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ingrid@bookwyrm.social

Joined 1 year, 6 months ago

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Pollution Is Colonialism (Paperback, 2021, Duke University Press) 5 stars

In Pollution Is Colonialism Max Liboiron presents a framework for understanding scientific research methods as …

Practical and generous

5 stars

I'm really glad I read this before going into a PhD program in an environmental sciences school. Max does a wonderful job of laying out the colonial assumptions baked into a lot of even well-intentioned environmental science and examples of how her lab at Memorial University works to challenge those assumptions while still engaging in rigorous, peer-reviewed research. One of the most accessible academic books I've read in a while.

Ten Arguments for Deleting Your Social Media Accounts Right Now (Paperback, 2019, Picador) 3 stars

You might have trouble imagining life without your social media accounts, but virtual reality pioneer …

if you find-replace "social media" with "capitalism" in this book it's almost got a point

1 star

I read this because I was asked to write something to coincide with a re-broadcast online of a talk Lanier did about the book in 2018.

While I think Lanier does an OK job of outlining some of what's fucked about social media, this book suffers from the same delusion of Zuboff's surveillance capitalism: treating what social media does as an anomaly to capitalism, rather than a logical extension/stage of it. Lanier's pretty libertarian so it makes sense that his theory of change and his arguments for quitting social media are so "you, the reader" focused rather than collective imperatives. But much like "quitting" capitalism, quitting social media is something that requires either tremendous sacrifice or privilege to do as an individual and only really means an individual feels OK without necessarily contributing to anyone else's well-being.

In terms of readability it's not very jargon-y and relatively self-aware, but there …

No One Is Talking About This (Hardcover, 2021, Riverhead Books) 5 stars

As this urgent, genre-defying book opens, a woman who has recently been elevated to prominence …

This book destroyed me

5 stars

I'm very curious how someone who isn't extremely online would read this novel, but for me it was probably the most honest articulation of the experience of living with online? But also living with the weirdness and grief and absurdity and poetry of These Times, more generally. I want more books like this.

Medium Design (2021, Verso Books) 5 stars

In Medium Design everyone is a designer. But the approach to design inverts the typical …

ruthless optimism

5 stars

I'm just going to paste the review I wrote for this Yale School of Architecture magazine because it's probably the most coherent version of my thoughts.

Halfway through Medium Design, Keller Easterling notes that, regrettably, "[new ideas] will not burst upon the scene, take hold, or sell books unless they are presented as the lone, leading idea standing atop the high-altitude peak." It’s a lament not only about the notion of the public intellectual, but the trap that she inevitably faces as an author. My instinct in drafting this review was to cast Easterling and her propositions for "knowing how to work on the world" in a visionary, singular light, using the kinds of words that show up on blurbs for Easterling’s past books. “Foremost.” “Extraordinary.” “Provocative.” All accurate descriptors, but in Medium Design beside the point.

Because one of Medium Design’s central arguments is a rejection of simplistic modernist …

The Ministry for the Future (Paperback, 2021, Orbit) 3 stars

Established in 2025, the purpose of the new organization was simple: To advocate for the …

KSR trying to answer "how to write about/actually respond to climate change"

4 stars

So his answers for both, basically: maximalism. The point he's sort of making is that making the planet safely inhabitable is going to take every tactic and every ideology not necessarily working together but working on some piece of the thing. No one actor gets to be the hero (though I do enjoy that KSR's favorite kind of protagonist remains the middle-aged competent lady technocrat–guy's got a type) and while he's sort of indicating that capitalism as we know it has to die, he's not saying that happens through inevitable worker uprising. Some of it's coercion of central banks and some of it's straight-up guerrilla terrorism. Geoengineering happens at varying scales for better and for worse. Massive economic collapses occur. Millions die. And the point I think from KSR is that's the outcome in his most optimistic take. In general with KSR I don't know if I ever fully agree, …