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The Intolerable Present, the Urgency of Revolution: Minorities and Classes

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An acute reappraisal for our time of the very concept of revolution.

In order to be effective, union struggles, struggles for national liberation, worker mutualism, or struggles for emancipation were strategies that were necessarily connected to revolution. Starting from the historic defeat of the global Revolution in the mid-1970s, this book draws a portrait—whose elaboration is still lacking—of the concept of revolution. What conditions could lead us to speak of revolution once again?

In The Intolerable Present, the Urgency of Revolution, Maurizio Lazzarato ponders the fundamental importance of the passage from the historical class struggle (the conflict between capital and labor) to the more recent class struggles that open onto plural trajectories: social, sexual, gender, and race struggles. Expanding the notion of class as a rejoinder to the normative appropriation of minority politics, the revolution is returned as the horizon where subjection can be resorbed.

In this sense, Marxist, feminist, anticolonial, and postcolonial theories provide the necessary critical tools to understand the relations between classes and minorities, between the global North and the global South, and between the time of revolutions and the eruption of new subjectivities.

Author: Lazzarato Maurizio
Publisher: SEMIOTEXT(E)-MIT PRESS
Pages: 432
ISBN: 9781635901818
Cover: Paperback
Edition Number: 1
Release Year: 2023

Eric Alliez is a philosopher and Professor at Universite Paris 8 and at the Centre for Research in Modern European Philosophy (Kingston University). He is the author of Capital Times, The Brain-Eye, and Undoing the Image.

Maurizio Lazzarato is a sociologist and philosopher in Paris. He is the author of Governing by Debt and Signs and Machines: Capitalism and the Production of Subjectivity, both published by Semiotext(e).

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