Welcome to Bookmarker!

This is a personal project by @dellsystem. I built this to help me retain information from the books I'm reading.

Source code on GitHub (MIT license).

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4 months ago

romantic pain has changed profoundly

By our own standards, Catherine and Emma’s pain seems extreme, but it is still intelligible to us. Yet, as this book seeks to claim, the romantic agony that both of these women experience has changed its content, color, and texture. First of all, the opposition between society and love which each e…

—p.2 Why Love Hurts: A Sociological Explanation Introduction: The Misery of Love (1) by Eva Illouz
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4 months ago

an earlier moment in Silicon Valley

Is this still capitalism, or something worse? Haraway was already grappling with a new language for it in her “Cyborg” text. Whatever it is, it produces a new worldwide proletariat, new distributions of ethnicity and sexuality, and new forms of the family. Haraway was writing about an earlier momen…

—p.322 General Intellects: Twenty-Five Thinkers for the Twenty-First Century Donna Haraway: The Inhuman Comedy (311) by McKenzie Wark
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4 months ago

Richard Stallman and the Free Software movement

I have always dissented from part of this narrative. I think the category of the “immaterial” is meaningless, and modifiers such as “cognitive” and “semio-” don’t really capture what is distinctive about the forces of production and reproduction in our times. I also think it best not to assume in a…

—p.305 Isabelle Stengers: Gaia Intruding (298) by McKenzie Wark
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4 months ago

props for the accumulation of information

To what extent is information the missing “complement” to the commodity? There is only one kind of (proto-) information in Marx, and that is the general equivalent—money. The materiality of a thing—let’s say “coats”—its use value, is doubled by its informational quantity, its exchange value, and it…

—p.250 Wendy Chun: Programming Politics (234) by McKenzie Wark
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4 months ago

programming and neoliberalism

My argument would be that while the timing is different, programming might not be all the different from other professions in its claims to exclusive mastery based on knowledge of protocols shorn of certain material and practical dimensions. In this regard, is it all that different from architectur…

—p.241 Wendy Chun: Programming Politics (234) by McKenzie Wark