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Kenneth Goldsmith

    CLO Leadership Styles & Participation in Strategic Learning Decisions
    Wasting time on the Internet
    I'll Be Your Mirror
    Duchamp Is My Lawyer
    Kenneth Goldsmith
    Uncreative writing
    • 2023

      The book juxtaposes Kenneth Goldsmith's artworks with the original text of Wittgenstein's Tractatus, creating a dialogue between visual art and philosophical ideas. This unique pairing invites readers to explore the intersections of language and meaning, encouraging a deeper understanding of both the artworks and the philosophical concepts presented in Wittgenstein's work. The combination of visual and textual elements offers a fresh perspective on the complexities of communication and interpretation.

      I Declare A Permanent State of Happiness, Second Edition
    • 2020

      Duchamp Is My Lawyer

      • 328 Seiten
      • 12 Lesestunden
      4,3(8)Abgeben

      In 1996, Kenneth Goldsmith created UbuWeb to post hard-to-find works of concrete poetry. It grew into an essential archive of twentieth- and twenty- first-century avant-garde and experimental literature, film, and music. In Duchamp Is My Lawyer, Goldsmith tells the history of UbuWeb, explaining the motivations behind its creation.

      Duchamp Is My Lawyer
    • 2016

      Wasting time on the Internet

      • 247 Seiten
      • 9 Lesestunden
      3,6(439)Abgeben

      Using clear, accessible prose, conceptual artist and poet Kenneth Goldsmith’s manifesto redefines our internet experiences as productive and creative, situating them within a theoretical and philosophical framework. Goldsmith encourages a rethinking of the internet, challenging the guilt many feel after spending hours online. He argues that, unlike traditional media, the internet fosters active engagement, enhancing our social interactions, creativity, and productivity. His course at the University of Pennsylvania, titled “Wasting Time on the Internet,” garnered significant media attention, with major outlets expressing shock and curiosity about his ideas. Goldsmith’s insights resonate because they are subversive and shareable. He expands on the notion that our digital lives are reshaping human experiences; what seems like “wasting time” actually cultivates collaboration and transforms how we read and write. The internet challenges traditional concepts of authority and authenticity, placing us in a unique state of focus and flow conducive to creativity. Goldsmith suggests that this creative potential will shape narratives of the twenty-first century. Engaging, counterintuitive, and unpredictable—much like the internet itself—this manifesto offers a fresh perspective on our digital lives.

      Wasting time on the Internet
    • 2013

      What are the words we use to describe something that we never thought we'd have to describe? In Seven American Deaths and Disasters, Kenneth Goldsmith transcribes historic radio and television reports of national tragedies as they unfurl, revealing an extraordinarily rich linguistic panorama of passionate description. Taking its title from the series of Andy Warhol paintings by the same name, Goldsmith recasts the mundane as the iconic, creating a series of prose poems that encapsulate seven pivotal moments in recent American history: the John F. Kennedy, Robert F. Kennedy, and John Lennon assassinations, the space shuttle Challenger disaster, the Columbine shootings, 9/11, and the death of Michael Jackson. While we've become accustomed to watching endless reruns of these tragic spectacles-often to the point of cliche-once rendered in text, they become unfamiliar, and revealing new dimensions emerge. Impartial reportage is revealed to be laced with subjectivity, bias, mystery, second-guessing, and, in many cases, white-knuckled fear. Part nostalgia, part myth, these words render pivotal moments in American history through the communal lens of media.

      Seven American Deaths and Disasters
    • 2012

      This book provides a comprehensive guide to all three volumes of Karl Marx's 'Capital', with advice on further reading and points for further discussion

      A Guide to Marx's 'Capital' Vols I-III
    • 2011

      CLO Leadership Styles & Participation in Strategic Learning Decisions

      Chief Learning Officers as emerging C-Level Executives

      • 204 Seiten
      • 8 Lesestunden

      The book investigates the emerging role of Chief Learning Officers (CLOs) within organizations and their impact on strategic learning decisions. Through a quantitative study involving U.S. learning executives, it examines the correlation between CLO leadership styles—specifically transactional and laissez-faire—and their involvement in decision-making processes. The findings highlight a significant relationship between leadership approaches and strategic participation, underscoring the importance of CLOs in fostering organizational success in a knowledge-driven landscape.

      CLO Leadership Styles & Participation in Strategic Learning Decisions
    • 2011

      In einem Brief an Bettina Funcke, Leiterin der Publikationsabteilung der dOCUMENTA (13), verwebt der in New York lebende Dichter Kenneth Goldsmith (geb 1961) verschiedene Stränge seiner künstlerischen Tätigkeit zum Gesamtbild seines Schaffens. Am Anfang steht dabei das von ihm 1996 gegründete Online- Archiv UbuWeb: eine nichtkommerzielle Plattform, auf der er sonst meist schwer zugängliches Material aus allen Bereichen der avantgardistischen künstlerischen Produktion (u. a. Dichtung, Film, Video und Sound) zur Verfügung stellt. Die Beschreibungen seiner Arbeit an UbuWeb sowie als Autor (der bereits existierende Text abtippt), als Moderator einer wöchentlichen Radiosendung (der Musiklisten anderer DJs und Texte von Bloggern abliest) und als Professor für englische Literatur (der unkreatives Schreiben unterrichtet) verdichten sich im Zusammenspiel mit theoretischen und poetischen Einschüben zu einer komplexen Reflexion über Dichtung unter dem Einfluss der Appropriation.

      Kenneth Goldsmith
    • 2011

      In einer Welt, in der jeder Text überall und sofort verfügbar ist, geht es immer weniger um das Schaffen von Neuem als den Umgang mit vorhandenem Text. Kenneth Goldsmith fordert daher, die Möglichkeiten des Internets ernst zu nehmen, die unser Schreib- und Leseverhalten radikal verändern. Inspiration und Expression gehören der Vergangenheit an. Goldsmith fordert das Plagiat und bewusste Unkreativität als radikale Strategien zur Erweiterung der Literatur, die sich seit den Experimenten der klassischen Moderne nicht mehr weiterbewegt hat. Im Gegensatz zum Kulturpessimismus, der Internet und Digitalisierung als Gefahr für die Literatur sieht, heißt er die digitale Welt enthusiastisch willkommen. Kopieren, Programmieren, Automatisieren sind die neuen literarischen Werkzeuge, ihre Genres heißen Plagiat, Remix, Appropriation. Sein epochemachendes Buch, das die erste ernst zu nehmende Poetik seit 50 Jahren ist, wird hier zum ersten Mal auf Deutsch veröffentlicht, ergänzt um ein neues, für die deutsche Ausgabe geschriebenes Kapitel.

      Uncreative writing
    • 2010

      'Retyping On the Road is not only a remarkable performance – of endurance, concentration, and apprenticeship – it is also a deadpan experiment in textual literary criticism. Kerouac's original typescript was oriented toward the writer. Morris' practice collapses reader and writer, reorienting Kerouac's typescript to the digital, discontinuous unit of the published codex page. In doing so, Morris both inverts Kerouac's style of production – pecking slowly and methodically where his predecessor sped along at a reputed one-hundred-words-per-benzedrine-fuelled-minute – and he simultaneously fulfils its legend. A constrained and unexpressive homage to the era that heralded unconstrained and improvisatory expressionism, Getting Inside Jack Kerouac's Head showcases the critical power of the extended techniques of conceptually rigorous 'uncreative writing.' In the process it reclaims Truman Capote's Parthian shot as a point of pride: 'it isn't writing at all – it's typing.' And type – as Kerouac used the word in On the Road – is all about genre.' (Professor Craig Dworkin, University of Utah)

      Getting Inside Jack Kerouac's Head
    • 2004

      I'll Be Your Mirror

      • 320 Seiten
      • 12 Lesestunden
      3,9(315)Abgeben

      The Question-and-Answer interview was one of Andy Warhol's favorite communication vehicles, so much so that he named his own magazine after the form. Yet, never before has anyone published a collection of interviews that Warhol himself gave. I'll Be Your Mirror contains more then thirty conversations revealing this unique and important artist. Each piece presents a different facet of the Sphinx-like Warhol's ever-evolving personality. Writer Kenneth Goldsmith provides context and provenance for each selection. Beginning in 1962 with a notorious interview in which Warhol literally begs the interviewer to put words into his mouth, the book covers Warhol's most important artistic period during the '60s. As Warhol shifts to filmmaking in the '70s, this collection explores his emergence as socialite, scene-maker, and trendsetter; his influential Interview magazine; and the Studio 54 scene. In the 80s, his support of young artists like Jean-Michel Basquait, his perspective on art history and the growing relationship to technology in his work are shown. Finally, his return to religious imagery and spirituality are available in an interview conducted just months before his death. Including photographs and previous unpublished interviews, this collage of Warhol showcases the artist's ability to manipulate, captivate, and enrich American culture.

      I'll Be Your Mirror