Jaromil on Thu, 29 Oct 2015 18:34:09 +0100 (CET) |
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Re: <nettime> what if we were all right but all wrong? |
On Sun, 30 Aug 2015, Geert Lovink wrote: > > On 30 Aug 2015, at 12:26 pm, Alex Foti <alex.foti@gmail.com> wrote: > > > > So anarchists, autonomists, ecologists, queers are right in what > > they say and fight for, but they are also all wrong, because if they > > don't unite neoliberals and fundamentalists will defeat each one by > > one. We need a new intellectual synthesis, a new political > > philoposophy, a new, less intellectual and more popular, way of > > doing politics. > > Strong analysis, Alex. I agreed up to this last point. Coming from the > low lands where pragmatism rules, the culture here is deeply > anti-intellectual. It's main problem is the rejection of debate and > reflexion, outlawing intellectuals, both from political parties and > social movement. The source of this is positivism on the one side > (specially amongst the Greens who detest any form of negativism and > critique as not constructive and exclude all these voices that are not > 'reasonable'). So do not forget, in many places, more intellectual > means more popular because it is inclusive of different voices that > break the New Age consensus that paralyzes us right now. I completely disagree with this. Wanted to make my point, then let it aside, but now reading your refrain in Dorien's interview I'll just get this out of my chest, for the little I know of the Netherlands and the much I know of Italy the country also Alex comes from. In Italy we are literally engulfed by (critical or not, same) intellectualoids swimming into academy/politics and unable to get anything done, or even understood by the masses, completely detached from the actual legwork it takes to carry on a political campaign or initiative. Geert, this is clearly not your case so I really advise you to look deeper into this rather than countering Alex conclusion with your fight against the Dutch mills. Let Italy be once again a political laboratory worth observing: even critical voices who have all the reasons to be there countering the late-capitalist "positivism" you define become the very enemies of themselves - at least on the intellectual plane, since the bodies are usually enriched from exposing their smart-ass critic. A political stance that is true to the post-capitalist phase we are approaching should be there to produce accessible value (knowledge and practice) rather than ivory-towers of know-it-all that often and gratuitously cash-in on a all-round critical position which has no other role than that of advertising the presence of another talking head. The population is numbed by this dynamic and in the worst case made very cynical, there is no trust anymore, not even in critical thinking which is oh-so-right but not followed by practice. There is simply no trust because noone is walking the walk, but everyone likes to go around and criticize, from the sport-bar to the academic palace, the latter being the place where the privileged can cash in on their refined use of language and references. This is ultimately a total disaster for the very critical culture you care so much about and me too and Alex too. All the space is taken by an enlarging old-boys camp to the point today I'm not really sure where Brecht would go sit, perhaps withing the new ranks of a generational conflict which is unfolding under so many names, last but not least that of disruptive innovation. The real problem we are facing is that of succession, whose consequence is also production of sense that is relevant and nurturing someone more than the intellectualoids themselves. This is the last stage where capitalism is still winning. And sorry to say but if you insist in this vision please consider that the Netherlands (a place I admitedly love for its pragmatism too) is also a very small context and the context you are trying to defend is the smallest in this smallness. Defending the petty interest of a mistreated cast of intellectuals in the land where cultural cuts have hit pragmatically and dramatically hard won't ever help to understand the larger analysis Alex is bringing forward. ciao -- Denis Roio aka Jaromil http://Dyne.org think &do tank CTO and co-founder free/open source developer åå 6113 D89C A825 C5CE DD02 C872 73B3 5DA5 4ACB 7D10 # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: http://mx.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org