Object Lessons is a series of short, beautifully designed books about the hidden lives of ordinary things.
The electric candle and faux fur, coffee substitutes and meat analogues, Obama impersonators, prosthetics. Imitation this, false that. Humans have been replacing and improving upon the real thing for millennia from wooden toes found on Egyptian mummies to the Luxor pyramid in Las Vegas. So why do people have such disdain for so-called fakes?
Kati Stevens's Fake discusses the strange history of imitations, as well as our ever-changing psychological and socioeconomic relationships with them. After all, fakes aren't going anywhere; they seem to be going everywhere.
Object Lessons is published in partnership with an essay series in The Atlantic.
Recenzijas
Fake aims to interrogate what it is we think were getting from the real thing and what were searching for either by clamoring for real things or by accepting their imitation If you revel in the critical examination of objects around you and criticism of commonly accepted attitudes, this book will be your new friend. * Seattle Book Review * Fake is fascinating, clever, and utterly perspective-altering. Kati Stevens is the genuine article. * Emily Anthes, author of Frankensteins Cat (2013) *
Papildus informācija
Though the connotation of the fake is negative, the fact that have we been and continue to pursue the artificial version, the plastic replica, and the virtual experience so aggressively for so long suggests that it is time to rethink our relationship with so-called fakes.
1. The Start of Something Fake
2. That Which Is Fake May Never Die
3. Quorn for Lunch; Oreos for Dessert
4. What Was Never Real Can(not) Be Faked
5. Hippopotamus Teeth
6. Davids
7. Ovid and the Real Girl
8. The Start of Something Fake, Part 2
Acknowledgments
Notes
Index
Kati Stevens is a public affairs specialist based in Washington, D.C. Her writing has appeared in The Hairpin and The Billfold.