I found this "cut and paste" after doing a quick search because I have had a photocopy of this article kicking around my office ever since it appeared in the TLS on October 6, 1995.
Has anyone read all 100?
I started theat Taylor book. I saw him give a talk in 1985 and liked his approach . . . . but I thought his book would be more hermenuetical and found it wasn't what I was looking for . . . and yes, it WAS a bore . .. typical Canuk . . . I do like his work on Hegel though . . .
by the way Dune sucks
Vonnegut is great
. . . i am reading trashy sci-fi . . . at the moment Alastair Reynold's Revelation Space . . . keeps me from thinking about the real world and myself . . . and right now that's ok . . .
wil be reading Emanuel DeLanda's 1 Million Years of Human History . . . interesting book . . . and also plan to read Pure Immanence by Delueze . . . its short and its about Nietszche
3, I've read 3. Both books by Orwell, and Hawking's + Huxley from the list of anti-bellum books (yeah I know that usually refers to the civil war, but it doesn't have to )
The Illustrated version of A Brief History of Time. Pretty well written; it's tough to explain such obscure concepts in plain English but Hawking does a pretty good job of it mostly. I'm always reading it before bed though which means I can't get through more than about 5 or 6 pages without dozing off. I should read it during my lunch breaks or something but then I'd end up taking too long a lunch break.
3, I've read 3. Both books by Orwell, and Hawking's + Huxley from the list of anti-bellum books (yeah I know that usually refers to the civil war, but it doesn't have to )
Darn . . .
I only read 10 on the main list . . . though there were books by people who had written other books that i read, such as Arrendt's the Human Condition (great book from a great thinker)
there were 4.5 on the addendum list from pre-war
I need to hit the books and read more of those . . .
I reread Catch-22 over Spring Break. I'm currently reading through Transitions to Democracy, an edited volume by Lisa Anderson for my exam next Tuesday. On deck after that is rushing through Arendt's Human Condition, Foucault's Discipline and Punish, and if I get around to it, Nietzsche's Genealogy of Morals for my exam on Wednesday. Having 4 exams in 3 days is fun.
I'm not too keen on fiction. I can't really get through an entire book of it. i can get through short stories ok (Poe of course, and there was this great Irish femail author, who's name escapes me). Recently, I started Heidegger's What Is Called Thinking?, which is very interesting. I'm also reading Nietcshe's Thus Spoke Zarathustra, which isn't quite what I expected coming from him.
I reread Catch-22 over Spring Break. I'm currently reading through Transitions to Democracy, an edited volume by Lisa Anderson for my exam next Tuesday. On deck after that is rushing through Arendt's Human Condition, Foucault's Discipline and Punish, and if I get around to it, Nietzsche's Genealogy of Morals for my exam on Wednesday. Having 4 exams in 3 days is fun.
Those last three should DEFINITELY be given time and focus . . . and they're all excellent books!!!!
The Arendt is misleading in that it might at first seem to be anti-progressive and reactionary and yet what she maps out as regards the loss of Action and the rise of the social and its origins in metaphysical thought (like her lover Heidegger) is very profound . . . . a good critique of Communism implicit as well . .
hey the Freak . . the Heidegger: that's a good book too . . . "What is most thought-provoking in these thought provoking times is why we have not begun thinking . . . " paraphrased from memory . . . . though it does seem to go on and on . . . his reworking of the ancient greek Logos is brilliant . . . probably completely wrong but still it works for provoking thought . .
hey the Freak . . the Heidegger: that's a good book too . . . "What is most thought-provoking in these thought provoking times is why we have not begun thinking . . . " paraphrased from memory . . . . though it does seem to go on and on . . . his reworking of the ancient greek Logos is brilliant . . . probably completely wrong but still it works for provoking thought . .
he definitely doesn't seem to drone as much as Nietzche's Zarathustra; though maybe i haven't gotten into the bulk of him. The book, as i understand it, is a transcript of several lectures, so the longwinded parts are probably just him loving his voice. i actually picked it up by accident at the store; i can't remember the name of the fella or the book i intended to buy, but i remember he was a german from before my time.
The Pillars of Creation by Terry Goodkind, part of the Sword of Truth series. Not the best book in the series, which would be Faith of the Fallen, but a good tale nonetheless. When reading the series, it's probably best to start with the first book or else become hopelessly lost.
I only read 10 on the main list . . . though there were books by people who had written other books that i read, such as Arrendt's the Human Condition (great book from a great thinker)
Darn indeed... I've read a dozen by my count but really I should have read more I keep a photocopy of the list around my desk as I keep meaning to read more but just haven't managed to yet. In fact I've got a number of these sitting on my bookshelf but just haven't gotten around to it yet. Perhaps reincarnation will allow me to read the others in a future life unless it turns out to be an eternal return
I agree about the Arendt: a great thinker and the Human Condition is an awesome book with great clarity and range. The Origins of Totalitarianism is also an incredible book but not as well organised and with a lot more time spent on historical detail. The Eichmann book is definitely her most infamous book as it led to her virtual excommunication within the American Jewish community. Definitely an author worth reading... along with many others in the 100 list!
On deck after that is rushing through Arendt's Human Condition, Foucault's Discipline and Punish, and if I get around to it, Nietzsche's Genealogy of Morals for my exam on Wednesday. Having 4 exams in 3 days is fun.
Quote:
Originally posted by pfflam
Those last three should DEFINITELY be given time and focus . . . and they're all excellent books!!!!
I echo pfflam's appraisal! It sounds like you are doing an excellent social and political theory course. I had a professor once say to me that no undergraduate student should ever complete a bachelor's degree without having read certain books. She included in that list Nietzsche's Genealogy of Morals as well as Freud's Civilization and It's Discontents as well as Goethe's Faust. I think you could definitely add Foucault's DP as well as Arendt's HC to that list.
Thanks. Yeah, it seems like it should have been a good course, if wasn't for the fact that my professor was horrible! The reading list was good though.
Comments
On deck: Mother Night by Kurt Vonnegut Jr.
At home its Crime and Punishment...
Good book.
Great book
Originally posted by Retrograde
Ok, call me an old bore but I have just been reading Charles Taylor's Sources of the Self this evening and I have to say I have been enjoying it!
But everyone interested in reading ought to check the link below out: The Hundred Most Influential Books Since the War.
I found this "cut and paste" after doing a quick search because I have had a photocopy of this article kicking around my office ever since it appeared in the TLS on October 6, 1995.
Has anyone read all 100?
I started theat Taylor book. I saw him give a talk in 1985 and liked his approach . . . . but I thought his book would be more hermenuetical and found it wasn't what I was looking for . . . and yes, it WAS a bore . .. typical Canuk . . . I do like his work on Hegel though . . .
by the way Dune sucks
Vonnegut is great
. . . i am reading trashy sci-fi . . . at the moment Alastair Reynold's Revelation Space . . . keeps me from thinking about the real world and myself . . . and right now that's ok . . .
wil be reading Emanuel DeLanda's 1 Million Years of Human History . . . interesting book . . . and also plan to read Pure Immanence by Delueze . . . its short and its about Nietszche
right now i just started
The CCNA Guid to Cisco Networking Fundementals
Originally posted by Retrograde
Has anyone read all 100?
3, I've read 3. Both books by Orwell, and Hawking's + Huxley from the list of anti-bellum books (yeah I know that usually refers to the civil war, but it doesn't have to )
Originally posted by SledgeHammer
3, I've read 3. Both books by Orwell, and Hawking's + Huxley from the list of anti-bellum books (yeah I know that usually refers to the civil war, but it doesn't have to )
Darn . . .
I only read 10 on the main list . . . though there were books by people who had written other books that i read, such as Arrendt's the Human Condition (great book from a great thinker)
there were 4.5 on the addendum list from pre-war
I need to hit the books and read more of those . . .
Originally posted by agent302
I reread Catch-22 over Spring Break. I'm currently reading through Transitions to Democracy, an edited volume by Lisa Anderson for my exam next Tuesday. On deck after that is rushing through Arendt's Human Condition, Foucault's Discipline and Punish, and if I get around to it, Nietzsche's Genealogy of Morals for my exam on Wednesday. Having 4 exams in 3 days is fun.
Those last three should DEFINITELY be given time and focus . . . and they're all excellent books!!!!
The Arendt is misleading in that it might at first seem to be anti-progressive and reactionary and yet what she maps out as regards the loss of Action and the rise of the social and its origins in metaphysical thought (like her lover Heidegger) is very profound . . . . a good critique of Communism implicit as well . .
hey the Freak . . the Heidegger: that's a good book too . . . "What is most thought-provoking in these thought provoking times is why we have not begun thinking . . . " paraphrased from memory . . . . though it does seem to go on and on . . . his reworking of the ancient greek Logos is brilliant . . . probably completely wrong but still it works for provoking thought . .
Originally posted by pfflam
hey the Freak . . the Heidegger: that's a good book too . . . "What is most thought-provoking in these thought provoking times is why we have not begun thinking . . . " paraphrased from memory . . . . though it does seem to go on and on . . . his reworking of the ancient greek Logos is brilliant . . . probably completely wrong but still it works for provoking thought . .
he definitely doesn't seem to drone as much as Nietzche's Zarathustra; though maybe i haven't gotten into the bulk of him. The book, as i understand it, is a transcript of several lectures, so the longwinded parts are probably just him loving his voice. i actually picked it up by accident at the store; i can't remember the name of the fella or the book i intended to buy, but i remember he was a german from before my time.
Some other good books I've recently read: Timeline by Michael Crichton and A Walk in the Woods: Rediscovering America on the Appalachian Trail by Bill Bryson.
Originally posted by pfflam
Darn . . .
I only read 10 on the main list . . . though there were books by people who had written other books that i read, such as Arrendt's the Human Condition (great book from a great thinker)
Darn indeed... I've read a dozen by my count but really I should have read more I keep a photocopy of the list around my desk as I keep meaning to read more but just haven't managed to yet. In fact I've got a number of these sitting on my bookshelf but just haven't gotten around to it yet. Perhaps reincarnation will allow me to read the others in a future life unless it turns out to be an eternal return
I agree about the Arendt: a great thinker and the Human Condition is an awesome book with great clarity and range. The Origins of Totalitarianism is also an incredible book but not as well organised and with a lot more time spent on historical detail. The Eichmann book is definitely her most infamous book as it led to her virtual excommunication within the American Jewish community. Definitely an author worth reading... along with many others in the 100 list!
Originally posted by agent302
On deck after that is rushing through Arendt's Human Condition, Foucault's Discipline and Punish, and if I get around to it, Nietzsche's Genealogy of Morals for my exam on Wednesday. Having 4 exams in 3 days is fun.
Originally posted by pfflam
Those last three should DEFINITELY be given time and focus . . . and they're all excellent books!!!!
I echo pfflam's appraisal! It sounds like you are doing an excellent social and political theory course. I had a professor once say to me that no undergraduate student should ever complete a bachelor's degree without having read certain books. She included in that list Nietzsche's Genealogy of Morals as well as Freud's Civilization and It's Discontents as well as Goethe's Faust. I think you could definitely add Foucault's DP as well as Arendt's HC to that list.
oh, and good luck with the exams!
Originally posted by Retrograde
oh, and good luck with the exams!
Thanks. Yeah, it seems like it should have been a good course, if wasn't for the fact that my professor was horrible! The reading list was good though.