Deterritorial Support Group: Ten Growth Markets for Crisis: A Trend Forecast (2011)
Filed under pamphlet | Tags: · autonomy, community, debt, democracy, financial crisis, money, politics, utopia

“In a time of political flux, how do we escape a political discourse which is just a reaction to a series of attacks on our class? How do we place ourselves in a position which is not defensive, but launches a positive vision of social organisation? Where will the challenges and potentials of the coming months and years lie? In Britain mainstream political innovation slumps in the doldrums. Hamstrung by financial and political contingencies, Parliamentary politics offers little in the way of social critique and finds little resonance in the public. But in the field of radical politics? Whilst dissent flourishes, it lingers in the negative, unable to be converted into innovation, by doctrinal discipline or an inability to harness creative thought and speculative conversation. The field lies open for those who wish to write a new story. We have put together a few possibilities to spot these growth markets for crisis; a trend forecast for social struggle.
Let’s outline some key social trends, some growing ideological markets and some possible future scenarios as the class-war continues to warm up. These aren’t predictions, as such – they are attempts to open up our understanding of our current situation as ideologies come crashing down around us. We need to write new stories about how we got here, who we are, and how we’re going to cope with what is to come. Let’s turn tendencies into trends; turn trends into Tendencies.” (from introduction)
Published by Deterritorial Support Group, London, in December 2011
12 pages
article about DSG (Dan Hancox, Guardian)
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Rethinking Marxism 22-3: Special Issue on the Common and the Forms of the Commune (2010)
Filed under journal | Tags: · capitalism, commons, communism, community, neoliberalism, production

“Operating within and beyond each of the offerings contained in the pages [of this special issue] is a profound play on precisely the question posed: What is the operative notion of the common today? Even the singularity of that question’s basic assumption is challenged by the scope of these inquiries for, indeed, a paradox begins to emerge when we consider them as a collection, one might even say as a common production of knowledge: recognition that the very foundation of a concept of the common—its particularity—may well be articulated in a multiplicity of ways. That is to say, can postmodernity—or whatever we wish to designate our present condition—tolerate a single “operative notion” of the common, or does it rather demand a constellation of understandings that contribute simultaneously to our experience of the common and to its neoliberal other, the promotion of individuation?” (from Introduction)
Contributions by Anna Curcio & Ceren Özselçuk, Jack Amariglio, Michael Hardt, Gigi Roggero, Aras Özgün, 16beaver group, Antonio Callari & David F. Ruccio, Deborah Jenson, Federico Luisetti, S. Charusheela, Kenneth Surin, Kathi Weeks, Anna Curcio, Yahya M. Madra & Ceren Özselçuk, Alvaro Reyes.
With Introduction by Joseph Childers
Rethinking Marxism: A Journal of Economics, Culture & Society Volume 22 Issue 3
ISSN: 0893-5696
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Comment (0)Rethinking Marxism: Special Issue on the Common and the Forms of the Commune (2010)
Filed under journal | Tags: · biopolitics, commons, communism, community, education, marxism, political economy, politics

This issue brings together papers that tackle a series of problematics which are formulated around the concepts of common, commune, community, and communism, and which engage with the field of critical Marxism. The discussions include the critique of property and commodity fetishism; the relation between ‘modes of production’ and ‘modes of subjectivity’; the rupture with a bourgeois political imaginary circumscribed by the relation between public and private; and the antagonistic nature of class as a process or composition. While an organizing aspiration has been to stage an encounter between operaismo and Althusserian Marxism, contributors complicate this divide by drawing from different philosophical sources and bringing into existence a broader intellectual plane within which these problematics can be situated.
Rethinking Marxism, Volume 22, Issue 3, 2010
Editor: S. Charusheela
Guest editors: Anna Curcio and Ceren Özselçuk
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