Sean Guynes's Blog, page 5

August 5, 2024

Reading “Empire of Ivory” by Naomi Novik (Temeraire 4)

Naomi Noviks’s Empire of Ivory (2007), the fourth novel in the Temeraire series, leads to some reflections on narrative and worldbuilding strategies in alternate history, some concerns about the series's politics (or lack thereof), and prompts the question: when do you give up on a series?
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Published on August 05, 2024 19:01

July 16, 2024

Reading “African History for Beginners” by Herb Boyd

Herb Boyd’s African History for Beginners (1991) may not be an African history worth reading for African history, but it is an important, illustrative, and eccentrically illustrated example of an attempt to create a popular history textbook in the Afrocentric mold for a mass audience.
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Published on July 16, 2024 22:24

July 5, 2024

Reading “Household Horror: Cinematic Fear and the Secret Life of Everyday Objects” by Marc Olivier

Marc Olivier's Household Horror is a study of the material networks of household objects in the domestic world of more than a dozen horror films, and also an argument for why object-oriented ontology is a terrible and terribly useless theoretical project.
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Published on July 05, 2024 16:19

July 3, 2024

Reading “Linghun” by Ai Jiang

Ai Jiang's Linghun criss-crosses the haunted house genre, subverts expectations about the purpose and mood of the haunted, indexes the suburban hellscape of (post)neoliberalism as the locus of horror, and ruminates nearly constantly on death, dying, grief, and the ties that bind us to the past, to family, to community.
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Published on July 03, 2024 10:53

June 25, 2024

Reading “The Silent War in Tibet” by Lowell Thomas, Jr.

In Lowell Thomas, Jr.'s 1959 book The Silent War in Tibet, Tibet’s turbulent history in the 1950s is told with the pressing excitement of a narrator who wants readers to understand the confluence of local, regional, and global forces at work in the People Republic of China's occupation and annexation of Tibet.
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Published on June 25, 2024 15:56

June 22, 2024

Fall 2024 University Press Recommendations

A curated list of recommended books published by university presses and academic publishers in fall 2024. Recommendations tend toward my own interests and books that I think can help make a better world.
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Published on June 22, 2024 12:57

June 21, 2024

Reading “The Fate of Africa: A History of the Continent since Independence” by Martin Meredith

Martin Meredith's The Fate of Africa: A History of the Continent since Independence is an unparalleled resource for introducing the major issues, figures, and periods of post-independence African history, but is severely marred by its failure to engage the devastating legacies of colonialism on the continent.
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Published on June 21, 2024 15:41

June 20, 2024

Reading “Here Be Dragons” by Sharon Kay Penman (Welsh Princes 1)

Sharon Kay Penman's Here By Dragon is a classic of historical fiction, offering a rich, complex tapestry of medieval Welsh and Anglo-Norman life, with a unique narrative style that decenters the big moments and focuses on domestic life and character psychology, and has a lot to say about medieval women's lives.
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Published on June 20, 2024 20:20

February 16, 2024

Playing “Venba” (2023)

The 2023 narrative cooking game Venba by new studio Visai Games punches above its weight in art, sound, and soundtrack, and tells an endearing story of a Tamil family and foodways.
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Published on February 16, 2024 10:47

February 8, 2024

Reading “India: A Short History” by Andrew Robinson

India: A Short History by Andrew Robinson (Thames & Hudson, 2014). Short Histories The genre of the “short history” that seeks to communicate an impossibly complex narrative spanning the entire history of its subject—whether decades, centuries, or millennia—to an audience that many describe as “the educated public” faces a nearly insurmountable challenge. No matter how … Continue reading Reading “India: A Short History” by Andrew Robinson →
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Published on February 08, 2024 11:13

Sean Guynes's Blog

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