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This brilliant, brutally honest account of an exhausted mother is one of the finest novels this year
This brilliant, brutally honest account of an exhausted mother is one of the finest novels this year
Tell me, men: when were you last split open from the inside?” asks the narrator of Claire Kilroy’s brilliant, angry, arresting new novel. She wants to know why her husband — slumped in front of Blade Runner, beer in hand — is more moved by the film’s closing speech about man’s mortality than he ever is by his exhausted wife and distressed baby. How is it that he can see something “noble” and “epic” in this very male cinematic moment while failing to recognise her “ennobling truth”, that she risked death to give life to their child?
This brilliant, brutally honest account of an exhausted mother is one of the finest novels this year
Clancy Martin’s Writerly Repetitions
Clancy Martin’s Writerly Repetitions
In “How Not to Kill Yourself,” a memoir on suicide, the author returns to the obsessions and self-obliterations that have recurred in his fiction and essays.
Clancy Martin’s Writerly Repetitions
The big idea: why colour is in the eye of the beholder
The big idea: why colour is in the eye of the beholder
We might think the sky is blue and trees are green, but the truth is rather stranger
Different wavelengths of light do exist independently of us but they only become colours inside our bodies. Colour is ultimately a neurological process whereby photons are detected by light-sensitive cells in our eyes, transformed into electrical signals and sent to our brain, where, in a series of complex calculations, our visual cortex converts them into “colour”.Most experts now agree that colour, as commonly understood, doesn’t inhabit the physical world at all but exists in the eyes or minds of its beholders. They argue that if a tree fell in a forest and no one was there to see it, its leaves would be colourless – and so would everything else. To put it another way: there is no such thing as colour; there are only the people who perceive it.This is why no two people will ever see exactly the same colours. Every person’s visual system is unique and so, therefore, are their perceptions.
The big idea: why colour is in the eye of the beholder
Nan Shepherd delved into a queer erotic kinship with nature | Psyche Ideas
Nan Shepherd delved into a queer erotic kinship with nature | Psyche Ideas
In the Highlands, Nan Shepherd found an erotic kinship with nature: ‘The Living Mountain’ a core text for queer ecology
Queer ecology asks us to embrace the porous, to eliminate boundaries between self and nature, and to celebrate a diversity within our landscapes that can help us grow collectively and harmoniously. In this new relationship with nature, one embodied in pleasure, queer power, joy, kinship, one can find an intimacy that is erotic, generative and inclusive. It’s what Donna Haraway was alluding to, when she wrote in When Species Meet (2008): ‘To be in love means to be worldly, to be in connection with significant otherness and signifying others, on many scales, in layers of locals and globals, in ramifying webs.’ Or what Mortimer-Sandilands and Bruce Erickson, in their introduction to Queer Ecologies (2010), refer to as being ‘disruptive’ of heteronormative approaches.
Nan Shepherd delved into a queer erotic kinship with nature | Psyche Ideas
Column | Lawaaistad
Column | Lawaaistad
Deckwitz on noise and the friend who wants her to listen to their Cannibal Corpse record.
Column | Lawaaistad
The long history of protesting with pots and pans
The long history of protesting with pots and pans
Banging saucepans in France is thought to hark back to a middle ages ritual in which villagers would seek to humiliate an ill-matched marriage – generally a widower to a much younger bride – with a concert of saucepans, or “casseroles” as they are known.
The long history of protesting with pots and pans
K. was te gevaarlijk voor opname, dus lieten ze hem gaan
K. was te gevaarlijk voor opname, dus lieten ze hem gaan
How conservative political parties (CDA/VVD) teamed up with the Dutch labour party (PVDA) and destroyed mental health care in the Netherlands while in governement. (nrc — in Dutch)
Nog drastischer waren de zorghervormingen van het tweede kabinet-Rutte (VVD en PvdA). Zorg moest decentraal geregeld worden. Gemeentes werden tien jaar geleden verantwoordelijk en moesten het zo organiseren dat minder mensen in de dure opvang terecht zouden komen, en meer mensen thuis – ‘ambulant’ in jargon – zouden worden behandeld. Dit bleek een verkapte bezuiniging. Veel opvangplekken, niet alleen voor verwarde personen maar ook voor andere mensen met complexe stoornissen, werden gesloten. Mulder: „Normaal gesproken waren het communicerende vaten geweest. Minder geld naar de bedden, meer geld naar de ambulantisering. Maar zo is het niet gegaan. Er is afbouw geweest van bedden, maar geen opbouw van extra ambulantisering. Er is gewoon geen beleid op gevoerd.” Het huidige kabinet legt de verantwoordelijkheid voor het aantal opvangplekken volledig bij de markt. Minister Helder (VVD, Langdurige Zorg) schreef in een Kamerbrief: „Het is de rol van de verzekeraars om er zorg voor te dragen dat zij voldoende zorg inkopen.”
K. was te gevaarlijk voor opname, dus lieten ze hem gaan
Grief, hallucinations and exhumed violins: the astonishing music of Richard Skelton
Grief, hallucinations and exhumed violins: the astonishing music of Richard Skelton
He’s self-released more than 60 searing albums – some with only a single copy – made with instruments including his late wife’s jewellery. On a drive through northern moorlands, he explains his singular sonic world
there’s talk of joining an intentional community, buying some land in Richardson’s native Canada, or finding a practice-based postdoctoral research role – he’s just completed a PhD about magico-religious practices in north-west England during the last ice age.
Grief, hallucinations and exhumed violins: the astonishing music of Richard Skelton
How Deborah Levy can change your life
How Deborah Levy can change your life
The long read: From her shimmering novels to her ‘living autobiographies’, Deborah Levy’s work inspires a devotion few literary authors ever ac
She is taking French lessons, though presently her literary enthusiasms outstrip her linguistic ability. “I say, ‘Shall we translate this poem of Apollinaire together?’ and my teacher says, ‘I think today, Deborah, we will try to master être and avoir.’”
How Deborah Levy can change your life
Serial returners
Serial returners
What damage is being done – to the planet and to retailers – by their boomerang shopping habits?
“You wouldn’t even be waiting on the return money because you never paid for it in the first place.”
Serial returners
Jack Grealish, Manchester City’s coolest kid, teaches Liverpool a lesson | Barney Ronay
Jack Grealish, Manchester City’s coolest kid, teaches Liverpool a lesson | Barney Ronay
did you say : Before kick-off the stadium PA had played a gabba-speed remix of Love Will Tear Us Apart, while the City mascots Moonchester and Moonbeam did modern dance-style interpretative moves in front of a sign saying Abu Dhabi Find Your Pace. No doubt this was Ian Curtis’s distant dream when he bared his bleeding soul to the world.
Before kick-off the stadium PA had played a gabba-speed remix of Love Will Tear Us Apart, while the City mascots Moonchester and Moonbeam did modern dance-style interpretative moves in front of a sign saying Abu Dhabi Find Your Pace. No doubt this was Ian Curtis’s distant dream when he bared his bleeding soul to the world.
Jack Grealish, Manchester City’s coolest kid, teaches Liverpool a lesson | Barney Ronay