Reviews

The Wretched of the Screen by Franco "Bifo" Berardi, Hito Steyerl

jdschuster's review against another edition

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adventurous challenging informative inspiring mysterious reflective medium-paced

4.0

chillcox15's review against another edition

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5.0

One of those books you read and are like "oh, yeah, I get all this, this is all just, like, part of the discourse" and then you are like "wait, is this book one of the main reasons this is part of the discourse?" An essential essay collection on visual culture in the digital age.

noitsjustnate's review against another edition

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5.0

Like several other comments have stated, “In Defense of the Poor Image” and “The Spam of Earth” are the definitive takeaways. I’ll be reflecting on this collection of essays for a long time. As a reader relatively new to philosophies surrounding images previous readings in the realm of architecture theory were very complimentary, namely phenomenologists like juhani Pollasmaa and other theorists like Foucault and Keller Easterling.

Steyerl’s discussion of post-production really blew my perception of architectural rendering wide open. Untapped social classes of images influence much of the discussions around the “Money-Shot” and the redundant production of conceptual drawings, diagrams and images. There’s a paternalistic approach to the communication with the client that the author really taps into; as the images communicate with us as much as an architect communicates to their employer(though the debate of architecture as a service rather than an artistic medium changes this communication greatly). Even current innovations in crypto-currencies, NFT’s, and blockchain introduce even more classes of images, more streams of communication and more “spam” for Steyerl to observe.

As a designer and artist I’ll surely have a lot to recollect on, and hope to come back to these essays again!

levi_masuli's review against another edition

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4.0

a lot to take in: horizontality, freelance work, autonomy of art, and many others

katgand's review against another edition

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challenging reflective fast-paced

3.5

At times provocative, polemical, and problematic, it made me think. Sometimes about what Hito was actually trying to say.

pearlin's review

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will try again when my brain works better
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