Tumgik
andreaslingard · 8 years
Audio
https://soundcloud.com/andreaslingard/006d-main-5
1 note · View note
andreaslingard · 8 years
Audio
https://soundcloud.com/andreaslingard/sjukt-daligt-input
0 notes
andreaslingard · 9 years
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
March 25 2015 - Squatters resisting eviction in Amsterdam, aided by a glorious banner. [videos]
2K notes · View notes
andreaslingard · 10 years
Link
11 notes · View notes
andreaslingard · 10 years
Video
youtube
Reza Negarestani's talk at Symposium: Speculations on Anonymous Materials.
4 notes · View notes
andreaslingard · 10 years
Video
youtube
Wonderful BBC-documentary from 1979 on the history of recorded sound. Full of vintage sounds that really were “The New Sound Of Music” back then.
5 notes · View notes
andreaslingard · 10 years
Link
1 note · View note
andreaslingard · 10 years
Photo
Tumblr media
857 notes · View notes
andreaslingard · 10 years
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Zizek on Leninist Hugging.
1K notes · View notes
andreaslingard · 10 years
Quote
Deleuze was—I lost my best friend last month, because Deleuze was my best friend. I admired him. I loved him. When we were young we were very separate. Together we invented the term amis de vieillesse. You know the expression amis de jeunesse? We were not amis de jeunesse. We became amis de vieillesse. And why? Because we are a little bit brothers. I think that Deleuze is a geographer, and I am too a geographer. We are not historians. I think for instance that Deleuze’s philosophy is full of fluxes. And what fluxes? Prepositions in my case! I have a chapter in my book about prepositions. Prepositions are the algebra of fluxes. I don’t think he committed suicide. It was impossible to breathe—he opened the window and…
Michel Serres, in a 1995 interview with Hari Kunzru (via manymanywolves)
60 notes · View notes
andreaslingard · 10 years
Photo
Tumblr media
Workers of the world, faint!
PHNOM PENH, Cambodia — Just over two years ago, at the Anful Garments Factory in Kompong Speu Province, a young worker named Chanthul and 250 of her colleagues collapsed in a collective spell of fainting. They had to be hospitalized; the production line shut down.
Two days later, the factory was back up, and the mass faintings struck again. A worker started barking commands in a language that sounded like Chinese and, claiming to speak in the name of an ancestral spirit, demanded offerings of raw chicken. None were forthcoming, and more workers fell down. Peace, and production, resumed only after factory owners staged an elaborate ceremony, offering up copious amounts of food, cigarettes and Coca-Cola to the spirit.
[…]
These days, when neak ta appear on the factory floor — inducing mass faintings among workers and shouting commands at managers — they are helping the cause of Cambodia’s largely young, female and rural factory workforce by registering a kind of bodily objection to the harsh daily regimen of industrial capitalism: few days off; a hard bed in a wooden barracks; meager meals of rice and a mystery curry, hastily scarfed down between shifts. These voices from beyond are speaking up for collective bargaining in the here and now, expressing grievances much like the workers’ own: a feeling that they are being exploited by forces beyond their control, that the terms of factory labor somehow violate an older, fairer moral economy.
[..]
What the spirit was asking for was respect. He demanded that an altar be built and that ritual offerings be made to him there four times a month. He demanded that the owner roast a pig for him and throw a Khmer New Year party for the workers. The owner complied. The faintings stopped.
[…]
In September 2010, when the national minimum wage was $61 per month, some 200,000 workers took to the streets to ask for a raise. It was the largest-ever strike in the garment sector, but after just three days it came to an anticlimactic halt due to police violence and threats against union leaders. Hundreds of the striking workers were illegally fired in retaliation. The minimum wage remained the same.
Then the neak ta appeared. Mass faintings in garment factories increased exponentially in early 2011, just a few months after the mass strike fizzled. Production lines shut down after the workers’ bodies shut down, and spirits bargained with management on the factory floor.
[…]
And now neak ta have been showing up to defend other victims of development. The spirits have appeared at demonstrations and sit-ins organized by the political opposition, which has been contesting the results of elections held in July, which kept Hun Sen’s governing party in power.
[…]
Last year, in a slum in Phnom Penh, a demonstration by residents who were being evicted by a wealthy landlord was interrupted when a neak ta possessed an indigent woman who lived under a staircase with her mentally ill husband, both suffering from H.I.V. The woman assaulted a local official who was trying to shut down the protest, forcing him to stand down. Previously, the landlord had cut down an old banyan tree believed to be the neak ta’s home.
“I have been protecting this area for a long time,” the woman shouted, “and I am very angry because the company demolished my house. I am very, very angry.”
7 notes · View notes
andreaslingard · 10 years
Photo
Tumblr media
1 note · View note
andreaslingard · 10 years
Quote
[D]escriptions of a CEO’s day also prove Deleuze and Guattari’s claim in Anti-Oedipus that, in capitalism, “there are no longer even any masters, but only slaves commanding other slaves … The bourgeois sets the example … : more utterly enslaved than the lowest of slaves, he is the first servant of the ravenous machine, the beast of the reproduction of capital … ‘I too am a slave’ – these are the new words spoken by the master. ” The good old days of exploitation, where the boss was interested in the worker only to the extent that they produced a commodity which could be sold at a profit, are long gone. Work then meant the annihilation of subjectivity, your reduction to an impersonal machine-part; it was the price that you paid for time away from work. Now, there is no time away from work, and work is not opposed to subjectivity. All time is entrepreneurial time because we are the commodities, so that any time not spent selling ourselves is wasted time.
-Mark Fisher, Suffering With A Smile (http://theoccupiedtimes.org/?p=11586)
866 notes · View notes
andreaslingard · 10 years
Photo
Tumblr media
20 notes · View notes
andreaslingard · 10 years
Text
The Militarization of Peace: Absence of Terror or Terror of Absence?
Reza Negarestani
Introduction:
This essay explores the rise of a new wave of terrorism which
exploits its own dissolution, making a weapon of the doctrine of Taqiyya or strategic (dis)simulation, dismantling the theatrical aspect of the battlefield and selecting civilians as primary targets and ‘molecular battlefields’. This tendency threatens not only global civilian survival but the very horizon of survival or living (inits most basic, abstract sense) in general. It makes survival itself a field of exploitation for extremist terrorism.
Full text
2 notes · View notes
andreaslingard · 10 years
Photo
Tumblr media
594 notes · View notes
andreaslingard · 10 years
Photo
Tumblr media
St. Volodymyr’s Cathedral, Kiev
(via Pinterest)
3K notes · View notes