I Can’t Sleep

I Can’t Sleep

About the Book

An attempt to feel and investigate the quality of time, with references to Jonathan Crary, Paul B. Preciado, Charles Baudelaire, and Walter Benjamin.
 


“This book could have been called The Contemporary Condition of Sleeping and Reading in the Heart of (and in Spite of) the Logosphere and Various Media Streams, but frankly, I Can’t Sleep sounds better, plus it’s true.”—Lionel Ruffel
 
The diaristic form of I Can't Sleep is an attempt to feel and investigate the quality of time, making reference to Jonathan Crary, Bernard Stiegler, Yves Citton, Paul B. Preciado, Charles Baudelaire, and above all Walter Benjamin. Written in a style that borrows not from classical forms of theory or prose, but operates in between fiction and nonfiction to investigate the very concept of the contemporary, I Can't Sleep uses a quite old but often renewed method—in this sense a very contemporary one—consisting of starting from one’s own personal situation.
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Sternberg Press / The Contemporary Condition Series

Contemporaneity in Embodied Data Practices
Challenging Institutionalization
The Autonomy of Art Is Ordinary
I Can’t Sleep
Whose Time Is It?
Exhibition-ism
Co-existence of Times

About the Author

Lionel Ruffel
Decorative Carat

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