Feed: Adbusters Culturejammer Headquarters - AggScore: 70.6


Visitor Rating: 7 (1) (Rate)
Story Clicks: 229
Lenses: (Add|?)
Comments: (Log in to add)
Log in to add feed to you bookmarks.


URL: 
http://www.UglyPlasticHabit.com
Juice: 
This is the NOW WHAT? box — strictly for jams, direct actions and inspiring examples of meme warfare. Send us your own ideas for taking action today!


Date Published: Nov 19, 2009 - 3:32 pm

One of the best novels I have ever read won the Nobel Prize in 1920. Written by Knut Hamsun, Growth of the Soil is a beautiful fable about modernization, self-sufficiency, love and the magic of imagination. I love and treasure this book, so imagine my dismay when I discovered that Hamsun earnestly supported the Nazis and that two decades after writing the novel he met with Adolf Hitler and Josef Goebbels. And it gets worse: at that meeting he gave Goebbels his Nobel Prize medal as a token of his esteem for the Nazi movement!

Let no one deny that Hamsun – like Ezra Pound and a number of prominent intellectuals during World War 2 – was a Nazi and a fascist. Hamsun is nonetheless deemed safe to read because he is largely forgotten and the Nazi implications of his works are considered of academic interest only. The same is not true, however, for the German philosopher Martin Heidegger.

Nearly every essay, seminar and lecture about Martin Heidegger begins with a reminder that he was a Nazi in 1933. Some anti-Heideggerians – presuming that his thought is contaminated – have taken it upon themselves to reveal his fascistic impulses, arguing that it is best to throw the baby out with the bathwater when it comes to his corpus. The war against Heidegger has been raging for over 70 years: it began when the Nazi regime ostracized him, escalated when the postwar de-Nazification tribunal prevented him from teaching and continues today with attempts to remove him from the canon of Western thought. The interesting aspect of all this is not that Heidegger is being attacked (I take his ability to keep the debate raging even after his death as a mark of his genius), but that those in power are scared of Martin Heidegger.

We all know that power has an amazing ability to co-opt resistance. While philosophers bemoan Nietzsche’s appropriation by anti-Semites, an ideology he deplored, activists in solidarity with Palestine are aghast to see the Keffiyeh sold in malls as just another consumer item. The ability of capitalism to turn resistance into complicity is so common that we ought to pay less attention to successful appropriations and more to the failed attempts. So rarely is appropriation deemed impossible by power that when it occurs we should explore the indigestible idea. Why are we told that Heidegger must be burned? Why isn’t he being co-opted instead?

I would argue that while Hamsun has been appropriated, his books are published by Penguin Classics and sold at mega-stores, it has not been so easy to pervert Heidegger. Martin Heidegger is an essential thinker and despite some protest, his thought can never be put back in the bottle. If we wish to get rid of Heidegger, we must also rid ourselves of almost all contemporary French and German philosophy: No more Derrida, Foucault, Ronell, Badiou and Agamben. Because Heideggerian interpretations of the past abound, we would also have to do away with much of our past. Nietzsche would be the first to go because Heidegger was one of the first to take his legacy away from the Nazis.

The danger of Heidegger is that he courted power, was rebuffed and then lived the rest of his life as an outcast – an intellectual exile few would touch. Such lives are resistant to the allures of power. His experiences under Nazism, led Heidegger to develop an anti-capitalist, anti-scientific, anti-modern, anti-democratic and even anti-Nazi philosophy. Living in a hut without running water and electricity, Heidegger crafted an entirely new way of thinking that has changed the course of Western thought. Do not believe their protestations: the dangers Heidegger’s theory pose to power don’t lie in Nazi or fascistic undertones. Consumerism is scared of Heidegger because of his ability to cultivate a new relation to all that exists. That new relation is not one of power but of stewardship.

At this moment in history – when technology and consumerism are leading us toward catastrophe – Heidegger may be presenting the only way out. If the fearful reaction to his work grows, it will not be because he is evil, but because power finally faces a foe whose assimilation would be ruinous to the wasteland of consumerism.

To discover the magic of Martin Heidegger, begin with his most accessible work: “The Question Concerning Technology”.

Micah White is a contributing editor at Adbusters and an independent activist. He lives in Berkeley, CA and is currently writing a book about the future of activism. www.micahmwhite.com or micah (at) adbusters.org

Upload
Select media to display inside the post

Martin Heidegger



Date Published: Nov 16, 2009 - 5:06 pm

URL: 
http://www.kickitover.org
Juice: 

This is the NOW WHAT? box — strictly for jams, direct actions and inspiring examples of real change. Send us your own ideas for taking action today!



Date Published: Nov 12, 2009 - 5:15 pm
86
Splash Image: 
ThePainter

I am a painter, not much else. Houses are what I mostly work on, sometimes apartments. It’s not glamorous but it pays the bills and puts food on the table. I have a wife and two boys. Eight and twelve. They really grow up fast, shit. I paint and I eat with my family and I go to sleep. Things are steady. I love my wife and my kids, but I am angry. I am tired of all of this. I paint. I eat. I hug my kids. I go to sleep. I wake up and repeat six days a week, and I am angry.

read more



Date Published: Nov 06, 2009 - 3:51 pm


Date Published: Nov 02, 2009 - 1:57 pm
Juice: 

This is the NOW WHAT? box — strictly for jams, direct actions and inspiring examples of real change. Send us your own ideas for taking action today!



Date Published: Oct 30, 2009 - 5:29 pm
URL: 
http://www.flickr.com/photos/thomashawk/4009154784/
Juice: 

This is the NOW WHAT? box — strictly for jams, direct actions and inspiring examples of real change. Send us your own ideas for taking action today!



Date Published: Oct 23, 2009 - 5:08 pm

The curious interplay between our imagination and external reality gives credence to the argument that the struggles over the mental environment are the future of activism. By protecting our mental environment we change external reality more quickly than any number of direct actions. But to make such an argument in today’s materialist, secular and scientific world requires the courage to imagine a different way of thinking.

Three hundred and seventy years ago, René Descartes sat down in a comfortable chair, with a candlestick on his table and his feet warmed by a fire. Closing his eyes, he gave free reign to his imagination. “What can I know for sure,” he wondered, “if I doubt everything?”

Modern philosophy began in this moment, with Descartes leading us through a series of thought experiments in which the rejection of all dubious knowledge leads him to discover the only knowable fact, famously expressed as “cogito, ergo sum”: I think, therefore I am. The freedom to imagine and to doubt all conventional wisdom and traditional truths was, thus, the first step in building our modern world-view.

The primacy of imagination in the construction of modern philosophy cannot be denied. A well-known criticism of Descartes’ imagination experiment is that it divorced the mind from the body and drew a barrier between the internal world of thoughts and the external world of reality. This mind-body separation occurs in Descartes because of his will to accept only what is absolutely knowable. To prove that the mind makes mistakes and cannot be trusted, he utilizes his imagination to interact with and falsify external reality.

Take, for example, an odd moment where Descartes imagines robots walking the streets. Near the end of his Second Meditation he writes, “if I look out of the window and see men crossing the square, as I just happen to have done, I normally say that I see the men themselves… Yet do I see any more than hats and coats which could conceal automatons? I judge that they are men. And so something which I thought I was seeing with my eyes is in fact grasped solely by the faculty of judgment which is in my mind.” In this moment of uncanny apprehension, seeing a man but imagining him to be an automaton, Descartes asks for certainty and rejects the evidence of his eyes because it can be influenced by the wanderings of his mind.

But what if he had not asked for certainty, had set aside the principle of non-contradiction, and accepted that what he saw at first as men were later automatons and then men again. In other words, what if we affirmed the position that imagination is constitutive of reality, not as a corrupting force but as an indispensable aspect.

If only Descartes had known how to imagine with his eyes open. The power of our imagination is so great that, even without the aid of hallucinogenic drugs, we can choose to see things that are not present or change the color of an object that is (as Edmund Husserl documented phenomenologically). Likewise, Martin Heidegger writes in Being and Time that our moods color the world around us. For example, on a bad day it seems as if the world is darker, the trees are weeping and the clouds grimacing. But if we suddenly get some good news, the world lightens up and the clouds look more like smiling faces than menacing grimaces. Thus, if our moods are being artificially influenced – through advertising, for example – we can expect that our external reality will also be influenced. From the perspective of mental environmentalism the concern is not with the imagination’s impact on external reality but on external reality’s impact on imagination.

We must dispel immediately the notion that our mental environment is unique to each individual. Just as we share our natural environment, we also share our mental environment, which is crafted through the culture we consume – the television shows we watch, the websites we frequent and the symbols and concepts that comprise our thoughts. (Heidegger referred to this shared aspect as our “they-self”.) Thus, the mental environment is not something entirely within us but is instead something that is outside of our complete control and shared among a culture. The danger, and opportunity, here is obvious. If there is no strict division between my internal world and the external world and if I am not in complete control over my internal world then the way the world appears to me is contestable.

In other words, if we engage in an activism of mental environmentalism it need not be construed as a politics of solipsism, or an attempt to dodge the imperative of “direct action”. Instead, developing another way of thinking that places the role of imagination back into the forefront and denies the right of corporations to influence our mental environment may be the most effective strategy of cultural insurrection in the twenty-first century because it directly influences the manifestation of our natural environment.

Micah White is a Contributing Editor at Adbusters and an independent activist. He lives in Berkeley, CA and is currently writing a book about the future of activism. www.micahmwhite.com or micah (at) adbusters.org



Date Published: Oct 20, 2009 - 4:56 pm
Juice: 

This is the NOW WHAT? box — strictly for jams, direct actions and inspiring examples of real change. Send us your own ideas for taking action today!



Date Published: Oct 14, 2009 - 11:52 am
URL: 
http://www.brigitte.de/
Juice: 

This is the NOW WHAT? box — strictly for jams, direct actions and inspiring examples of meme warfare. Send us your own ideas for taking action today!



Date Published: Oct 08, 2009 - 11:51 am
u-mp7309 serv 1.3234 seconds to generate.