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When Chris Kraus, an unsuccessful artist pushing 40, spends an
evening with a rogue academic named Dick, she falls madly and
inexplicably in love, enlisting her husband in her haunted pursuit.
Dick proposes a kind of game between them, but when he fails to
answer their letters Chris continues alone, transforming an
adolescent infatuation into a new form of philosophy. Blurring the
lines of fiction, essay and memoir, Chris Kraus's novel was a
literary sensation when it was first published in 1997. Widely
considered to be the most important feminist novel of the past two
decades, I Love Dick is still essential reading; as relevant,
fierce and funny as ever.
First published in 2000, Aliens & Anorexia defined a female form of chance that is both emotional and radical. Unfolding like a set of Chinese boxes, with storytelling and philosophy informing each other, the novel weaves together the lives of earnest visionaries and failed artists. Its characters include Simone Weil, the first radical philosopher of sadness; the artist Paul Thek; Kraus herself; and 'Africa,' Kraus's virtual S&M partner, who is shooting a big-budget Hollywood film in Namibia while Kraus holes up in the Northwest woods to chronicle the failure of Gravity & Grace, her own low-budget independent film.
In Aliens & Anorexia, Kraus makes a case for empathy as the ultimate perceptive tool, and reclaims anorexia from the psychoanalytic girl-ghetto of poor "self-esteem." Anorexia, Kraus writes, could be an attempt to leave the body altogether: a rejection of the cynicism that this culture hands us through its food. As Palle Yourgrau writes in the book's new foreword, 'Kraus's rescue operation for aliens like Weil from behind enemy lines on planet Earth is a gift, if, in the end, like all good deeds, it remains-as Weil herself would be the first to insist-a fool's errand.'
Chris Kraus’ The Bastard Factory tells the story of an entire
epoch: a drama of betrayal and self-delusion spanning the years
1905 to 1975, taking us from Riga and Moscow, Berlin and Munich,
all the way to Tel Aviv. Hubert and Konstantin Solm are brothers,
born in Riga at the beginning of the twentieth century. They will
find themselves – along with their Jewish adopted sister, Ev Solm
– caught up in in the maelstrom of their changing times. As the
two brothers climb the rungs of society – working first for the
government in Nazi Germany, then as agents for the Allied forces,
and eventually becoming spies for the young West Germany – Ev
will be their constant companion, and eventually a lover to them
both. The passionate love triangle that emerges will propel the
characters to terrifying moral and political depths. The story of
the Solms is also the story of twentieth-century Germany: the
decline of an old world and the rise of a new one – under new
auspices but with the same familiar protagonists. Translated from
the German by Ruth Martin
It's Summer, 1991, the dawning of the New World Order; a post-MTV,
pre-AOL generation. Jerome Shafir and Sylvie Green, two former New
Yorkers who can no longer afford an East Village apartment, set off
on a journey across the entire former Soviet Bloc with the
intention of adopting a Romanian orphan. Unflinchingly dark,
hilarious and moving - Torpor is at once a satire and philosophy of
cultural history, social identity and failing relationships.
Dipping into the trajectory of a life at different moments, Kraus
interrogates convention and emotion, creating characters that are
flawed, witty, and altogether true to life. Part prequel, part
sequel, Torpor continues a project of life-writing; personal,
unsparing, and triumphant. If I Love Dick is the book of your 20s,
Torpor is the book of your 30s.
A masterpiece of surrealist fiction, steeped in controversy upon
its first publication in 1984, Blood and Guts in High School is the
book that established Kathy Acker as the preeminent voice of
post-punk feminism. With 2017 marking the 70th anniversary of her
birth, as well as the 10th year since her death this transgressive
work of philosophical, political, and sexual insight--with a new
introduction by Chris Kraus--continues to become more relevant than
ever before. In the Mexican city of Merida, ten-year-old Janey
lives with Johnny--her "boyfriend, brother, sister, money,
amusement, and father"--until he leaves her for another woman.
Bereft, Janey travels to New York City, plunging into an underworld
of gangs and prostitution. After escaping imprisonment, she flees
to Tangiers where she meets Jean Genet, and they begin a torrid
affair that will lead Janey to her demise. Fantastical, sensual,
and fearlessly radical, this hallucinatory collage is both a comic
and tragic portrait of erotic awakening.
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Hotel Theory Reader (Paperback)
Sohrab Mohebbi, Ruth Estevez; Text written by Sohrab Mohebbi, Ruth Estevez, Chris Kraus, …
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R459
R425
Discovery Miles 4 250
Save R34 (7%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Athenian tragedy of the fifth century BCE became an international
and a canonical genre with remarkable rapidity. It is, therefore, a
remarkable test case through which to explore how a genre becomes
privileged and what the cultural effects of its continuing
appropriation are. In this collection of essays by an international
group of distinguished scholars the particular point of reference
is the visual, that is, the myriad ways in which tragic texts are
(re)interpreted, (re)appropriated, and (re)visualized through
verbal and artistic description. Topics treated include the
interaction of comedy and dithyramb with tragedy; vase painting and
tragedy; representations of Dionysus, of Tragoedia, and of Nike;
Homer, Aeschylus, Philostratus, and Longus; choral lyric and ritual
performance, choral victories, and the staging of choruses on the
modern stage. The common focus of all the essays is an engagement
with and response to the unique scholarly voice of Froma Zeitlin.
A novel about failure, empathy, and sadness, with a cast of
characters that includes Simone Weil, Paul Thek, and the author
herself. First published in 2000, Chris Kraus's second novel,
Aliens & Anorexia, defined a female form of chance that is both
emotional and radical. Unfolding like a set of Chinese boxes, with
storytelling and philosophy informing each other, the novel weaves
together the lives of earnest visionaries and failed artists. Its
characters include Simone Weil, the first radical philosopher of
sadness; the artist Paul Thek; Kraus herself; and "Africa," Kraus's
virtual S&M partner, who is shooting a big-budget Hollywood
film in Namibia while Kraus holes up in the Northwest woods to
chronicle the failure of Gravity & Grace, her own low-budget
independent film. In Aliens & Anorexia, Kraus makes a case for
empathy as the ultimate perceptive tool, and reclaims anorexia from
the psychoanalytic girl-ghetto of poor "self-esteem." Anorexia,
Kraus writes, could be an attempt to leave the body altogether: a
rejection of the cynicism that this culture hands us through its
food. As Palle Yourgrau writes in the book's new foreword, "Kraus's
rescue operation for aliens like Weil from behind enemy lines on
planet Earth is a gift, if, in the end, like all good deeds, it
remains-as Weil herself would be the first to insist-a fool's
errand."
Baudrillard's remarkably prescient meditation on terrorism throws
light on post-9/11 delusional fears and political simulations.
Published one year after Forget Foucault, In the Shadow of the
Silent Majorities (1978) may be the most important sociopolitical
manifesto of the twentieth century: it calls for nothing less than
the end of both sociology and politics. Disenfranchised
revolutionaries (the Red Brigades, the Baader-Meinhof Gang) hoped
to reach the masses directly through spectacular actions, but their
message merely played into the hands of the media and the state. In
a media society meaning has no meaning anymore; communication
merely communicates itself. Jean Baudrillard uses this last
outburst of ideological terrorism in Europe to showcase the end of
the "Social." Once invoked by Marx as the motor of history, the
masses no longer have sociological reality. In the electronic media
society, all the masses can do-and all they will do-is enjoy the
spectacle. In the Shadow of the Silent Majorities takes to its
ultimate conclusion the "end of ideologies" experienced in Europe
after the Soviet invasion of Hungary and the death of revolutionary
illusions after May 1968. Ideological terrorism doesn't represent
anything anymore, writes Baudrillard, not even itself. It is just
the last hysterical reaction to discredited political illusions.
Eileen Myles, the popular author of Chelsea Girls and Not Me, the
poet who ran an openly female campaign for president in 1992, now
gives us a talking masterpiece of a novel that scratches out and
rewrites the picture of what fifty years of female life looks like
today. Cool For You is a darkly comic novel that traces the
downbeat progress of an Irish American girl through a series of
stuttering efforts to leave home. Cool For You's tough girl
narrator wants to be an astronaut. Instead, she becomes a poet and
takes us on a ferocious tour of, low-end schools, pathetic jobs,
and unmade beds. This is a book hell-bent on telling the truth
about poor women, how they do and do not get out of the hands of
the family and the State.
Chris Kraus' The Bastard Factory tells the story of an entire
epoch: a drama of betrayal and self-delusion spanning the years
1905 to 1975, taking us from Riga to Moscow, Berlin and Munich all
the way to Tel Aviv. Hubert and Konstantin Solm are brothers, born
in Riga at the beginning of the twentieth century. They will find
themselves - along with their Jewish adopted sister, Ev Solm -
caught up in in the maelstrom of their changing times. As the two
brothers climb the rungs of society - working first for the
government in Nazi Germany, then as agents for the Allied Forces,
and eventually becoming spies for the young West Germany - Ev will
be their constant companion, and eventually a lover to them both.
The passionate love triangle that emerges will propel the
characters to terrifying moral and political depths. The story of
the Solms is also the story of twentieth-century Germany: the
decline of an old world and the rise of a new one - under new
auspices but with the same familiar protagonists. Translated from
the German by Ruth Martin
Rich girl, street punk, lost girl and icon ... scholar, stripper,
victim and media-whore: The late Kathy Acker's legend and writings
are wrapped in mythologies, created mostly by Acker herself. In
this first, fully authorized biography, Kraus approaches Acker both
as a writer, and as a member of the artistic communities from which
she emerged. At once forensic and intimate, After Kathy Acker
traces the extreme discipline and literary strategies Acker used to
develop her work, and the contradictions she longed to embody.
Using exhaustive archival research and ongoing conversations with
mutual colleagues and friends, Kraus charts Acker's movement
through some of the late 20th century's most significant artistic
enterprises.
Jean Baudrillard meets Cookie Mueller in this gathering of French
theory and new American fiction. Compiled in 2001 to commemorate
the passing of an era, Hatred of Capitalism brings together
highlights of Semiotext(e)'s most beloved and prescient works.
Semiotext(e)'s three-decade history mirrors the history of American
thought. Founded by French theorist and critic Sylvere Lotringer as
a scholarly journal in 1974, Semiotext(e) quickly took on the
mission of melding French theory with the American art world and
punk underground. Its Foreign Agents, Native Agents, Active Agents
and Double Agents imprints have brought together thinkers and
writers as diverse as Gilles Deleuze, Assata Shakur, Bob Flanagan,
Paul Virillio, Kate Millet, Jean Baudrillard, Michelle Tea, William
S. Burroughs, Eileen Myles, Ulrike Meinhof, and Fanny Howe. In
Hatred of Capitalism, editors Kraus and Lotringer bring these
people together in the same volume for the first time.
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Dusty Pink (Paperback)
Jean-Jacques Schuhl, Jeffrey Zuckerman, Chris Kraus
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R409
Discovery Miles 4 090
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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A cult classic in France, the first translation of a novel that
captures a subjective stroll through an underground, glamorous
Paris finally there are the rolling stones who call for all these
at the same time among them and around them: the policeman, the
cross-dresser, the dancer, Frankenstein, the dandy, the robot -from
Dusty Pink Written with the hope of achieving a "dreary distant
banality," Jean-Jacques Schuhl's first novel is a subjective stroll
through an underground, glamorous Paris, a city that slips into the
background but never disappears, hovering on the verge of its own
suppression. An elegiac and luminous cut-up, Dusty Pink brings
together race wire results, editions of France-Soir, the lyrics to
well-known British songs, scripts from famous old films,
pharmaceutical leaflets, fashion ads, and strips and scraps of
culture in which the avant-garde and academicism blur in an
overview of the cultural scene. This world of atmospheres,
portraits, and dazzling associations of ideas creates a plane of
shimmering surfaces. Published in French in 1972, Jean-Jacques
Schuhl's Dusty Pink became a cult classic. This is its first
translation.
A memoir of gay life in 1970s Long Island by one of the leading
proponents of the New Narrative movement. Fascination brings
together an early memoir, Bedrooms Have Windows (1989) and a
previously unpublished prose work, Bachelors Get Lonely, by the
poet and novelist Kevin Killian, one of the founding members of the
New Narrative movement. The two together depict the author's early
years struggling to become a writer in the sexed-up, boozy,
drug-ridden world of Long Island's North Shore in the 1970s. It
concludes with Triangles in the Sand, a new, previously unpublished
memoir of Killian's brief affair in the 1970s with the composer
Arthur Russell. Fascination offers a moving and often funny view of
the loneliness and desire that defined gay life of that era-a time
in which Richard Nixon's resignation intersected with David Bowie's
Diamond Dogs-from one of the leading voices in experimental gay
writing of the past thirty years. "Move along the velvet rope,"
Killian writes in Bedrooms Have Windows, "run your shaky fingers
past the lacquered Keith Haring graffito: 'You did not live in our
time! Be Sorry!'"
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Vzszhhzz (Paperback)
Jeanne Graff, Chris Kraus
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R484
Discovery Miles 4 840
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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A novel that captures the glancing intersections of a loose group
of artists and lawyers, restaurateurs, philosophers, wine-makers,
and boxers. Having dinner at the Triennale, Massimiliano is cooking
Pho. He bought the ingredients a few days ago on his way back from
Vietnam. The building was built in 1933, Malou went there as a
child with Jacqueline, the fascist architecture and the name
Triennale remained. A building named "every three years."
Massimiliano was born on December 6th, the same day as Malou...
-from Vzszhhzz Composed between destinations, in airplanes, trains,
museums, and bars over three years, Jeanne Graff's Vzszhhzz
captures the slight intersections of a loose group of artists and
lawyers, restauranteurs, philosophers, wine-makers and boxers whose
lives are conducted almost entirely in a second language. A loose
chronicle masquerading as a novel, Vszhhzz-like Michele Bernstein's
All The King's Horses, the Bernadette Corporation's Reena
Spaulings, and Natasha Stagg's Surveys-couches Graff's sharp
observations in a laconic and ambient style. By not saying too
much, Vzszhhzz says everything about the relation to time, cities,
weather and smog that has become the lingua franca of a creative
and transient life. "There's an art of writing amidst the energies
and languages of others, and Graff's ear for existential
specificity finds momentum in even the most glancing encounters.
Always on the move, Graff's phototropic texts incline toward human
heat, hallucinating characters upon contact." -John Kelsey
Chris Kraus examines artistic enterprises of the past decade that
reclaim the use of lived time as a material in the creation of
visual art. In Where Art Belongs, Chris Kraus examines artistic
enterprises of the past decade that reclaim the use of lived time
as a material in the creation of visual art. In four interlinked
essays, Kraus expands the argument begun in her earlier book Video
Green that "the art world is interesting only insofar as it
reflects the larger world outside it." Moving from New York to
Berlin to Los Angeles to the Pueblo Nuevo barrio of Mexicali, Kraus
addresses such subjects as the ubiquity of video, the legacy of the
1960s Amsterdam underground newspaper Suck, and the activities of
the New York art collective Bernadette Corporation. She examines
the uses of boredom, poetry, privatized prisons, community art,
corporate philanthropy, vertically integrated manufacturing, and
discarded utopias, revealing the surprising persistence of
microcultures within the matrix. Chronicling the sometimes doomed
but persistently heroic efforts of small groups of artists to
reclaim public space and time, Where Art Belongs describes the
trend towards collectivity manifested in the visual art world
during the past decade, and the small forms of resistance to
digital disembodiment and the hegemony of the
entertainment/media/culture industry. For all its faults, Kraus
argues, the art world remains the last frontier for the desire to
live differently.
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Say So (Hardcover)
Whitney Hubbs; Text written by Chris Kraus
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R1,341
Discovery Miles 13 410
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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