Arthur Kroker: Technopocalypse & Slow Suicide
Originally posted on The Dark Forest: Literature, Philosophy, and Digital Arts:
Today, the emblematic signs of the technopoesis that holds us in its sway are symptomatic of a future that…
Originally posted on The Dark Forest: Literature, Philosophy, and Digital Arts:
Today, the emblematic signs of the technopoesis that holds us in its sway are symptomatic of a future that…
“We stand outside of science. Instead we stand before a tree in bloom, for example – and the tree stands before us. The tree faces us. The tree and we […]
http://podcast.cbc.ca/mp3/podcasts/current_20160429_46350.mp3 “Deep in the heart of the largest slum, or favela, in Brazil, it’s hard to be heard by the rest of the country, let alone the rest of the […]
Originally posted on Shannon E. Williams:
We are now faced with the fact, my friends, that tomorrow is today. We are confronted with the fierce urgency of now. In this…
“the contrast between organized experience and corporeal experience in Deleuze – the latter being akin to the non-figurative dimension of desire (what appears often as imperceptible), to contagion, to unnoticed […]
It would seem as if the very language of our parlors would lose all its nerve and degenerate into palaver wholly, our lives pass at such remoteness from its symbols, […]
Originally posted on Deterritorial Investigations :
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IIQb0U8vIXc http://www.shaviro.com/Blog/?p=1306
I sit here in the prison ward nervously dickering with my ulcer a half-tamed animal raising hell in its living space RIP Daniel J. Berrigan
http://french-italian.stanford.edu/opinions/shows/eo10194.mp3 starts around 6:44 w/ Jean-Marie Apostolidès “We are bored in the city, there is no longer any Temple of the Sun. Between the legs of the women walking by, […]
Originally posted on The Dark Forest: Literature, Philosophy, and Digital Arts:
Good article by Evgeny Morozov on The Glass Cage: Automation and Us, by Nicholas Carr on The Baffler. As…
http://podcast.cbc.ca/mp3/podcasts/ideas_20160427_69588.mp3 “Words on a page — that’s usually how we conceive of poetry. But Christian Bök, at the University of Calgary, has done something no other writer has ever done: […]
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