βThere is nothing more enticing, disenchanting, and enslaving than the life at sea,β wrote Joseph Conrad. And there is certainly nothing more integral to the ...
Continue Reading βHope Mirrlees (1887-1978) has long been regarded as the lost modernist. Her extraordinary long poem Paris (1920), a journey through a day in post First ...
Continue Reading βNei Gong has been a well-kept secret within the Daoist sects of China for centuries. Based upon the original teachings of the great sage Laozi, ...
Continue Reading βSuppose I were to begin by saying that I had fallen in love with a color . . . A lyrical, philosophical, and often explicit ...
Continue Reading βBarbara Newman reintroduces English-speaking readers to an extraordinary and gifted figure of the twelfth-century renaissance. Hildegard of Bingen (1098-1179) was mystic and writer, musician and ...
Continue Reading βAtopias is a manifesto for a radical existentialism that restores the place of the outside that contemporary theory underestimates. Neyrat calls this outside “atopia”: not ...
Continue Reading βThis book is an original exploration of Deleuze’s dynamic philosophies of space, time and language, bringing Deleuze and futurism together for the first time. Helen ...
Continue Reading βToday, both woman and the computer screen the matrix, which also makes its appearance as the veils and screens on which its operations are displayed. ...
Continue Reading βA highly contentious, very readable and totally up-to-the-minute investigation of women’s natural relationship with modern technology, an association which, Plant argues, will trigger a new ...
Continue Reading βSurrealism as a movement has always resisted the efforts of critics to confine it to any static definition–surrealists themselves have always preferred to speak of ...
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