No matter how many times I try to study theory (with Cowbee’s method of taking each paragraph and boiling them down simply in their own words), I never get to fully process theory. What should I do?

This goes out to all the DBZer0, Lemmy.ml, Hexbear and Lemmygrad people out there reading this. Seriously!

  • trashcroissant@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    59 minutes ago

    If you want a very quick and extremely easy to read overview that covers the basic concepts, I highly recommend “it’s not you, it’s capitalism” by Malaika Jabali.

    It discusses theory in a more modern way and is set up as beginner reading but gives a lot of jumping off points for further reading. It is very US-centric.

  • Grail@multiverse.soulism.net
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    12 hours ago

    Most theory is written very poorly, or at least for a version of English that doesn’t exist anymore. I found David Graeber’s and Donald Hoffman’s work much easier to read and understand than Marx and Kropotkin.

    PS: you can add anarchist.nexus and multiverse.soulism.net to your list of communist instances

  • starlinguk@lemmy.world
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    13 hours ago

    Socialism and communism are two different things. Don’t use that slash as if they’re synonyms.

    • dogbert@lemmy.zip
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      8 hours ago

      Socialism is the process toward communism. They are intrinsically linked to one another. Read a book…

  • discocactus@lemmy.world
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    17 hours ago

    Try reading something less technical to get your brain in shape. Ursula K Leguins The Dispossessed is a pretty great read and it draws on a lot of the more academic literature.

  • PM_ME_VINTAGE_30S [he/him]
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    14 hours ago

    It’s okay to read things multiple times, get stuck, stop and think, take a long time, etc. The fact that you’re not just blowing through the reading is a sign that you are critically engaging with the material.

    Lately I’ve been reading more technical/mathematical books than socialist theory since I started engineering school, but here are some of the reading habits I’ve developed.

    I very rarely ever read a book cover-to-cover in a linear fashion. For math books, I usually skim the contents, then read the preface. Then, the first pass of the book is just to learn the notation and conventions, and to get the most basic overview of what is going on. (For socialist books, this might mean how words look in the font the book uses, the structure of the book, words you’ve never seen before, definitions (especially if the author uses some words with a novel definition!), standing assumptions, and the conclusions the book makes.) Then, for the second reading, you gotta follow the proofs/arguments more carefully. And the third and subsequent readings are focused on specific sections that you figure out in previous readings that you want to take away from the book.

    My preference is to read on a computer sitting at a desk, but I keep copies of basically all my books on my phone so if I’m too sad to get out of bed, or if I’m stuck waiting in line, I can read any time, anywhere, basically anything.

    Personally, I prefer dark mode, to the point that I invert the color of my PDFs. (In Okular, I usually use the “invert lightness” option. The default “invert” option makes blues oranges, greens reds, etc., which is annoying for color diagrams.) I personally like to read while listening to tech metal in the coldest room I can find. (Music silences the “head voice”, i.e. if you’re reading this right now you are probably imagining how it sounds. This slows down your reading; you can read a little faster than you process speech. I pick tech metal because it’s a subset of what I like, it’s energetic which gives me the energy to keep reading, but it’s proggy as fuck so it makes me feel smart 🤓. If you don’t want to have your ears melted off, try some jazz. IMO make sure you have at least 24 hours of study music on hand. For some people, music makes it way way worse, so be careful 😆) I just picked up some noise cancelling headphones and even with no music, it’s so fucking helpful to be able to actively cancel some of the outside noise. And I like to read away from my room/bed whenever possible.

    IMO the key here is: make yourself comfortable when you read. And only you know what makes you comfortable 😄. Reading should be fun!

    If I get stuck on an equation or passage in any reading, I will spend a finite amount of time racking my brain and the Internet trying to get through it under my own power. (First reading, up to about 5 minutes. Second reading, up to about 30 minutes. Subsequent readings, however much time I have left to read, since I probably decided to read the section to nail down the equation/passage I’m having trouble with.) IMO thinking through problems is a hugely important part of reading and just life, but the thing with books is that sometimes, your question gets answered later in the book. E.g., in pure math books, authors sometimes define objects before they tell you (or you figure out from context) why that definition matters or what it aims to encode.

    Hope this helps.

  • Deceptichum@quokk.au
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    16 hours ago

    Anarchist theory is broken down into a question by question F.A.Q. format: https://theanarchistlibrary.org/library/the-anarchist-faq-editorial-collective-an-anarchist-faq-full.

    CrimeThinc has a nice visual style design that discusses some basics https://crimethinc.com/tce

    And there’s a shit ton of Anarchist zines to read at:https://github.com/rechelon/zine_library

    The best thing about Anarchist theory is that a lot of it is modern, relating to the world we live in today, and doesn’t force you to slog through painful 200 year old literary styles.

  • Zwuzelmaus@feddit.org
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    16 hours ago

    You can simply read the books of Marx et. al.

    Note that Socialism / Communism has never been more than a theory. The governments that claimed to practise it were all faking it and using it to cover up how they stuffed their own pockets, just like the so called capitalist governments still do today.