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It's about cavepeople, the time 30,000 years ago when Neanderthals and Cro-Magnons shared the earth. One of my favourite things about it is how the people live communism - no-one owns anything other than their own personal effects. All the land is unowned, people are free to hunt and gather anywhere. They keep the profits of their own work, they don't have the boss skimming the majority of the profit off, they don't pay taxes to some bloated government staffed by corrupt millionaires. Everyone receives what they need, no-one starves, things are shared.

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I have a hard time understanding the earlier poems though.

I understand the mental imagery, but the meaning behind it all, I can't discern that well.

Here's such an example:

"I can't tell you - but you feel it -

Nor can you tell me-

Saints, with ravished slate and pencil

Solve our April Day!

Sweeter than a vanished frolic

From a vanished green!

Swifter than the hoofs of Horsemen

Round a Ledge of dream!

Modest, let us walk among it

With our faces veiled -

As they say polite Archangels

Do in meeting God!

Not for me - to prate about it!

Not for you - to say

To some fashionable Lady

"Charming April Day"!

Rather - Heaven's "Peter Parley"!

By which Children slow

To sublime Recitation

Are prepared to go!"

Another one:

"So from the mould

Scarlet and Gold

Many a Bulb will Rise -

Hidden away, cunningly,

From sagacious eyes.

So from Cocoon

Many a Worm

Leap so Highland gay,

Peasants like me

Peasants like Thee

Gaze perplexedly!"

That last one I understood, but the first example?

Not so much.

Do people often need a guide when reading poetry?

I've started reading poetry and missing the meaning of multiple poems always leaves me feeling almost ashamed that I can't get it. Maybe I'm just not used to poetry... Never have I read poetry till recently, of course. So that may have something to do with it.

Ah well...

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I remember I had this on my e-reader so here you go.

These are the collected works from editions that exist, so I can't say if that's the complete works. Only PDFs

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Here you go, enjoy over 1000 pages of the historical Chinese epic.

The Moss translation is relatively more recent than the common translation and is much closer to the original Chinese. At that time the custom was to be very direct and avoid superfluous words, and this translation captures that spirit better.

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submitted 6 months ago* (last edited 6 months ago) by DisabledAceSocialist@lemmygrad.ml to c/books@lemmygrad.ml
 
 

Years ago I had a book, The Mask of Time, by Joan Forman. I thought it was still on my shelf. Today I found out the book is valuable. There's a copy on eBay going for £150. Of course I rushed to find mine..... and it's nowhere to be found. Last year my landlady took a load of old books to the charity shop, I can only imagine it was amongst them. 😔 💔

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Check it out.

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A lot of you probably know about An Indigenous Peoples' History of the United States by Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz. I found out that it's actually part of a series along with six other US history books (Afro-American, African American and Latinx, Asian American, Black Women's, Disability, and Queer histories of the US). Has anyone read these other books or knows if they're good? They're all available for free on Libgen or Anna's Archive.

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Anyone else keeping up with the anti-library and book-banning movements?

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The previous books in the series were The Collapse of Antiquity and …and forgive them their debts.

I don’t know how he cranks these out, on top of his articles, YouTube series, and endless interviews.

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Check it out.

Last chapter.

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"the more she ate the more she shat"

Classic GRRM.

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Moar Selmy.

Moar "mummer's farce."

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"The Ugly Little Girl"

Just like me fr

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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ml/post/18017207

I heard a lot of praise for Bulgakov's oeuvre in the past, so I decided to give it a go.

I have read Russian literature in the past by recommendation of family and friends who always showed much interest in it; be it Dostoevsky, Tolstoy, Chekhov or Pushkin.

But recently I noticed that knowledge of Russian literature virtually stops at the onset of the revolution. When it comes to the Soviet era, there is a sort of intentional silence regarding the literature of that time, at least in the West and its colonized peripheries. Anecdotally, I once had a conversation with my mother during which she claimed that the Soviet period was a dark time to be living in Russia. When I asked her what's the basis of her statement, she said this is based on the novels she read, citing Dostoevsky and Tolstoy. The awkward smile on her face after telling her that these authors died decades before the revolution was priceless; bless her heart, but I am digressing.

When a few exceptions of Soviet literature emerge out of the iron curtain, it turns out to be some anticommunist rambling, just like Bulgakov's Master and Margarita.

Considering the critical acclaim, it feels wrong to say that I found it to be average. Was I supposed to cheer for the devil and his retinue as they terrorize Moscow? Maybe it's my ideological orientation which prevents me from fully engaging with the novel, and I'm alright with that. Though I did enjoy the chapters narrating Pontius Pilate's encounter with Yeshua Ha-Nozri.

Anyhow, was Soviet literature ever popular? Did it die out after the collapse of the union? Or has it always been curtailed in the West?

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Check it out.

Get the first book from your local library or for free as well from Z Library (PDF version).

First book in the series is A Game of Thrones.

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Check it out.

Start with A Game of Thrones, Book 1 of A Song of Ice and Fire, and then go from there.

I have my mechanical keyboard attached to my tablet so I'm able to type again without the screen, even if I don't have my computer.

Take care, folks.

Start here:

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=PKNG8t-XPho&list=PLMLTM7CoBZvIs5vNnwL3Ee25qbyudFda4&index=1&t=3s&pp=iAQB

You can also get A Game of Thrones from your local library; best to patronize it while they're under attack by the right-wing.

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Empire of Normality: Neurodiversity and Capitalism by Robert Chapman is what I'll be exploring.

Anyone want to read along with me?

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tværpostet fra: https://lemmygrad.ml/post/4611140

I loved this book just as much as Leviathan Wakes. 9/10. I would highly recommend this to anyone who's a fan of science fiction, and his read Leviathan Wakes

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submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by SovietReporter@lemmygrad.ml to c/books@lemmygrad.ml
 
 
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cross-posted from: https://lemmygrad.ml/post/4150047

Just helping someone out.

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I would recommend this to anyone who is interested in learning about the Soviet Union, their trade unions, their working conditions, their technology, or what life was like for visitors.

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The best way I could describe Uruguayan Journalist Eduardo Galeano's book is that it's a poetical obituary of the art of soccer. As the author writes in the first lines, “the history of soccer is a sad voyage from beauty to duty. When the sport became an industry, the beauty that blossoms from the joy of play got torn out by its very roots. In this fin de siècle world, professional soccer condemns all that is useless, and useless means not profitable.”

Galeano recounts the development of the sport from its ancient roots, its bourgeois upbringings in the modern age, through its proletarisation and to its eventual commercialisation by the global market. The history of soccer is one of those few instances whose origins are less grim than their present actuality.

The fact is that professional players offer their labor power to the factories of spectacle in exchange for a wage. The price depends on performance, and the more they get paid the more they are expected to produce. Trained to win or to win, squeezed to the last calorie, they are treated worse than racehorses.

Soccer in the chaotic 20th century turned from an innocent sport into a profitable and equally shady industry milked to its last bit by bureaucrats, merchants and corporations. Players are owned and sold and disposed of like slaves in plantations. The profession being shaped by the entertainment industry, the common man fails to regard the soccer player (or of any other mainstream sport for that matter) as a worker with labour rights, and the international bureaucracy tries its best to maintain the status quo.

The machinery of spectacle grinds up everything in its path, nothing lasts very long, and the manager is as disposable as any other product of consumer society.

But, despite the chronological narration, this is no history book, far from it. The passion and vividness in which the author describes some of most iconic plays from around the world, old amd new, capture a beaty that no camera or TV screen can ever catch.

To Galeano, soccer is an art; the players are performers; and the stadium is a theatre. He denounces the mechanical vocabulary employed by the critics and commentators: the players of the Argentine club River Plate couldn't be a "Machine" when they had so much fun they'd forget to shoot at the goal; the 1974 world cup Dutch team nicknamed "Clockwork Orange" was more of a jazz band.

The reader throughout the book ceases to be simply a spectator. No, he is now bonding with the fatigued striker, the goalkeeper criminalised by the fans, the distressed referee, the suicidal star and so on.

Galeano remains very much aware that sport cannot be detached from the politics of our age. To some fans, especially in South America,

The club is the only identity card [they] believe in. And in many cases the shirt, the anthem, and the flag embody deeply felt traditions that may find expression on the playing field but spring from the depths of a community’s history.

”Soccer and fatherland are always connected, and politicians and dictators frequently exploit those links of identity.” The championship is a national pride, countries host the world cup to bleach the regime's record of oppression, wins are offrances to the monarch or the tyrant.

Being a Uruguayan, the author shifts the spectacle of soccer from the European pitches to the South American turf, breaking the mythological narrative of European dominance and superiority in a sport that had no meaning before the Brazilian Mulattoes Friedenrich and Pelé, the Argentine Di Stéfano, the grandsons of slaves Gradín and Delgado, all dabbled with the ball.

The game of soccer was and still is the source of happiness and glimmer of hope for the youth of the world. As for the professional sport, we must mourn its beautiful past and cry on the cold body that is shamelessly called “soccer.”

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submitted 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) by ComradeEd@lemmygrad.ml to c/books@lemmygrad.ml
 
 

I have made what I believe to be the first reflowable version of "This Soviet World" by Anna Louise Strong.

This book is incredibly fucking good. READ IT. (please)

Download my EPUB version: https://comlib.encryptionin.space (or https://archive.org/details/this-soviet-world-anna-louise-strong)

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