User Profile

Jim Brown

jamesjbrownjr@bookwyrm.social

Joined 3 years ago

jamesjbrownjr.net English professor Teaches and studies rhetoric and digital studies Director of the Rutgers-Camden Digital Studies Center (DiSC): digitalstudies.camden.rutgers.edu

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Jim Brown's books

Currently Reading

2024 Reading Goal

24% complete! Jim Brown has read 17 of 70 books.

Leah Hunt-Hendrix, Astra Taylor: Solidarity (2024, Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group) No rating

Solidarity as a practice

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This is a nice, detailed walk-through of the history of solidarity as a term/concept and as a practice. It argues that we need to revive that practice and that a number of structures and forces are in the way of that.

It has a bunch of examples, and it's written by an organizer of the debt collective and a person who's working hard to rethink how to transform the way wealthy people think about charity.

It's great as both a guide and a meditation on solidarity

“Appeals to benevolence, altruism, deference, or allyship are widespread, and invite us to be empathetic and kind; but they all place the onus on individual action rather than larger collective engagement, and on harnessing pity or guild, rather than a sense of shared responsibility or shared fate.” (xx)

“Building transformative solidarity involves acknowledging and overcoming imposed categories that pit us against one another and …

Sabrina Imbler: How Far the Light Reaches (2022, Little Brown & Company) 4 stars

A queer, mixed race writer working in a largely white, male field, science and conservation …

Looking to the deep sea for other models

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I love a book that is trying to figure out other ways, other models for living, gathering, and organizing. This book does that, examining the deep sea and setting it alongside Imbler's own life and experiences. My favorite essay in the collection is called "Pure Life," and it examines deep sea heat vents alongside queer gathering spaces.

Hanif Abdurraqib: There's Always This Year (2024, Random House, Incorporated) No rating

Read anything this man writes

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There's not a better writer working today. I always roll me eyes when people talk about savoring a book, about not rushing through it. But that's how I feel about anything Abdurraqib writes.

This book is about basketball, but it's also not. It's vulnerable, cutting, incisive, beautiful. Read it, and then read everything else he's written: Go Ahead in the Rain (a book about Tribe Called Quest), Little Devil in America, They Can't Kill Us 'Till they Kill Us, The Crown Ain't Worth Much. All of it.

McCourt, Frank H., Jr., Michael J. Casey: Our Biggest Fight (2024, Crown Publishing Group, The) No rating

Libertarian call for a "re-decentralized" internet

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I don't recommend this book. I read it for research purposes because it's written by Frank McCourt, a billionaire investing in a decentralized protocol called "Project Liberty." The book is invested in giving people "ownership" of their own data through decentralized structures and blockchain technology. The argument is built on the idea that a new internet should be built with the same ethos as the "American Project." It cites Paine's Common Sense throughout, and it has no real self-reflexive moments about what the "American Project" required (land theft and slavery). Their vision is an internet of individual rights in which you control your data and you have ownership of your data. The audience is likely libertarians who are ready for technosolutionism.

It's worth reading only if you want to see how billionaires want to fix the problem of a broken internet, even when those billionaires (and you have to give …

Katie J. Wells, Kafui Attoh, Declan Cullen: Disrupting D. C. (2023, Princeton University Press) No rating

Uber's ability to shift the "common sense"

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This is a quick read and an interesting argument. Uber arrived in D.C. to some initial resistance, but that resistance quickly dissipated. The authors argue that the company was successfully able to shift the "common sense" of D.C. That shift was both in the sense of "plain wisdom" and everyday habits (taking an Uber and not a taxi or a train became the sensible, practical thing to do) and in the sense of a significant shift in the political terrain - Uber was able to shape what people expected from cities and government. Or, better, it was able to radical reduce those expectations, to convince everyone (politicians, citizens, everyone) that cities are bad at providing basic services and we should just "let Uber do it."

One interesting idea that emerges from the authors' analysis is that Uber succeeds in reducing complicated problems to a simple solution that doesn't actually address …

Ottessa Moshfegh: Lapvona (2022, Penguin Publishing Group) 4 stars

A fateful year in the life of a thirteen-year-old shepherd's son living in Lapvona, a …

Did I like this?

No rating

Moshfegh's books are page turners and funny, but they are also horrific and filled with dread. In a conversation with jilliansayre@bookwyrm.social, we were trying to figure out if you could say you "enjoyed" a novel by Moshfegh. It's a complicated question. This book is no different. You likely won't be able to put it down, but you might not be able to figure out why you keep turning pages (and you might ask yourself what that fact says about you).