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Shape of a Pocket

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ISBN-10: 0375718885

ISBN-13: 9780375718885

Edition: N/A

Authors: John Berger, John Berger

List price: $16.00
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Description:

The pocket in question is a small pocket of resistance. A pocket is formed when two or more people come together in agreement. The resistance is against the inhumanity of the new world economic order. The people coming together are the reader, me and those the essays are about — Rembrandt, Palaeolithic cave painters, a Romanian peasant, ancient Egyptians, an expert in the loneliness of certain hotel bedrooms, dogs at dusk, a man in a radio station. And unexpectedly, our exchanges strengthen each of us in our conviction that what is happening to the world today is wrong, and that what is often said about it is a lie. I’ve never written a book with a greater sense of urgency. —John Berger
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Book details

List price: $16.00
Publisher: Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group
Publication date: 3/11/2003
Binding: Paperback
Pages: 272
Size: 5.10" wide x 8.00" long x 0.60" tall
Weight: 0.528
Language: English

John Berger was born in London in 1926. Berger was educated at St Edward's School, an independent school for boys in Oxford. Berger served in the British Army from 1944 to 1946; he then enrolled in the Chelsea School of Art and the Central School of Art in London. Berger began his career as a painter and exhibited work at a number of London galleries in the late 1940s. Berger became an art critic, publishing many essays and reviews in the New Statesman from 1948 - 1955. He titled an early collection of essays Permanent Red, in part as a statement of political commitment. In 1958 Berger published his first novel, A Painter of Our Time, which tells the story of the disappearance of Janos…    

Opening a Gate
Steps Towards a Small Theory of the Visible (for Yves)
Studio Talk (for Miquel Barcel�)
The Chauvet Cave
Penelope
The Fayum Portraits
Degas
Drawing: Correspondence with Leon Kossoff
Vincent
Michelangelo
Rembrandt and the Body
A Cloth Over the Mirror
Brancusi
The River Po
Giorgio Morandi (for Gianni Celati)
Pull the Other Leg, It's Got Bells On It
Frida Kahlo
A Bed (for Christoph H�nsli)
A Man with Tousled Hair
An Apple Orchard (An Open Letter to Raymond Barre, Mayor of Lyon)
Brushes Standing Up in Jars
Against the Great Defeat of the World
Correspondence with Subcomandante Marcos:-
The Herons-
The Herons and Eagles-
How to Live with Stones
Will It Be a Likeness?
(for Juan Munoz)