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Mumia Abu-Jamal
Kathy Acker
Erje Ayden
Jean Baudrillard
Barbara Barg
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Michèle Bernstein
Dhoruba Bin Wahad
Catherine Breillat
William Burroughs
Pierre Clastres
Dhoruba Bin Wahad
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Jane DeLynn
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Rainer Ganahl
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Luce Irigaray
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Cookie Müeller
Heiner Müller
Eileen Myles
Antonio Negri
François Peraldi
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Suely Rolnik
Ann Rower
Assata Shakur
Peter Sloterdijk
Abdellah Taïa
Michelle Tea
Lynne Tillman
Masha Tupitsyn
Paul Virilio
Paolo Virno
Mark von Schlegell
David Wojnarowicz
Heather Woodbury
Nina Zivancevic
Suely Rolnick and Felix Guattari

Molecular Revolution in Brazil
Translated by Karel Clapshow and Brian Holmes

Following Brazil's first democratic election after two decades of military dictatorship, French philosopher Félix Guattari traveled through Brazil in 1982 with Brazilian psychoanalyst Suely Rolnik and discovered an exciting, new political vitality. In the infancy of its new republic, Brazil was moving against traditional hierarchies of control and totalitarian regimes and founding a revolution of ideas and politics. Molecular Revolution in Brazil documents the conversations, discussions, and debates that arose during the trip, including a dialogue between Guattari and Brazil's future President Luis Ignacia Lula da Silva, then a young gubernatorial candidate. Through these exchanges, Guattari cuts through to the shadowy practices of globalization gone awry and boldly charts a revolution in practice.

Assembled and edited by Rolnik, Molecular Revolution in Brazil is organized thematically; aphoristic at times, it presents a lesser-known, more overtly political aspect of Guattari's work. Originally published in Brazil in 1986 as Micropolitica: Cartografias do desejo, the book became a crucial reference for political movements in Brazil in the 1980s and 1990s. It now provides English-speaking readers with an invaluable picture of the radical thought and optimism that lies at the root of Lula's Brazil.


Félix Guattari (1930-19920), post-'68 French psychoanalyst and philosopher, is the author of Anti-Oedipus (with Gilles Deleuze), The Anti-Oedipus Papers (Semiotext(e)), and other books. Semiotext(e) has published the first two volumes of his complete essays, Chaosophy (1995) and Soft Subversions (1996), and will publish the final volume, Chaos and Complexity, in 2008.

Suely Rolnik is a psychoanalyst, cultural critic, and curator who lives and works in Sao Paulo, Brazil. She was a close collaborator of Guattari's during her exile in Paris from the military dictatorship in Brazil.



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“Yes, I believe that there is a multiple people, a people of mutants, a people of potentialities that appears and disappears, that is embodied in social, literary, and musical events.... I think that we're in a period of productivity, proliferation, creation, utterly fabulous revolutions from the viewpoint of this emergence of a people. That's molecular revolution: it isn't a slogan or a program, it's something that I feel, that I live.... --from Molecular Revolution in Brazil
— Danzy Senna, author of Caucasia and Symptomatic