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New Dark Age – Technology and the End of the Future by James Bridle

New Dark Age – Technology and the End of the Future by James Bridle

February 10, 2022 – Thornbury

A few years ago you might have read an article about some truly disturbing algorithmically created YouTube videos for kids — this is that author's book, exploring the new era humanity heads into as we hand over control to automation, big data and a networked world.

This is a Verso book, so expect a level of dense, but I will say I found this extraordinarily readable and deeply interesting.

#7
January 16, 2025
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Stolen Focus – Why You Can't Pay Attention by Johann Hari

Stolen Focus – Why You Can't Pay Attention by Johann Hari

January 29, 2022 – Thornbury

It would have been ironic if I didn't finish this but thankfully it was a pretty engaging read. I did put my phone at least a few metres away from me to stop my brain finding excuses of things I needed to look up or buy or browse...

I've noticed a fairly big degradation of my ability to focus. Perhaps it was bad before, but over the last few years, this glowing rectangle seems to offer more mindless self soothing comfort than is perhaps healthy.

#6
January 16, 2025
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Down Girl – The Logic of Misogyny by Kate Manne

Down Girl – The Logic of Misogyny by Kate Manne

January 21, 2022 – Thornbury

We generally seem able to identify misogyny, but often struggle to understand its purpose. Certainly I do. I'd even say I've come to be able to predict it and accept it when it does occur. I've grown able to depersonalise it; to understand when I am the target of it that it says more about the speaker than about me — and yet I find myself sometimes confounded by it, in particular when it offers what seems at first glance to be a logical contradiction. For example, I've been told I'm both "too emotional" and "not emotional enough" by male superiors. How can both be true?

Kate Manne theorises in this book that misogyny is the policing arm of patriarchy, in that it serves to reinforce the power structure by regulating the economics of feminine coded goods (namely love, affection, caregiving) and masculine coded rewards (power, status, influence).

#5
January 16, 2025
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The Hype Machine – How Social Media Disrupts Our Elections, Our Economy and How We Must Adapt by Sinan Aral

The Hype Machine – How Social Media Disrupts Our Elections, Our Economy and How We Must Adapt by Sinan Aral

January 7, 2022 – Thornbury

This was interesting - dense, academic, footnoted and referenced, citing many, many studies and looking verrrrry closely at the effects and emergent behaviours generated by the various networked apps and platforms we use online. Nerdy review because this is the area I work in.

If you've read Mike Monteiro's book Ruined By Design it describes, very convincingly, the harm being done by these services and the culpability of those working in tech. This book tries to answer the question of how we might start to unpick this mess, starting with a deep understanding of the mechanisms at play.

#4
January 16, 2025
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The Wasp Factory by Iain Banks

The Wasp Factory by Iain Banks

December 29, 2021 – Thornbury

And now for something completely different. Curious if anyone else has read this? Recommended by @chizr, this is the first novel by Iain Banks. He writes as Iain M Banks when he's doing sci fi, including "Player of Games" which you may recognise as Grimes' latest song title. I admit I haven't read anything else of his.

This is just so impressive as a first novel. It is probably also the first horror fiction I've read, maybe except for American Psycho. I actually like horror films so I'm not surprised I liked this too.

#3
January 16, 2025
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How to Worry Less about Money by John Armstrong

How to Worry Less About Money by John Armstrong

December 19, 2021 – Warburton

Read in one sitting; an erudite and intelligent, empathetic and sensitive interrogation of money and its tendrils into our psyches. Surprisingly not deeply focused on class or even capitalism, but a more tender approach via the emotional layer.

A helpful salve for anyone who, like me, finds money a little triggering, anxiety inducing, sometimes overwhelming and often confusing. This can be a difficult time of the year for people with uneasy relationships with money and it felt like a meditation.

#2
January 16, 2025
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How to Do Nothing – Resisting the attention economy by Jenny Odell

How to Do Nothing – Resisting the attention economy by Jenny Odell

April 13, 2021 – Thornbury

As my friend Georgia said, this book is a trojan horse. It looks like a self help book aimed at women with its fancy floral cover, but it's actually an incredible anti-capitalist manifesto drawing on art and literary theory, philosophy and more. It's so up my alley I'm mad that people didn't explain this earlier. From Diogenes to Hockney and everything in between, Jenny Odell is so well read and so interesting, I'll be eagerly awaiting her next book.

The theme of connecting to place and the natural world makes it a perfect companion to Sophie Cunningham's City of Trees, also highly recommended. If you're looking for a how-to, this ain't it, but if you're looking for a theoretical grounding to help you mount your own resistance against the attention economy, please read it!

#2
January 16, 2025
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This is Not Propaganda – Adventures in the war against reality by Peter Pomerantsev

This is not Propaganda — Adventures in the war against Reality by Peter Pomerantsev
This is not Propaganda — Adventures in the war against Reality by Peter Pomerantsev

March 21, 2021 – Thornbury

Good. Confronting, also depressing. The cold war tactics haven't died, they've just morphed and augmented for the internet audience. Feels like Adam Curtis' documentaries. The scale of disinformation and state-led manipulation on social media (just not your state necessarily) is pretty wild.

#1
January 14, 2025
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