20.7.12

Spread Anarchy, Live Communism?

The question of anarchism as a viable poltical stance has always bothered me. I tend towards a more communistic, collectivist political perspective, but perhaps what is called for under the contemporary conditions is something more deconstructive and wild? This remains an open question for me.

Audio from day two of the 2011 symposium The Anarchist Turn:

Spread Anarchy, Live Communism
By The Invisible Committee

LISTEN HERE:

Information about the symposium from the conference organizers:
For a long time, the word ‘anarchist’ has been used as an insult. This is because, at least since Thomas Hobbes, the concept of anarchy has been extended from its etymological meaning (absence of centralized government) to that of pure disorder – the idea being that, without a sovereign state, the life of individuals can only be brutish, miserable, and chaotic. This move was certainly functional to the ideological justification of modern sovereign states, but not to an understanding of what anarchy might be.

In the last decade, this caricature of anarchy has begun to crack. Globalization and the social movements it spawned seem to have proved what anarchists have long been advocating: an anarchical order is not just desirable, but also feasible. This has led to a revitalized interest in the subterranean anarchist tradition and its understanding of anarchy as collective self-organization without centralized authority. But the ban on ‘anarchism’ has not yet been lifted.

The aim of this conference is to argue for an ‘anarchist turn’ in political philosophy. We want to discuss the anarchist hypothesis with specific reference to the philosophical tradition in its many historical and geographical variants, but also in relation to other disciplines like politics, anthropology, economics, history and sociology. By bringing together academics and activists, past and present, this conference will assess the nature and effectiveness of anarchist politics in our times.

Speakers: Miguel Abensour (Paris VII), Cinzia Arruzza (New School), Banu Bargu (New School), Chiara Bottici (New School), Judith Butler (UC Berkeley), Laura Corradi (Calabria), Stephen Duncombe (NYU), Todd May (Clemson), Alberto Toscano (Goldsmiths), Mitchell Verter (New School), Stephanie Wakefield (CUNY), as well as writers such as Andrej Grubačić , Cindy Milstein, Ben Morea from Black Mask and alleged authors of The Coming Insurrection.
Learn More: Here

5 comments:

Jeremy Trombley said...

Thanks for sharing this, Michael, I look forward to listening to/watching these presentations and am very interested in the ADCS Journal! I've always self-identified as an anarchist with the belief that a truly collectivist/communitarian organization can only come about when power is distributed more or less equally. In that sense, it becomes a kind of chicken-egg problem, and the realization is that the two are mutually constitutive. That is, they only arise together - one never proceeds the other.

I see myself as a pragmatic anarchist in the sense that I don't think we can do away with hierarchical organization wholesale without consequences. What that means to me is that we have to work within, alongside, in between, and around the present system in order to generate alternatives as we orchestrate its downfall. In a sense, that's what is meant by the title of my blog - "struggle forever!"

Anonymous said...

http://dietsoap.podomatic.com/entry/2011-09-16T01_19_45-07_00
The guest this week is professor Jodi Dean. Ms. Dean is the author of Blog Theory, the force behind a lecture entitled the Communist Horizon, and a blogger herself at the blog icite.com. She was nice enough to make the time to discuss her hypothesis that Democracy, Anarchism, and Liberalism are the three impediments we face during a time when Capitalism is in crisis.

Anonymous said...

http://www.veteransunplugged.com/theshow/archive/100-2-12-2012

Anonymous said...

http://www.mara-stream.org/wp-content/uploads/2010/09/Latour_How_to_Make_Things_Public.pdf

Anonymous said...

http://edge.org/conversation/a-new-kind-of-social-inspired-technology

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