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Nietzsche's Corps-e: Aesthetics, Politics, Prophecy, or, the Spectacular Technoculture of Everyday Life (Post-Contemporary Interventions) PDF

576 Pages·1996·15.54 MB·English
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n o s e m a J c ri d e r F d n a h s Fi y e nl a St s: r o dit E s e ri e S S N O I T N E V R E T N I Y R A R O P M E T N O C T- S O P NIETZSCHE'S CORPS/E Aesthetics, Politics, Prophecy, or, The Spectacular Technoculture of Everyday Life Geoff Waite 1996 DUKE UNIVERSITY PRESS Durham & London © 1996 Duke University Press All rights reserved Printed in the United States of America on acid-free paper °° Designed by Cherie H. Westmoreland Typeset in GaUiard by Keystone Typesetting, Inc. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data appear on the last printed page of this book. This book is published with the aid of a grant from the Hull Memorial Publication Fund of Cornell University. for if Let the dead bury their own dead. — Matthew 8:22 II n'y a que les morts qui' ne reviennent pas. (It is only the dead who do not return.) — Bertrand Barere, 1794 There is no reason, which compels me to maintain that a body does not die, unless it becomes a corpse; nay, experience would seem to point in the opposite direction. —Benedict de Spinoza, 1675 Wir leiden nicht nur von den Lebenden, sondern audi von den Toten. Le mortsaisit le vif! (We suffer not only from the living, but also from the dead. The dead man grabs the living!) — Karl Marx, 1867 Your dead are buried ours are reborn you clean up the ashes we light the fire they're queuing up to dance on socialism's grave this funeral is for the wrong corpse. —The Mekons, 1991 Plate i. MarkTansey, Utopic, 1987, oil on canvas, 68 X 70 inches. Private collection. Courtesy Curt Marcus Galiay> New York, ©Mark Tansey. Contents Prologue xi 1. Nietzsche, The Only Position as Adversary i The Only Position i Incorporation as Adversary 7 Nietzsche/anism as Concept (Spinoza) 21 Between the Lines 30 Structural Causality (Al- thusser versus Heidegger) 34 Corps/e 51 Polemic and Hypothesis 58 Outline of the Argument, Anexact Philology 68 Utopic: Nietzsche versus Freud versusMarx 98 Caveat on the Un/canny 118 2. Channeling beyond Interpretation 123 On Slogans: Aesthetics, Politics, Prophecy 123 Left-Nietzschoids, BJght-Nietzscheans 139 Prom Bataille (Channel 3) to Nietzsche (Channel 4) 166 3. Nietzsche's Esoteric Semiotics 195 Nietzsche 195 After Derrida 242 After Klossowski 265 Nietzsche Again 275 Esoterrorism: The Process of Weeding Out 288 4. Trasformismo from Gramsci to Dick, or, The Spectacular Technoculture of Everyday Life 339 Preliminaries 339 Trasformismo 365 Technoculture/Everyday Life 372 Epilogue 391 Too Much Nietzsche 391 The Toilet Was Full of Nietzsche 391 Nietzsche in Dormancy 392 Caput mortuum, or, The Industrialists of the Corps/e 392 Mao III 392 On the Dead Burying Their Dead 393 Nietzsche's Last Words 394 TheLastWord 395 Afofef 397 Jw/fca: 555 Plate 2. MzckTmscy,Derrida Queries de Man, 1990, oil on canvas, 83% X 55 inches. Collection of Michael and Judy Ovitz, Los Angeles. Courtesy Curt Marcus Gallery, New Tork, ©Mark Tansey.

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Appearing between two historical touchstones—the alleged end of communism and the 100th anniversary of Nietzsche’s death—this book offers a provocative hypothesis about the philosopher’s afterlife and the fate of leftist thought and culture. At issue is the relation of the dead Nietzsche (co
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