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You Have a New Memory: Essays

You Have a New Memory: Essays

by Aiden Arata

Grand Central Publishing ·2025 ·240 pages
New Release
Maybe Someday
Maybe Someday
I Index
30/99
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22/99

Critics' Rating Index

Maybe Someday

37/99

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About This Book

An open-hearted interrogation of our digital selves, braiding cultural criticism, memoir, and narrative musings into an exploration of identity, girlhood, media, tech, nature and "finding the depth and beauty in the fucked-up world we live in" (Phoebe Bridgers) from writer, artist, and conflicted influencer Aiden Arata. If you told Aiden Arata in 1995 that the internet would one day crown her the "meme queen of depression" and mega corporations would fly her to conferences to speak about commodifying one's emotions for views, she would have asked you what a meme was. Now, in her highly anticipated debut, she brings us raw reportage from that liminal space between online and offline worlds, illuminating how we got here and where to go next. In this collection of kaleidoscopic essays, Aiden artfully explores what it means to exist on the internet, from fan fic forums to TikTok. She exposes influencer grifts from the perspective of a grifter, digs into the alluring aesthetic numbness of stay-at-home girlfriend content creators, and interrogates our online fetishization of doom to grapple with the real-world apocalypse. In her own words, "In some ways, the internet feels like a neutral energy in the way that money is a neutral energy, only as virtuous or wicked as the person using it. But then you have to follow that line of inquiry somewhere annoying like, Am I using it for good?" YOU HAVE A NEW MEMORY is a deeply human inventory of the digital sphere, a searing analysis of the present and a prescient assessment of the future. Aiden is the wry, unexpected voice we need to navigate existing simultaneously as creators, consumers, and products in our increasingly braver and newer world.


Reviews

"Acerbic reflections on being digital."

Kirkus Read review ↗ Near the Top

"Arata covers a range of internet topics ..."

Katie Pomeroy· Booklist Read review ↗ Near the Top

"This will resonate with the chronically online."

Publishers Weekly Read review ↗ Near the Top

"Fresh, intelligent ..."

Harvey Freedenberg· BookPage Read review ↗ Near the Top

"Offer[s] glimmers of hope that this little gizmo is not completely destroying society ..."

Alexandra Jacobs· The New York Times Read review ↗ Near the Top

"Arata captures the physicality of being online with a...deft touch ..."

Maggie Lange· The Washington Post Read review ↗ Near the Top

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