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Full Description
The first volume to place Deleuze and Guattari's philosophy in the context of contemporary fascism
Brings Deleuze to contemporary fascism, as opposed to earlier publications on Deleuze which dealt with historical fascism
Uses case studies that are grounded in space and time, within contemporary Spain, Italy and Greece
Presents fascism as more than just a political theory
Addressing patriarchal fascism demonstrates that fascism is sexualized and genderized, which is highly relevant in the age of #metoo, Black Lives Matter and rising populism
Critiques patriarchal fascism in an affirmative manner, offering insights for intervention and searching for new openings
A range of international contributors uncover and reflect upon the anti- and non-fascist ethics situated in Deleuze and Guattari's philosophical framework and that of the scholarship that followed after. The 'new philosophy' that Deleuze and Guattari propose to us is engaged and situated and it asks us to map urgent issues, not by opposing ourselves to it, but by mapping how it is part of the everyday, and of ourselves. The global rise of fascism today demands a rigid and careful analysis. The concepts and themes that Deleuze (and Guattari) handed to us in their extensive oeuvre can be of immense help in capturing its micropolitics and macropolitics.
All of the contributions in this volume have a keen eye on the practices of fascism today, meaning that they all show us, very much in line with Deleuze's thinking, how fascism works. The book is organized in three parts. The first part (21st century fascisms) focuses on the global threats technologies and algorithmic realities; the second part (situated fascisms) holds analyses of fascisms at work in different parts of the contemporary world; the third part deals with patriarchal fascism and offers concrete case-studies of sexualized and genderized modes of oppression.
Contents
List of Illustrations
Abbreviations
Introduction: How To Live The Anti-Fascist Life And Endure The Pain?
Rick Dolphijn and Rosi Braidotti
Part I: 21st Century Fascisms
1. Human Nature and Anti-Fascist Living
John Protevi
2. Immanence, Neoliberalism, Microfascism: Will We Die in Silence?
Zeynep Gambetti
3. Generative Contaminations: Biohacking as A Method for Instituting an Affirmative Politics of Life
Christian Alonso
4. Algorithmic Governmentality and Managerial Fascism: The Case of Smart Cities
Goda Klumbytė and Lila Athanasiadou
5. The Two Cartographies: A Posthumanist Approach to Geomatics Education
Siddique Motala
6. The Theatre of Everyday Debt-Cruelty: The Enfleshed Threat, Missing People and The Unbearable Strange Terrorist Machine
Shiva Zarabadi
7. Giving Grace: Human Exceptionalism as Fascism
Patricia MacCormack
Part II: Situated Fascisms;
8. Colonial Fascism: Redemption, Forgiveness and Excolonialism
Simone Bignall
9. Escaping Pro-Life Neo-Fascism in Italy: Affirmative and Collective Lines of Flight
Angela Balzano
10. Nomadism Reterritorialized: The Lesson of Fascism Debates in Korea
Woosung Kang
11. Cancerous Silence and Fascism. The Spanish Politics of Forgetting
Mónica Cano Abadía
12. The Wounds of Europe: The Life of Joë Bousquet
Rick Dolphijn
13. Fascistophilic Epidemics: Transpositions on Shiite Medico-Religious Imagination
Arash Ghajarjazi
14. An Athens Yet to Come
Stavros Kousoulas
Part III: Patriarchal Fascism
15. Fascism and The Entangled Subject, Or How to Resist Fascist Toxicity
Christine Daigle
16. Reclaiming Vital Materialism's Affirmative, Anti-Fascist Powers. A Deleuzoguattarian-New Materialist Exploration of The Fascist-Within
Delphi Carstens and Evelien Geerts
17. 'Soy Boy', Ecology, And the Fascist Imaginary
Ruth Clemens and Becket Flannery
18. Pussy Riot Vs. Trump: Becoming Woman to Resist Becoming Fascist
Natalie Dyer, Hollie Mackenzie, Diana Teggi, Patricia de Vries
Notes on Contributors
Index