{"version":"1.0","type":"rich","provider_name":"Context XXI","provider_url":"http:\/\/contextxxi.org","title":"How Not to Read Situationist Books\n","author_name":"Ken&nbsp;Knabb (translation) \u25aa \nSituationistische Internationale","width":"1200","height":"800","url":"https:\/\/licra.contextxxi.org\/how-not-to-read-situationist-books.html","html":"\u003Ch4 class='title'\u003E\u003Ca href='https:\/\/licra.contextxxi.org\/how-not-to-read-situationist-books.html'\u003EHow Not to Read Situationist Books\n\u003C\/a\u003E\u003C\/h4\u003E\u003Cblockquote class='spip'\u003EIf the SI\u2019s activity had not recently led to some publicly scandalous and threatening consequences it is certain that no French publication would have reviewed our recent books. Fran\u00e7ois Ch\u00e2telet ingenuously admits as much in the Nouvel Observateur (3 January 1968): \u201cOne\u2019s first impulse when confronted with such works is purely and simply to exclude them, to leave this absolutist point of view in the realm of the absolute \u2014 the realm of the nonrelative and unmentioned.\u201d But having&nbsp;\u003Ca href=\"..\/how-not-to-read-situationist-books.html\" class=' pts_suite'\u003E(...)\u003C\/a\u003E\u003C\/blockquote\u003E\n"}