Hope 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 →Nei 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 →Suppose I were to begin by saying that I had fallen in love with a color . . . A lyrical, philosophical, and often explicit ...
Continue Reading →Barbara 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 →Atopias 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 →This 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 →Today, 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 →A 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 →Surrealism 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 ...
Continue Reading →Olives, bread, meat and wine: it is deceptively easy to evoke ancient Greece and Rome through a few items of food and drink. But how ...
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