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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6 years, 7 months ago

counter the centrifuge of late modernity topic/literary-theory

I would argue, then, that the contemporary novelist who is not in any way addressing the changed reality of the present may yet be serving an important function. For the reader, that is--not necessarily for the genre itself. A crucial distinction. Through his deployment of the language, through g…

—p.10 The Future of Fiction Second Thoughts (9) by Sven Birkerts
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6 years, 7 months ago

the stuff that's truly interesting about religion

[...] I think this is because the stuff that's truly interesting about religion is inarticulable.** Plus the truth is that there's nothing about I really know, and nothing about it that anybody, I don't think, really knows; and so when I hear some person try to articulate or persuade me of so…

—p.7 Quo Vadis--Introduction (7) by David Foster Wallace
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6 years, 7 months ago

deconstruction suspends that view

[...] Deconstruction neither denies nor really affects the commonsense view that language exists to communicate meaning. It suspends that view for its own specific purpose of seeing what happens when the writs of convention no longer run.

—p.128 Deconstruction: Theory and Practice Conclusion: dissenting voices (126) by Christopher Norris
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6 years, 7 months ago

there is no end to the interrogative play

[...] The end-point of deconstructive thought, as Derrida insists, is to recognize that there is no end to the interrogative play between text and text. Deconstruction can never have the final word because its insights are inevitably couched in a rhetoric which itself lies open to further deconstru…

—p.84 Between Marx and Nietzsche: the politics of deconstruction (74) by Christopher Norris
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6 years, 7 months ago

a series of buried metaphors

[...] Nietzsche saw nothing but blindness and multiplied error in the various attempts to arrive at truth through logic or abstract reason. Philosophy had based itself unwittingly on a series of buried metaphors none the less potent and beguiling for their common and commonsense usage. Nietzsche ca…

—p.77 Between Marx and Nietzsche: the politics of deconstruction (74) by Christopher Norris