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Shared reading list #38

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Frijol opened this issue Jul 30, 2019 · 5 comments
Open

Shared reading list #38

Frijol opened this issue Jul 30, 2019 · 5 comments

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@Frijol
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Frijol commented Jul 30, 2019

Idea

Shared reading list from DWeb Camp– I talked to a ton of people and shared and received many book and blog post recommendations! I'd love to collaboratively bring together some of those recommendations here as links to continue that conversation.

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discussion-topic, library

@Frijol
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Frijol commented Jul 30, 2019

@RangerMauve already shared a post along a similar line, cross-linking!

@RangerMauve
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I'm also going to be adding in recommendations from people responding to my post on Twitter and SSB at %ZHGN7B3XnQnSiBOmRmCOSpNZeEvmkPp+YlgkjvFJYCQ=.sha256

Sadly I totally forgot to take a picture of the list that @Frijol started in the Dome. 😿

@Frijol
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Frijol commented Jul 30, 2019

Kelsey's (absurdly long) book list

Books

I've read this & can personally recommend it

  • Seeing Like a State – about centralized ways of seeing, the difference between things that look orderly when viewed from above/legibility as a means of control and taxation, vs. messy-looking processes that may not be or seem efficient but are collaborative and participatory. I'm not doing it a lot of justice in this summary but hope to write a blog post on it sometime soonish.
  • Compendium for the Civic Economy – a set of examples of places, mostly in the UK, that have undertaken collaborative and initiative-driven civic participation. Good for flipping through and getting inspired about local work you could do.
  • The Singularity is Near (Kurzweil) – There's a lot here and I don't recommend the whole book, but it talks about the inherent fragility of born-digital data, the pace of technological change, and the ethical questions that may be relevant in a potential transhumanist future
  • Radicalized – a fiction anthology of Cory Doctorow short stories showcasing ways in which the system as it is can radicalize good and reasonable people out of perverse rulemaking. The first story, primarily around the ethics & incentives of digital locks, seems to be a riff on the ideas in Doctorow's book Information Doesn't Want to be Free (aimed at content creators), which I'm currently reading, which I also recommend.
  • Walkaway, another Cory Doctorow novel that builds a world I want to live in
  • Manufacturing Consent (Chomsky) is a solid example of some of the ways things go wrong when power is centralized. If you don't want to read the whole book, the point is pretty well made in the introduction.
  • Reinventing Organizations (Laloux) – full of really great use cases of communities and companies that organize for greater individual empowerment and less centralized control
  • Emergent Strategy – adrienne maree brown is an organizer/activist who writes & speaks powerfully also on the theme of decentralized power structures, thinking outside existing systems, and ways of being that open pathways to personal growth
  • The Problem with Work (Weeks) – this book is so good it makes me want to go to grad school and study this: a history of work and labor and what's wrong with the way these things are handled in modern society and ways that system has been challenged
  • Obfuscation: A User's Guide for Privacy and Protest (Brunton & Nissenbaum) – half academic historical examples of obfuscation techniques, half pragmatic
  • Better Work Together out of Enspiral (some crossover with SSB) is one of the best books I've read this year. It ranges from philosophical to pragmatic on the subject of doing work that matters with the majority of your resources (time, energy, etc).
  • Raising the Floor (Stern) is a labor organizer's journey into fixing economics, landing on universal basic income– though in case you're not into that, he also gives some good detail around other proposed solutions to our dying economic paradigm
  • Octavia Butler's various imaginaries around possible futures and ways of being, in particular Parable of the Sower
  • Labyrinths (Borges) and especially Pierre Menard, Author of the Quixote

There are probably a lot more novels not currently coming to mind. I'll add them if I think of them; imaginaries are crucial to the building of a new world.

I want to read this

Blog posts

I've read this & can personally recommend it

I want to read this

@cinnamon-bun
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The Data Together group has a reading list

Covers topics like Knowledge Commons, Civics, Alternatives to Capitalist Structures, Stewardship

@cinnamon-bun
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Oh, @Frijol is part of the Data Together group! :)

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