ENN GRAMATEN
Natasha Soobramanien & Luke Williams
Published by Book Works, London, 2018, 16 pages, 16 × 24 cm, English
Price: €9
  • ‘N u there p?
  • L yes b.
  • N Working on this Diego thing
  • L how is it
  • N It’s making me think about my Kreol. Did I tell you how I lost it?
  • L I know you mourn it
  • N It was the first language I knew
  • L the first one you spoke?
  • N y. the only one. Til I went to nursery school and no one understood me. They told my folks to speak English to me. So Kreol became language of adults/familial authority
  • L Didn’t you know any kids who spoke it?
  • N nope.
  • N I never stopped understanding it
  • N but the speaking seized up
  • L Funny when you think how under colonialism, use of pidgins/creoles by colonised subjects = justification for colonials to infantilise them, while English = language of authority…
  • L Have you read Moten’s ‘Blackness and Nothingness’?
  • N No. Send!’

—Enn Gramaten

A cautionary tale of academic privilege and misadventure in Diego Garcia via a Kreole translation, and parallel live chat.

Dialecty, conceived by Maria Fusco with The Common Guild, considers the uses of vernacular forms of speech and writing, exploring how dialect words, grammar and syntax challenge and improve traditional orthodoxies of critical writing.

#2018 #bookworks #experimentalwriting #lukewilliams #mariafusco #natashasoobramanien
The Female Man
Joanna Russ
Published by Orion Publishing Group, London, 209 pages, 12.8 × 19.7 cm, English
Price: €9 (Temporarily out of stock)

The Female Man is a classic feminist science fiction novel by American writer Joanna Russ, published in 1975. Four women, Joanna, Jeannine, Janet and Jael, live in four different and parallel worlds. Joanna lives in a world similar to 1970s Earth. Jeannine lives in a world where the Great Depression did not end, WW2 never happened, and Japan is still an imperial power. Janet lives in Whileaway, a Utopian society in the far future where men have long since died out in a gender-specific plague. Jael lives in a dystopia where men and women are fighting an enduring and literal battle of the sexes, where women trade children for resources and young boys have cosmetic surgery to resemble women. As the women are transported into these other worlds and meet one another, their perspectives on gender, identity and the societies in which they each live are radically altered.

#feministsciencefiction #fiction #joannaruss #sciencefiction
The Federal #1
Jonas Žakaitis, Gintaras Didžiapetris, Aurime Aleksandravičiūtė (Ed.)
Published by Tulips & Roses, Brussels, 2011, 32 pages (b/w ill.), 16 × 24 cm, English
Price: €5

The Federal is a periodical of artist’s writings published by Brussels gallery, Tulips and Roses.

Contributors to this issue: Gintaras Didžiapetris, Graham Harman, Raimundas Malašauskas, Snowden Snowden, Jonas Žakaitis.

#2011 #gintarasdidziapetris #jonaszakaitis #raimundasmalasauskas
The Federal #2
Jonas Žakaitis, Gintaras Didžiapetris, Aurime Aleksandravičiūtė (Ed.)
Published by Tulips & Roses, Brussels, 2011, 32 pages (b/w ill.), 16 × 24 cm, English
Price: €5

The Federal is a periodical of artist’s writings published by Brussels gallery, Tulips and Roses.

Contributors to this issue: Christopher Fraga, Elena Narbutaite, Jonas Žakaitis, Gintaras Didžiapetris in conversation with Paul Sietsema, and Jonas Žakaitis in conversation with Christopher Witmore

#2011 #elenanarbutaite #gintarasdidziapetris #jonaszakaitis #paulsietsema
Cafe du Reve
Marc Camille Chaimowicz
Published by Thames and Hudson, London, 1985, 181 pages (colour & b/w ill.), 21 × 26 cm, English
Price: €70 (Out of stock)

Since the 1970s, Marc Camille Chaimowicz has explored the space between art, life, and decoration. He develops interiors and spatial arrangements as well as various furnishings and decorative objects, paintings, vases, curtains, furniture, and wallpaper. In his work, Chaimowicz blurs the boundaries between private and public space. His formal language—in painting, interiors, and arrangements—perhaps refers to intimist painting from the late nineteenth century, including work by artists such as Pierre Bonnard and Édouard Vuillard.

#1985 #marccamillechaimowicz
Weibliche" und "männliche" Körpersprache als Folge patriarchalischer Machtverhältnisse
Marianne Wex
Published by Verlag Marianne Wex, Hamburg, 1979, 377 pages (b/w ill.), 23.5 × 29.5 cm, German
Price: €90 (Out of stock)

Speaking about her work, Wex notes that her endeavor was “based on the assumption that body language is the result of sexoriented, patriarchal socialization, affecting all of our ‘feminine’ and ‘masculine’ role behavior.” Her discovery was that “body language and bodily ideals between sexes have become increasingly divergent.”

The resulting body of photographic collages is unique: they combine the history of street photography and the typologies of the Becher School with conceptual art imperatives, especially in their possibilities for modular recombination. Let’s Take Back Our Space might be classified, non-exhaustively, as a feminist broadside, an encyclopedia of gesture, an ethnographic portrait of Hamburg in the 1970s, a genealogical tract on art history, a neglected classic of appropriation art and a kind of autobiography.

#1979 #mariannewex