Breathing

Chaos and Poetry

160 páginas

Idioma English

Publicado el 2 de noviembre de 2019 por MIT Press.

ISBN:
978-1-63590-038-5
¡ISBN copiado!

Ver en OpenLibrary

Sin valoración (1 reseña)

The increasingly chaotic rhythm of our respiration, and the sense of suffocation that grows everywhere: an essay on poetical therapy. Since the hopeful days of the Occupy movement, many things have changed in the respiration of the world, and we have entered a cycle of spasm, despair, and chaos. Breathing is a book about the increasingly chaotic rhythm of our respiration, about the sense of suffocation that grows everywhere. “I can't breathe.” These words panted by Eric Garner before dying, strangled by a police officer on the streets of Staten Island, capture perfectly catching the overall sentiment of our time. In Breathing, Franco "Bifo" Berardi comes back to the subject that was the core of his 2011 book, The Uprising: the place of poetry in the relations between language, capital, and possibility. In The Uprising, he focuses on poetry as an anticipation of the trend toward abstraction that led to …

2 ediciones

"Civilization is not crumbling, it is only diverging from civility"

Sin valoración

This was my first autonomist book, author, and my first introduction to this particular vision. As someone who reads philosophy casually, I often felt I didn't have a good enough mastery of the terms being used, or the ideas being references. I come from the book not really having understood what Bifo's vision for the future is, nor what he is suggesting, concretely, we could do differently. But, that being said, I have still enjoyed this book a lot, and I don't feel like an "actionable take-away" is required in order for a piece of social critique to be valuable.

The middle part of this book was by far my favorite. His analysis of the conditions that have made solidarity difficult, unrewarded, that have pushed away the idea of communal life and self-organizing and platformed individuality felt very incisive and spot-on.

"Truth cannot be the ethical motivation of our choices, …