We’re back with a new reading group for 2022, reading essays that reflect the content of Mark Fisher’s Postcapitalist Desirelectures.
I’ve been planning on doing this for a while. Over a year, in fact. It was shelved after the death of Nine, who was so active in this group and who I knew was excited about this project, but I know many in our group are still interested and after so long reading new works together, I thought it might be fun and more engaging to draw on my own expertise for a change!
I edited together Mark’s final lectures because I believed they provided the best and most cohesive statement on where his thought was headed. So much poor and unfounded posthumous speculation was dragging the public perception of his thought in strange directions. Though incomplete, I felt the momentum and passion was there to engage people far better than another collection of unpublished and under-appreciated essays.
That being said, they’re out there. Fisher’s Acid Communism could effectively be reconstructed from various essays he wrote after the publication of Capitalist Realism, between 2012 and 2016. So, for this reading group, I suggest we read those essays, using the Postcapitalist Desire syllabus as a guide. Rather than turning to Mark’s own references, however, let’s read the essays he wrote that explore those same themes.
Of course, I’m very aware this project overlaps with the start of The K-Files over on the Zer0 Books YouTube channel. So there’s a lot of Fisher going around at the moment and I hope that neither you nor I get burnt out on him too quickly. But I do not think the material we discuss here will overlap with what we discuss there.
So, without further ado, here’s the discussion from our first session. We read Mark’s essay “Postcapitalist Desire”, first published in What We Are Fighting For, published by Pluto Press in 2012.
We have reached the end! We have taken this very short book very slowly, but it has been a worthy exercise. For all the vague critiques about Bratton’s technocratic tendencies, which are certainly present earlier on, it is had to find much to disagree with in his book’s closing chapters. A thoroughly invigorating close and an interesting intervention into the long shadow of phenomenology and bad readings of Foucault.
Where we go next is an open question. This is our last session for this book and also for this year. In January, we will return. The idea was to do some Mark Fisher, but I may have been double-booked, as Buddies Without Organs have been poached to explore the K-Files for the new Zer0 Books YouTube channel. As mentioned in this session’s intro, we can still explore the same texts or different texts in our own space, but that can be a discussion for the Discord.
Until then, I hope you all have lovely Christmases (if you’re that way inclined) and have good New Years. See you on the other side.
This was our penultimate session reading Ben Bratton’s Revenge of the Real. Short but sweet — we talked about mask wars, automation as “touchlessness at scale”, positive objectification, ego death, and more!
This was a fun one, and I think left us raring to go, excited to read Bratton’s takedown of Giorgio Agamben.
We’re back after a brief hiatus — at least the recordings are. We had a great session a few weeks back that I unfortunately lost when my laptop died mid-render. Then I went on holiday and then the last session was a quiet one and there weren’t enough of us to really sustain a discussion.
Thankfully, we’re back this week, and we’ll hopefully be accelerating things a bit so as to get to the end of this very short book, which is nonetheless taking us months. Then we’ll be moving onto something a bit more involved and we’ll be doing an 8-week course based around Mark Fisher’s Postcapitalist Desire, which I’ve had planned for a long, long time and which is finally ready to shared.
In the meantime, here’s this week’s chat. We discussed four chapters from Ben Bratton’s The Revenge of the Real — “What 5G Stands For”, “The Problem Is Individuation Itself”, “Touchlessness” and “Quarantine Urbanism”.
We talked about individuation and subjectivation, Bruno Latour, Achille Mbembe, computational planetarity, Insulate Britain, beekeeping, and more.Below are some notes and quotes I pulled out of the chapters, and below that are some links to things discussed over the course of the session.
Notes
“Reminiscent of fears about photography absorbing the souls of its subjects, the general brooding sense that our identities are being ‘stolen’ through the acceleration of ‘the system’ links 5G’s yet faster bandwidth for ego-corrosive social media to the de-subjectifying demands of pandemic public policy”. The fear of vaccines similarly leads some to believe that unknown compounds or technologies, created by the government, are designed to “invade and colonize one’s biological person, dissolving its fragile integrity into an intolerable agglomerated capture.” [62]
Ultimately, Bratton argues “we need to stop making people crazy with the demand for total individual autonomy, and stop conflating individuality with subjectivity, subjectivity with identity, and identity with agency so thoroughly that a challenge to one is a challenge to all.” [62] This “intense conflation of identity, subjectivity, agency, and individuality is enforced by the Pavlovian economics of social media”. [64] The irony is that our reliance on what Jodi Dean has called “communicative capitalism” and its associated technologies has made our entangled societies, in Bratton’s words, “both more complex and less willing and able to deliberately comprehend themselves.” [65]
Taking issue with the processes of (over-)individuation that our social media networks not only encourage but enforce, Bratton notes how critical theory has long dealt with these issues of subjective formation. “Foucault’s account of the history of Western subjectivity, identity, and individuation is also a history of liberal individualism,” he writes, as “a set of presumptions deep within diverse philosophical and popular political commitments” [67] — something we have explored repeatedly ourselves.
“The remedy of post-pandemic politics is not to ‘free’ individuals so their individual private wants can be better met, faster and more transparently, but to organize society’s capacity for self-modelling and self-composition around a different axis than individuals and their wants.” [68] Instead, we are “frozen in place by the impossibly contradictory demands of being _both_ embedded inside a planetary society that mediates itself through vast physical connections of information, energy, and matter, _and_ simultaneously asked to realize [our] potential as a self-sovereign autonomous agent with all the associated identities that Western liberalism demands as the precondition of personal actualization. No wonder people think the 5G cell towers are melting the boundaries of their egos.” [69]
Mbembe: “We’re led to believe that sensibility, emotions, affect, sentiments and feelings are all the real stuff of subjectivity, and therefore, of radical agency. Paradoxically, in the paranoid tenor of our epoch, this is very much in tune with the dominant strictures of neoliberal individualism.” [73]
“[A] privatized subjectivity and the attendant hyper-interiorized individuation hinge on a commitment to the authenticity and efficacy of affect. This embraces the notion that a preferred personal narrativisation of the world can, and in fact should, take priority over the cold reality of the planet and its indifferent biochemistries. It is the ‘culture’ in ‘culture war.'” [73]
The epidemiological view [of society] should shift our sense of subjectivity away from private individuation and toward public transmissibility.
…as we change ourselves to resist its viral RNA, [Covid-19] is neutralised, not annihilated.
Hello! We’re back again, reading Benjamin Bratton’s The Revenge of the Real. This time we read chapters four and five: “The Epidemiological View of Society” and “The Sensing Layer”. We had a good debate about both. Personally, I found both of these chapters lacking, but there was still hope to be found in what Bratton was gesturing towards. We discussed both at length.
No links this week, beyond this one to Thomas Murphy’s Twitter critique of Bratton’s book, which felt quite applicable this week, whereas previously I didn’t really understand what he was gesturing at. Below you’ll find my hastily-written notes and first thoughts on this chapters, which I basically riffed on during the conversation. But in case you want to read it written down… And below that, an earworm I acquired as soon as we wrapped up.
The first chapter here takes issue with what Giorgio Agamben calls the “most incommunicable element of subjectivity”, which is “the biopolitical life of the body”. Biopolitical life, for Agamben, is, as Bratton writes, “a differential field of relations that produces modes of subjectivity through materialist-discursive institutionalisation”. For Bratton, to say this is incommunicable is to unnecessarily mystify it. Subjectivity and the modes of its production are, on the contrary, perfectly legible if you understand contemporary forms of governance.
But there’s a misstep — or at least a misunderstanding — here, I think. Bratton seems to argue that this view has led to “a debilitating and lazy constructivism”. Is this a critique of the body without organs? The deleuzoguattarian position is that the anatomical organisation of the body restricts what it can do. For Bratton, however, this is a positive mode of understanding. And yet, Bratton later seems to affirm this deleuzoguattarian view, when he argues against Agamben’s apparent “theological-phenomenological preferences” in favour of “a positive biopolitics” that embraces “a realist and materialist conception of the human body as a biochemical assemblage and collective human intelligence as the collaboration of such creatures working in concert.”
I’ve heard a few people make complaints about this since, arguing that Bratton misrepresents Agamben’s position. Personally, I still haven’t read any of Agamben’s essays on Covid, but Bratton seems confused about a lot more than just Agamben’s argument.
This sense of “the incommunicable” is similar, I think, to what Lyotard calls the “unpresentable” in The Postmodern Condition. In a postmodern world, any newly discovered form of knowledge or expression is immediately subordinated to a totalizing ideological “truth”. This is an unfortunate side-effect of society’s computerisation, he argues. Just as any new programme loaded onto a computer for the first time must nonetheless be rendered in a format that is legible to the operating system at large, so any new perspective on our world must be legible to a pre-existing hegemonic framework – even forms of knowledge that are principally opposed to that framework altogether.
This is not simply a function of capitalist society for Lyotard, but any computerised socioeconomic alternative.
We might note that, when Lyotard’s appraisal of postmodernism was written, there was still such a thing as the Soviet Union – a clear alternative to capitalist hegemony. The problem is less with the classic formulation of a particular ideology, but the “advanced liberal management” systems used to keep them running. Following the fall of the Soviet Union in the early 1990s, this computational stasis is even more apparent today. From that moment onwards, the choice was no longer between capitalism and communism but reduced to a choice between Microsoft and Apple.
For Lyotard especially, postmodernist critique was a kind of battle cry, signalling “a war on totality” that demands we bear witness “to the unpresentable” – that is, all that cannot be rendered in the computational language of global capital.
When Agamben speaks of the “uncommunicable” – and we might remember that Jodi Dean referenced this in her book Blog Theory, which we read a few months ago – I think he’s talking about something very similar. We might note it is also a large part of his work in conversation with the recently deceased Jean-Luc Nancy, who similarly talks about the “inoperative” or the “disavowed”. It’s a sort of communication that is beyond communicative capitalism.
So, I can see what Bratton means when he argues that biopolitical life is “public, communicable, and intersubjective”, but it seems that his understanding of these words is far more restrictive than Agamben’s own. Agamben would surely not disagree with Bratton’s point, but he’s certainly attempting to go beyond it. That Bratton interprets this as some sort of transcendence is also a mistake, I think. To call Agamben’s position “theological-phenomenological” is very strange. I think he simply means an epidemiological understanding that is not captured by capitalism. Bratton’s view does start to feel technocratic here, which is surely a misreading not only of Agamben but the likes of Deleuze and Guattari as well. When they talk of machines, for instance, they’re not excluding bios but expanding the biosphere into the technosphere, so that they might enter into a new relation, both physically and epistemologically.
It’s a subtle difference but an important one. Like when we think of the brain like a computer. We know that it’s a bad analogy, and somewhat folk-psychological. It also restricts our understanding of the brain, in some instances, as if the brain as it actually functions is too abstract to comprehend so we have to reduce it to an understanding that is not only reductive but also accepts the programming of your average computer to be a kind of given. But what if we understood the brain as a computer in the sense that a computer is modular, upgradable, adaptable, plastic, etc. The analogy is never clean, but it can be used for reductive purposes and Promethean purposes, if that makes sense.
I’m not sure which side of this coin Bratton is on in this chapter. (In “The Sensing Layer” his argument is more obviously resembles a kind of techno-Leviathan, where state apparatuses “sense” things like we do.) In fact, he seems to oddly confuse the two. Or he is at least casting people as enemies who simply have a different set of terminology for making very similar points as he wants to, which sort of affirms Agamben’s point. That Bratton has misinterpreted an argument that is not written with his own lexical preferences in mind is to fall into the technocratic trap that Lyotard first described four decades ago.
It’s a bit like Brassier’s argument against Badiou, for instance, if people remember when we read his essay “Nihil Unbound” – different to the book of the same name. He argues that, whilst Badiou’s preoccupation with mathematics and zero might be a novel way of discussing the real, it is nonetheless a framework that is easily captured by capitalism. Indeed, that Badiou’s militant philosophy and capitalism itself are both grounded on mathematics is surely a point of weakness on the part of his anti-capitalism. It doesn’t mean that numbers are innately capitalist, of course, but it makes the argument very easy to appropriate. I think Bratton is falling into the same trap here, and it is one that I think a bunch of left-accelerationists fell into when they started talking about party-political strategizing rather than Alex Williams’ initial talk of a kind of “xenoeconomics”. Bratton’s argument here is much closer to the thing it is supposedly arguing against that I think many postmodern philosophers would be comfortable with.
So it’s not, as Bratton puts it, that “life is just too mysterious to grasp or that the natural order is too sacred to fiddle with”, it’s asking – to what extent is your understanding of the natural order limited to a certain kind of captured language and understanding? It’s precisely arguing that any attempts to fix lives lived with “the daily agencies of sewage landscapes and exposed corpses” can end up dangerously colonial if we suggest it is just a case of implementing advanced neoliberal management systems in certain neglected areas. It’s dangerously close to Western imperial arrogance for the technological age.
If that is accounted for, though, there is potential for a truly egalitarian technological future.
Post-pandemic politics needs to think through these relationships carefully and with the goal that the whole of society is included in the model appropriately.
This is surely the acceptance of a social immanence. There is no outside to capitalism but there are still outsides to neoliberal management systems. This, again, is the tension between Bratton and Agamben. Is there still a radicality in being unseen? It is possible in real life, without being accompanied by destitution? Is it possible online, without being lumped in with a reactionary mass of anons? What happened to Deleuze and Guattari’s political of becoming-imperceptible? This is arguably as much an affirmation of normcore as it is being off-grid. Is the only way to become imperceptible to get lost in the mass of government sensing data? Is what Bratton is describing a kind of technocommunism? A truly universal governance of care? I think it is interesting that he repeatedly speaks of “care” rather than “healthcare”. Free healthcare counts for a lot, of course, but not in isolation. Free healthcare is inherently reductive if it does not encompass things like housing or income – a lack of which arguably puts further strain on an isolated healthcare system, since a general lack of other care provisions can impact your health in myriad ways.
There were just a couple of us this week, so I’ll keep the intro short and sweet. We read chapters 2 and 3 of Revenge of the Real — that is, “The Big Filtering” and “Comparative Governance”.
Welcome back to a new edition of the XG reading group! After jumping around all sorts of texts last time, before settling on Jodi Dean’s Blog Theory, this time we’re readying Benjamin Bratton’s new book, The Revenge of the Real: Politics for a Post-Pandemic World.
It’s a short book with nice and condensed chapters, so it feels good to have a shorter and more digestible book to read through. (We have previously jumped at nightmare books that want to kill you, so it’s nice to read one that wants to save the world.)
This week, we read the Preface and Chapter 1, and a couple of us were immediately struck by how this book feels like left-accelerationism by another name. We connected Bratton’s understanding of the Covid-19 pandemic to how the accelerationist blogosphere tried to respond to the financial crash of 2008, and we also discussed the various stakes of Bratton’s project of planetary governmentality.
Below are links to various resources and other things discussed. Join us in two weeks’ time for a discussion of Chapter 2 (and maybe 3?)
Welcome back to what will probably be the final episode of the reading group arch. We started off with Badiou and we’ve been all around the houses, but it feels about time to we jump into something new. From here on out we’ll be reading Benjamin Bratton’s new book The Return of the Real. Get your copies in soon if you want to read it along with us, probably starting in two or three weeks.
In the meantime, we read Gilles Deleuze’s essay “Bartleby, or, the Formula”, which we were meant to read last week but instead just chatted about general stuff. We dug a bit deeper into the essay this week, but still bounced around its central concepts. Reading this sent me into a poetry rabbit hole personally, and so Bec and I ended up chatting for quite awhile about Ted Hughes, Sylvia Plath and Virginia Woolf, in a way that I hope sheds some light on the literary associations and interests embedded with Deleuze’s own philosophy.
The book mentioned about poetry was Ben Lerner’s The Hatred of Poetry, published in the UK by Fitzcarraldo Editions, and the Ted Hughes documentary was Stronger Than Death, available on YouTube here. Part of my thoughts on that already made it into a blog post posted yesterday, if you want the more polished and less rambling version.
Welcome back! Just a brief hangout this week. We were scheduled to discuss Gilles Deleuze’s essay “Bartleby, or, the Formula” from Essays Critical and Clinical, but we had a low turnout. Nevertheless, rather than just straight-up reschedule, we had a hang out anyway and the chat was good!
We talked about the changing state of Covid, a little bit about Bartleby and Deleuze’s interest in the outsideness of American literature, as well as Benjamin Bratton’s new book The Revenge of the Real, which I think we’ll read together soon once it is out properly and people can pick up hard copies if they so wish.
We’re not leaving Deleuze alone just yet though. We’ll take another run at this chapter next week, hopefully with a few more people available to chat about it. Until then, enjoy this nice hour of a few of us just shooting the shit.
Below is the true crime YouTube channel I’ve been binge-watching at work, which I think is genuinely interesting as a phenomenon (and as content). Still, it’s very existence just goes to show that we really do live in a society…
Hello! We’re back, reading the fourth and final chapter of Jodi Dean’s Blog Theory. Really enjoyed this book, for all its twists and turns, and particularly how prescient it is. Though some parts have aged, the “affective networks” discussed in this final chapter remain depressingly familiar. We primarily talked about that this week, and how affect and participation create a weird catch-22 between active and passive engagement in contemporary politics. Lockdown, in general, has made me more interested in engaging with grassroots organising once it is safer to gather together in person. I think this book has only strengthened that feeling for others.
As Dean says: “It’s easier to set up a new blog than it is to undertake the ground-level organisational work of building alternatives.” That’s certainly true, but there’s no reason why we can’t do both!
Next time we’ll be reading Deleuze’s essay “Bartleby, or, the Formula” from Essays Critical and Clinical.