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Bob Compte verrouillé

Bob@bouquins.zbeul.fr

A rejoint ce serveur il y a 2 années, 6 mois

J'aime les livres, parfois je les déchire. Je lis moitié de la SF, moitié des livres politiques et moitié d'autres trucs. Lis et commente en anglais et français. Administrateur de l'instance.

Reading half Sci-Fi, half political books, half other things. Read and comment books in English or French. Instance admin.

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Livres de Bob

Lectures en cours (Voir les 27)

a publié une critique de Bullshit Jobs par David Graeber

David Graeber: Bullshit Jobs (Hardcover, 2018, Simon Schuster)

Bullshit Jobs: A Theory is a 2018 book by anthropologist David Graeber that argues the …

A very interesting book about work

It took me some time to enter into the Bullshit jobs book. At first, it appears as some leftist light essay. The book started when David Graeber wrote a first opinion piece about the fact that a significant percentage of the population is doing work that is useless to society and they know it. This first essay made a lot of noise, and some media made some polls : in UK, more than 35% of people say that they are doing a useless bullshit job. Based on these numbers and lot of testimonies, David Graeber wrote this book to elaborate on this concept. The first chapters appears as quite light : some definitions, some testimonies, some categories of bullshit job. Overall, I wasn't convinced : radically leftist but also pretty light theoretically, not real analysis of what is happening, no stats, everything described in a pretty broad context. But I …

Dorothy H. Crawford: Deadly companions (2009, Oxford University Press)

Ever since we started huddling together in communities, the story of human history has been …

A great introduction to microbes and pandemics

I really liked reading "Deadly companions", it was one of the first books I read about microbes and viruses and I learned a lot. The author makes a great work at explaining what we know and don't know about the history of viruses with many anecdotes, and look both at the past and challenges in the future. The only drawback I see is that doing a book that is going through history, it gets a bit disorganized when many diseases are coming back in history, and quickly get into a mix of historical and per disease narrative. It should also be noted that the book was published in 2007 and lack some recent knowledge (like of course Covid but also recent knowledge about Ebola). Still a really good book, highly recommend it!