July 21, 2010
"I think that the liberal prohibition of enemies [in politics] has a very precise implication: If there are no true enemies, if there is no true struggle in politics, this means that those who really disagree are not simply our enemies, but are excluded from the very scope of humanity, so that anything goes against them. Paradoxically, the first step to recognizing the very humanity of the enemy, should be to fully accept the unavoidability of taking sides in politics. There is then no third place above the struggle."

— Slavoj Zizek, “The Uses and Misuses of Violence” seminar, Nunemaker Hall, Loyola University, Nov. 17, 2009 (via objet-a + theguywhoinventedfire)

July 14, 2010
from ‘Refusing Defeatism: Derrida, Decision and Absolute Risk’ by Nick Mansfield

How did we find the strength to go on? In the modern period, ‘‘the people’’, the collective subject and patient vehicle of progressive Enlightenment and historical meaning, became nothing but a pretext for murder, the Volk, the proletariat, the petty bourgeois settler clearing away peoples and cultures as so many obstacles to agriculture, carving out the requisite emptiness for a fantasy-autochthony. In the modern period, while ‘‘the people’’ awaited one humanistic apocalypse or another, aching for the promised final unity, purity or triumph, people themselves were mangled by bureaucratic genocides, brutalised by imperial police actions, photo-spectralised by nuclear experimentalism, shamed by the normativities of bio-power, and disappeared in the silence and night of one political terror apparatus or another, forced assimilations, forced migrations, forced industrialisation, emptied villages in Poland, in Kenya, in Chechnya, Bengal, Vietnam, Algeria, El Salvador, and East Timor, concentration camps, treacherous infiltrations, racial disenfranchisement, liberal complacency and error. In the twentieth century, when politics became art, art became madness, madness became pornography, pornography became murder, and murder became just entertainment, a delirium no subjectivity could make purposeful or more than rhetorically redemptive. Only love was redemptive by 1969. In the twentieth century, nature became simply the passive object of administration, pleasure was re-packaged as science, because science was the only language the newspapers accorded authority. It was the time of the eternal recurrence of the spiritless mind, the eternal poverty of the scandalous minority, the eternal sunshine of the exterminating angel, when the poet said: ‘‘Black milk of daybreak we drink you at sundown/We drink it at noon in the morning we drink it at night/We drink and we drink it/We dig a grave in the wind there one lies unconfined’’ (Celan 1990, 63). ‘‘Was I sleeping, while the others suffered?’’ (Beckett 1965, 90).

As a consequence, our time is a time of shameless defeatism, when we know everything we are told is misinformation, but this knowledge does not protect us, or inspire us to a future freedom, where things will be transparent. We know politicians lie, kill, cheat and dishonour us, but it is not clear what can be done about it, or whether in fact it is to be accepted with a frustrated resignation. We are not ignorant of what they do nor indifferent to it, but we are impelled to trust them by the apparent lack of any other option. This defeatism is not childlike nor naïve, not ignorant nor idealistic. It is wise, split between the wisdom of a cultivated lassitude where knowledge does not lead to the struggle with difficulty, nor to the dangerous decision, and an impatient, but directionless radicalism where the long awaited re-birth of progressive spirit seems further off every day, and the hope for change becomes simply invested in the imminence of first economic, then environmental, then terroristic, and now military catastrophe.

In the West, we pay our governments to do our murders for us, in the crisp hi-tech, neat, logistical, politic, rationalised, well-mannered and eminently reportable, statistical, Christian, way they have mastered these things, leaving the electorate untroubled by the cost on which its luxury depends and who gets to pay it. The legacy of the Reagan/Thatcher experiment: do not frighten the electorate with the spectre of the injustice, torment, dictatorship, starvation, epidemic, exploitation or genocide that it causes or benefits from. The electorate must be kept in a warm cocoon of moralistic platitudes, and homespun economic automaticity, where world-affairs are reduced to the business of an unthinking common sense, and the role of the media is merely to police stereotypes we can all hold in contempt: the cheating tradesman, the paedophile priest, the corrupt politician, the charlatan diet guru, thus creating a pathetic simulacrum of social consensus around injustices that never accumulate into a positive theory of the just itself. The point is Derrida never gave in, never conceded to the platitude, to the easy, reassuring orthodoxies of left or right, of humanism or subversion. No balking at risk, no refusal to recognise difficulty, no pragmatic concession that incommensurables, aporias, incompossibilities needed at some point to be truncated, by-passed, frustrated or overcome. No sense that thinking had a limit beyond which only authority or pragmatism should take us. For Derrida, there was no pragmatics without thought, except the pragmatics that would not admit what it thought. No pragmatics without metaphysics. The pragmatics that disavowed metaphysics simply confessed how bad, un-self-conscious and ill-considered its metaphysics actually was. There was no point for Derrida in a thought that did not think, that refused to think, the ‘‘humanity’’ that settled for rhetorical gestures, the politics satisfied by an educated resignation, nor, above all, did he ever concede to defeatism and its small wisdom.

SOCIAL SEMIOTICS VOLUME 16 NUMBER 3 (SEPTEMBER 2006)

So when will it start being okay for me to introduce my papers with pure unmitigated rage like this…?

Can’t wait!

July 7, 2010

More from Mona Hatoum’s Witness.

July 7, 2010
‘Witness’ by Mona Hatoum, from the eponymous exhibition at the Beirut Art Center.

‘Witness’ by Mona Hatoum, from the eponymous exhibition at the Beirut Art Center.

May 31, 2010

Pailhead - I Will Refuse via @newsongsforyou

Murder and weather
Is our only news -
But I will refuse.

May 29, 2010
Russian graffiti in the fallen Reichstag /via @neatorama

Russian graffiti in the fallen Reichstag /via @neatorama

May 28, 2010
"Cast as unreliable and unruly, the human body in the age of technology is less and less the primary site/cite of military representational practices. The triad more is appropriately understood as such: the hardware has come to represent a whole range of advanced high-tech weapons; the software represents information and communication technologies; and the wetware represents the embodied human soldier, which significantly is the weakest link (see Der Derian 2003; Kundnani 2004; Harris 2003). Thus what constituted the cyborg in its earlier manifestations, as explored and detailed by Foucault, no longer fully captures the shifts motivated by the current fetishisation of advanced technology in the military. Alternatively, what we are witnessing, and indeed participating in, with the constitution of the cyborg soldier is a radical rearticulation of subjectivity. Contemporary military techno-scientific discourses have profoundly altered the subject of discursive power productions, with the fleshy body of the soldier no longer standing in as the agent of politics by other means, or in this case, war by other means. With the discursive positioning of military technologies as superior to the human soldier, machines are now the subjects of the text."

Cristina Masters, Cyborg soldiers and militarised masculinities /via wildcat2030

Auto reblog for that “site/cite” - I think I despair…

May 22, 2010
Puppets, Pageantry and Protest Politics: White People and the Anti-War Movement

via clingtomymouth

May 21, 2010
"Let us consider this scene. Whereas, not so long ago, that is until the 1960s, volunteers went off to fight alongside peoples in their liberation struggles, it is now humanitarian workers who go to take care of victims of conflict. Where previously the language evoked in defending oppressed peoples was that of revolution, current usage favors the vocabulary of psychology to sensitize the world to their misfortune. Yesterday we denounced imperialist domination; today we reveal its psychic traces. Not so long ago we glorified the resistance of populations; we henceforth scrutinize the resilience of individuals."

— Fassin, Didier (2008). The Humanitarian Politics of Testimony: Subjectification through Trauma in the Israeli–Palestinian Conflict. Cultural Anthropology, 23(3): 531–558. /via anthropophagous curate bonesarecoralmade guerrillamamamedicine

February 3, 2010
(via blackandwtf)

(via blackandwtf)

October 31, 2009
Eyal Weizman, "Deleuze, Guattari, Debord and the Israeli Defense Force"

“The Israeli Defence Forces have been heavily influenced by contemporary philosophy, highlighting the fact that there is considerable overlap among theoretical texts deemed essential by military academies and architectural schools.” ||| via @davidbmetcalfe

October 27, 2009
U.S. Propaganda Activities in the Middle East | National Security Archive

September 22, 2009
fish tank via @krikor

fish tank via @krikor

September 19, 2009
star fighter via skambla

star fighter via skambla