The freedom of the migrant
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First Sentence
"Although it goes against my usual practice and steers us away from the subject of heimat and its loss, I would nonetheless like to tell the reader about my own loss of heimat."
136 pages
~2h 16min to read
Description
Vilem Flusser was one of the most fascinating and original European thinkers of the late twentieth century. In this collection of his essays on emigration, nationalism, and information theory, he raises questions about the viability of ideas of national identity in a world whose borders are becoming increasingly arbitrary and permeable. Flusser argues that modern societies are in flux, with traditional linear and textual epistemologies being challenged by global circulatory networks and a growth in visual stimulation. Beyond globalization, Flusser's ideas about communication and identity are rooted in the Judeo-Christian concept of self-determination and self-realization through recognition of the other.
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