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).

(noun) the often uncharted areas beyond a coastal district or a river's banks; an area lying beyond what is visible or known

Highlighted phrases

hinterland



Heavy industry centres are typified by large, networked, powerful corporations. To cover their overheads these entities must have large outputs and contain their labour costs. This means that local people (mostly wage earners) cannot consume all that the factories are producing. This is why powerhouse economies require a hinterland to generate the necessary demand for their surplus goods. If the exchange rate between the powerhouse economy and the hinterland is fixed, the hinterland will remain in permanent trade deficit

endnote 39; you need a surplus recycling mechanism to fix that

—p.274 Notes (262) by Yanis Varoufakis
notable
7 years, 4 months ago


the surprise discovery of his wife's lactose intolerance becomes "an unknown hinterland to our marriage"

quoting Netherland

—p.80 Two Directions for the Novel (72) by Zadie Smith
notable
7 years, 7 months ago


Anyone who’s seen photographs of Harlow’s monkeys clinging to wire models or huddled in isolation chambers will know that these are deeply disturbing experiments, carried out in an uneasy hinterland between the scientifically valid and the ethically abhorrent

—p.148 by Olivia Laing
notable
4 years, 10 months ago