thanks for circulating Patrice

there's a great piece responding to similar issues by Daniel Ross (aka 
Stiegler’s translator):

https://mscp.org.au/plague-proportions/this-pandemic-should-not-have-happened

a flavour:
"Anthropogenic climate change and the systemic limits with which it is 
associated indeed define the fundamental emergency situation with which we are 
confronted today. The possibility of facing up to this emergency depends on 
recognizing that this accident must become our necessity, a necessity whose 
impure technological, but also social, economic and political conditions are 
alone what make possible the exercise of collective intelligence, belief, 
wisdom and decision. The temptation is always to say that freedom and democracy 
are the fundamental requirements for making good collective decisions, and yet 
the absolute failure of the West over the past two years means that these ideas 
must absolutely be subjected to critique, where the latter is never a 
denunciation, but an interrogation of their ‘pharmacological’ limits"

seán


Seán Cubitt | He/Him
Professor of Screen Studies
School of Culture and Communication
W104 John Medley Building
University of Melbourne
Grattan Street
Victoria 3010
AUSTRALIA


[email protected]


New Book: Anecdotal Evidence

https://global.oup.com/academic/product/anecdotal-evidence-9780190065720?lang=en&cc=au#

Latest from the Lambert Nagle writing partnership

https://books2read.com/u/4NXA1W


________________________________
<snip>

The comprehensive crisis of neoliberalism may have unleashed creative 
intellectual energy even at the once-dead centre of politics. But an 
intellectual crisis does not a new era make. If it is energising to discover 
that we can afford anything we can actually do, it also puts us on the spot. 
What can and should we actually do? Who, in fact, is the we?

As Britain, the US and Brazil demonstrate, democratic politics is taking on 
strange and unfamiliar new forms. Social inequalities are more, not less 
extreme. At least in the rich countries, there is no collective countervailing 
force. Capitalist accumulation continues in channels that continuously multiply 
risks. The principal use to which our newfound financial freedom has been put 
are more and more grotesque efforts at financial stabilisation. The antagonism 
between the west and China divides huge chunks of the world, as not since the 
cold war. And now, in the form of Covid, the monster has arrived. The 
Anthropocene has shown its fangs ? on an as yet modest scale. Covid is far from 
being the worst of what we should expect ? 2020 was not the full alert. If we 
are dusting ourselves off and enjoying the recovery, we should reflect. Around 
the world the dead are unnumbered, but our best guess puts the figure at 10 
million. Thousands are dying every day. And 2020 was a wake-up call.

Adapted from Shutdown: How Covid Shook the World?s Economy by Adam Tooze, 
published by Allen Lane on 7 September

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