not the motorcycle diaries

3/28/2008

The Work of Stuff White People Like

Filed under: impossible ethics, capitalism, privi-legium, white life — ana @ 3:58 pm

As you can see from my reading list, I’m a fan of the blog Stuff White People Like. I’m also White (proof: I like all of the things listed here, with the exception of Manhattan, which I haven’t got around to visiting. I ‘did’ South America before Europe, you see.). So, apparently, are most of the folks who dig the site, to the point where the (white) author is soon to release a book with Random House. To some extent the whole trajectory of this blog takes on an outline of ressentiment; configured by Fiona Probyn as a “giving that is always already a taking”. The self-reflexive white subject (self-reflexivity being, undoubtedly, something else that White People Like) recognises themselves with some shame, laughs at themselves (such is their white humility), generates a similarly motivated following of white compadrés. The blog author gets a book deal. The white readers buy the book. And at the end of the day, it’s hard to say whether power, or at least capital, has shifted any; although I guess that’s the edge of irony, and humour …

1/22/2008

Reading the stock market poetically (though I guess Engels had the idea first)

Filed under: alternative thesis topics, capitalism, other lives — ana @ 4:34 pm

This is another urge I’ve had for some time, spurred on today by this news report about the state of the Australian stock market*. Just look at these words:

a day of carnage

its worst one-day fall since 1989

fears the slowdown is spreading across the world

dived

slumped

No sectors secure from the hammering

deeply in the red

crashed skyrocketed

tipping point

There is so little use of terms that even imply economy, don’t you think? It’s all terrifying excess.

*Are shares the same as stocks?

10/22/2007

Apologies for the delay ….

Filed under: capitalism — ana @ 11:56 am

…. can’t blog. Busy beholding the capitalist monster.

10/20/2007

The global homeland

Filed under: capitalism — ana @ 10:41 am

Adriana Yoto explains malls.

How socially responsible and commercially viable of General Growth Properties and his regiment to allow Yoto´s work to take place. Malls truly are the way of the future, if they are being led by such visionary people with such a commitment to making space for community projects.

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