Semiotext(e) (@semiotextepress) 's Twitter Profile
Semiotext(e)

@semiotextepress

Semiotext(e) publishes works of theory, fiction, madness, economics, satire, sexuality, science fiction, activism and confession.

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linkhttps://www.semiotexte.com calendar_today27-09-2017 18:03:49

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The Nation (@thenation) 's Twitter Profile Photo

The book, which was first published by Semiotext(e) in 1998, is a tender, compassionate, and crushingly depressing work of fiction by one of our most important feminist theorists. bit.ly/3EH6DVs

Beyond the Last Estate (@blastestate) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Issue 4 out now. $12 Contact: [email protected] for ordering info. International readers, reach out and we’ll calculate postage. Featuring rare interview w/ John Tottenham, author of Service (Semiotext[e])….

Issue 4 out now.
$12
Contact: beyondthelastestate@gmail.com for ordering info. International readers, reach out and we’ll calculate postage.

Featuring rare interview w/ John Tottenham, author of Service (Semiotext[e])….
Alina Stefanescu (@aliner) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Why should this body and this life be normalized by a family’s natural love? This body should be public, its imprisoned soul leaking as foam on its lips, piss through its member… - Pierre Guyotat, IN THE DEEP

Why should this body and this life be normalized by a family’s natural love? This body should be public, its imprisoned soul leaking as foam on its lips, piss through its member…

- Pierre Guyotat, IN THE DEEP
Arta (@_rtab_) 's Twitter Profile Photo

We’ll be screening a 35 mm print of City of Pirates, accompanied by printouts of a brand new (and the first-ever!) English translation of Daney’s text on the film, preceded by an exquisite video intro courtesy of Adrian Martin. What more could you ask for, London? :)

Jessica Ferri (@jessicaaferri) 's Twitter Profile Photo

I’m absolutely thrilled to be writing the introduction for the Semiotext(e) reissue of Ann Rower’s wonderful book Lee & Elaine. Their magic arrives February 2026. mitpress.mit.edu/9781635902747/…

I’m absolutely thrilled to be writing the introduction for the <a href="/SemiotextePress/">Semiotext(e)</a> reissue of Ann Rower’s wonderful book Lee &amp; Elaine. Their magic arrives February 2026. mitpress.mit.edu/9781635902747/…
Arta (@_rtab_) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Ahead of the opening of our programme at Institute of Contemporary Arts tonight, it's a great time to catch up with the Daney dossier we produced for Sabzian: sabzian.be/issue/serge-da…

Conor Williams (@sadfilmcritic) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Apropos of nothing: One of the best things I read last year was A.S. Hamrah’s newsletter “Last Week in End Times Cinema,” in Hamrah’s words, “an almanac of every bad thing that happened in the film industry from mid-March 2024 to mid-March 2025.” Coming in Nov from Semiotexte.

Apropos of nothing: One of the best things I read last year was A.S. Hamrah’s newsletter “Last Week in End Times Cinema,” in Hamrah’s words, “an almanac of every bad thing that happened in the film industry from mid-March 2024 to mid-March 2025.” Coming in Nov from Semiotexte.
4Columns (@4_columns) 's Twitter Profile Photo

“Told in flashbacks to someone asking where she grew up, the book is a reply to that question, in the form of a teenage diary, the story of Tess as an adolescent girl.”—Jeanine Herman writes about Natasha Stagg’s new novel, “Grand Rapids” Semiotext(e) 4columns.org/herman-jeanine…

4Columns (@4_columns) 's Twitter Profile Photo

“Amid the abject and the sordid, though, the book glitters with moments of beauty. There is the final paragraph of the novel, which is a kind of shimmering tour de force.”—Jeanine Herman writes about Natasha Stagg’s novel “Grand Rapids” Semiotext(e) 4columns.org/herman-jeanine…