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updated: 9 mar

William Pope L.

USA

William Pope.L's Hole Theory is a small, spiral-bound artist's book that explores the concept of "holes" as metaphors for absence, lack, and potential. The text is presented with handwritten annotations and deliberate cross-outs, creating visual "holes" on the pages. Pope.L engages with the idea that holes, or absences, can be generative spaces, challenging traditional notions of possession and knowledge. He writes: "What I mean by having Something is the fantasy That having is possessing [and] That possessing is knowing."

John Steinbeck

USA

Two migrant workers, one intelligent and restless, the other strong but mentally disabled, travel through Depression-era California in search of work and stability. Their friendship is built on a fragile dream of owning land, but their circumstances and the world around them make escape impossible.

A collection of five plays and one short film script that push the limits of theater through extreme violence, fragmented structure, and raw emotional intensity.

Maggie Nelson

USA

The Argonauts is a memoir by Maggie Nelson that explores themes of gender, sexuality, and family. Nelson writes about her own experience with gender fluidity, her relationship with her partner, and becoming a mother.

Emil M. Cioran

Romania

A collection of aphorisms reflecting on existence, suffering, and the absurdity of human life. With stark pessimism, the book dissects illusions of meaning, the weight of memory, and the inevitability of decline.

Constantine P. Cavafy [Translated by Edmund Keeley and Philip Sherrard]

Greece

As you set out for Ithaka

hope your road is a long one,

full of adventure, full of discovery.

Laistrygonians, Cyclops,

angry Poseidon—don’t be afraid of them:

you’ll never find things like that on your way

as long as you keep your thoughts raised high,

as long as a rare excitement

stirs your spirit and your body.

Laistrygonians, Cyclops,

wild Poseidon—you won’t encounter them

unless you bring them along inside your soul,

unless your soul sets them up in front of you.


Hope your road is a long one.

May there be many summer mornings when,

with what pleasure, what joy,

you enter harbors you’re seeing for the first time;

may you stop at Phoenician trading stations

to buy fine things,

mother of pearl and coral, amber and ebony,

sensual perfume of every kind-as many sensual perfumes as you can;

and may you visit many Egyptian cities

to learn and go on learning from their scholars.


Keep Ithaka always in your mind.

Arriving there is what you’re destined for.

But don’t hurry the journey at all.

Better if it lasts for years,

so you’re old by the time you reach the island,

wealthy with all you’ve gained on the way,

not expecting Ithaka to make you rich.


Ithaka gave you the marvelous journey.

Without her you wouldn't have set out.

She has nothing left to give you now.


And if you find her poor, Ithaka won’t have fooled you.

Wise as you will have become, so full of experience,

you’ll have understood by then what these Ithakas mean.

Carol Emshwiller

USA

Charley is an athlete. He wants to be painted crossing the finish line, in his racing silks, with a medal around his neck. But Charley isn't a runner. He is a human mount, the property of one of the alien invaders called Hoots. Charley hasn't seen his mother in years, and his father is hiding out in the mountains with the other Free Humans. The Hoots own the world, but the humans want it back. Charley knows how to be a good mount-now he's going to have to learn how to be a human being. This remarkable novel, winner of the 2002 Philip K. Dick Award, should be read by every fan of speculative fiction, teenagers and adults alike.

Derek Jarman

England

A meditation on color, memory, and perception, written as Jarman was losing his sight to AIDS-related illness. Moving between personal reflections, historical anecdotes, and artistic theory, the book explores how color shapes experience and emotion. Blending autobiography with cultural commentary, it is both an intellectual study and a deeply personal farewell to the world as he once saw it.

Langston Hughes

USA

Wave of sorrow,
Do not drown me now:
 
I see the island
Still ahead somehow.
 
I see the island
And its sands are fair:
 
Wave of sorrow,
Take me there.

My love
Has told me
That he needs me.

That's why
I take good care of myself
Watch out where I'm going and
Fear that any drop of rain
Might kill me.

Maurice Maeterlinck

USA

Explores how plants adapt to their surroundings, develop mechanisms for survival, and seek light with precision. He argues that flowers exhibit a kind of intelligence—not in human terms, but as a quiet, structured response to the world. Mixing observation with philosophy, the book looks at nature without sentimentality, seeing design and purpose in even the smallest movements.

Elizabeth Bishop

USA

September rain falls on the house.
In the failing light, the old grandmother
sits in the kitchen with the child
beside the Little Marvel Stove,
reading the jokes from the almanac,
laughing and talking to hide her tears.

She thinks that her equinoctial tears
and the rain that beats on the roof of the house
were both foretold by the almanac,
but only known to a grandmother.
The iron kettle sings on the stove.
She cuts some bread and says to the child,

It's time for tea now; but the child
is watching the teakettle's small hard tears
dance like mad on the hot black stove,
the way the rain must dance on the house.
Tidying up, the old grandmother
hangs up the clever almanac

on its string. Birdlike, the almanac
hovers half open above the child,
hovers above the old grandmother
and her teacup full of dark brown tears.
She shivers and says she thinks the house
feels chilly, and puts more wood in the stove.

It was to be, says the Marvel Stove.
I know what I know, says the almanac.
With crayons the child draws a rigid house
and a winding pathway. Then the child
puts in a man with buttons like tears
and shows it proudly to the grandmother.

But secretly, while the grandmother
busies herself about the stove,
the little moons fall down like tears
from between the pages of the almanac
into the flower bed the child
has carefully placed in the front of the house.

Time to plant tears, says the almanac.
The grandmother sings to the marvelous stove
and the child draws another inscrutable house.

Kara Walker (2022) is a compilation of essays and interviews that delve into the extensive artistic journey of Kara Walker, from her early 1990s creations to her more recent works. This volume emphasizes an in-depth engagement with Walker's art, moving beyond the controversies it has sparked. Contributors, including art historians, curators, critics, scholars, and writers, provide insights into her renowned silhouette installations as well as her lesser-known drawings and lantern shows. The collection features an interview by Thelma Golden, an essay-lexicon by Yasmil Raymond cataloging key elements in Walker's art, and a piece by Zadie Smith reflecting on Walker's public art as counterpoints to colonial monuments. Edited by Vanina Géré, this anthology offers a comprehensive exploration of Walker's provocative and influential body of work.

Fábio Moon, Gabriel Bá

Brazil

"In this graphic novel, the miracle child of a world-famous Brazilian writer, Brás spends his days penning other people's obituaries and his nights dreaming of becoming a successful author himself"

William Blake

England

Now I a fourfold vision see
And a fourfold vision is given to me
Tis fourfold in my supreme delight
And three fold in soft Beulahs night
And twofold Always. May God us keep
From Single vision & Newtons sleep

Sharon Olds

USA

A week later, I said to a friend: I don’t
think I could ever write about it.
Maybe in a year I could write something.
There is something in me maybe someday
to be written; now it is folded, and folded,
and folded, like a note in school.

Juan Cárdenas

Colombia

Two veteran macheteros, masters of an ancient Afro-Colombian martial art, set out in search of the forgotten "shadow games" and the legendary Elástico de sombra, a technique that allows its wielder to fight in total darkness.

Carlos Castaneda’s The Teachings of Don Juan: A Yaqui Way of Knowledge (1968) is an account of his apprenticeship under Don Juan Matus, a Yaqui shaman. Blending anthropology, mysticism, and psychedelia, the book documents Castaneda’s encounters with hallucinogenic plants—peyote, jimson weed, and mushrooms—as tools for perceiving alternative realities. Structured as both a field report and an esoteric initiation, it remains a controversial exploration of knowledge, vision, and the blurred lines between experience and fiction.

Two-Headed Doctor is a forensic investigation into a single LP: Dr. John, the night tripper's Gris-gris. Though released in 1968 to poor sales and a minimum of critical attention, Gris-gris has accumulated legendary status over subsequent decades for its strangeness, hybridity, and innovative production.

A letter from Kathy Acker to Bernadette Mayer, dated June 1973, reflecting on literary ambitions, financial struggles, and personal relationships. Acker discusses her novel Rip-Off Red: Girl Detective, her frustrations with the publishing world, and an intense but fleeting encounter with conceptual artist Dan Graham.

Roland Barthes

France

Roland Barthes’ The Pleasure of the Text (1973) explores the dual nature of reading, distinguishing between plaisir—the comfort of familiar, structured texts—and jouissance, a disruptive, ecstatic engagement with language. Rejecting rigid literary criticism, Barthes treats reading as an intimate, bodily experience, where meaning is secondary to sensation. The book is structured as a series of aphoristic fragments, embracing contradiction and the instability of interpretation.

Franz Wright

USA

Will I always be eleven,
lonely in this house,
reading books
that are too hard for me,
in the long fatherless hours.
The terrible hours of the window,
the rain-light
on the page,
awaiting the letter,
the phone call,
still your strange elderly child.

Franz Kafka

Czechoslovakia

"For we are like tree trunks in the snow. In appearance they lie sleekly and a little push should be enough to set them rolling. No, it can’t be done, for they are firmly wedded to the ground. But see, even that is only appearance."

We Have Delivered Ourselves from the Tonal — Of, Towards, On, For Julius Eastman is a collection of essays, librettos, lyrics, memories, photos, personal anecdotes by musicians, visual artists, researchers and archivers that pays homage to the work and life of African-American composer, musician, performer, activist Julius Eastman. 

James Baldwin

USA

An American man in Paris struggles with his desires and identity as he becomes involved with Giovanni, a charismatic but troubled Italian bartender. Torn between societal expectations, personal guilt, and the pull of a love he cannot fully accept, he watches his world unravel in the dim light of Giovanni’s small, suffocating room.

Jean Little

Canada

I peel oranges neatly.
The sections come apart cleanly, perfectly in my hands.

When Emily peels an orange, she tears holes in it.
Juice squirts in all directions.

“Kate,” she says, “I don’t know how you do it!”

Emily is my best friend.
I hope she never learns how to peel oranges.

Moyra Davey

Canada

Moyra Davey’s The Problem of Reading (2003) is a photographic and textual exploration of the act of reading, its rituals, and its interruptions. Through a mix of essayistic writing and visual documentation—marked by images of books, notes, and domestic spaces—Davey examines how reading shapes thought, memory, and daily life. The work moves between personal reflection and literary analysis, questioning the ways we engage with text in a distracted world.

"ადამიანების ურთიერთგაუცხოების ფორმათა შორის ყველაზე გავრცელებული, ამასთანავე შეუმჩნეველიც, ასაკობრივი ნიშნით დაყოფა და ერთმანეთისგან გამიჯვნაა. ამ მოვლენის აღსანიშნავად შექმნილი ტერმინი „ეიჯიზმი“ ასაკობრივი ნიშნით დისკრიმინაციად გაიგება. ის ყველაზე გავრცელებული მნიშვნელობით უფროსი ასაკის ადამიანებს მიემართება. ეს მიმართება ასეთია: ისინი უფრო მეტად ენერგიული ახალგაზრდებისგან გაირიყებიან და შრომა-მოღვაწეობის ასპარეზიდან განიდევნებიან."

Rosemary and Bernadette Mayer

USA

The Letters of Rosemary and Bernadette Mayer (1976–1980) documents an intimate correspondence between sisters, poet Bernadette Mayer and artist Rosemary Mayer. Spanning personal reflections, literary discussions, and everyday life, their letters offer insight into their creative processes and the intersection of art and poetry in 1970s New York. The exchange captures their deep intellectual and emotional bond, revealing a shared commitment to experimental thought and artistic practice.

Moyra Davey

Canada

In these essays, the acclaimed artist, photographer, writer, and filmmaker Moyra Davey often begins with a daily encounter—with a photograph, a memory, or a passage from a book—and links that subject to others, drawing fascinating and unlikely connections, until you can almost feel the texture of her thinking. While thinking and writing, she weaves together disparate writers and artists—Mary Wollstonecraft, Jean Genet, Virginia Woolf, Janet Malcolm, Chantal Akerman, and Roland Barthes, among many others—in a way that is both elliptical and direct, clearheaded and personal, prismatic and self-examining, layering narratives to reveal the thorny but nourishing relationship between art and life. 

Yvonne Rainer

USA

No to spectacle.

No to virtuosity.

No to transformations and magic and make-believe.

No to the glamour and transcendency of the star image.

No to the heroic.

No to the anti-heroic.

No to trash imagery.

No to involvement of performer or spectator.

No to style.

No to camp.

No to seduction of spectator by the wiles of the performer.

No to eccentricity.

No to moving or being moved.

James Baldwin

USA

A personal and direct letter from Baldwin to his nephew, written in 1962, reflecting on the realities of being Black in America. He warns of the deep-rooted racism his nephew will face and urges him to resist internalizing the hatred of a society built to oppress him. At the same time, Baldwin speaks of love, resilience, and the necessity of fighting for dignity.

Anne Carson’s Variations on the Right to Remain Silent is a lyrical essay exploring the intersections of translation, silence, and the ineffable. Moving between Homer, Joan of Arc, and visual artist Francis Bacon, Carson examines how language both reveals and conceals meaning. Through reflections on untranslatable words and the limits of expression, she dissects the tension between articulation and silence, questioning the very nature of communication.

Thomas Pynchon

USA

Thomas Pynchon's The Crying of Lot 49 (1966) follows Oedipa Maas, a California housewife unexpectedly named the executor of her ex-lover’s vast and tangled estate. As she navigates a web of obscure connections, underground postal systems, corporate conspiracies, and cryptic historical references, she descends into a reality where meaning is elusive and paranoia takes hold. A postmodern mystery drenched in entropy, forgotten counter-histories, and the fragile distinction between the real and the imagined.

A collection of autobiographical stories tracing a life lived on the fringes. From 1960s Baltimore to New York’s downtown art scene and global wanderings, Mueller moves through underground film, drugs, love, and loss with sharp humor and unflinching honesty.

Pablo Neruda

Chile

You start dying slowly
if you do not travel,
if you do not read,
If you do not listen to the sounds of life,
If you do not appreciate yourself.

You start dying slowly
When you kill your self-esteem;
When you do not let others help you.

You start dying slowly
If you become a slave of your habits,
Walking everyday on the same paths…
If you do not change your routine,
If you do not wear different colours
Or you do not speak to those you don’t know.

You start dying slowly
If you avoid to feel passion
And their turbulent emotions;
Those which make your eyes glisten
And your heart beat fast.

You start dying slowly
If you do not change your life when you are not satisfied with your job, or with your love,
If you do not risk what is safe for the uncertain,
If you do not go after a dream,
If you do not allow yourself,
At least once in your lifetime,
To run away from sensible advice…

WATCH

updated: 9 mar

Gábor Bódy

Hungary

Narcissus and Psyche is based on a novel by Sandor Weores. Borrowing the character of Psyche from mythology and placing her in Europe in the 19th century, the authors give her a "modern" life.

Derek Jarman

UK

A nonlinear collage of personal and political imagery, set against the barren landscape of Derek Jarman’s coastal garden.

Beverly Conrad, Tony Conrad

USA

A sequence of parallel white lines moves and shifts against a black background, creating optical illusions through flicker and pattern variation. Using only light, contrast, and rhythm, the film explores perception and movement without traditional narrative or representation.

Douglas Gordon

UK

Alfred Hitchcock’s Psycho (1960) is slowed down to run over 24 hours, stretching each movement and gesture into near stillness. The film dissects time, perception, and the mechanics of cinematic suspense, transforming a familiar narrative into an abstract, hypnotic experience.

Krzysztof Kieslowski

France, Poland

A young woman in Poland and another in France share an unexplained connection, unaware of each other’s existence but linked through subtle events and emotions. As one pursues music and the other drifts through an undefinable sense of absence, the film explores identity, fate, and the possibility of parallel lives.

Krzysztof Kieslowski

Poland, West Germany

Ten standalone episodes set in a Polish housing complex, each loosely based on one of the Ten Commandments.

Lars von Trier

Denmark

A deeply religious woman in a remote Scottish village marries a man paralyzed in an accident, sacrificing her own happiness and well-being to fulfill his sexual desires.

Tony Richardson

UK

A working-class teenage girl in northern England navigates an unplanned pregnancy, an absent mother, and a shifting sense of identity.

Michael Snow

Canada

A camera, mounted on a mechanized rig, moves in continuous, pre-programmed rotations across an isolated Canadian landscape. With no human presence, no fixed perspective, and no narrative, the film reduces cinema to pure movement and duration.

Kenzô Masaoka

Japan

A stray kitten is taken in by a family but struggles to find its place in a world shaped by postwar hardships.

Cao Fei

China

Workers in a Chinese lightbulb factory move between the monotony of production and imagined lives beyond the assembly line. Through staged performances and personal reflections, the film contrasts industrial reality with individual dreams.

Ken McMullen

UK

Two women engage in conversations about ghosts, history, and the nature of reality while moving through contemporary Paris and London.

Stan Brakhage, Joseph Cornell

USA

A short film by Stan Brakhage in which New York City's Third Avenue elevated train is filmed before its destruction.

Lisandro Alonso

Argentina

A filmmaker returns to a nearly empty cinema, accompanied by two actors from his previous film. They wander through the space in near silence, moving between reality and fiction without clear distinction.

Laura Mulvey, Peter Wollen

UK

A fragmented exploration of motherhood, identity, and language, structured through experimental narration and circular camera movements.

Michael Snow

Canada

A single, continuous zoom across a New York loft unfolds over 45 minutes, moving imperceptibly toward a photograph on the wall.

Yorgos Lanthimos

Greece

Three siblings are raised in complete isolation by their parents, who construct a controlled reality filled with false definitions, strict rules, and manufactured dangers. Cut off from the outside world, they develop their own language and understanding of reality, shaped entirely by their father’s authoritarian control.

Alfonso Cuarón

Mexico

Two teenage friends and an older woman set out on a road trip across Mexico, seeking adventure and escape. Along the way, their friendships, desires, and unspoken conflicts unravel against the backdrop of a changing country.

Alfonso Cuarón

Mexico

Two teenage friends and an older woman set out on a road trip across Mexico, seeking adventure and escape. Along the way, their friendships, desires, and unspoken conflicts unravel against the backdrop of a changing country.

12 hour theatre performance, at Volksbühne am Rosa Luxemburg Platz, Berlin 2012

Lucrecia Martel

Argentina

A family spends the summer in a deteriorating house in northern Argentina.

David Lynch

USA

After a car wreck on Mulholland Drive renders a woman amnesiac, she and a Hollywood-hopeful search for clues and answers across Los Angeles.

René Laloux

France

On a faraway planet where blue giants rule, oppressed humanoids rebel against their machine-like leaders.

released 1973

David Lynch, Mark Frost

USA

An idiosyncratic FBI agent investigates the murder of a young woman in the even more idiosyncratic town of Twin Peaks.

released 1990

Donald Glover

USA

If you are out of reach.

released 2016

Einar Schleef

Austria

Master of choirs.

Roy Andersson

Sweden

Two teenagers fall in love during a Swedish summer in the early 1970s. While they experience the excitement and intensity of first love, the adults around them struggle with disappointment, disillusionment, and unfulfilled lives.

Pedro Almodóvar

Argentina

A woman loses her son in an accident and travels to Barcelona to find his father, a trans woman he never knew. Along the way, she reconnects with figures from her past and becomes involved in the lives of an actress, a nun, and a sex worker.

Patrick Nation

Japan

In this surreal documentary film, the producer, writer and artist discusses a selection of objects related to her work with close friends and collaborators.

released 2021

Hirokazu Koreeda

Japan

"The act of caring is the most radical kind of love."

released 2018

Alex Proyas

USA

The Crow is the tale of a young musician Eric Draven who, along with his fiancé, is murdered on the eve of their Halloween wedding. Exactly one year after their deaths, Eric is risen from the grave by a mysterious crow to seek out his killers and force them to answer for their crimes.

Romeo Castellucci

Italy

Inferno is a monument of pain. The artist must pay. In a dark wood in which he is immediately plunged, he doubts, he fears, he suffers. But what sin is the artist guilty of?

Lucrecia Martel

Argentina

A teenage girl in a provincial Argentine town becomes entangled in a quiet but disturbing dynamic with an older doctor who has made an inappropriate advance.

Sofia Coppola

USA

A Hollywood actor drifts through his life at the Chateau Marmont, numbing himself with routine, alcohol, and fleeting encounters. When his young daughter arrives unexpectedly, he is forced to confront his own detachment.

Louis C.K.

USA

A comedy-drama series created by and starring Louis C.K.

released 2010

Shirin Neshat

Iran

In Turbulent, Neshats 1998 two-screen video installation, two singers (Shoja Azari playing the role of the male and Iranian Vocalist and composer Sussan Deyhim as the female) create a powerful musical metaphor for the complexity of gender roles and cultural power within the framework of ancient Persian music and poetry.

released 1998

Sergei Parajanov

Armenia

The life of the Armenian poet Sayat-Nova, from childhood to death: his spiritual journey, artistic endeavors, and inner conflicts within the cultural and historical context of Armenia.

released 1969

Bigas Luna

Spain

A young woman working at a lingerie factory becomes the center of a power struggle between her wealthy boyfriend’s controlling mother and a local drifter hired to seduce her.

Matthias Ehlert, Lutz Pehnert, Adama Ulrich

Germany

Partisan: Volksbühne am Rosa-Luxemburg-Platz 1992-2017 (2018) is a documentary tracing the 25-year tenure of Frank Castorf as artistic director of the Volksbühne in Berlin. Through archival footage, interviews with actors and collaborators, and scenes from Castorf’s radical productions, the film captures the theater’s transformation into a bastion of experimental and politically charged performance. A chronicle of resistance, reinvention, and the volatile intersection of art and ideology.

Katie Krentz, Patrick McHale

USA

Two brothers find themselves lost in a mysterious land and try to find their way home.

released 2014

Ali Abbasi

Iran

Holy Spider (2022) is a psychological crime thriller by Ali Abbasi, inspired by true events in early 2000s Iran. The film follows a female journalist investigating a string of murders in Mashhad, where a man, believing himself to be on a divine mission, targets sex workers.

David Lynch

USA

"It begins with fire and fury—a savage collision of violence and defiance that sets the tone for a world teetering on the edge of madness. At its core is a love so fierce, so consuming, that it bends the chaos around it, drawing Sailor and Lula together against a tide of venom and vengeance. The road is littered with grotesque fragments of humanity—twisted figures, bizarre encounters, and a darkness that only Lynch could conjure. Yet amidst the derangement, there is a raw tenderness, a yearning to love in a world that is, by its very nature, wild at heart."

Peter Chung

USA, Japan

A collection of nine short films featuring stories related to "The Matrix".

released 2003

Pedro Almodóvar

Spain

"Like threads unraveling and weaving anew, it lingers—a quiet, persistent hum beneath the noise. Some bonds are not made; they are remembered, carried in the folds of time. It is less about what is said and more about what is left unspoken, the spaces between, where meaning truly resides."

Hannes Holm

Sweden

Long before the Tom Hanks adaptation.

released 2015

Gus Van Sant

USA

Several ordinary high school students go through their daily routine as two others prepare for something more malevolent.

Agnés Varda

France

A married man with a stable family life begins an affair with another woman, believing that love and happiness can only expand, never diminish. His actions disrupt the balance he takes for granted, leading to unintended consequences.

Stephen Nomura Schible

Japan

"A portrait of genius music composer Ryuichi Sakamoto."

released 2017

Abbas Kiarostami

Iran

An Iranian man drives his car in search of someone who will quietly bury him under a cherry tree after he commits suicide.

released 1997

Robert J. Flaherty

Canada

In this silent predecessor to the modern documentary, film-maker Robert J. Flaherty spends one year following the lives of Nanook and his family, Inuits living in the Arctic Circle.

released 1922

Ronan Bennett

UK

Two London drug dealers ply their lucrative trade at a public housing estate in East London.

released 2011

Wes Anderson

USA

A family of former child prodigies reunites years later, each dealing with personal failures and unresolved tensions. Their estranged father, a manipulative and self-absorbed figure, returns claiming he wants to make amends.

Noah Baumbach

USA

A couple going through a divorce struggles to navigate the legal system, shifting emotions, and the reality of their separation. As they move between moments of connection, resentment, and misunderstanding, the process exposes the flaws in their marriage and the compromises they can no longer make.

Abbas Kiarostami

Iran

A film essay exploring the range of hues that color our world, creatively introducing color values to young children as the narrator depicts where each appears in nature or in manufactured objects-featuring footage of consumer culture in Iran prior to the 1979 Iranian Revolution.

released 1976

Mike Mills

USA

A single mother in 1979 raises her teenage son with the help of two younger women and a free-spirited lodger. As they navigate shifting cultural and generational dynamics, the boy is shaped by their perspectives on love, identity, and independence.

Deniz Gamze Ergüven

Turkey

Five sisters in a rural Turkish village are confined to their home after being seen playing with boys. As their family imposes increasingly strict measures to control their behavior, they resist in different ways, some with quiet defiance, others with open rebellion.

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