By pulling Kid A from its canonical status and grounding the album in
various contexts, Marvin Lin explains not only why Radiohead suddenly
adopted a new songwriting methodology, but also how properties like
genre and authenticity distracted us from understanding our reactions to
it. From bovine growth hormones and neurological impulses to Dada poetry
and bandwidth throttling, the book articulated the politics behind both
Radiohead's music and our listening experiences. But in a period of
socio-political unrest, is listening to Kid A a waste of time? In and
through the album, Lin seeks to answer this question by examining what
Kid A does to us over time, what Kid A tells us about the future, and
whether it's possible (or even desirable) to use Kid A to transcend time
altogether.