User Profile

Ben Sahlmueller

b3n@bookwyrm.social

Joined 1 year, 6 months ago

Reviews & Recommendations.

Currently interested in #AI #Asia #economics #Europe #Germany #psychology #philosophy #sociology #Taiwan and (always) good fiction!

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Ben Sahlmueller's books

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Annie Ernaux: Memoire de fille (French language) 4 stars

Annie Ernaux: Memoire de fille (French language) 4 stars

Masterfully crafted memories of female youth, desire and its boundaries in 20th century France

4 stars

Another great book by Ernaux, "Mémoire de fille (Girl's Memory, Erinnerungen eines Mädchens) focuses on her youth and the weeks and months around her sexual awakening. It is a powerful book, tender, self-conscious (a tricky balance act in which Ernaux proves her prowess), delicate.

I liked once more how Ernaux weaves the personal with the general and the timely. Her story describes a particular experience that is human, at the same time strongly influenced by her time, upbringing, milieu. Understanding these influences, taking a stance towards them, accepting that they can never be fully overcome seems to be a core theme in her work, and they are once more carefully carved out here.

Another core issue are the topics of female sexuality, desire, and shame - as a social expectation and personal possibility. Her book has a strong feminist message without being abstract or normative. This makes it all the …

Bertrand Russell: A History of Western Philosophy (Paperback, 1967, Touchstone) 4 stars

Bertrand Russell's 'A History of Western Philosophy': A comprehensive narrative, as lively as personal

5 stars

Bertrand Russell is broadly considered a philosophical heavyweight, strengthened by the Nobel Prize for Literature he earned partly on behest of this work. With his strong roots in mathematics and logic as well as his outspoken political stance, Russell can be considered one of the great 20th century polymaths. As such, his History was often criticized on its academic merits and praised on its character, wit, and reach. Indeed, it is these qualities on which the work still stands strong.

Russell never claimed it a work of cultural history, taken his subjectivity on the issue for granted. As such, it is a historic document that can stand for itself, other than the ups and downs of academic discourse that often fade in relevancy as quickly as they rose. The book breathes the humble self-confidence of a kind of well-read great thinker that are getting more rare in current times - …

Matthew C. Klein, Michael Pettis: Trade Wars Are Class Wars (2020, Yale University Press) 4 stars

Countering German Myths

4 stars

It was a quite impactful, revelatory book for me in the last year and I will just be able to scratch the surface here. The book addresses global trade imbalances (especially China‘s and Germany‘s trade surpluses, think "Exportweltmeister"), arguing that they weaken overall global prosperity. This critique is not new and in the past I have often put it aside as simple envy. (Klein and Pettis too are Americans.) Yet, it is their detailed analysis of German economy that really made me think me. Klein and Pettis argue that Germany’s export strength is basically a compensation for a weak internal economy due to high inequality, a policy set up that favors capital over labor, historic reasons around the Euro, and the way profits are not distributed within German society. The book is very critical about common myths of "Made in Germany", German engineering ingenuity, and general narratives of cultural or …

Ai Weiwei, Allan H. Barr: 1000 Years of Joys and Sorrows (Hardcover, 2021, Crown) 4 stars

Insightful auto-biography of a great artist!

4 stars

Ai Weiwei is a fascinating character. As an artist and activist, patriotic Chinese and critic of the CCP, a dissident and self-proclaimed hooligan he does not easily fit into existing stereotypes of artists. A classical loner painting water lilies in his garden, an industrial manager conducting his minions to draw dots, a postmodern concept-thinker philosophizing about bananas on walls - Ai is none of that.

It is exactly this complexity that makes "1000 Years of Joys and Sorrows" so fascinating. Ai starts with the story of his father - a poet and intellectual who lived and suffered through the Cultural Revolution - before turning to his own life. Studying arts in the US, he was not in China when many of his fellow students fought and died for a free China on Tiananmen Square in 1989. After coming back to China, he found a voice in the emerging micro-blogging scene, …