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Book Cover for: The Extreme Self, Shumon Basar

The Extreme Self

Shumon Basar

A graphic-novel guide to the demented present from the authors of the bestselling The Age of Earthquakes

If you're wondering why the inside of your head feels so strange these days, this book has the answers. The Extreme Self is a new kind of graphic novel that shows how you've been morphing into something else. It's about the remaking of your interior world as the exterior world becomes more unfamiliar and uncertain. Basar, Coupland and Obrist's cult prequel, The Age of Earthquakes: A Guide to the Extreme Present, was hailed as "a meditation on the madness of our media" (Dazed) and "an abstract representation of how we feel about our digital world" (Hello!). Like that book, The Extreme Self collapses comedy and calamity at the speed of swipe. Dazzling images are sourced from over 70 of the world's foremost artists, photographers, technologists and musicians, while Daly & Lyon's kinetic design elevates the language of memes into a manifesto. Over 14 timely chapters, The Extreme Self tours through fame and intimacy, post-work and new crowds, identity crisis and eternity. Crazed, hilarious, unsettling, true. No other book today so presciently predicts how the present and the future have become the same thing. The Extreme Self is an accelerated tale for an even more accelerated culture. Welcome to the Age of You.
Cultural critic Shumon Basar (born 1974) is the author of Do You Often Confuse Love with Success and with Fame? (2012).
Canadian novelist and artist Douglas Coupland (born 1961) is the author of Girlfriend in a Coma: A Novel (2008), Life After God (1994) and Generation X: Tales for an Accelerated Culture (1991).
Swiss art curator, critic and art historian Hans Ulrich Obrist (born 1968) is the artistic director at the Serpentine Galleries in London and the author of numerous books, including Hans Ulrich Obrist: Infinite Conversations (2020), Ways of Curating (2014) and A Brief History of Curating (2008).

Book Details

  • Publisher: Walther Konig Verlag
  • Publish Date: Jul 20th, 2021
  • Pages: 256
  • Language: English
  • Edition: undefined - undefined
  • Dimensions: 7.10in - 4.40in - 0.50in - 0.45lb
  • EAN: 9783960989738
  • Categories: Internet - GeneralFuture StudiesArt & Politics

Praise for this book

Shows how the near daily conveyor belt of change we experience impacts how we feel.--Becky Anderson "CNN"
Three decades after Generation X, the authors wonder whether - after Y, Z and now C, for Covid - individuality will become obsolete.-- "The Guardian"
Teeth-achingly self-aware, with biting humour and both crazed and insightful predictions for the now and near-future. Inhale it in one compelling, uncanny sitting, and you'll have a mind-expanding understanding of our current crises.-- "Dazed.com"
A forceful reminder that we are living through a moment of extreme change. Change that is affecting everyone.--Iain Akerman "Wired"
The Extreme Self throws lists, images, questions and theses at you, in order to capture a present in which everything is different than it used to be. The self is no longer what it was.-- "Welt am Sonntag"
A probing new graphic-novel-like-book that seeks to answer the big question: who are you really in the age of the Internet?-- "The National"
Posits that the radical shifts in our reality supersede our ability to apprehend them in language.-- "ArtReview"
A work of prescient graphic literature.-- "Canvas magazine"
We connect with ourselves through screens, and it is this idea of the self [which this book says] is under threat as a consequence of our widespread digitalization-- "Arab News"
Takes on the usurp of 'real' worlds by digital realms.--Lucy McLaughlin "Metal Magazine"
The Extreme Self bares the soul of our extreme present. It is a marker of emotional intensities that reveal the discombobulated stasis of our neurally networked selves.--Dorian Batycka "Ocula"
Poses a journey of reckoning and reconciliation with our parallel digital selves.--Anna Bernice "Global Art Daily"
Readers interact with individual pages which allow associations that are sometimes cringy, not always euphoric, often even dystopically frustrating. But that's the way it is in IRL.-- "Monopol"
Tiny but packs a punch!-- "coupland.corner"
In awe of how contemporary it can be.--Adam Thirlwell
It's superb. Expresses the zeitgeist of the moment.--Jim Stoddart
As laid out in The Extreme Self, the book endures as a technology to help us see; to help us make sense of our mediatized lives in anxious times.--George Kafka "Eye on Design"