The book series entitled «The Strong of the Future» deals with
accelerationist philosophy, in particular with the thought based on
Nietzsche, Klossowski and Acéphale magazine, Deleuze and Guattari,
Foucault and Lyotard.
Issues:
SF001 :: OBSOLETE CAPITALISM, The Strong of the Future (July 2016)
SF002 :: OBSOLETE CAPITALISM, Acceleration, Revolution and Money in
Deleuze and Guattari’s Anti-Oedipus (August 2016)
SF003 :: EDMUND BERGER, Grungy Accelerationism (September 2016)
Next issue:
SF004 :: OBSOLETE CAPITALISM, Deleuze and the Algorithm of the
Revolution (October 2016)
Grungy Accelerationism, Copyright Edmund Berger, 2015
Originally published on Deterritorial Investigations Unit blog
on the 3rd October, 2015.
Anti-copyright, Rizozsfera-Obsolete Capitalism
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You may do so in any reasonable manner, but not in any way that suggests the licensor endorses you or your use.
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Preface
by Obsolete Capitalism
This essay by Edmund Berger is already a classic! Out on 3rd
October 2015 in Berger’s blog Deterritorial Investigations Unit, the
essay immediately received a positive echo in the internet accelerationist blogosphere, tackling the international debate on
the accelerationist philosophy and culture by consolidating the
perspective of the post structuralist thought - Deleuze, Foucault, Guattari, Lyotard and others - in 70’s in America. Moreover
Grungy Accelerationism amplifies the perspective of what we
define as quantic or pulsional accelerationism that we offer in the
series of books The Strong of the Future by Rizosfera.
One year after its first release, Obsolete Capitalism is republishing the essay for a wider audience than the one of the accelerationist followers. The reason is twofold.
First, Berger’s essay sharply connects the radical culture of
New York in the 70’s - Semiotext(e), Lotringer, the punk and the
no wave movements - with the revolutionary force proposed by
Foucault and Deleuze’s reevaluation of Nietzsche’s work through Klossowski, Bataille and Blanchot’s approach. The same approach was confirmed by the same French philosophers thanks
to the direct relationship they established with Sylvère Lotringer during the Schizoculture event held at the Columbia University in New York in 1975. The «aberrant nuptials» set between
11
the two different ‘Atlantic’ visions and the ‘rhizomatic filter’
proposed by Semiotext(e) would produce a wild clash, deeply
underestimated in 70’s and 80’s. Only after the passing of time
this cultural approach and lifestyle emerged from the American
underground soil, and from the clubs in Manhattan to become a
‘central’ cultural frame in Europe.
While recognizing the importance of the reception of Deleuze and the French rhizosphere in the humanities departments
of American universities, we believe that the editorial and cultural commitment brought about by Lotringer and Semiotext(e)
has been essential, as it linked together the world of the radically polymorphous fringe of the American cultural landscape,
including Burroughs and his fellow Beats, punk and cyberpunk,
with the French rhizosphere, entering thus the accelerationist
philosophy of the «Strong of the Future». This entails the theft
of certain philosophies and thought from the academic world
and knowledge industry and its redistribution by way of its dissipation in the streets, in the independent centres of research,
in the antagonist social and political milieu, in the artistic world
and in the alternative publishing space and the blogosphere. An
important political move on the American field: to deprive the
mainstream of Foucault and Deleuze’s thought.
The second reason for the re-publishing is the immediate
link that has established between Berger’s proposal of Grungy
Accelerationism and what we define as quantic or pulsional accelerationism as shown in two of Obsolete Capitalism’s essays: The
12
Strong of the Future and Acceleration, Revolution an Money in Deleuze
and Guattari's Anti-Oedipus. The three essays offer the same conceptual perspective and have been published as a whole section
entitled: Nietzsche, the heart of darkness of Accelerationism in the two
books Money, Revolution and Philosophy of the Future1 and in Deleuze Studies in Rome 2016 Remix. Different from the cultural and
philosophical perimeter of the first accelerationist Marxist wave
(Noys, Srnicek and Williams, and Collapse magazine), the three
above mentioned essays take distance from both the classic accelerationism and the forefathers of the movement in the ‘90s,
namely Nick Land and the CCRU.
In the «schizo-pulsional» perspective proposed by Berger and
Obsolete Capitalism future technology and its uses – utopian or
dystopian alike - is no longer the prevailing element, though
very present. What is relevant here is the new way to conceive
communities, social organisations and cultural production, stealing them from any market and work logic.
The silicon man - the surplus man - as suggested by Deleuze
in his book dedicated to Foucault - will have to deeply rethink
the categories through which he watches the world and humanity today, creating new conceptual types, different from what the
twentieth century has consigned to history.
Invention, experimentation, mistake and bifurcation will be
the new words leading the thought to a new dimension of political action.
1
The book will be published by the end of October 2016 by Rhizosphere
13
Grungy
Accelerationism
At a crucial turn in William Gibson’s Neuromancer, we’re introduced the Panther Moderns – a guerrilla subculture in a
world where subcultures flicker by like disconnected frames of
some montage film. The Panther Moderns specialize in hallucinatory simulations – in a world dipping into the “consensual
hallucination” of cyberspace, they build hallucinations on top
of it, subverting a reality that is already subjected to constant
reconfiguration through digitalization, genetic body modification, and psychotropic drugs. If cyberpunk, as Lewis Call insists, picks up where Baudrillard’s delirious hysteria over the
becoming-simulation, becoming-simulacrum of reality leaves
off, figures like the Panther Moderns show the escape route.
They embody the old ‘Mao-Dadaist’ slogan of the Autonomists
rallied around Radio Alice: “false information produces real
events.”
15
The political ramifications of the Panther Moderns, beyond the literary depiction of our very real world, did not go
unnoticed. A group of theory-heads involved with ACT UP,
a direct action/political advocacy group dedicated to revising awareness over the AIDs epidemic, read Neuromancer and
took inspiration from the Panther Moderns. They christened
themselves the Critical Art Ensemble, and began making waves
with their elucidation of “tactical media” and their provocative
stance that “as far as power is concerned, the streets are dead
capital!”1 Better to contest power right in the heart of its new
ambiguity – the electronic flows that replace former sedentary
masses. By being plugged into strange and wonderful history
of tactical media, William Gibson finds himself embedded in
a rhizomatic sprawl running back to the Dadaist and earlier
and up to Occupy Wall Street and beyond – with a whole host
of avant-gardes, freak scenes, reality hackers, and anonymous
revolutionaries kicking around in between.
The Panther Moderns, in Gibson’s world, are something
of an avant-garde. With an array of practices and/or tactics
hanging hazily between political action, artistic expression,
and general trouble-making, their nihilistic surroundings finds
their real world compliments in the industrialized Paris that so
inspired the Decadents and the later Surrealists, the Saint-Germain scene that spewed out not only existentialism but the Situationists, or the avant-political networks that gave the world
16
urban guerrilla commandos as much as it did Krautrock. What
is it about the thin lines that exist between art, radical politics,
and criminality? What makes these birds, seemingly of different species, flock together? And what do we make of the general atmosphere of radical urban transformation, encroaching
poverty, and industrial ruination that spark them?
For now, I’d like to leave that up for others to untangle, and
turn now to Accelerationism, that term so debate, celebrated,
and reviled in equal terms. By two, some two years after Srnicek
and Williams simultaneously equated accelerationism with leftwing technological development and dragged Nick Land and
the CCRU out of the shadows that they hoped to resign them
to, nearly every militant political moment has been brought
together under the ‘Accelerationist’ label – almost to the point
where the term hardly holds any meaning whatsoever. Marx
encouraged technology’s ability to open up free time? Accelerationist. The Soviets looked towards computer automation to
eliminate the traces of capitalist labor relations? Accelerationist. The Situationists wanted to turn cybernetics over to worker’s councils? Accelerationist. The ambiguities of communization theory? Accelerationist. Deleuze and Guattari, Lyotard,
Baudrillard, Hardt, Negri – Accelerationism all the way down.
So ultimately, it’s not my goal to go indulge the adding of
another name to the ever-expanding roster. That said, that’s
17
precisely what I’m going to do – albeit with a little different
spin.
Over at the blog Obsolete Capitalism we find some rather
unacknowledged information about the now-famous quote
from Deleuze and Guattari’s Anti-Oedipus, where they ask if
Nietzsche was right all along and the decoding of flows (the
capitalist processes of deterritorialization) needs to be accelerated – rather than the retreat into left-wing nationalism. Much
has been made about the rejection of an important left-wing
strategy deployed against multinational capitalism, and the way
that accelerating capitalism’s expansion appears, at first glance,
to be an odd veer into some sort of post-Marxist libertarianism
(to deploy the term in contemporary parlance). Much less has
been made about Nietzsche’s role in all of it – namely, where
exactly did he say we had to accelerate decoding, and what did
he mean by this? Obsolete Capitalism points us towards a fragment of Nietzsche’s titled “The Strong of the Future”, which
was commented on at length in Pierre Klossowski’s Nietzsche
and His Vicious Circle – a text that would come to bear an incredible influence over Deleuze, Guattari, Foucault and the
other post-structuralist theorists. In fact, as Obsolete Capitalism points out, it was Klossowski’s decision to translate the term
deployed by Nietzsche as “accelerate”, thus giving rise directly
to Deleuze and Guattari’s interpretation.
18
For Nietzsche, the levelling of society through modernizing
forces will produce, as a sort of strange side effect or mutation
that will affirm the dissolution of their traditionalist bonds and
boundaries while carrying out an overcoming of the system
that put them into play. Accelerationism, in the Nietzschean
perspective, is less about pushing laissez-faire economics into
apocalyptic overdrive or the unshackling of technology’s restraints. It’s about the fomenting of contrarian subjectivities –
and in this sense it’s very much an affair of avant-gardes. The
mad modernists wandering in the ruins, the leftist psychedelia
of Vaneigem, the all-night jazz parties in Saint-Germain, the
Autonomists celebrating the artificiality of simulation.
Hardt and Negri, who deploy the quote from Anti-Oedipus for
their own ends (to invoke the multitude pushing Empire through
to its other side, in a clear anticipation of Srnicek and Williams),
also turn to Nietzsche as a figure to be hold clues to the future.
Citing from The Will to Power (in which “The Strong of the Future”
appears), they seize upon the figure of the barbarian, who will
“come into view and consolidate themselves only after tremendous socialist crises.”2 Hardt and Negri stress that the barbarian
“while escaping from the local and particular constraints of their
human condition, must also continually attempt to construct a
new body and new life.” In a footnote to this section of Empire they
tell us that in cyberpunk fiction the barbarian find clues to its future beyond the rubble. A Panther Modern lurks in that direction.
19
Enter Semiotext(e), purveyors of what I would like to dub
“grungy accelerationism”. It’s a dumb name, for sure, but I
would like to clarify exactly what it means. Accelerationism
here is used in the sense sketched about, as a sort of mutant
subjectivity that begins (and ends) amidst the rubble of capitalism’s deterritorializing modernization processes. This also
gives us a temporal space, marking the period prior to the inevitability of capitalism’s reterritorializing tendencies, which
sorts through exactly what it’s made unhinged and puts it back
together. Grungy, on the other hand, is a word that conjures up
images of the 1990s – flannel shirts, bummed out kids, and the
generalized ‘slacker attitude’ that prevailed in the underside of
the Clinton economy. What’s more important, however, is what
lurks behind these corporatized images: a sort of street nihilism
where the punk mantra of “no future” becomes a way of life,
and the conditions for new coordinates of living and do-it-yourself attitude fester and take root – all the while acknowledging
the essential bullshit of the spectacle. And a caveat: this is not
an attempt at periodization, or theory, or an excuse to canonize anything in orthodoxy. More than all, this is an excuse to
point out a few – and maybe ultimately unimportant – aspects
out there on the margins.
The origin of Semiotext(e) dates back to the early-to-mid
1970s, when Sylvere Lotringer – French immigrant and close
friend to the celebrities of post-structuralism – got together
20
with some of his students at Columbia University, where he
taught courses on semiotics, to release a kind of underground
‘zine that would bridge the gap between French theory and
the “downtown” arts culture that had weaved its way through
New York City since the 1950s. Downtown culture was large and
heterogeneous: it founds its origins in circles around the abstract expressionists (Jackson Pollock, Theodore Roszak, William de Koonig, etc) and the Fluxus artists (John Cage, Yoko
Ono, George Maciunas, etc); it continued down through the
minimalists (La Monte Young, Terry Riley, Philip Glass, etc)
and Andy Warhol’s Exploding Plastic Inevitable and the Velvet
Underground. It explored through punk rock (Richard Hell
and the Voidoids, Television, the Ramones, etc) and later gave
rise to no wave (Mars, DNA, Teenage Jesus and the Jerks, etc).
It counted in its ranks innumerable poets, artists, painters, performance artists – and even more innumerable unclassifiable
individuals who eschewed arts for a life near the bottom. It habituated in clubs and secreted away spaces like the Kitchen,
Colab and the Mud Club; it has now given rise to an entire
industry of retrospection.
In the mid-1970s French theory was all but unknown – but
its essential topics (subjectivity, power, rhizomes, nomadism,
simulation, libidinal economics) seemed to Lotringer to speak
not so much to the possibility of a revolution to come in Europe, but the actual practices being put into play in the United
21
States. This is the usually accounted for origins of Semiotext(e); Lotringer’s own recounting of the publication’s founding hints towards what today is well known in critical circles
as Accelerationism. Anti-Oedipus was the lynchpin, assimilating
the demands of the desiring-revolution in May of 1968 with a
new interpretation of how capitalism functions. Deleuze and
Guattari, Lotringer says, were “upping the ante on Marx by observing that capital, far from being a purely repressive, ruthless mechanism meant to extract surplus-value, was constantly
creating new values and new possibilities. And since capitalism
absorbed everything, the trick was to counter it from within,
redirecting its flows, ceaselessly moving ground.”3 Since France
was dominated by heavy bureaucracy directed by cybernetically-minded socialists-turned-marketeers, this position was simply
“science fiction”, while in America - and New York City in particular - it was immediately recognizable.
In the issue of Semiotext(e) dedicated solely to Anti-Oedipus,
published in 1977, these ideas are grounded even more firmly. In an essay section titled “Project for a Revolution in New
York”, Lotringer writes that “The gamble of Anti-Oedipus is to
reformulate revolutionary perspectives from the strong points,
and the weak links, of capitalism.”4 Another essay in the issue,
written by Lyotard with the name “Enurgumen Capitalism”,
defines the revolutionary subject of Anti-Oedipus as the artist
who struggles “to make himself inhuman”, and points towards
22
its relationship with the flows of the libidinal economy that
forever surpass their limits. In 2014 “Enurgumen Capitalism”
would find its reprint – this time in the #Accelerationist Reader.
“Nietzsche’s Return,” a Semiotext(e) issue from the same year,
contains Deleuze’s essay “Nomad Thought”, where he quotes
“The Strong of the Future” and adds “Faced with the decoding of our societies, the leaking away of our codes, Nietzsche
is the one who does not endeavor to recode. He says: things
still haven’t gone far enough, you are just children yet… In his
writing as well as his thinking, Nietzsche pursues an attempt at
decoding: not in the sense of a relative decoding which would
consist in deciphering antiquated, current or future codes, but
in the sense of an absolute decoding- the introduction of something that isn’t encodable, the jamming of all codes.”5 A handful of pages later we find Lyotard again, this time celebrating
Nietzsche’s projected decomposition of coordinates, and aligning this celebration on one hand with capitalism’s tendency
towards dissolution, and the music of John Cage on the other.
Across the 1970s, capital burned through a great many areas of New York City and left in its wake a hulking shell of what
had once been a metropolis. Decades earlier Robert Moses, the
so-called “Master Builder”, had went to work re-organizing the
city’s urban space – crisscrossing it with highway and unmaking its neighborhoods in a grand vision of scale on par with
Hausmann’s reconstruction of Paris under the watchful eye of
23
Napoleon. But the city of the future would not be realized: the
neighborhoods transformed by Moses’ top-down planning never recovered, and thanks to newly laid expressway systems were
cut from the organic urban fabric. Compounded with corruption and mismanagement of public funds, the city teetering
on the edge of bankruptcy by 1975. By this point, vast areas of
the Lower East Side were empty, the streets lined with vacant
lots and stores. Lydia Lunch recounted that “There were just
blocks and blocks of abandoned buildings, set on fire nightly
from people sleeping under tea lights,” while the filmmaker
Scott B added “You could go to a building and take it over-steal electricity out of the lamp post and live in it for years.”6
In the eyes of Lotringer and Semiotext(e) this was becoming the staging ground for the emergence of “schizo-culture”,
taking its cue from Deleuze and Guattari’s depiction of schizophrenia as a process of decoding and deterritorialization – not
unlike capitalism but capable of making revolutionary breaks
from the power it wields. In 1975 Semiotext(e) organized the
Schizo-Culture conference at Columbia University, bringing
together Deleuze, Guattari, Foucault and Lyotard with Cage,
Burroughs and other members of this Downtown scene – but
rather from being an academic success, it served to estrange
Semiotext(e) from the university and push it into direct interaction with the street culture it sought to analyze. By the time
the “Schizo-Culture” issue was released in 1978, the aesthetics
24
of the magazine resembled a punk ‘zine more than anything,
even if the first article is an interview with Foucault.
The notion of Schizo-Culture is precisely what I call grungy
accelerationism – both move in the wake of capitalism’s flows and
find their meanings to autonomy in the left-overs. A case in point
was art “movement” of no wave, which grew in the abandoned
districts of the Lower East Side and whose cacophony made the
punk scene sound conservative. Bands like Teenage Jesus and
the Jerks, Mars, DNA, James Chance and the Contortions, the
Theoretical Girls and the Gynecologists took street nihilism as
their launching pad, and used stake out a territory far beyond the
co-opted, mass-produced culture of the 1970s. For the brief period of its existence, the no wave scene saw the collapse of boundaries between artistic disciplines – everyone was a musician, a
sculptor, a painter, a writer, and a filmmaker. The hollowing-out
of New York City allowed them to pursue these goals without resorting to wage labor. In a retrospective, Lydia Lunch recalled
“Work? Are you nuts? Please. $75 per month-- that was my rent
when I got an apartment on 12th Street.” As in early avant-gardes,
the line between arts and criminality blurred; many resorted to
illegal means for money when it was necessary. In grungy accelerationism, life isn’t easy or pretty, but to quote Scott B “You can’t
imagine the freedom that we had. The middle class had abandoned the place, and we just walked in and took it.”
25
Semiotext(e) made its home in the no wave scene, with many
of the artists taking part in putting the publications together.
Take for example Diego Cortez, the director of the Mudd Club
(the central locus of no wave music) and an organizer of a concert that brought together the downtown music scene with the
concept artists from Soho, took helm on designing the lay-out
several issues; his impact was felt on the immediate follow-up to
schizo-culture, 1979’s “Autonomia: Post-Political Politics”. The
purpose of this issue was to bring together the struggles of the
Italian Autonomia with no wave, the two having emerged at the
same time (albeit on different continents). Like their New York
counterparts, the Autonomists took a strong line against labor,
calling for a refusal of work and the glorification of idleness
instead. Antonio Negri, in his classic text “Capitalist Domination and Working Class Sabotage” (a fragment of which can
be found in the Semiotext(e) issue), channeled punk energy
by asserting “We have a method for the destruction of work.
We are in search of a positive measure of non-work, a measure of our liberation from that disgusting slavery from which
the bosses have always profited, and which the official socialist
movement has always imposed on us like some sort of title of
nobility. No, we really cannot call ourselves ‘socialists’ for we
can no longer accept your disgrace.”7
The Autonomia also held a certain debt to the French theorists, most specifically Deleuze, Guattari, and Baudrillard. The
26
various tactics they deployed – pirate radio stations like Radio
Alice, the refusal to work, the rejection of parliamentary politics, the usage of squats, and the bringing of the strange into
everyday life (such as the case of the Metropolitan Indians,
who wore face painted and prowled the streets of Rome, staging spontaneous urban) interventions such as impromptu concerts) – embodied the ideas of a schizoid revolution. Guattari
would agree in full, writing in a text titled “The Proliferation
of the Margins” that in the case of the Autonomia, “the lines
of flight merge with the objective lines of deterritorialization.”8
Again, we find the theme of revolution emerging in the wake
of capitalism’s flows, a molecular uprising amongst the ruins.
Guattari pondered whether or not this molecular revolution
could “take charge of not only local problems, but also administrative larger economic configurations”. The inevitable reterritorialization of capitalism’s flows took place instead. In the
case of Italy, the Autonomia was dismantled under the state’s
enacting of emergency laws. In New York City, the administrators had enacted a series of economic reforms following the
near-bankruptcy of 1975; as the Reaganite 80s loomed, finance
and real estate capital swept through the city, raising property
rates across the boards and expunging the artists from their
lofts. Flush with money, art patrons, rich collectors, and gallery
owners turned their eyes to the concept artists, painters, and
sculptors. Almost overnight the spontaneous immediatism of
27
the downtown culture transformed into the affluent art market.
Semiotext(e) rode this wave, shifting away from ‘zine-style publications to their “Foreign Agents” series – pocket-seized theory
fragments bearing minimalist, black covers. The goal was to
carry out the Situationist gesture of creating an “explosion in
the heart of the commodity”, a sort of homeopathic antidote
to the commoditization of all things radical and militant. One
wonders, however, to the extent that “Foreign Agents” deviated
from the spectacular wave of finance capitalism: with their aesthetic sheen and mobile nature, the books doubled as a fashionable accoutrement, something to be seen while reading in
the subway or to show off to friends at a party. Case in point
is the release of Baudrillard’s Simulation. Instead of throwing
down the gauntlet, the ideas of hyppereality and simulacrum
were stripped of their postmodern anarchist, cyberpunked potentials. It became the lingua franca of the art market itself, the
new territory of the commodity sprawl.
Now we turn to Autonomedia, a radically anarchist book
publisher that became Semiotext(e)’s main distributor in
the early 1980s. Best known for publishing works in the vein
of Hakim Bey’s T.A.Z. and the militant writings of Ron Sakolsky, Autonomedia can be immediately contextualized in what
is now commonly referred to as “post-left anarchism”. At the
same time, I would argue that they – and the texts they print
- embody what I’m referring to as grungy accelerationism. In28
stead of opting for a direct confrontation with the powers of
capitalism, the bourgeoisie and the state (as Marxist-Leninism
or communization theory might pose, in their own different
routes), what was promoted instead was the construction of
alternative, aesthetically experimental, DIY networks right in
the midst of the ruins. John Cage, concept art and minimalist
music mattered much less here than the ability to take theory
out of its contexts and insert it into a gleeful, deviant intransigence.
Autonomedia’s output is a small glimpse into a wider world,
of which the downtown scene of New York City had been the
recognizable tip of the iceberg. This was a world populated by
anarchists, drop-outs, schisms groups, kooks, cranks, professional idlers, punks, nomads, parody mystics, vagabonds, and
other figures that, to quote Anti-Oedipus, “know how to leave, to
scramble codes, to cause flows to circulate…”9 This world had
its own passcodes, rituals, and objects that circulated outside of
commodity of relations. ‘Zines were an essential aspect of this
circulation, as were cassettes of garage bands and noise music;
mail art (with its own origins in the Fluxus movement) helped
tie the whole network together.
Staying true to their insistence that the underside of America culture gave form to the abstract militancy of the French theorists, Semiotext(e) released in 1987 Semiotext(e) USA, edited by
29
Jim Fleming (the editor of Autonomedia) and Peter Lamborn
Wilson (better known as Hakim Bey). A dense compilation of
writing, letters, comics, advertisements, and unclassifiable, Semiotex(e) USA performs a living archeology of this underground
world. Like the Autonomia and the no wavers before them, a
reoccurring theme is the refusal of work. Bob Black’s famous
“Abolition of Work” appears next to anarcho-syndicalist propaganda material, detourned ads from women’s magazines calling on people to leave their careers, and comics suggesting that
micropolitical revolution is no different that the so-called macropolitical transformations. The point is driven home clearly in
a picture of a woman looking on wistfully, a wall clock ticking
behind her. “So many revolutionaries without a revolution,”
the thought bubbles above her head say. “I want a revolution
without revolutionaries!”
Semiotext(e) USA acts as a performative text. The last second
of the book contains veritable classifieds section, full of addresses and advertisements for ‘zines, various fringe groups,
‘strange individuals’, and conspiracy nuts. A full page is dedicated to the Church of the Subgenius, a parody religion founded by Ivan Stang. Beyond the Church’s relationship to the postal avant-garde (through its connections to Neoism, cassette
culture, and mail art writ large), the commonalities are clear:
the Church preaches a gospel of ‘slack’ instead of work, and
encourages the ‘followers’ to reach out and learn from every
30
fringe subculture, conspiracy group, and religious sect imaginable. By providing a dialogue to these rhizomatic sources,
Semiotext(e) USA invited the reader to participate directly in this
world.
Two years later, Semiotext(e) and Autonomedia unveiled
their follow-up to Semiotext(e) USA – the aptly named Semiotext(e)
SF. The topic here is accelerationist avant-lettre genre of cyberpunk and other mutant strands of science fiction. If USA was
a cartography of the existing underground, SF aimed to show
exactly grungy accelerationism was going - the editors (Peter
Lamborn Wilson/Hakim Bey, Robert Anton Wilson and Rudy
Rucker) note that made of the contributions they culled together “emerged largely from underground world of xerox microzines and American samizdat: writers so radically marginalized
they could never be co-opted, recuperated, reified or bought
out by the Establishment.”10 When it comes to the well-known
names of the genre (William Gibson, Bruce Sterling, etc.) the
punk in cyberpunk is emphasized. “One imagines them,” they
say of the authors, “as crazed computer hackers with green mohawks and decaying leather jackets, stoned on drugs so new the
FDA hasn’t heard of them yet, word-processing their necropsychedelic prose to blaring tapes by groups with names like The
Crucifucks, Dead Kennedys, Butthole Surfers, Bad Brains…”
On the first page of Semiotext(e) SF we find the words “NO
31
WAVE SF”. While this pointed isn’t elucidated, perhaps there
is more going on there than an attempt to forge a bridge
between the future and the past. Let’s take for our example
Glenn Branca, who cut his musical teeth in the no wave band
Theoretical Girls before releasing a series of extremely abstract
works that blended rock guitar with the minimalist drone music of La Monte Young and Terry Riley – the culmination of
an experiment launched by the Velvet Underground in 1966.
Branca’s albums abound with references to Baudrillardian simulation and the Situationist critique of the Spectacle; it should
not be so surprising, then, that he later could be found selling
used copies of cyberpunk novels from his website. As James
Reich puts it, there appears to be a distinctive – yet discrete –
congruence between Branca’s liquid-metal guitar soundscapes.
Describing the premier of his “Symphony No. 12” in 1997, he
writes “For those of us that did not flee the auditorium covering our ears, Branca’s music possessed us (and continues to
possess) with structures, planes, and hyperspaces, compelling
a weird consensual hallucination in the distortion.”11 Rooting
through the overlap between music and visual arts in New York
City, he adds that “Branca the cyberpunk aficionado is… the
link between artist Robert Longo whose work from the Men In
The Cities series Branca used on the cover of his album The Ascension (1981) and Longo’s movie Johnny Mnemonic (1995)
based on Gibson’s short story of the same name (1981)…”
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An even more direct point of (sub)cultural connection
comes with the Sonic Youth, the now-famous band that emerged
at the tail end of no wave (with the first several of their albums
produced by Branca. After a slew of releases following the no
wave template – and bearing the usual no wave subject matter
– they shifted gears and began peppering their music with references to the schizophrenic science fiction of Philip K. Dick
and the cyberpunk of William Gibson. Their seminal Day Dream
Nation, for example, boasts a track titled “The Sprawl” – the
name of the dystopic super-city in Neuromancer and its sequels.
The implication is that the underground New York City - the
one that produced downtown culture, no wave, and the other
elements in Semiotext(e)’s conception of “schizo-culture” is
the real world equivalent of the strange spaces crafted by Gibson and his colleagues. This also marks, somewhat ironically,
the transformation of grungy accelerationism into the grunge
culture that swept the US in the 90s – as well as the promise of
its eventual commodification through the ongoing process of
reterritorialization.
It occurs to me that this essay is far too long, and ultimately
without any end in sight. In lieu of a conclusion proper, I just
want to add a few extra thoughts. First of all, this small transhistory that has been traced here exists in a garden of forking
paths, with plenty of other avenues to follow for those who are
interested:
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Absent here has been William Burroughs, Beat novelist-turned-science fiction writer-turned-(micro)political revolutionary. Described as the godfather of punk, Burroughs’ bestowed an immense influence over the no wave artists, while
his writings can be found in numerous Semiotext(e) issues,
including Schizo-Culture and Semiotext(e) SF. His literary tactics,
such as the cut-up technique, are essential when tracing not
only the lineage of tactical media strategies, but the development of cyberpunk as a genre.
After their dismantling by the Italian state, the Autonomists dispersed themselves through anarchic squats and social centers. It was here that Italian “political cyberpunk” took
hold, as Autonomists poured over translations of Burroughs
and Gibson and began looking to the computer and general access to technologies as the new terrain of social struggle.
To deepen the eternal network, these autonomous cyberpunks
operated in close proximity with the global mail art network.
Ignored here has been the industrial subculture, which
hangs about midway between punk and cyberpunk. Through
bands like Throbbing Gristle, Burroughs emerges as a figurehead here as well, with his ideas of cut-up being recast in the
idea of technological body modification as a means of evading
power’s processes of subjectivication.
And finally, I’d like to close with a quote from Nietzsche, by
way of Hardt and Negri: “Who are our barbarians of today?”
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Notes
1
Critical Art Ensemble Electronic Civil Disobedience http://www.critical-art.net/books/ecd/
ecd2.pdf
2
Michael Hardt and Antonio Negri Empire Harvard University Press, 2000, pg. 214
3
Sylvere Lotringer “Better Than Life: My 80s” Artforum, March, 2003, http://www.egs.edu/
faculty/sylvere-lotringer/articles/better-than-life/
4
Sylvere Lotringer “Libido Unbound: The Politic of ‘Schizophrenia’”, in Semiotext(e) Anti-Oedipus: From Psychoanalysis to Schizopolitics, 1977, pg. 6
5
Gilles Deleuze “Nomad Thought”, in Semiotext(e) Nietzsche’s Return 1977, Pg. 15
6
Marc Masters “No! The Origins of No Wave”Pitchfork January 15th, 2008, http://pitchfork.
com/features/articles/6764-no-the-origins-of-no-wave/
7
Antonio Negri “Capitalist Domination and Working Class Sabotage” https://libcom.org/
library/capitalist-domination-working-class-sabotage-negri
8
Felix Guattari “The Proliferation of the Margins”, in Autonomia: Post-Political Politics Semiotext(e), 1979 pg. 109
9
Gilles Deleuze and Felix Guattari Anti-Oedipus Penguin, 1977, pg. 133
10
Rudy Rucker, Peter Lamborn Wilson, Robert Anton Wilson, Semiotext(e) SF Semiotext(e),
1989 pg. 13
11
James Reich “Glenn Branca and the Lost History of Cyberpunk” Fiction Advocate, May
29th, 2009, http://fictionadvocate.com/2014/05/29/glenn-branca-and-the-lost-history-ofcyberpunk/
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Biography
Edmund Berger
Edmund Berger is an independent writer, researcher, and
activist based in Louisville, Kentucky, and has written extensively for the past several years concerning grassroots resistance,
critical theory, economic transition and the influence of the
so-called cybernetic sciences in contemporary world order. His
interaction with grassroots movements has been extensive: he
has done work with various anti-war and pro-labor groups in
Louisville, and in 2011 he spent a month in New York during
the events of Occupy Wall Street. Other activities have revolved
around Louisville’s experimental music and arts culture, and
both the political and the artistic form the basis of his approach
to analysis. He has been published in numerous online outlets and maintains the highly-trafficked Deterritorial Investigations Unit website. Multiple essays of his were published in the
Corporate Watch anthology “Managing Democracy, Managing
Dissent,” and forthcoming works include an essay in Benjamin
Noys, Ed Keller and Tim Matts’ “Dark Glamor: Acceleration
and the Occult”, to be published by Punctum Press in 2017.
His first book, “Uncertain Futures”, will be published by
Zero Books (February 2017).
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