A book I very much need (and want) to read: HOW TO BE A DISSIDENT, by @galbeckerman.bsky.social, coming April 21
A book I very much need (and want) to read: HOW TO BE A DISSIDENT, by @galbeckerman.bsky.social, coming April 21
I regret posting the piece and will stop engaging at this point, but I think she answers that question in the essay, and her answer is parallel to what she says about reading and writing.
That is not her presumption. A major thrust of the piece is that there are ethical reasons to care about process (in writing, reading, and relationships) that are missed if we focus on products or outcomes.
I don’t generally engage on Bluesky but this does not seem like an accurate representation of her piece
“I would honestly prefer for a sentient AI to kill every last human being on the planet in some hideously gruesome way than for even one more of us to become the kind of amoral, thoughtless person-shaped vacancy that AI threatens to turn us all into.” — a sober assessment by Becca Rothfeld
“Faustus, after all, was an academic who set out subversively to stretch the boundaries of human knowledge, but wound up squandering his talents … performing feats of necromancy in order to divert successive potentates even wealthier than the families of Greenblatt’s … Harvard students.”
“Given [his] ‘desire to speak with the dead’ … it’s a shame that [Greenblatt] didn’t recognise more of himself in Faustus.”
It’s been a while since I read a review like this: Michael Dobson on Stephen Greenblatt on Christopher Marlowe @lrb.co.uk
For the new year: I talked to Patricia Karpas (Untangle) about how to find meaning when life is hard
I wrote about Wittgenstein’s socks: Under the Net
ksetiya.substack.com/p/tractatus-...
I wrote about Wittgenstein’s socks: Under the Net
ksetiya.substack.com/p/tractatus-...
I wrote about the best books I read in 2025
ksetiya.substack.com/p/readers-di...
I wrote about the best books I read in 2025
ksetiya.substack.com/p/readers-di...
‘The biggest rock bands not only make the best noise but talk the most nonsense…’: the opening of a glorious, clear-eyed celebration of Oasis by Andrew O’Hagan in @nybooks.com
www.nybooks.com/articles/202...
‘Their biographers love to describe them as the last of the great rock and roll bands, but actually they were the first of the great karaoke bands…’
‘Oasis is lovable and tuneful and ballsy and hilarious, which is all true. The fact that it is as toxic as glue sniffing doesn’t really matter when the feeling is so good.’
‘the Gallaghers [come] across like a couple of cut-price Descartes with egos the size of England.
“Fuck trees, man,” offered Noel one time. “Dogs piss on them.”
“Fuck the sea,” reasoned Liam.’
‘The biggest rock bands not only make the best noise but talk the most nonsense…’: the opening of a glorious, clear-eyed celebration of Oasis by Andrew O’Hagan in @nybooks.com
www.nybooks.com/articles/202...
I wrote an essay for @bostonreview.bsky.social about what I learned about close reading when I taught at West Virginia University
www.bostonreview.net/articles/the...
I wrote about William Kentridge: Under the Net
ksetiya.substack.com/p/an-essenti...
I wrote about William Kentridge: Under the Net
ksetiya.substack.com/p/an-essenti...
Newly discovered poetry by Iris Mudoch, introduced by Miles Leeson in the TLS!
www.the-tls.com/literature/p...
I wrote about Alice Ambrose: Under the Net
ksetiya.substack.com/p/it-is-a-pe...
I wrote about Alice Ambrose: Under the Net
ksetiya.substack.com/p/it-is-a-pe...
I wrote about the rituals of mourning: Under the Net
ksetiya.substack.com/p/joy-in-the...
I wrote about the rituals of mourning: Under the Net
ksetiya.substack.com/p/joy-in-the...
I wrote about Jonathan Lear on the virtue of irony: Under the Net
ksetiya.substack.com/p/becoming-h...