sotos

Started by FreakAnimalFinland, March 04, 2010, 08:29:07 PM

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thatonekidatshows

Quote from: ariel026 on April 30, 2024, 01:19:55 AM
Quote from: thatonekidatshows on April 28, 2024, 08:43:26 AMI noticed that the very beginning of my favorite chapter, the letter, starts with "My Dear Woman" in Total Abuse and the standalone publication and "Mrs. Anderson" in Proxy. I wonder why this (or any) alterations are made to the text(s) after the fact.
Are you referring to chapters four and eight? I'm looking at those chapters in Total Abuse and Proxy and they're identical in both books (chapter four starts with "My Dear Woman" and chapter eight with "Dear Mrs. Anderson"). I haven't read the standalone Tool published in 2013 however, so I don't know if that edition is different.

You're right! Jesus, I need to remember to not post when I decide to binge drink for the night. Disregard my previous rambling, ha ha.

AiFeith

Is there no available scan of Lazy, that isn't the one from Proxy? That one is incomplete...

theotherjohn

#572
The Proxy scan or the book text itself? There's two scans of Proxy out there to my knowledge and they both seem to have all the pages complete from a quick skim through. One of the two scans which just shows a scroll of single pages has pages 87 (end of Tick) and 88 (beginning of Lazy) repeated twice, then it has the order of the pages shuffled, so it goes from page 89 to 88, then 91 to 90, then page 93 to 92 etc.

Edit: a scan of the original paperback 1999 edition is also available from archive.org. As a sidenote, there's a nifty browser extension out there that can download books from there for offline use too (if they aren't already available on the usual illicit ebook sites).

loudbugling

Have any UK readers been fortunate enough to receive their copy of Kee MacFarlane yet?

AiFeith

Quote from: theotherjohn on May 13, 2024, 02:25:40 AMThe Proxy scan or the book text itself? There's two scans of Proxy out there to my knowledge and they both seem to have all the pages complete from a quick skim through. One of the two scans which just shows a scroll of single pages has pages 87 (end of Tick) and 88 (beginning of Lazy) repeated twice, then it has the order of the pages shuffled, so it goes from page 89 to 88, then 91 to 90, then page 93 to 92 etc.

Edit: a scan of the original paperback 1999 edition is also available from archive.org. As a sidenote, there's a nifty browser extension out there that can download books from there for offline use too (if they aren't already available on the usual illicit ebook sites).

Thank you. I mananged to get the original scam from an illicit ebook site.
My problem was that, since I want to translate Lazy, the Proxy version doesn't have the correct layout that would serve as basis for the translation. Also, if I'm not mistaken it doesn't have all of the quotes that show up on the original book in alternating pages. They might be there, though, and I just can't seem to wrap my head around the new layout, I don't know.
Still, thank you very much.

AiFeith

https://aifeith.substack.com/p/notes-on-peter-sotos-language

I wrote a blog post about Sotos and his use of language, specifically his use of slurs - which tend to be highly contested in certain circles I'm unfortunate to have come across and engaged with. I understand that to most people here it doesn't seem like an issue, but my piece is also a "deconstruction" and "explanation" of Sotos' highly specific language use and how that shapes/is essential to his overall "thesis". Hope you enjoy/gain something from it.

It comes, as I explain in the "disclaimer", also from a sense of lack of appreciation of Sotos' formal mastery, which I feel like tends to be sidelined, and given less attention than his "content" and his POV on sex. Both are intrinsically, deeply connected and I get the sense that that connection is lost most of the time.

AiFeith

https://aifeith.substack.com/p/what-do-you-do

As a conceptual writer, I have also "used" Sotos' writing in my own work. This is a poem which takes every time Sotos uses a verb referring to a first person POV (which I then turned into the infinitive, in order to make it general/universal), by order that it appears on Index for the first time.
Enjoy.

Balor/SS1535

Quote from: AiFeith on May 25, 2024, 09:06:32 PMhttps://aifeith.substack.com/p/what-do-you-do

As a conceptual writer, I have also "used" Sotos' writing in my own work. This is a poem which takes every time Sotos uses a verb referring to a first person POV (which I then turned into the infinitive, in order to make it general/universal), by order that it appears on Index for the first time.
Enjoy.

This is very interesting and somewhat reminiscent of Burrough's idea that cutting up a text reveals more truths about it.  Very cool.

Theodore

Quote from: cantle on February 02, 2024, 04:56:32 PM
Quote from: rocksoff on February 02, 2024, 02:08:20 PMre the Sotos/Mason correspondence mentioned earlier, there's really nothing to it. iirc Mason asks for a replacement copy of Buyer's Market since his was confiscated by the police and there's just one letter from Sotos where he apologizes for being late to reply.

Cheers for that... Mason got busted for KP once didn't he?

Watched his interview with Bob Larson yesterday. They have fun together. For example dialogues going somewhat like: His jail time is mentioned by Bob - John The Baptist spent time behind bars too, didnt he ? - Not for going with underage. - How old was Mary when carried Jesus ?

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TqwDKmZQ3QY
"ἀθάνατοι θνητοί, θνητοὶ ἀθάνατοι, ζῶντες τὸν ἐκείνων θάνατον, τὸν δὲ ἐκείνων βίον τεθνεῶτες"

Xsforeyes

Quote from: thatonekidatshows on April 29, 2024, 09:16:23 PMI've just uploaded Kept to the folder, my friends.

You have any plans to do "Missed. Better still." at all? I greatly appreciate all you've done.

tiny_tove


not sure it was posted yet but this guy probably feels guilty for getting a stiffy listening to this.
CALIGULA031 - WERTHAM - FORESTA DI FERRO
instagram: @ANTICITIZEN
http://elettronicaradicale.bandcamp.com
telegram for updated list: https://t.me/+03nSMe2c6AFmMTk0

Balor/SS1535

#581
https://salitter.bigcartel.com/product/fun-summer-book

Proxy bootleg version with some bonus (but easily findable online) interviews  I have a copy and the quality is good.

Grimpin

I haven't listened to it yet, but I've just noticed this 90-minute, recently-released Obscura: A True Crime Podcast episode focused entirely on Sotos:

https://open.spotify.com/episode/6xb9tG4yhZcbsfdh0plsWG
https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/124-modern-de-sade-peter-sotos-feat-tapes-from-the-darkside/id1377988275?i=1000665933297

Could be potentially good/interesting if they've actually taken the effort to delve into his oeuvre at all, and don't spend the entire running time just waffling on about Pure , Buyer's Market and his 1985 arrest ("The sickest shit ever, dude!"). I'll soon find out. I seem to remember hearing a podcast covering his then-newly-released book Ingratitude - I think? - and they hadn't even read the fucking book!

KillToForget

Quote from: Grimpin on August 28, 2024, 02:43:14 PMI haven't listened to it yet, but I've just noticed this 90-minute, recently-released Obscura: A True Crime Podcast episode focused entirely on Sotos:

https://open.spotify.com/episode/6xb9tG4yhZcbsfdh0plsWG
https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/124-modern-de-sade-peter-sotos-feat-tapes-from-the-darkside/id1377988275?i=1000665933297

Could be potentially good/interesting if they've actually taken the effort to delve into his oeuvre at all, and don't spend the entire running time just waffling on about Pure , Buyer's Market and his 1985 arrest ("The sickest shit ever, dude!"). I'll soon find out. I seem to remember hearing a podcast covering his then-newly-released book Ingratitude - I think? - and they hadn't even read the fucking book!
I really don't have high hopes for it, but I'll check it out

theotherjohn

It's not too bad a listen, I checked it out a few days ago though seemingly it was first uploaded earlier in the year as a Patreon special. They readily admit to not being experts of his work and whilst they do cover the obvious topics, they seem to give Sotos a fair assessment by the end. Despite its 90 minute running time, they only really talk for 55 minutes or so as they play the entire Pompidou presentation in closing to sort of let Sotos speak for himself.