Skip to main content
The index room

Explore the index behind the atlas

Use this room when you already know the kind of cultural terrain you want to inspect. For guided orientation, open the Field Map or begin with a pathway.

Refine this shelf lens · medium · theme

Now showing — Buddi · 5 works

  • 21 Jump Street Film · 2010s

    Two underachieving cops go undercover at a high school and discover the social order has flipped. A self-aware buddy comedy that shouldn't work but does.

    Urban isolationPowerIdentity
  • Buddi Television · 2020s

    Buddi is a 2020 television series from United Kingdom, shaped by named creators. It helps the serial catalog read as a real field of seasons, institutions, and recurring pressure. Rooted in United Kingdom. Engages with nature, surveillance. In the index for the quality of its sustained storytelling.

    NaturePowerSurveillance
  • The Pearl Music · 1980s

    The Pearl is the second collaborative studio album by Harold Budd and Brian Eno, released in August 1984 by Editions EG and produced by Eno and Daniel Lanois in Hamilton, Ontario. The Pearl is similar to Budd and Eno's previous collaboration, Ambient 2: The Plateaux of Mirror (1980), consisting mostly of subtly trea...

    After-hoursLonging
  • Siddhartha Books · 1920s

    Hermann Hesse wrote Siddhartha after he traveled to India in the 1910s. It tells the story of a young boy who travels the country in a quest for spiritual enlightenment in the time of Guatama Buddha. It is a compact, lyrical work, which reads like an allegory about the finding of wisdom.

    FolkloreRitualMemory
  • The Buddha Essays

    Indian philosopher and the founder of Buddhism (623 or 563 BCE – 543 or 483 BCE)

    ModernityResistanceIdentity
Also in the field · 3
Screen to page
Books that echo Buddi
  • Siddhartha Books
  • Journey to the West Books
Listening lane
Albums in this field
  • The Pearl Music
  • BUDD DWYER Music
Interpretive layer
Idea lines behind this surface

Bring interpretation forward so the route reads with more clarity, pressure, and argument.

  • The Buddha Essays