A short list of selected research links relating to the Baudelaire/Debord lecture:

http://www.piranesia.net/baudelaire/index.html
-One of the few online pages I have seen offering a reasonable selection of Baudelaire's poetry translated into English.

-For more of that sweet French poetry stuff glance at Jean Arthur Rimbaud or Robert Desnos... or how about selections from Lautremont's Maldoror, translated into Esperanto? I knew you would find it useful...

http://www.nothingness.org/SI/debord.html
-The quasi-official Society of the Spectacle page.

http://www.bopsecrets.org/index.shtml
-More translations of Situationalist texts here, but this very highly recommended site also features Ken Knabb's Confessions of a Mild-mannered Enemy of the State and The Rexroth Archives, which offers several excellent and crisp essays interpreting classical literature.



-Some Amazonian links: personally I would not endorse Amazon, as I could confess a bit of a luddite distaste for online commerce, and if I were to suggest somewhere to go if you like books then the TPL would be it!

-However, as the TPL unfortunately does not offer commentary, Amazon is a place to glance at for a vague overview, keeping in mind that their reader descriptions are sometimes ill-informed when not vaguely amusing.

Griel Marcus: Lipstick Traces

Jerrold Siegal: Bohemian Paris...1830-1930

Philip Marchand: Marshall McLuhan

As a minor digression we should acknowledge Amazon's inadvertant contribution to the evolution of public critique here.

The pellucid Herve Villechase movie Forbidden Zone (not to confused with other projects with the same title) is currently unavailable in general distribution, but can be ordered personally from the director Richard Elfman.

Finally, this link will return to offical Von Bark page.