Articles on literature and film are published here.
Why criticise a piece of art when you can simply enjoy the effect it has on you? Criticism can be tremendously productive, namely when it does not dwell on the classification of cultural products into so-called high or pop culture, when instead, consciously renouncing universal evaluation criteria, one allows every work of art to be a more or less subversive irritation of calcified neuronal networks. Writing reviews is an attempt not to go mental from this self-inflicted irritation, i.e. to follow up the deconstruction of world knowledge with a new reconstruction. Anyone looking for a formula that quantitatively translates the quality of art will, at best, be disappointed here. Star ratings don’t get anyone anywhere. Furthermore the texts published here are not scientific in the strictest sense, but merely suggestions for interpretation. This can also be quite nonsense, but as the great sceptic Sportin‘ Life sang: ’It ain’t necessarily so.’ And as a communist kangaroo from Berlin pointed out, right and wrong are bourgeois categories anyway.

New Posts:
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Hegel’s wet dream? On a dive with Ursula K. Le Guin’s ‚The Lathe of Heaven‛ (1971)
A jellyfish drifts in the ocean. This is how Ursula K. Le Guin’s novel The Lathe of Heaven begins, but anyone looking forward to post-humanist jellyfish science fiction will be…
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„We’re all in it together!“ Terry Gilliam’s ‚Brazil‛ (1985)
Someone must have slandered Mr. Buttle, for one day, without having done anything truly wrong, he was arrested. The story could be told from the perspective of the innocent family…
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On the impossibility of not-telling – Joanna Russ: ‚We who are about to…‛ (1976)
An astronaut is stranded alone on an alien planet and fights for his survival. With technical know-how, inventiveness and a good portion of colonial power, he finally succeeds in doing…
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Freedom or Happyness? The insoluble equation in Yevgeny Zamyatin’s ‚We‛ (1920)
It is the first book to be officially banned in the Soviet Union. Three years previously, Zamyatin had fought on the side of the Bolsheviks in the February and October…


