【Second Hand Market Find A Seppa】
2025-06-26 00:03:34
805 views
628 comments
The Second Hand Market Find A SeppaOriginal Futurologists, and Other News
On the Shelf

From a set of French nineteenth-century postcards depicting what we thought we’d be doing in the year 2000.
- Isn’t it time for the New York Times to abandon its senselessly decorous policy on obscenity? “America’s newspaper of record has a habit of relying on euphemism to shield its subscribers’ delicate sensibilities, as if Times readers are all wealthy dowagers prone to fainting spells at the merest suggestion that human beings have sex or excrete waste … We’re all adults here. Reading a dirty word in the newspaper won’t scandalize anyone.”
- The Victorians invented the future as we know it, insofar as it was only in the nineteenth century that we began to imagine a future that could be radically different from our present. “As new attitudes towards progress, shaped by the relationship between technology and society, started coming together … people started thinking about the future as a different place, or an undiscovered country—an idea that seems so familiar to us now that we often forget how peculiar it actually is.”
- And the Victorians invented our concept of the biography, too; it could do with some shaking up. “Biography seems remarkably consistent. There is a deep similarity between those worthy (and often fascinating) nineteenth-century volumes … and the contemporary biographies … Why hasn’t biography been as daring as the novel?”
- Peter Funch’s stunning photographs of Mount Baker re-create decades-old postcards, illustrating how the landscape has changed: “Although imperceptible, each photograph has a narrative.”
- An interview with Laure Prouvost: “I know I’m never going to fully grasp life in my art. It’s never as good as having the sun on your face. Even if you film someone with the sun on their face it feels as if you’ve lost something.”
Search
Categories
Latest Posts
Looking for Twin Peaks
2025-06-25 23:52TikTok's latest viral manicure? 'Boston University Red' nails.
2025-06-25 22:47Steve Bannon’s Obsession with Shakespeare’s Goriest Play
2025-06-25 22:45Motherhood!
2025-06-25 21:44Popular Posts
The Ovid of Loserdom
2025-06-25 23:10From the Archive: Werner Herzog’s Jungle Journals
2025-06-25 23:09How to find your IP address
2025-06-25 23:02Anthony Madrid on Jonathan Swift
2025-06-25 22:14LittleSis is Watching the One Percent
2025-06-25 21:31Featured Posts
LittleSis is Watching the One Percent
2025-06-25 23:36How to watch 'A Haunting in Venice' on Hulu
2025-06-25 23:06Only You, Dear Reader, Can Justify the Humanities
2025-06-25 22:36Blood Will Out
2025-06-25 22:04Popular Articles
Total Attention Deficit
2025-06-26 00:02Wave Phenomena: Paintings by Ara Peterson
2025-06-26 00:01Australia’s Word of the Year Is Very Different from “Post
2025-06-25 23:49Hey, Look, Everyone—It’s the Medieval Wound Man!
2025-06-25 22:49The Perishable Politician
2025-06-25 22:42Newsletter
Subscribe to our newsletter for the latest updates.
Comments (371)
Era Information Network
The Eclipsing of Steve Bannon
2025-06-25 23:46Miracle Information Network
“The Reckless Moment” Invites Noirish Paranoia into the House
2025-06-25 23:40Unique Information Network
The Electric Kool
2025-06-25 23:08Miracle Information Network
Yeats and Pound: Great Poets, Terrible Gift
2025-06-25 21:35Unobstructed Information Network
The France of No Tomorrow
2025-06-25 21:28