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  • New Books Network

    Paul Robichaud, "Stories of the Stones: Imagining Prehistory in Britain, Ireland and Brittany" (Reaktion, 2026)

    13/04/2026 | 42 mins.
    Stories of the Stones: Imagining Prehistory in Britain, Ireland and Brittany (Reaktion, 2026) by Dr. Paul Robichaud explores how ancient monuments – standing stones, megaliths and earthworks – have been reimagined across the centuries in folklore, literature, art and popular culture. From medieval myths to Romantic fascination and from folk-horror cinema to Julian Cope, the powerful stories inspired by these enigmatic sites reflect the beliefs and anxieties of each era. Spanning Britain, Ireland and Brittany, the book includes iconic places such as Stonehenge and Newgrange, as well as lesser-known sites steeped in local lore. While the monuments' original meanings remain mysterious, our interpretations reveal deep emotional and cultural connections to the ancient landscape. Richly illustrated and wide-ranging, this book is ideal for readers interested in prehistoric monuments, storytelling traditions and the enduring power of place.

    This interview was conducted by Dr. Miranda Melcher whose book focuses on post-conflict military integration, understanding treaty negotiation and implementation in civil war contexts, with qualitative analysis of the Angolan and Mozambican civil wars. You can find Miranda’s interviews on New Books with Miranda Melcher, wherever you get your podcasts.
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  • New Books Network

    David Kirsch on the Dot Com Bubble and Bust

    13/04/2026 | 1h 12 mins.
    We chat with historian David Kirsch, Associate Professor of Management and Entrepreneurship at University of Maryland's Robert H. Smith School, about how to understand the Dot Com bubble and bust of the late 1990s and early 2000s. David both lived through the Dot Com moment as a California resident and is a scholar of technology bubbles, including through his coauthored book, Bubbles and Crashes: The Boom and Bust of Technological Innovation (Stanford University Press, 2019). We talk to him about how to think about past and contemporary bubbles from both personal and professional historical perspectives.
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  • New Books Network

    The AI Con: How to Fight Big Tech’s Hype and Create the Future We Want

    13/04/2026 | 52 mins.
    In this episode, Emily M. Bender, Alex Hanna, Jeffrey Herlihy-Mera and Alex Rivera Cartagena discuss the looming social, cultural, and knowledge catastrophe described in The AI Con: How to Fight Big Tech’s Hype and Create the Future We Want (Harper, 2025). They explore how narratives around artificial intelligence are
    shaped by powerful tech companies, often obscuring the real limitations,
    risks, and social costs of these systems.

    Their conversation challenges many common assumptions about AI’s
    inevitability and neutrality, examining how the hype surrounding it
    threatens university life, just labor practices, and resource
    allocation. They also bring to light practical ways that individuals,
    communities, and institutions can resist misleading claims and advocate
    for more accountable technologies. They argue on behalf of a
    critical roadmap for rethinking our relationship with AI—one grounded
    not in hype and speculation, but in democratic values and collective
    action.

    This is the first of two episodes about The AI Con. The second, in Spanish, will appear on the New Books Network en español.

    This conversation is sponsored in part by the Teagle Foundation and
    the “STEM to STEAM” program, which stresses the importance of reading
    and integrating humanistic perspectives in the sciences.

    Quotes, organizations, books, scholars, and articles mentioned in this conversation:

    Instituto Nuevos Horizontes

    Universidad de Puerto Rico-Mayagüez



    Elogio a las cercanías: crítica a la cultura tecnológica actual, Héctor José Huyke.


    The AI Mirror: How to Reclaim Our Humanity in an Age of Machine Thinking, Shannon Vallor.


    The Costs of Connection and "Rethinking Big Data's Relation to the Contemporary Subject," by Nick Couldry and Ulises Ali Mejias.

    DukeGPT

    Wendy Brown

    Ivan Illich

    "Has such promise but is so empty." -Alex Rivera Cartagena

    "We know that they don't understand." -Emily M. Bender

    "The real privilege is not using this technology; it is avoiding it." -Alex Rivera Cartagena

    "AI flattens relationships into the words we exchange instead of the things we do." -Emily M. Bender

    "It's not about the text specifically but the idea the text enables." -Alex Hanna

    "It doesn't make us think about process." -Alex Hanna

    "The
    groups that are already formed can be very powerful pathways for
    political education and for ensuring there's an integration of society
    and tech that works for people." -Alex Hanna

    "The very idea of
    intelligence is that you can rank people based on one property...that
    same racist eugenicist concept." -Emily M. Bender

    "The imposition of technology is presented as philanthropy." -Emily M. Bender

    "Metaphor of data colonialism" -Alex Hanna

    "How do we get there without a natural disaster?" -Emily M. Bender

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  • New Books Network

    Decolonizing the Novum

    13/04/2026 | 22 mins.
    In this episode of High Theory, Zac Zimmer talks to Kim about Decolonizing the Novum. The novum is a concept developed by Darko Suvin that names the new element of a science fiction or speculative fiction narrative. SF narratives from the Americas that rewrite archival material about colonization and first contact have begun an imaginative project of decolonizing that novum.

    In Zac’s words, the "novum" has been part of our definition of science fiction since Darko Suvin first offered up the concept of part of his critical assessment of SF. This idea of "novelty" is linked to conquest and colonialism through the figure of the New World, i.e. the post-1492 Americas. Thus untangling the relationship between colonialism, novelty, and science fiction must pass through the historical record of the conquest. One way to do this is to focus on SF that deeply engages the archival record of the XVIth century in the Americas: texts and artworks that use speculation to depart from the knowledge that things didn't quite occur the way the dominant paradigms would lead us to believe, and to imagine other futures linked to past moments of historical contingency.

    In the episode, Zac references an incredible list of writers and theorists, including Edmundo O'Gorman and Walter Benjamin, Saidiya Hartman’s “Venus in Two Acts,” You Dreamed of Empires by Álvaro Enrigue, Destrucción de todas las cosas by Hugo Hiriart, and “Decolonization is not a metaphor” by Eve Tuck and K. Wayne Yang.

    The transcript lives here as a WordDoc and here as a PDF.

    Zac’s book, First Contact: Speculative Visions of the Conquest of the Americas (Northwestern University Press 2025), is a comparative study of Latin American science fiction and narratives of the sixteenth century conquest of the Americas. It moves through a corpus of Mexican novels, Andean visual arts practices, and other cultural artifacts that have dramatized counterfactual narratives. Reimagining the early colonial period’s historiography from a south-to-north directionality while inventing parallel realities, these texts, which are concerned with limit cases, alterities, and alternative temporalities, refuse any reliance on the imperial ontologies of European expansion. Zac examines these works to explore the slippage that exists between science fiction as the exemplary genre of the modern, colonial reality and literary speculation as an aesthetic tool that can be used to imagine other possible worlds. You can read a review in the Los Angeles Review of Books.

    Zac Zimmer works as an Associate Professor of Literature at UC Santa Cruz. His research explores questions of literature, aesthetics, politics, and technology in the Americas.In addition to his current research on the cultural infrastructure of technosystems, he co-facilitates the Ethics & Astrobiology reading group, part of UCSC's Astrobiology Initiative. In the Literature department, he teaches classes on Latin American literature, science fiction, ethics & technology, and the poetics of California infrastructure.

    The image for this episode is the view from the Hubble Space Telescope, showing the birth of a sun-like star, retrieved from Flicker for High Theory by Lili Epstein. Image credit: NASA, ESA, G. Duchene (Universite de Grenoble I); Image Processing: Gladys Kober (NASA/Catholic University of America)
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  • New Books Network

    Money Beyond Borders with Barry Eichengreen

    13/04/2026 | 59 mins.
    Doubts about the international dominance of the dollar are only growing amid worries about tariffs, political dysfunction, and fraying international alliances. Will the dollar continue to reign supreme? In Money Beyond Borders, the leading authority on international currencies, Barry Eichengreen, puts the dollar's prospects in deep historical perspective by chronicling the entire history of cross-border currencies, from the invention of coins in the seventh century BCE to the cryptocurrencies of today and the central bank digital currencies of tomorrow.

    Money Beyond Borders: Global Currencies from Croesus to Crypto (Princeton University Press, 2026) recounts how Greek and Roman coins became the first true international currencies. It tells how the Florentine gold florin became the "greenback of the Renaissance," and how it was succeeded by Spanish silver and a Dutch fiat currency. The book explains why the British pound dominated the international economy in the nineteenth century, why the dollar rose to the top during World War II, and why the dollar has survived predictions of the imminent loss of its preeminence since the 1970s.

    The long history of international currencies shows that the same factors that encourage their widespread use eventually lead to their abandonment. Money Beyond Borders makes a powerful case that the dollar is now on the downside of this cycle, and it considers who the winners and losers will be when there is flight away from the greenback. Revealing important patterns in the life cycles of international currencies over the past 2,500 years, the book offers valuable lessons and insights about how currencies rise--and why they fall.

    Barry Eichengreen is the George C. and Helen N. Pardee Chair and Distinguished Professor of Economics and Political Science at the University of California, Berkeley.

    Caleb Zakarin is the CEO and Publisher of the New Books Network.
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