Join us this week on Wednesday, November 28 in the UVU Library room LI505 at 8 pm where we will receive a lecture entitled "How Is It to Be Done?": Tiqqun, Civil War, and the Tactics of Communism. Abstract follows:"Society no longer exists, at least in the sense of a differentiated whole. There is only a tangle of norms and mechanisms through which THEY hold together the scattered tatters of the global biopolitical fabric, through which THEY prevent its violent disintegration. Empire is the administrator of this desolation, the supreme manager of a process of listless implosion."—from Introduction to Civil War
Society is not in crisis, society is at an end. The things we used to take for granted have all been vapor
ized.
Politics was one of these things, a Greek invention that condenses
around an equation: to hold a position means to take sides, and to take
sides means to unleash civil war. Civil war, position, sides--these were
all one word in the Greek: stasis. If the history of the modern state
in all its forms--absolute, liberal, welfare--has been the continuous
attempt to ward off this stasis, the great novelty of contemporary
imperial power is its embrace of civil war as a technique of governance
and disorder as a means of maintaining control. Where the modern state
was founded on the institution of the law and its constellation of
divisions, exclusions, and repressions, imperial power has replaced them
with a network of norms and apparatuses that conspire in the production
of the biopolitical citizens of Empire. In their first book available
in English, Tiqqun explores the possibility of a new practice of
communism, finding a foundation for an ontology of the common in the
politics of friendship and the free play of forms-of-life. They see the
ruins of society as the ideal setting for the construction of the
community to come. In other words: the situation is excellent. Now is
not the time to lose courage.
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