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DAVID LAPADAT
WRITER · RESEARCHER · SONGWRITER · CULTURAL JOURNALIST

David Lapadat holds degrees in music and history, earned a PhD in Music from the National University of Music Bucharest, and has published more than 150 cultural essays for Actualitatea Muzicală. His essays bring literature, philosophy, music, and history into one house.


The Wound the Modernists Named: Five novels that still describe us — and one question they won’t answer
Five novels that still describe the modern wound: isolation, bureaucracy, absurdity, divided identity, and the social mask.
David Lapadat | Music PhD


Nélida Piñon — A Casa da Paixão (The House of Passion): On the sacred marriage buried under Piñon's 1972 novel
Nélida Piñon's A Casa da Paixão (1972) operates beneath its erotic surface as a recovery of the hieros gamos — the sacred marriage rite of agrarian religious imagination. Read through Mircea Eliade, the novel becomes a 20th-century surfacing of a script civilization has spent millennia trying to bury, performed in Brazilian Portuguese under military dictatorship.
David Lapadat | Music PhD


Camus' Absurdity and the 9-to-5 You Can't Quit: On Work, Repetition, and the Future That Keeps Failing to Arrive
Camus helps explain why respectable work can feel existentially unpaid: the modern worker is asked to endure repetition by trusting that a later freedom will redeem the life already being spent.
David Lapadat | Music PhD


Nvidia’s Monopoly: Heidegger, the ‘Standing Reserve,’ and the AI Gold Rush
Jensen Huang holds the GPU above his head the way a priest raises a host. The chip is smaller than a playing card. It costs more than a sedan. No consumer will ever touch it — and yet the object in that gloved hand has already determined what the next decade of thought will be permitted to become.
David Lapadat | Music PhD


The Burning Warehouse: Ernest Becker, the Lie of Eternity, and the Only Revolt That Matters
Ernest Becker's The Denial of Death meets Charlie Kaufman's Synecdoche, New York in this essay on immortality projects, the god-with-an-anus paradox, and the molecular betrayal of neurochemistry. A meditation on why we build cathedrals against oblivion — and what remains when you accept the warehouse is burning.
David Lapadat | Music PhD


The Best Way Into Roberto Bolaño: A Reading Map for Beginners
Most readers approach Bolaño through 2666 or The Savage Detectives and drown. This reading map starts with the blade — Distant Star — moves through cultivated guilt and the weather of his short fiction, drops into the abyss of 2666, and ends with the lost poets of his youth.
David Lapadat | Music PhD


How to Read Difficult Literature Without Getting Lost
Most readers who give up on difficult books haven’t been outsmarted. They’ve come in under the wrong contract.
They expected the book to behave like a friendlier one — to explain itself in their preferred order, label its references, and dial down the difficulty until the whole thing became a more prestigious version of an ordinary novel.
David Lapadat | Music PhD


How to Start Reading Dostoevsky: A Beginner's Guide
Half the people who give up on Dostoevsky give up on the wrong book. A reading map that starts with The Idiot, moves through Notes from Underground and Crime and Punishment, passes through Demons, and ends at The Brothers Karamazov — the cathedral, not the lobby.
David Lapadat | Music PhD


Kant's Categorical Imperative for Credit-Card Debt: Universal Law, Minimum Payments, and the Ethics of Borrowed Consumption
A minimum payment looks like a financial option, but Kant makes it look like something harsher: a private exception leaning on other people’s discipline. This essay reads credit-card debt through universal law, future-self obligation, and the narrow but real moral case for emergency borrowing.
David Lapadat | Music PhD
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