Paperback, 136 pages

English language

Published May 14, 2009 by Semiotext(e).

ISBN:
978-1-58435-080-4
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OCLC Number:
1203355595
Goodreads:
6447374

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4 stars (19 reviews)

A call to arms by a group of French intellectuals that rejects leftist reform and aligns itself with younger, wilder forms of resistance.

Thirty years of “crisis,” mass unemployment, and flagging growth, and they still want us to believe in the economy… We have to see that the economy is itself the crisis. It's not that there's not enough work, it's that there is too much of it. The Coming Insurrection is an eloquent call to arms arising from the recent waves of social contestation in France and Europe. Written by the anonymous Invisible Committee in the vein of Guy Debord—and with comparable elegance—it has been proclaimed a manual for terrorism by the French government (who recently arrested its alleged authors). One of its members more adequately described the group as “the name given to a collective voice bent on denouncing contemporary cynicism and reality.” The Coming Insurrection is a …

13 editions

reviewed The Coming Insurrection by The Invisible Committee (Semiotext(e) Intervention Series, #1)

Review of 'The Coming Insurrection' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

“Power is no longer concentrated in one point in the world; it is the world itself, its flows and its avenues, its people and its norms, its codes and its technologies. Power is the organization of the metropolis itself.” I don’t agree with all of the conclusions about what to do next, but the descriptions of the problems that must be overcome here ring true. Perhaps oddly, I made connections with Emergent Strategy; the two arrive at very similar ideas about decentralization and the power of hierarchy-less organizing through very different lenses.

reviewed The Coming Insurrection by The Invisible Committee (Semiotext(e) Intervention Series, #1)

Review of 'The Coming Insurrection' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

A Situationist manifesto for the 21st century: Against capitalism, against the state. Written in a venomous but lyrical prose, appropriately total disdain for western society is communicated in both the text and the aura. Subtextual references are made to certain thinkers (they reappropriate terminology from Deleuze & Guattari frequently, writing in terms of flows and multiplicities against representation), but by and large this should be understood as a series of interconnected analyses of the ills of market democracy. The critical point they reach, and it is a crucial one, is that these crises are inherent in capitalism, they are co-existence with it; you can't have one without the other. Even the climate crisis is being repackaged as yet another means of putting us to work in order to preserve the production of producers and consumers, of sustaining capitalism and the state yet again.

The problem I have with this text, …

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Subjects

  • Anarchism
  • Insurgency
  • World politics -- Forecasting
  • World politics
  • Political science
  • Politics, Practical
  • Crisis management
  • Economics