Thursday, 6 November 2008
November meeting
The next book is Hervé Kempf's How the Rich are Destroying the Earth. See you on Wednesday the 26th of November.
Sunday, 5 October 2008
October Meeting Details
The votes have been counted and Sartre and Heidegger finished first with five votes. Second place went to The Corrosion Of Character and third to Civilization and its Discontents. Both the texts we will be reading are available free online:
Existentialism is a Humanism
Jean Paul Sartre
Letter on Humanism
Martin Heidegger
The October meeting will be on Wednesday the 29th at the usual time (6:30 for 7pm start) at the usual venue (Candid Arts Trust cafe).
Existentialism is a Humanism
Jean Paul Sartre
Letter on Humanism
Martin Heidegger
The October meeting will be on Wednesday the 29th at the usual time (6:30 for 7pm start) at the usual venue (Candid Arts Trust cafe).
September Meeting Thanks
Just a quick note of thanks to everyone who turned up for the September meeting. A spirited discussion about Edward W Said's Culture and Imperialism seemed to be enjoyed by all.
Thursday, 14 August 2008
First meeting details and mailing list
The first meeting at the Itchy Chin Club will be on Tuesday the 26th of August at the Candid Arts Trust cafe in Angel Islington. It's located on the second floor of the Candid Arts Trust studio building on Torrens Street behind Angel tube. There's sign outside the door on the street and from there you go up two flights of stairs and turn right. I plan to arrive about 6PM to grab the sofas down the back and expect people to start arriving 6:30ish and things to get going around 7PM.
The cafe does nice, veggie-friendly no frills food with mains in the £7-9 range. They only sell wine and beer with meals, but seem happy for everyone to share an open bottle.
I've also started the discussion list for deciding on the next book and making arrangements for futire meetings. If you'd like to join please send a mail with the subject subscribe to itchychinclub-request@goop.org (or to myself).
The cafe does nice, veggie-friendly no frills food with mains in the £7-9 range. They only sell wine and beer with meals, but seem happy for everyone to share an open bottle.
I've also started the discussion list for deciding on the next book and making arrangements for futire meetings. If you'd like to join please send a mail with the subject subscribe to itchychinclub-request@goop.org (or to myself).
Friday, 18 July 2008
Calling all itchy chins
Can't get enough Dan Brown? Then stop reading right now because this is definitely not the book group for you. Have an open minded general interest in non-fiction and a desire to read and discuss books on art, culture, politics, history and philosophy? Then itchy chin is a new central London based book group which would like to meet you.
It works something like this: we choose a new book to read every month and then meet up early evening mid week in a pub or cafe somewhere reasonably central to discuss. Decisions on what to read next will be collective, but in the interests of lively discussion I'd like to focus on books which are more speculative than factual and more on the side of challenging than accessible. Since works of fiction are already well served by other book groups, I expect we will predominantly stick with non-fiction though reading literary criticism along with the original work is definitely a possibility.
To get things started the first book will be Slavoj Žižek's In Defense of Lost Causes (reviewed here) and the proposed first meet up date is the 26th of August. I'll confirm the venue in the next week or two, but it will definitely be somewhere central in the WC1/EC1/N1 area. A possibly is the Candid Arts Trust in Angel N1.
We'll generally try to stick with inexpensive paperbacks, however Žižek's book has only recently been published so is only available in hardback. Fortunately it is available for a reasonable price from Amazon. Some possibilities for future books include:
Albert Einstein - The World as I See It
Bertrand Russell - History of Western Philosophy
E. H. Gombrich - Art and Illusion
Edward W. Said - Culture and Imperialism
Francis Wheen - How Mumbo Jumbo Conquered The World
Guy Debord - The Society of the Spectacle
Orlando Figes - A People's Tragedy: Russian Revolution, 1891-1924
Truman Capote - In Cold Blood
The aim is to appeal to non-expert audiences and by the nature of being in central London and the people already interested I would expect there would be a slight left leaning, but people of all backgrounds and persuasions are of course welcome. Especially people who think The Da Vinci Code is kind of mindless airport novel which rots the brains of honest, decent people and sets the paths of humanity back five millennia.
Intrigued? Send a mail to chrisf (at) goop.org and I'll add to you the list.
It works something like this: we choose a new book to read every month and then meet up early evening mid week in a pub or cafe somewhere reasonably central to discuss. Decisions on what to read next will be collective, but in the interests of lively discussion I'd like to focus on books which are more speculative than factual and more on the side of challenging than accessible. Since works of fiction are already well served by other book groups, I expect we will predominantly stick with non-fiction though reading literary criticism along with the original work is definitely a possibility.
To get things started the first book will be Slavoj Žižek's In Defense of Lost Causes (reviewed here) and the proposed first meet up date is the 26th of August. I'll confirm the venue in the next week or two, but it will definitely be somewhere central in the WC1/EC1/N1 area. A possibly is the Candid Arts Trust in Angel N1.
We'll generally try to stick with inexpensive paperbacks, however Žižek's book has only recently been published so is only available in hardback. Fortunately it is available for a reasonable price from Amazon. Some possibilities for future books include:
Albert Einstein - The World as I See It
Bertrand Russell - History of Western Philosophy
E. H. Gombrich - Art and Illusion
Edward W. Said - Culture and Imperialism
Francis Wheen - How Mumbo Jumbo Conquered The World
Guy Debord - The Society of the Spectacle
Orlando Figes - A People's Tragedy: Russian Revolution, 1891-1924
Truman Capote - In Cold Blood
The aim is to appeal to non-expert audiences and by the nature of being in central London and the people already interested I would expect there would be a slight left leaning, but people of all backgrounds and persuasions are of course welcome. Especially people who think The Da Vinci Code is kind of mindless airport novel which rots the brains of honest, decent people and sets the paths of humanity back five millennia.
Intrigued? Send a mail to chrisf (at) goop.org and I'll add to you the list.
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