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Mlle d. Sade said:I had two units on existentialism (still can't spell it though) in HS- in drama was reading/performing Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead (and possibly Jewish) then watching the movie- I highly suggest the movie, it's great on so many levels. In literature it was reading Rhinoceros and other surrealist/absurdist things- that was a good year, it made me understand WHY I've been such an insane, avid, freakish Marx Bros., fan since I was 12 when I could never figure out what I liked about them before. That was a formative year of study and really made me thank the heavens I went to the school I did.
My final final final was Existentialism in the Iliad- now, that I think about it Homer influenced me or at least helped me cobble together some of the pieces of what I'd learned thus far.
Monkey Business.
Harpo Speaks was a good search of identity- style read in a college dorm. I'd cut off my left foot to be able to leave that kind of memoir behind, it made me believe in the power of whacky living again, just when "reality" was starting to rain on my absurd parade- which is why I write the way I do- I can't help it, I'm insane.
There are a lot of good books listed here- I just got done with "The Dispossessed"- I read it in one sitting, I liked it so much. As for existentialist stuff, I much prefer Camus to Sartre. I enjoyed "The Plague" when I read it in high school.
Existentialism can be entertaining, but I much prefer transcendentalist works, especially those by Thoreau. I've read "Walden" and quite a few of his essays several times over at this point.
Other books I found influential were: "The Feminine Mystique" by Betty Friedan, and "Anarchism and Other Essays" by Emma Goldman. I owe quite a bit of my humanistic/ socialistic outlook to those three people listed. I came from a background where women were only to be seen, not heard, and those books opened a door to freedom from the oppressive belief structures of the people around me.

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Afro-punk is a platform for the other Black experience, the one we don't see in our media. D.I.Y (Do It Yourself) is the foundation.
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