Black Box: A Record of the Catastrophe, Volume One
As the serial disasters of capitalism’s current crisis—economic, political, environmental—continue to batter the world, Black Box: A Record of the Catastrophe is a device for recording, analyzing, and transmitting events as they happen. But it offers neither dire predictions nor false hopes. Instead, it embraces the mystery of what might transpire. The word “catastrophe” has not always signified “disaster”; during the sixteenth century, especially in theater, it came to mean “a reversal of what is expected.” Black Box is ultimately a documentary project, a record of the catastrophe, but it’s an open question where the inquiry will take us. It may be a record of the disastrous end. Or it may be a record of the turning.

The first volume contains an eclectic but accessible collection of reportage, interviews, letters, fragments, and theoretical responses from some of the brightest minds in critical theory. Its authors have sent dispatches from American prison yards, the shipping graveyards of India, fatal overseas drone strikes, roads crisscrossing the Mississippi Delta, childhoods in revolutionary Zimbabwe, and kitchens where undocumented workers wash dishes. By taking a broad geographical and aesthetic stance, Black Box will be a constellation of ideas and information that points toward the future—whatever it may hold.

Contributors to Black Box include scholars (Nina Power, Silvia Federici, Sami Khatib, Chris O’Kane, Tanya Erzen), cultural critics (Richard Dyer, Charles Mudede), authors (Ursula K. Le Guin, Miranda Mellis), poets (Emily Abendroth, Cathy Wagner, Alli Warren), and many others.

1139824714
Black Box: A Record of the Catastrophe, Volume One
As the serial disasters of capitalism’s current crisis—economic, political, environmental—continue to batter the world, Black Box: A Record of the Catastrophe is a device for recording, analyzing, and transmitting events as they happen. But it offers neither dire predictions nor false hopes. Instead, it embraces the mystery of what might transpire. The word “catastrophe” has not always signified “disaster”; during the sixteenth century, especially in theater, it came to mean “a reversal of what is expected.” Black Box is ultimately a documentary project, a record of the catastrophe, but it’s an open question where the inquiry will take us. It may be a record of the disastrous end. Or it may be a record of the turning.

The first volume contains an eclectic but accessible collection of reportage, interviews, letters, fragments, and theoretical responses from some of the brightest minds in critical theory. Its authors have sent dispatches from American prison yards, the shipping graveyards of India, fatal overseas drone strikes, roads crisscrossing the Mississippi Delta, childhoods in revolutionary Zimbabwe, and kitchens where undocumented workers wash dishes. By taking a broad geographical and aesthetic stance, Black Box will be a constellation of ideas and information that points toward the future—whatever it may hold.

Contributors to Black Box include scholars (Nina Power, Silvia Federici, Sami Khatib, Chris O’Kane, Tanya Erzen), cultural critics (Richard Dyer, Charles Mudede), authors (Ursula K. Le Guin, Miranda Mellis), poets (Emily Abendroth, Cathy Wagner, Alli Warren), and many others.

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Black Box: A Record of the Catastrophe, Volume One

Black Box: A Record of the Catastrophe, Volume One

by The Black Box Collective The Black Box Collective (Editor)
Black Box: A Record of the Catastrophe, Volume One

Black Box: A Record of the Catastrophe, Volume One

by The Black Box Collective The Black Box Collective (Editor)

Paperback

$19.95 
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Overview

As the serial disasters of capitalism’s current crisis—economic, political, environmental—continue to batter the world, Black Box: A Record of the Catastrophe is a device for recording, analyzing, and transmitting events as they happen. But it offers neither dire predictions nor false hopes. Instead, it embraces the mystery of what might transpire. The word “catastrophe” has not always signified “disaster”; during the sixteenth century, especially in theater, it came to mean “a reversal of what is expected.” Black Box is ultimately a documentary project, a record of the catastrophe, but it’s an open question where the inquiry will take us. It may be a record of the disastrous end. Or it may be a record of the turning.

The first volume contains an eclectic but accessible collection of reportage, interviews, letters, fragments, and theoretical responses from some of the brightest minds in critical theory. Its authors have sent dispatches from American prison yards, the shipping graveyards of India, fatal overseas drone strikes, roads crisscrossing the Mississippi Delta, childhoods in revolutionary Zimbabwe, and kitchens where undocumented workers wash dishes. By taking a broad geographical and aesthetic stance, Black Box will be a constellation of ideas and information that points toward the future—whatever it may hold.

Contributors to Black Box include scholars (Nina Power, Silvia Federici, Sami Khatib, Chris O’Kane, Tanya Erzen), cultural critics (Richard Dyer, Charles Mudede), authors (Ursula K. Le Guin, Miranda Mellis), poets (Emily Abendroth, Cathy Wagner, Alli Warren), and many others.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781629631233
Publisher: PM Press
Publication date: 02/01/2016
Pages: 256
Product dimensions: 7.00(w) x 9.90(h) x 0.70(d)

About the Author

The Black Box Collective emerged after several years of symposia, reading groups, philosophy camps, and wood splitting. The poets, journalists, academics, metaphysicians, artists, and strategists of the collective gather regularly at a retired dairy farm in the foothills of the Cascade Mountains north of Seattle to explore themes of consciousness, community, and circulation of the communizing current—and to discover and assemble a critique that will wake us from the dream world that is seamlessly reproduced by capitalist culture. The first volume of Black Box: A Record of the Catastrophe was assembled by Nadya Zimmerman, Eirik Steinhoff, Stuart Smithers, Brendan Kiley, and Bethany Jean Clement, with assistance from many others.

Table of Contents

The Weight of All Those Machines Peter Wieben 11

What Is a Life in Angola Prison? Tanya Erzen 18

The Logic of the Martyr Stuart Smithers 25

Catheter Enjambment CA Conrad 38

Precarious Labor: A Feminist Viewpoint Silvia Federici 42

Dishwasher Fernando Fortin 52

Review of The Snail Miranda Mellis 54

Bergsonism Jorge Uarrera Andrade 59

Which Little Flicker of Facial Recognition Am I? Emily Abendroth 62

The Difference Is Spreading: Sabotage and Aesthetics Firik Steinhoff 71

Weimar on the Bay Patrik Øöd-Noir 83

The Politics of "Pure Means": Walter Benjamin on Divine Violence Sami Khatib 87

The Necessary Ingredient: Interview with Kshama Sawant 105

After the Revolution Charles Tendered Mudede 117

Protect Me from What I Want Alli Warren 124

Thoughts on Revolutionary Indifference; or, The Thermodynamics of Militancy Daniel Hartley 127

Fieldbook: Pharsalia Joel Felix 141

In Defense of Disco Richard Dyer 145

Native code Roberto Harrison 155

Drone On: Scene Five Stephen Voyce 158

Vergil David Hadbawnik 169

The Problem of Dido Tisa Bryant 174

Unknown Race Male Mitchell Inclan 181

Hole Poems Cathy Wagner 184

"The Process of Domination Spews Out Tatters of Subjugated Nature": Critical Theory, Negative Totality, and the State of Extraction Chris O'Kane 190

Parties/Partying/the Party Olive Blackburn 207

Epigrams by Ernesto Cardenal Alejandro de Acosta 212

Simplicity Keston Sutherland 226

The Pigeon and Me Sergio Hyland 232

The Ones Who Walk Away from Omelas Ursula K. Le Guin 234

Exiting the One-Dimensional Nina Power 242

Contributors 248

Encyclopedia of the Catastrophe 250

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