11,51 €
12,79 €
-10% with code: EXTRA
Temporary Truth
Temporary Truth
11,51
12,79 €
  • We will send in 10–14 business days.
A critical, socio-political satire on the psychological underpinnings of cultural revolutions. The author parodies events in the Europe of Kafka and Dostoevsky, from the potato revolts of 1841, to the political intrigues of 1918, sourcing a wide range of classical philosophic conceptions, to deconstruct the current, international, political 'terroir.' The book, however, is not an attempt at a historically accurate account of actual events, but, rather, portrays the vicissitudes of a fantastic s…
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Temporary Truth (e-book) (used book) | Beat Waydown | bookbook.eu

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A critical, socio-political satire on the psychological underpinnings of cultural revolutions. The author parodies events in the Europe of Kafka and Dostoevsky, from the potato revolts of 1841, to the political intrigues of 1918, sourcing a wide range of classical philosophic conceptions, to deconstruct the current, international, political 'terroir.' The book, however, is not an attempt at a historically accurate account of actual events, but, rather, portrays the vicissitudes of a fantastic set of fictional characters. It manages to be quite funny, despite the serious topics of oil, religion, war, and sex. It is as if De Sade met Rousseau, Diogenes Voltaire, Heraclitus Parmenides, or Corso Koch, never mind Hannah Heidegger, over a century-old Barolo, and goes on to show that time does not change, but people do.

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A critical, socio-political satire on the psychological underpinnings of cultural revolutions. The author parodies events in the Europe of Kafka and Dostoevsky, from the potato revolts of 1841, to the political intrigues of 1918, sourcing a wide range of classical philosophic conceptions, to deconstruct the current, international, political 'terroir.' The book, however, is not an attempt at a historically accurate account of actual events, but, rather, portrays the vicissitudes of a fantastic set of fictional characters. It manages to be quite funny, despite the serious topics of oil, religion, war, and sex. It is as if De Sade met Rousseau, Diogenes Voltaire, Heraclitus Parmenides, or Corso Koch, never mind Hannah Heidegger, over a century-old Barolo, and goes on to show that time does not change, but people do.

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