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Capital and Language
From the New Economy to the War Economy
Christian Marazzi
Translated by Gregory Conti, Introduction
by Michael Hardt
The Swiss-Italian
economist Christian Marazzi is one of the core theorists of the
Italian postfordist movement, along with Antonio Negri, Paolo Virno,
and Bifo (Franco Berardi). But although his work is often cited
by scholars (particularly by those in the field of "Cognitive Capitalism"),
his writing has never appeared in English. This translation of his
most recent work, Capital and Language (published in Italian in
2002), finally makes Marazzi's work available to an English-speaking
audience.
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Porcelain
Workshop For a New Grammar of Politics
Antonio Negri
Translated by Noura Wedell
In 2004 and 2005,
Antonio Negri held ten workshops at the Collège International
de Philosophie in Paris to formulate a new political grammar of
the postmodern. Biopolitics, biopowers, control, the multitude,
people, war, borders, dependency and interdependency, state, nation,
the common, difference, resistance, subjective rights, revolution,
freedom, democracy: these are just a few of the themes Negri addressed
in these experimental laboratories.
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Multitude Between Innovation
and Negation
Paolo Virno
Translated by Isabella Bertoletti, James
Cascaito and Andrea Casson
The publication of Paolo Virno's first book in
English, A Grammar of the Multitude, by Semiotext(e) in
2004 was an event within the field of radical political thought
and introduced post-'68 currents in Italy to American readers. Multitude
between Innovation and Negativity, written several years later,
offers three essays that take the reader on a journey through the
political philosophy of language.
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Introduction to
Kant's Anthropology Michel
Foucault
Translated by Roberto
Nigro and Kate Briggs
This introduction and commentary to Kant's
least discussed work, Anthropology from a Pragmatic Point of View,
is the dissertation that Michel Foucault presented in 1961 as his
doctoral thesis. It has remained unpublished, in any language, until
now.
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Pornocracy
Catherine
Breillat
Translated by Paul
Buck and Catherine Petit Introduction
by Chris Kraus, Afterword by Peter Sotos
Includes an interview
with Catherine Breillat by Dorna Khazeni.
As celebrated as it is reviled, internationally
acclaimed filmmaker Catherine Breillat's novel Pornocracy
viscerally enacts the dramatic confluence of mystery, desire, and
shame that lies at the heart of sexuality. In Pornocracy,
a beautiful woman wanders through a gay disco and engages a man,
confident that he will follow her. Perversely and dispassionately,
she offers her body as the ground of a ritualistic game in which,
over the course of three evenings, the two will explore the numbing
mechanics of sexual brutality. What follows is an exchange between
a man and a woman that is both frankly sexual and deeply philosophical.
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Pure War
Paul
Virilio and Sylvère Lotringer
Translated by Mark Polizzotti
with a new introduction by Sylvere Lotringer
and Paul Virilio In June 2007, Paul Virilio and Sylvčre Lotringer
met in La Rochelle, France to reconsider the premises they developed
twenty-five years before in their frighteningly prescient classic,
Pure War. Pure War described the invisible war waged by technology
against humanity, and the lack of any real distinction since World
War II between war and peace. Speaking with Lotringer in 1982, Virilio
noted the "accidents" that inevitably arise with every technological
development: from car crashes to nuclear spillage, to the extermination
of space and the derealization of time wrought by instant communication.
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Radical Alterity
Jean Baudrillard and Marc Guillaume
Translated by Ames Hodges
Where is the Other today? Can Otherness
challenge our arrogant, insular cultural narcissism? From artificial
intelligence to the streets of Venice, from early explorers to contemporary
photographers, Jean Baudrillard and Marc Guillaume discuss the traces
of radical alterity in our world. These provocative seminars, held
in 1990 and 1991, follow the multiple, intertwined trajectories
first projected in Baudrillard's work and his reading of the "radical
exoticism" posited by Victor Segalen--ideas Baudrillard extends
into the realms of mass media, pseudonyms, technology, and that
illusorily close yet radically foreign "primitive society of the
future," America. |
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Fatal
Strategies
Jean Baudrillard
Translated by Philippe
Beitchman and W. G. J. Niesluchowski Introduction by Dominic Pettman
When Fatal Strategies was first published
in French in 1983, it represented a turning point for Jean Baudrillard:
an utterly original, and for many readers, utterly bizarre book
that offered a theory as proliferative, ecstatic, and hallucinatory
as the postmodern world it endeavored to describe. Arguing against
the predetermined outcomes of dialectical thought with his renowned,
wry, ambivalent passion, with this volume Jean Baudrillard mounted
an attack against the "false problems" posed by Western
philosophy.
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twin time:
or, how death befell me
Veronica Gonzalez
Poetic, sensuous
and witty, Veronica Gonzalez’s debut novel unfolds like a
fairy tale spanning the dusty hills of Los Angeles and the glittering
nightlife of Mexico City. Raised in northeast LA by her widowed
immigrant father, a baker, Mona has grown up believing her mother
died minutes after her birth, and her twin brother was simply given
away. Stifled by unnameable doubts as a child, when her father dies,
Mona sets off on a quest to discover her long-lost twin brother.
The journey takes her into the labyrinth of her own fabulations
about her parents’ lives, and a dreamy Mexico City that exists
only as cultural imagination. In the process she encounters a band
of Nordic men, her Chinese double, a lascivious giant, and a tribe
of feral children. Gonzalez masterfully probes the oddness of Mona’s
interior world until it becomes a twisted parable for all kinds
of displacement.
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Molecular
Revolution in Brazil
Felix Guattari and Suely Rolnik
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.
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Autonomia
Post-Political Politics Edited
by Sylvère Lotringer and Christian Marazzi
with a new introduction by Sylvčre Lotringer,
"In the Shadow of the Red Brigades"
Semiotext(e) is reissuing in book form its legendary
magazine issue Autonomia: Post-Political Politics, originally
published in New York in 1980. Edited by Sylvère Lotringer
and Christian Marazzi with the direct participation of the main
leaders and theorists of the Autonomist movement (including Antonio
Negri, Mario Tronti, Franco Piperno, Oreste Scalzone, Paolo Virno,
Sergio Bologna, and Franco Berardi), this volume is the only first-hand
document and contemporaneous analysis that exists of the most innovative
post-'68 radical movement in the West.
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Good Sex Illustrated
Tony Duvert
Translated by Bruce Benderson [read
Benderson's intro here
>]
First published in France in 1973, Good
Sex Illustrated gleefully deciphers the subtext of a popular
sex education manual for children produced during that period. In
so doing, Duvert mounts a scabrous and scathing critique of how
deftly the “sex-positive” ethos was harnessed to promote the ideal
of the nuclear family. Like Michel Houllebecq, Duvert is highly
attuned to all the hypocrisies of late twentieth century western
“sexual liberation” mass movements. As Bruce Benderson notes in
his introduction, Good Sex Illustrated shows that, “in
our sexual order, orgasm follows the patterns of any other kind
of capital…‘good sex’ is a voracious profit machine.” But unlike
Houllebecq, Duvert writes from a passionate belief in the integrity
of unpoliced sex and of pleasure.
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Art and Revolution
Transversal Activism in the Long Twentieth
Century Gerald Raunig
Translated by Aileen
Derieg
Gerald Raunig has written an alternative art history
of the "long twentieth century," from the Paris Commune of 1871
to the turbulent counter-globalization protests in Genoa in 2001.
Meticulously moving from the Situationists and Sergei Eisenstein
to Viennese Actionism and the PublixTheatreCaravan, Art and
Revolution takes on the history of revolutionary transgressions
and optimistically charts an emergence from its tales of tragic
failure and unequivocal disaster. By eloquently applying Deleuze
and Guattari's idea of the "machine," Raunig extends the poststructuralist
theory of revolution through to the explosive nexus of art and activism.
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