The Myth-Functions of Contemporary Art and Philosophy
I doubt I'll finish this book. The first chapter on mythopoesis is excellent, especially the in-depth exploration of Deleuze and Guattari's philosophy and the discussion of neomedievalism, which I found fascinating. However, after that, the book starts to lose focus. It feels like the authors gradually drift away from their central ideas, and by the end, the point they're trying to make becomes completely unclear.
While I understand that fictioning is meant to be a fluid, hard-to-define concept, the book doesn't make it any easier to grasp. Instead of offering a coherent explanation, it gets bogged down in constant analysis of different cultural texts, many of which are heavily America-centric. As a European, I couldn't relate to or even understand some of these references.
After about 190 pages, the book seems to fall apart, turning into a confusing, disjointed analysis of cultural texts. The writing becomes increasingly convoluted, with long, spiraling sentences that bury any meaningful points. Rather than feeling enlightened, I ended up feeling tired and alienated, like I was being led through a maze with no clear destination.
You are better of just reading DNG, Gunther Anders, Jung or Eric Vogelin and thinking on your own than reading this.