I'm currently reading my way through a book called "Debt: The First 5,000 Years". It's an interesting read so far. The author has some axes to grind and there is a bit of ivory tower feeling to some parts of it, but area it succeeds hugely in is reframing the entire (western) concept of debt and what exactly it means in terms of human relationships. It's a big idea to wrap one's head around, and I'm still reading through it and processing the ideas. Today I also worked on collage art. I picked several books from my bookshelf that I'll probably never actually read, and started the process of decomposing them down to raw material. I usually start by cutting all the pages away from the spine, so that it's just a bunch of loose paper. Then I go through page by page with an exacto knife and try to separate any paragraphs or images without cutting *through* anything on the page. This is tricky because I don't want to cut through anything on either side of the page. Separating things out like this decontextualizes it, so when I go through the paragraphs later I'm just reading snippets of text and I don't get caught up in the story. The next step is a continual one, reading through the paragraphs and slicing out any sentences or words that stand out. Finally, I'm left with a lot of "swiss cheese" pieces of paper that contain a bunch of really boring sentences. I haven't decided how to use these yet, but I think they would be cool layered on top of each other as a background or something. Here's an example of a collage poem+song I did recently for WINDOWSNINETYFIVESECONDEDITION: https://www.extropicstudios.com/psyche/ceo.html