The laughter of Carthage : the second volume of the Colonel Pyat quartet
(2012)

Fiction

eBook

Provider: hoopla

Details

PUBLISHED
[United States] : PM Press, 2012
Made available through hoopla
DESCRIPTION

1 online resource

ISBN/ISSN
9781604867824 (electronic bk.) MWT14229706, 1604867825 (electronic bk.) 14229706
LANGUAGE
English
NOTES

Originally published just months before the May 1968 upheavals in France, Raoul Vaneigem's The Revolution of Everyday Life offered a lyrical and aphoristic critique of the "society of the spectacle" from the point of view of individual experience. Whereas Debord's masterful analysis of the new historical conditions that triggered the uprisings of the 1960s armed the revolutionaries of the time with theory, Vaneigem's book described their feelings of desperation directly, and armed them with "formulations capable of firing point-blank on our enemies." "I realise," writes Vaneigem in his introduction, "that I have given subjective will an easy time in this book, but let no one reproach me for this without first considering the extent, to which the objective conditions of the contemporary world advance the cause of subjectivity day after day." Vaneigem names and defines the alienating features of everyday life in consumer society: survival rather than life, the call to sacrifice, the cultivation of false needs, the dictatorship of the commodity, subjection to social roles, and above all the replacement of God by the Economy. And, in the second part of his book, "Reversal of Perspective," he explores the countervailing impulses that, in true dialectical fashion, persist within the deepest alienation: creativity, spontaneity, poetry, and the path from isolation to communication and participation. For "To desire a different life is already that life in the making." And, "fulfillment is expressed in the singular but conjugated in the plural."

Mode of access: World Wide Web

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