Skip to Content

Chan, Paul. - Vidokle, Anton et al. - (E-Flux Journal):

What's Love (or Care, Intimacy, Warmth, Affection) Got to Do with It?

Kirkegaards Antikvariat
kir59940
Sternberg Press, 2017. Wraps. 358 pp. Very good clean copy.

""What's Love Got to Do with It? by E-Flux Journal" is a book exploring the intersections of art, culture, and love. Written by E-Flux Journal, this reading material delves into the significance of love within various contexts, possibly touching upon relationships, human connections, and emotional expressions in the realm of art and society. With a focus on critical thinking and contemporary issues, this book offers insightful perspectives on the role of love in shaping our world and creative experiences. " Edited by Julieta Aranda, Stephen Squibb, Anton Vidokle, Brian Kuan Wood. Contributions by Paul Chan, Keti Chukhrov, Cluster, Elizabeth A. Povinelli and Kim Turcot DiFruscia, Antke Engel, Hu Fang, Fred Moten and Stefano Harney, Lee Mackinnon, Chus Martínez, Tavi Meraud, Paul B. Preciado, Martha Rosler, Virginia Solomon, Jalal Toufic, Jan Verwoert, Brian Kuan Wood, Slavoj Žižek Preface by Julieta Aranda, Kaye Cain-Nielsen, Brian Kuan Wood, Stephen Squibb, Anton Vidokle. It is often said that we no longer have an addressee for our political demands. But that’s not true. We have each other. What we can no longer get from the state, the party, the union, the boss, we ask for from one another. And we provide. Lacan famously defined love as giving something you don’t have to someone who doesn’t want it. But love is more than a YouTube link or a URL. Love’s joy is not to be found in fulfillment, it is to be found in recognition: even though I can never return what was taken away from you, I may be the only person alive who knows what it is. In our present times—post-human, post-reality, or maybe pre-internet, post-it, pre-collapse, pre-fabricated by algorithms—what does love have to do with it? Since 2009, need and care and desire and admiration have been cross-examined, called as witness, put on parole, and made the subject of caring inquiry by e-flux journal authors. These writings have now been collected to form this comprehensive volume.
Address:
Islands Brygge 25
2300 Copenhagen
Denmark
Phone:
CVR/VAT:
DK 28 01 76 34

Recently Added From Kirkegaards Antikvariat

Jensen, Thit:
Kirkegaards Antikvariat
kir12962
Steen Hasselbalchs Forlag, (1925). Indbundet i det originale halvshirt med rygtitel i guld. 150 pp. Rent og pænt eksemplar. Første udgave.
Wilder, Laura Ingalls:
Kirkegaards Antikvariat
kir60125
Gyldendal, forskellige år og forskellige udgave - se foto. Alle på nær ét bind i hardcover. Navn foran i enkelte bind ellers pænt og gennemgående rent sæt. Pænt eksemplar.
Nordbrandt, Henrik. - Jens Winther. - Krass Clement:
Kirkegaards Antikvariat
kir60124
Gyldendal, 2013. 262 sider. Hft. Pænt eksemplar.
Nørgaard, Bjørn. - Prins, Henning. - Leif Varmark et al:
Kirkegaards Antikvariat
kir60115
Eks-skolens trykkeri, København September 1970. 4 sider. Velbevaret. Extremely rare! One of the 48 original issues of the Danish avantgarde artist magazine, the "newspaper" HÆTSJJ (Haetsjj = "Kerchoo") published between 1968 and 1970, this copy from September 1970. This issue deals with the "happening" at Hjardemål 31st August 1970 - the occupation or liberation of Hjardemål Church, which is close to the Thy camp - by Bodil Marie Nielsen, Peter Louis Jensen, Lene Adler Petersen, Bjørn Nørgaard among others. - The magazine is an example of what Nylen describes, and with most of the mentioned elements featured in it - "From the start of the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament and the public events staged by the situationists and Fluxus in the early 1960s, symbolic actions in public spaces became the focus of political movements, youth culture and the arts. Collective action became the favoured mode of the 1960s, not only in political movements but also in the communes formed by young people who wanted alternative lifestyles, or just an affordable place to live, and in, for instance, popular music, where the rock group took the place of the individual pop star, as well as in art collectives, which organised their own schools (such as the Ex-School in Copenhagen) or assembled to produce little magazines, experimental films or utopian societies, animated by the do-it-yourself style of the new youth culture. For a moment in the second half of the ’60s it seemed possible for the politi-cal movements, the youth culture and the avant-garde to merge and create a huge wave of change that would permanently transform society. The Swedish writer Leif Nylén has described how these three movements overlapped in Sweden: The political students’ movement had its emotional background in the youth revolt, and any political demonstration would be full of Dylan lovers and Beatles fans. Young avant-garde artists were attracted to the concerts and dance halls of the youth culture, where the distinction between high and low culture would dissolve in a way that had been the aim of the avant-garde movements ever since the discussions of cultural democracy and the culture wars of the early 1960s. And the simple pop and rock music of the early 1960s developed into more sophisticated and experimental music which fused with the avant-garde scene".
More info
Nordbrandt, Henrik:
Kirkegaards Antikvariat
kir60123
Brøndums Forlag, (1986). Stor 8vo. Original heftet med tråd og med det originale omslag. Illustreret med en tegning af Jørgen Haugen Sørensen. Ikke signeret. Med originalgrafik af Jørgen Haugen Sørensen. Godt eksemplar.
Blixen, Karen. - Dinesen, Isak. - Tania:
Kirkegaards Antikvariat
kir60122
Exlibris / Gyldendal 1987 (1953). Original LP. Near fine / Fine. Karen Blixer læser op / Isak Dinesen reading her own text.