Andrea Juno
Forfatter af Angry Women
Om forfatteren
Image credit: https://www.discogs.com/artist/777825-Andrea-Juno
Værker af Andrea Juno
Modern Primitives : An Investigation of Contemporary Adornment & Ritual (1989) — Redaktør — 341 eksemplarer
Modern Primitives: Multiple Works 06 1 eksemplar
Excerpts from the Modern Primitives book 1 eksemplar
Modern Primitives Press Release 1 eksemplar
Modern Primitives: Multiple Works 07 1 eksemplar
Modern Primitives: Multiple Works 05 1 eksemplar
Greg Kulz 1 eksemplar
Modern Primitives: Multiple Works 04 1 eksemplar
Modern Primitives: Multiple Works 03 1 eksemplar
Untitled 01 1 eksemplar
Fakir Musafar 01 1 eksemplar
Capt. Don 1 eksemplar
Modern Primitives: Untitled 02 1 eksemplar
Exhibition 3 1 eksemplar
Exhibition 2 1 eksemplar
Exhibition 1 1 eksemplar
Research Pranks 1 eksemplar
Satte nøgleord på
Almen Viden
- Juridisk navn
- Juno, Andrea Lee
- Fødselsdato
- 1956
- Køn
- female
- Bopæl
- New York, New York, USA
Medlemmer
Anmeldelser
Lister
Måske også interessante?
Associated Authors
Statistikker
- Værker
- 25
- Medlemmer
- 1,998
- Popularitet
- #12,890
- Vurdering
- 4.0
- Anmeldelser
- 8
- ISBN
- 21
- Sprog
- 1
The books published by RE/Search exhibited the kind of layout and format popular in the zine movement, populated by fringe artists eager to share their visions and passions not fit for mainstream commercialism. Issue 8/9, dedicated to cult icon author J.G. Ballard, has the feel of the thick, photo-copied fanzines of the time period, assembling previous interviews and eclectic materials both from and by the publication's focus.
Chock full of materials that were potentially invaluable to a pre-internet audience, the book is divided into four main sections: Interviews with the author, works by the author both Fiction and Non-Fiction, then a final autobiographical and bibliographical wrap-up.
For me, the interviews with Ballard were the most insightful and interesting, witnessing intelligent people musing about the future implications of mass media from the very future they are positing. Ballard's ruminations of the advancement of media technology is especially gripping, as in some ways he seems to predict the YouTube culture and the increased ability of the average individual to not only actively create their own reality, but to broadcast it as reality to others.
My least favorite part would be the biographical section, but this has more to do with my own lack of interest in author histories than Ballard's own life story.
Overall, an interesting read about Ballard, but probably more interesting as a snapshot of the history of counterculture publishing as a whole.… (mere)