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V. ValeKirja-arvosteluja

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For those not in the know, RE/Search was part of the underground publishing movement of the 70s through 90s, in which small independent publishers - many of them run out of homes and apartments - contributed greatly to the print counterculture of the end of the 20th century.

The books published by RE/Search exhibited the kind of layout and format popular in the zine movement, populated by fringe artists eager to share their visions and passions not fit for mainstream commercialism. Issue 8/9, dedicated to cult icon author J.G. Ballard, has the feel of the thick, photo-copied fanzines of the time period, assembling previous interviews and eclectic materials both from and by the publication's focus.

Chock full of materials that were potentially invaluable to a pre-internet audience, the book is divided into four main sections: Interviews with the author, works by the author both Fiction and Non-Fiction, then a final autobiographical and bibliographical wrap-up.

For me, the interviews with Ballard were the most insightful and interesting, witnessing intelligent people musing about the future implications of mass media from the very future they are positing. Ballard's ruminations of the advancement of media technology is especially gripping, as in some ways he seems to predict the YouTube culture and the increased ability of the average individual to not only actively create their own reality, but to broadcast it as reality to others.

My least favorite part would be the biographical section, but this has more to do with my own lack of interest in author histories than Ballard's own life story.

Overall, an interesting read about Ballard, but probably more interesting as a snapshot of the history of counterculture publishing as a whole.
 
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smichaelwilson | 1 muu arvostelu | Aug 28, 2023 |
 
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bloftin2 | 2 muuta kirja-arvostelua | May 4, 2023 |
Can't review this book because the bell hooks (and Lydia Lunch, less so) interview motivated me in the same way as all the David Foster Wallace I've read did, not to be ironic, flippant, not to operate on default mechanisms of distrust, fear, and meanness, not to be afraid of loneliness, not to perpetuate hurt, and then talking about it I get very serious and humorless, and I can't be any of those things on the internet without also being self-editing. The internet is the exact place to be ironic and flippant and being otherwise feels downright unnatural. So allow me to sum up: good book! Well curated and edited. As a nascent feminist, still overcautious about most things, some of these women scare the living shit out of me but like I said, some of these interviews really cut to the quick, not just about sexism, but about failures in human relationships in general. I didn't like this at first because it lacked a sense of humor but it is okay to assert, without a wink to the audience, that some things deserve to be taken seriously.
 
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uncleflannery | 2 muuta kirja-arvostelua | May 16, 2020 |
"'Anyone who's vaguely dissatisfied will finally have a way to express themselves!' I sincerely doubt the computer scientists or the people at Xerox were thinking about this- but it's too late now!"

great interviews fun formatting a million rabbit holes for people who like books
 
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uncleflannery | May 16, 2020 |
 
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bibliosk8er | 2 muuta kirja-arvostelua | Aug 16, 2018 |
Worth it just for the Billy Childish and Lawrence Ferlinghetti interviews.
 
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RodV | 2 muuta kirja-arvostelua | Feb 18, 2012 |
This was an influential publication in a pre-internet era where finding anything about these people was difficult. Vale bridged the gap from punk to beat writers and performance artists by working at City Lights Bookstore handling mailorder catalogs.

Gysin was obscure and relatively unknown, and even Burroughs was pretty off the radar for most people. And Throbbing Gristle was dissolving and barely even heard of, but also notorious for their last live performance in San Francisco.

I think this was where Re/Search made the leap to paperback books, evolved from being a newsprint paper 'for the first issues. While Vale was deeply in the SF punk scene he also helped broaden horizions in the first issues by turning me on to Fela, James Blood Ulmer and a broad spectrum of stuff that was beyond the idea of calling it a post-punk zine.

The rest of the Re/Search series was equally relevant. I'd argue that this book and Vale helped promote all of these artists to the point where they became legendary cult figures, as they deserved to be. This is the foundation of the publishing and info distribution network Vale created that promoted the idea of an evolving industrial culture - the blend of some essence of punk, post-punk, performance art, world music and paying respects to the influences that Burroughs and Gysin had in creating Dream Machines and tape cutups and editing.

Burroughs was really barely known beyond people already into the beats. Naked Lunch was considered unreadable by anyone I knew.

Throbbing Gristle was surprisingly more complicated in intent and influences than met the eye and this exposed a history with connections to mail art, Fluxus, performance art and some pretty disgusting performance things pushing boundaries sexually and psychologically. They're the bridge from Burroughs, who was sparked with audio edit experiments by Gysin, and TG took some of the ideas and ran with it.

The posthumous backstory on TG here laid them out as the godfathers of industrial music, putting it in a Dadaistic and art context that made these guys heroes to many people looking to explore the fringes of culture and art via the boundary pushing areas these people covered.
2 ääni
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malium | Jan 17, 2011 |
notable for an interview with Jeff Rosenbaum
 
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tredara | Mar 7, 2010 |
A compilation of Ballard's zine-type artwork and some short stories, along with many interviews and essays with JGB as the subject. These are accompanied by Ballardian photographs (rusting rocket boosters, drained swimming pools), and other cool bits and pieces such as an enumeration of the books on Ballard's shelf at home.
 
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sbszine | 1 muu arvostelu | Jun 10, 2009 |
I used to have loads of film books - I've cut back prior to moving house, but some I couldn't bring myself to part with and this is one. It's not a great book, but there are some seriously wacky films in here.½
 
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brianclegg | 5 muuta kirja-arvostelua | May 20, 2009 |
THE Bible for fans of cult movies. Great interviews and articles. My copy has survived countless readings and I still anticipate Vol2.
 
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gizzmose10 | 5 muuta kirja-arvostelua | Mar 5, 2009 |
Collection of reviews/interviews about random exploitation films of the '50's, '60's, and '70's. Movies dealing with gore, sadism, and drug use are highlighted.
 
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ChicGeekGirl21 | 5 muuta kirja-arvostelua | Jan 4, 2009 |
Looks like a big fancy fanzine. Some well-knowns mixed in with some fringe characters. An enjoyable read for the fierce feminist types like me.
 
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ohjanet | 2 muuta kirja-arvostelua | Apr 17, 2008 |
This book explores the world of B-movie, exploitation, horror, and genre films through interviews with directors, actors, and producers; articles on film genres; and essays on individual films. The entire book is nicely illustrated with film stills and movie posters.

The interview section is by far the strongest part of the book, particularly the interviews with Larry Cohen, Frank Henenlotter, Herschell Gordon Lewis and Russ Meyer.

Full review here:
http://spacebeer.blogspot.com/2007/09/incredibly-strange-films.html½
 
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kristykay22 | 5 muuta kirja-arvostelua | Sep 30, 2007 |
Perhaps THE definitive, though slightly out of date, anthropological reference on the modern body modification movement, I particularly like Wes Christensen's essay on the Ancient Maya and Hanky Panky's contibution on Tattoo History and Anthropology. An excellent work for all levels of curiosity!
1 ääni
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Sigistrix | Jan 21, 2007 |
Life changing. From the front cover to the back page, this book will rock you - although it seems like a message from distant history. One of the worst things about the Bush II administration is not having Kathy Acker around to tear it down by the roots.
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deliriumslibrarian | 2 muuta kirja-arvostelua | Apr 22, 2006 |
Oral history interview collection about pranks. Features interviews with various counter cultural figures. They describe mostly twentieth century events, mostly personal experience. Very funny; the edition is an oversized paperback with colorful wraps and numerous illustrations.
 
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laslo_h | Oct 29, 2006 |
Re/Search Publications (1985), 211 pages
 
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vorce | 5 muuta kirja-arvostelua | Jul 17, 2010 |