Y’all are the only instance making a honest effort to support Palestine. This is something i deeply appreciate. If y’all wanted to recommend reading to teach me about communism. I would appreciate that as well.

  • ReadFanon [any, any]@hexbear.net
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    1 year ago

    The effective blackout on communism is real. If it’s any consolation, we have books on communism here but they’re mostly written by anti-communist libs who go in hard on the anti-Stalin/anti-Mao paradigm which honestly isn’t much better.

    It’s very often the case that no information is better than bad information.

    My issue is, my ADHD makes reading non-physical copies practically impossible, so I need to get my hands on the book.

    I have ADHD as well so I can relate.

    Unsolicited advice so feel free to disregard this without a moment’s consideration and don’t feel obligated to reply but…

    Have you ever tried an e-reader? They are pretty close to being like print media with some added benefits - you never lose your page, highlighting and searching text is easy, and they’re very portable. The amount of ebooks that Zlib and Anna’s Archive offer are staggering.

    Or, if you aren’t certain about an e-reader or money is a barrier, you could try getting your hands on an old phone and deleting almost every app from it and running it as a pseudo e-reader if the problem is impulse control and the constant distractions from using a typical phone.

    Honestly, I’d just like one which is preferably long and deals with many topics, but also isn’t dated linguistically, and is generally enjoyable to read

    Oof. I’m not the right person to provide recommendations based on your request - micro-history is my jam and I tend to do deep dives on historical sources so that’s the complete opposite of your reading style.

    Maybe Blackshirts and Reds by Parenti is a good place to start? That covers a lot of ground, it’s an easy read, and it doesn’t use dated language.

      • ReadFanon [any, any]@hexbear.net
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        1 year ago

        No worries!

        I think if I was going to read manga digitally I’d be reaching for a tablet to do so because they can display colour and the screens are generally a lot bigger and can handle zooming if needed. Apparently the subreddit r/MangaPiracy has some good links but I haven’t looked into it because I’m not into manga. Obviously you can run a tablet as an e-reader too and the added screen size might be a benefit here.

        I get what you mean about screen size being small.

        I prefer larger text myself and that’s actually why I prefer e-readers (aside from the perks of piracy of course) because you are virtually unlimited in how large you can make the font size; since the screen is effectively limitless, you can either infinite-scroll as you read line by line or you can just tap ahead to the next page as needed.

        Obviously different devices meet different needs.

        If I was looking at reading PDFs and .cbz sorts of files, a tablet is absolutely the way to go.

        If I wanted large print size then a phone is good and an e-reader is better but you’re limited to epub and mobi files (PDFs are possible on a phone but it’s generally a bit hard going to read an entire PDF of a book on a phone.)

        If you want an all-arounder then you can’t go past a tablet though.

        One of the dirty secrets of the tech industry is that tablets and e-readers really don’t need to be released on a schedule like iPhones do. If it’s just for displaying text or PDFs then you can grab last season’s model on clearance, a second hand device, or a brand new low-end device and it’ll work just fine for your purposes.

        (I’d steer clear of Kindles tbh. They run surprisingly buggy software that struggles with producing text and you have to go through workarounds if you sideload most of your books so it’s much better to get something like a Kobo tbh.)

      • redtea
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        1 year ago

        Books have got so expensive in the last couple of years.

        If you want something physical to read in between being able to buy books, you could:

        • get a PDF of the book the you’re planning to buy
        • look at the references
        • see what books in the bibliography/footnotes are available in the library.

        Marxists often start their research by looking at bourgeois works. There’s little danger in borrowing a books by e.g. Smith, Ricardo, Bentham, Mill. These are dated examples, and can be more difficult than reading Marx, but it’s just to illustrate the idea.

        Michael Hudson’s Marxist mentor, for example, told Hudson that he would mentor him if he read every source cited in Marx’s Theories of Surplus Value. (Maybe I’ve got the details slightly mixed up, but that’s the gist of how Hudson became such s good political economist.)

        If you look at Parenti’s sources, he also frequently cites (more recent) bourgeois authors. It won’t hurt to read the kinds of texts that Marxists are engaging with. These might be in your library?

        FA Hayek will give you a good insight into how neoliberals think, for example. I don’t think you’ll raise any eyebrows by borrowing that kind of book (except your own eyebrows).

        Good on you for returning shit books! When I browse PDFs of books that I want to buy, I search for a few key terms. Stalin. Stalinism. Lenin. Marx. Engels. If the work claims to be radical but doesn’t mention any of them, I’m skeptical.

        If it claims to be Marxist and includes 20 uses of ‘Stalinism’, all in a negative light, it’s going to wind me up. Plenty of mistakes were made in the USSR under Stalin, sure, but if a ‘Marxist’ can lump all these together under ‘Stalinism’, they lose a lot of my respect. It just tells me they’ve got a big box of themes/issues that they don’t want to think about too closely. So instead of thinking, they fill up the Stalinism box, close the lid, and pretend they made an argument.

        Actually, thinking about it, a decent book about thinking is Daniel Dennett, Intuition Pumps and other Tools for Thinking. The chapters are short. I can’t remember if it’s anti-communist because I read it before I was a Marxist. That said, if it is anti-communist, that can probably be overlooked because there’s still a lot of value in what he says. He’s a bourgeois popular philosopher, so his book might be in your library. Or they might get a copy in for you.

        Dennett says, for example, that if an author uses ‘surely XYZ’ or ‘arguably XYZ’, it’s because they haven’t argued XYZ. If they haven’t made an argument about it, there may be a strong reason to doubt XYZ but the writer wants you to stop thinking about it and move on. I’ve found that ‘Stalinism’ is used in a similar way. It’s a thought-terminating label.

        It’s not that I don’t read those books, but I won’t pay a lot for them. If you’re on a tight budget, you might want to figure out what annoys you, then you can look out for it in the PDF before you buy. You might also be surprised at how much you can learn just by skimming a PDF to see whether it’s the kind of book you want to read so much that you’re willing to buy a copy.

        There is an open source, DIY e-ink reader that should be cheaper than a branded one if you’re willing to order the parts and build it. It won’t be tied in to any store, either. I’ll find a link for you.

        Edit: here’s a link to the DIY ereader— https://lemmygrad.ml/post/2353783 or maybe !lemmygrad.ml/post/2353783 but it looks like it might still cost $85 in Euros and might not be as swish as a branded one.