I knew the Zone books were numbered; I've never heard anyone reference
them that way. At this point I have only a few; I've traded some in,
including alas The Accursed Share. Saw a Bataille at the Salvation Army
today on the other hand...

- Alan


On Sat, 19 Nov 2005, phanero wrote:


The O'Reilly 'think' books and stuff like Bennahum really hold me however
- if anything these have to do with communalities, not tech -

of course.. you can imagine a kind of floppy freckled useless flipper a
zombi-flipper growing
from my head, perhaps it's pierced with the etymology of Upanishad. I am
always open to punishment.

Have you read Zone 6? or Zone 3, or Zone 5? The Journal Alexandria is

Probably not - I assume you're not talking about Zone books? Is the
Baudrillard new? I don't have it -

The Baudrillard and the Virilio are both new from Semiotext(e), both part of
the Foreign Agents series.

I AM talking about Zone books..(not with Alexandria) They gave them numbers
AND titles..
These are from 1987-1992 and part of the Zone Journal series
in part edited by Michel Ferer and Nadia Tazi.. Some excellent stuff in
these..

These are on ZONE books imprimatur. from the MIT Zone books website:

Zone 1/2 : The Contemporary City (Paperback)
by Michel Feher (Editor), Sanford Kwinter (Editor)
This inaugural double issue of the serial publication ZONE examines the
physical, political, and perceptual
transformations redefining the contemporary city.

Zone 3
Fragments for a History of the Human Body - Part 1
Michel Feher, Ramona Naddaff and Nadia Tazi (Eds.)
Paper / February 1989
OUT OF PRINT

Zone 4
Fragments for a History of the Human Body - Part 2
Michel Feher, Ramona Naddaff and Nadia Tazi (Eds.)
Cloth / February 1989
OUT OF PRINT

Zone 5
Fragments for a History of the Human Body - Part 3
Michel Feher, Ramona Naddaff and Nadia Tazi (Eds.)
Paper / February 1989
Price $38.50 | ADD TO CART

Zone 6
Incorporations
Jonathan Crary and Sanford Kwinter (Eds.)
Paper / October 1992
OUT OF PRINT





but then again

One dog barks at nothing
ten thousand others
pass it on





Barbara Maria Stafford is Brilliant, ne, and Yes, I have read it or at
it.. It's a fatty.. I keep it next to the desk as a primary reference.
Everybody should read her work. Not only Body criticism but her Artful
science as well. These are encyclopedic wunderkammernish works. the
illustration lists obscene. As far as the art goes in body criticism, be
sure to check out T. McClean's The Body Politic or the March of the
Intellect. I think that one image sums up my whole approach, or what i
'think' is my approach..

Ah - I noticed that image right away myself, Hello Dali -

- Alan, better be banged than beaded -

Better be hanged than
thus be headed

lq

----- Original Message -----
From: "Alan Sondheim" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <WRYTING-L@LISTSERV.UTORONTO.CA>
Sent: Saturday, November 19, 2005 10:04 AM
Subject: Re: Jean Baudrillard's The Conspiracy of Art.


I love this text - I'm about to review a Stafford book (that's how I got
it at the SLSA) - Body Criticism - have you read it? What's your take on
her? Also given your interests, you should absolutely check out Lingis'
Excesses if you haven't, as well as his more recent work - Alan

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