Reading List Archive

By Topic

This experiment in archive / link sharing covers from July – October 2025.

About

These are a loosely collected set of links shared by our contributors. We are evolving these & welcome your participation. We believe the act of reading & sharing information is, and has always been, a revolutionary act.

We resist big tech's:

The old-school act of reading, questioning, puzzling, integrating, reflecting and sharing articulate, transparent links to information is one of our superpowers of resistance. We cede it at our peril. It is the relational agency provided by the hyperlink in digital spaces that gives us ladders/bridges to each other and to particular writers/journalists/artists — sources that are being subsumed, consumed, erased by the AI profit machine (see: In a first-of-its-kind decision, an AI company wins a copyright infringement lawsuit brought by authors.

Marking up these content summaries for the web takes a bit of work & reading is arduous. But perhaps these times call for a bit of effort. Standing on street corners holding up signs, writing letters to the editor, having difficult conversations, visioning a better world ::: all of these things take time, energy, courage, dedication. But is easy & fast really the goal? Is ceding our search, reading, writing, conversations to an AI agent so it will take less work/thinking really the point? To read, reflect, grapple, & write roughly/"imperfectly" in our own voice is to be human. These acts are a prayer, a resistance, a persistance, a humble effort, a refusal to be subsumed, consumed, erased.

Documenting links, text, pathways through a torrent of the now is an insistance on remembering ::: making an imprint, an archive, a history. We surrender this to big tech in this age of surveillance capitalism, oligarchies, earth-destroying AI at our peril.

Is this work important in the large scale scheme of things? Perhaps not. But we continue as if it mattered to pay attention to the gifts of independent journalists, artists, writers, organizers, historians ::: to each other in this time of chaos, torrent, and incomprehensible change.

More coming soon ...