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Against the Written Word

Toward a Universal Illiteracy

ebook
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 2 weeks
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 2 weeks

If the Gutenberg Bible is the alpha, Against the Written Word is the OMEGA.

"Wielding the satiric tone of a Gen-X Jonathan Swift or leftist Andy Kaufman . . . Svenonius is an engaging companion . . . and he lands some scathing blows, as when he links internet porn to contemporary Christianity by noting that both are 'anti-intellectual, patriarchal, have an elitist or outsider self-image, and are aesthetically garish.'" —Publishers Weekly

Against the Written Word is the most important, most revolutionary book produced since the advent of the printing press; the book that will liberate readers from reading, writers from writing, and booksellers from peddling their despicable wares. This book ushers in a new era of freedom from reading and all its attendant bedfellows such as Enlightenment thinking and the mass alienation wrought by the phonetic alphabet. Against the Written Word will be a tremendous best seller and simultaneously the last book that anyone will read.

With nineteen essays ripping, shredding, tearing apart all the bugaboos that haunt humanity nowadays, Against the Written Word is a must-read for any aspiring radical or would-be gnostic who has a penchant for words, thought, clothes, intoxicants, music, art, expression, etc. The work is presented in a range of writing: essays, screenplays, lectures, sci-fi stories, and manifestos, with topics that include "the rise of incorporated man," "tourism as the neoliberal mode of military occupation," a workshop on songwriting for the purpose of suggestion and mind control, and many more.

This handsome, illustrated book will correct the paucity of thought that characterizes the modern bookstore, and will practically sell itself. It will call out from the shelf to ingratiate itself to the unsuspecting everyday book browser, who will be hooked and then hungrily consume it. Infected with a wild-eyed evangelism, they will then proliferate it amongst their friends and acquaintances. These new readers will disseminate it, and so on; soon this slim, innocuous volume will define an epoch and steer thought from here on out.

The bookseller will be surprised and pleased to find that it will be the only book they need to stock. Against the Written Word will be dominant in a manner the market has not seen since the Bible tore up best-seller lists in the Middle Ages or Mao's Little Red Book wowed the critics in Red China.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      January 2, 2023
      Svenonius (The Psychic Soviet), punk musician and 1990 winner of Sassy magazine’s Sassiest Boy in America, rages against everything from Instagram to language itself in this rangy collection of essays. His supposed mission, as presented in the book’s madcap first pages, is to convince readers to adopt a “new, unlettered life of sublime illiteracy.” Wielding the satiric tone of a Gen-X Jonathan Swift or leftist Andy Kaufman, Svenonius isn’t always clear about how seriously readers should be taking him: the transcript of a behind-the-music documentary about Frankenstein’s monster is an obvious lark, while an essay likening international tourism to military occupation reads as mostly lucid and sincere. Many of the pieces are pulled from Svenonius’s Cellophane Flag zine and adapted from public presentations he’s given at museums and festivals, and the lack of a through line binding everything together can make this feel too loose for its own good. Still, Svenonius is an engaging companion (even if he trends long-winded), and he lands some scathing blows, as when he links internet porn to contemporary Christianity by noting that both are “anti-intellectual, patriarchal, have an elitist or outsider self-image, and are aesthetically garish.” For radical readers seeking silly, left-field stimulation, this will more than suffice.

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Languages

  • English

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