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Mumia Abu-Jamal
Kathy Acker
Erje Ayden
Jean Baudrillard
Barbara Barg
Bernadette Corporation
Michèle Bernstein
Dhoruba Bin Wahad
Catherine Breillat
William Burroughs
Pierre Clastres
Dhoruba Bin Wahad
Guy Debord
Gilles Deleuze
Jane DeLynn
Tony Duvert
Shulamith Firestone
Bob Flanagan
Michel Foucault
Eldon Garnet
Rainer Ganahl
Veronica Gonzalez
Félix Guattari
Amira Hass
Fanny Howe
Luce Irigaray
Alain Joxe
Liz Kotz
Chris Kraus
Julia Kristeva
Jurg Laederach
Sylvère Lotringer
Jean-François Lyotard
Christian Marazzi
Cookie Müeller
Heiner Müller
Eileen Myles
Antonio Negri
François Peraldi
David Rattray
Gerald Raunig
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
Paul Virilio & Sylvère Lotringer

Pure War

We tried to reveal a number of important tendencies: the question of speed; speed as the essence of war; technology as the producer of speed; war as logistics, not strategy; endocolonization; deterrence; ultimate weapons; Pure War.

The publication of Pure War in 1983 introduced Virilio’s thought to the United States, and has since remained one of the most influential and far-reaching essays of our time.

Pure War
names the invisible war that technology is waging against humanity. For Virilio, the foremost philosopher of speed, the “technical surprise” of World War I was the discovery that the wartime economy could not be sustained unless it was continued during peacetime. As a consequence, the distinction between war and peace ceased to apply, inaugurating the military-industrial complex and the militarization of science itself.

In this dazzling dialogue with Sylvère Lotringer, Paul Virilio displays, for the first time, the entire range of his reflections on the effects of speed on our civilization. Every new invention casts a long shadow that we are loathe to acknowledge in the name of progress: the invention of automobiles inaugurated car-crashes; the invention of nuclear energy, Hiroshima and Chernobyl. But the technologies of instant communications have invented another kind of accident: the extermination of space and the de-realization of time. Instant feedback is shrinking the planet to nothing, and “globalization” is its ultimate accident.

Pure War