Can capital be seen? Cartographies of the Absolute surveys the disparate answers to this question offered by artists, film-makers, writers and theorists over the past few decades. It zones in on the crises of representation that have accompanied the enduring crisis of capitalism, foregrounding the production of new visions and artefacts that wrestle with the vastness, invisibility and complexity of the abstractions that rule our lives.
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"How much of capitalism can we see from the moon? This remarkable, unclassifiable book sets out to map the ways. Cartographies takes as its object representation as such, which it tracks through theories, models, visual works, films, novels, engineering projects and whole cities: it is an immense museum exhibition of artefacts material and mental which attempt, consciously or not, to convey the totalisation implacably at work everywhere in late capitalism. But this is also a profoundly theoretical work: indeed, it summons us to think new philosophical thoughts about this system and how to make it visible. We ought to emerge from it with a new conception of the tasks of criticism and the production of art itself." - Fredric Jameson, author of 'Representing Capital and The Antinomies of Realism'
"Cartographies of the Absolute is an essential guide to the most formidable and urgent questions about how we see, represent and try to understand the greatest forces shaping our historical moment." - Trevor Paglen, artist and author of 'Blank Spots on the Map: The Dark Geography of the Pentagon's Secret World'
"Cartographies of the Absolute takes us beyond current fashions for perspectivalism and flat ontologies, and beyond the tired (and often quietistic) formulae that argue how capitalism’s modern complexities must remain forever beyond human grasp. Bringing vital insights to a range of aesthetic practices – and recognising the torsions, refractions and ruses required to puncture the reified social forms before us - Toscano and Kinkle elaborate a praxis of dissident totalisation to counter capital’s limited horizons." - Gail Day, author of 'Dialectical Passions: Negation in Postwar Art Theory'
"Culture, in the last decade, has had a simple duty: to be the dreamlife of the bust. It has answered this call in ways uneven, tawdry, messed up, beautiful — but it has finally not failed to make a veiled reading of this obscene catastrophe. But how then to wake from the purling images, how to leap from dream to map of the present? Here we need ideal readers of culture's readings, and none have come closer than Alberto Toscano and Jeff Kinkle. Their bravura cleavings of spectacular representation and the transformations of global capital become themselves a kind of new knowledge, a kind of psychelocation from which we might take an orientation and a sense of possibility." - Joshua Clover, author of the 'Totality for Kids and 1989'
"How this complex, chaotic, vicious system of exploitation called capitalism has been rendered by TV writers, Hollywood directors, and glamorous or struggling artists forms the theme of this book. From box sets to boxes floating across the seas, from dialectical thinking to diabolical reckoning: it is all here, laid out, picked out and unpicked, absorbed and turned over. Rubbish practices are called out, whether they originate in governments or the artworld. Cognitive mapping, which may be the poor analyst's conspiracy theory, gets its abstractions made real. Read it and move more consciously and dialectically through the globe." - Esther Leslie, author of 'Walter Benjamin and Synthetic Worlds: Nature, Art and the Chemical Industry'
"A grand tour de force of western cognitive maps and a searching dérive through anti-capitalist dimensions of theory, media and art - now pulsing on the rotting flesh of the world system. With critical acumen, serious political commitment and more than a modicum of erudite cool, Toscano and Kinkle revisit Jameson's landmark work on cognitive mapping and, by drawing extensively on the Marxist critical tradition, forward the life and death project of teaching readers to read in a dialectical mode. Grasping the aesthetic as at once program and battleground, they clearly manifest the necessity, the stakes, and the fine-grained resolution of a radical critical practice." - Jonathan Beller, author of 'The Cinematic Mode of Production'
Alberto Toscano is Reader in Critical Theory at the Department of Sociology, Goldsmiths, University of London. He sits on the editorial board of Historical Materialism and edits The Italian List for Seagull Books. He is the author of The Theatre of Production: Philosophy and Individuation between Kant and Deleuze (2006), Fanaticism: On the Uses of an Idea (2010) and is the translator of several books by Alain Badiou, Antonio Negri and others.
Jeff Kinkle completed his PhD at the Centre for Cultural Studies, Goldsmiths, University of London. His dissertation was on Guy Debord, parapolitics and conspiracy theory. He is a member of the SITE Magazine editorial board and the art-collectives Sakerna and Everyone Agrees. He is currently pursuing his JD in New York.
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老实说,我是在一个咖啡馆里读完这本书的最后几页的,当时阳光正好,我感到一种奇特的宁静。这本书的语言风格,与其说是“写作”,不如说是“雕刻”。每一个句子似乎都经过了反复的打磨,去除了所有不必要的修饰,直击核心。它拒绝使用那些流行的、易于理解的口号式表达,而是坚持用最精确的词汇去描摹那些最难以名状的体验与概念。这种对语言纯粹性的追求,使得阅读本身成为了一种冥想。书中探讨的“绝对”的本质,并未给出任何明确的答案或定义,反而通过层层递进的否定和界定,将读者推向了一个更广阔、更具开放性的提问空间。这让我联想起那些古希腊哲学家在阿卡狄亚的林荫下进行的辩论,充满了对未知领域的敬畏。这本书的价值不在于它提供了多少确切的知识,而在于它成功地重新校准了我们提问的方式,激发了我们对“什么是真实”这个根本问题的持久探寻欲。
评分这本书的名字实在有点玄乎,初次翻开时,我几乎要被那些密密麻麻的术语和看似毫无关联的概念给劝退了。封面设计本身也偏向学术化,缺乏那种能立刻抓住眼球的商业气息,更像是某个深奥领域里专供研究者阅读的工具书。但坚持下去后,我发现它像是一张错综复杂的藏宝图,引导读者穿越一片思想的迷雾。作者的叙事节奏非常克制,不急于抛出结论,而是像一位老练的导游,一步步揭示不同文明、哲学思潮乃至科学发现背后的共同逻辑线索。阅读过程中,我常常需要停下来,在脑海中构建那些复杂的思维模型,然后才能对接下来的论述产生更深的理解。尤其是关于“无限”与“有限”在不同历史时期认知边界的探讨,其深度和广度都超出了我以往的阅读经验,它迫使我重新审视那些我原本以为早已了然于心的基础概念。这本书并非那种能让人轻松消遣的作品,它需要投入极大的心力去解码,但一旦那些连接点在你脑海中被成功点亮,那种豁然开朗的体验是无与伦比的,仿佛打开了一扇通往更高维度的知识之门,让人对人类认知能力的边界产生了全新的敬畏感。
评分我通常不太涉猎这种跨学科的巨著,但这本书给我的感觉非常独特,它不像是在读一本书,更像是在参与一场跨越时空的对话。作者似乎能与从柏拉图到冯·诺依曼的诸多思想巨匠进行无缝对接,并在他们的肩膀上,继续向前探索。全书的结构设计堪称精妙,前三部分的理论铺垫,如同稳固的地基,为最后一部分关于“意识与宇宙互联性”的激进论断提供了坚实的逻辑支撑。尽管论述极其抽象,但作者对细节的把握却异常扎实,插入的数学模型和历史案例都恰到好处,既满足了深度读者的求证欲,又避免了纯粹的公式堆砌。我发现自己常常在阅读完一个章节后,忍不住起身在房间里踱步,试图消化其中蕴含的巨大信息量。这本书的后劲很足,读完后它会持续在你的脑海中发酵,让你对之前习以为常的“确定性”产生怀疑。它不是一本用来“读完”的书,而是一本用来“生活在其中”很长一段时间的书。
评分坦白说,这本书的阅读体验简直像是在攀登一座陡峭的山峰,沿途风景固然壮丽,但每一步都需要耗费巨大的体力。我花了整整一个月的时间才勉强读完初稿,期间不得不反复查阅大量的背景资料,因为作者似乎有一种“预设读者已经掌握了所有前置知识”的自信。这种写作风格,一方面展示了作者深厚的学养,另一方面也让普通读者望而却步。书中的核心论点围绕着“结构如何自发涌现”这一宏大主题展开,通过对复杂系统的分析,试图找到支配宇宙万物运行的底层代码。我特别欣赏作者在描述那些抽象概念时,偶尔会穿插一些极其精妙的类比,比如将量子纠缠比喻成古老的家族契约,这种看似不搭界的嫁接,却出乎意料地精准地捕捉到了本质的相似性。然而,这种技巧也并非总是有效,有时那些类比本身也过于晦涩,反而增加了理解的难度。总而言之,这是一部需要高强度智力参与的作品,适合那些渴望挑战自身认知极限、不惧怕在知识的旷野中迷失片刻的读者。
评分我通常偏爱那些情节跌宕起伏的小说,对这种偏向理论构建的著作抱持着谨慎的态度。然而,被朋友极力推荐后,我还是硬着头皮翻开了它。起初的章节读起来确实有些枯燥,仿佛在研读一份冗长的技术手册,充满了对既有理论的批判与重构。但渐渐地,我体会到了一种奇特的“韵律感”。作者的行文虽然严谨,却隐藏着一种对真理的近乎狂热的追求。他并非只是罗列事实,而是在构建一个庞大的哲学框架,旨在统一看似对立的学科分支。这种整合的野心令人印象深刻。书中对时间和空间概念的解构部分,尤其令我感到震撼——它提供了一种完全非人类中心主义的视角来看待我们习以为常的现实。虽然我可能无法完全复述书中的所有复杂论证,但它无疑在我的思维深处埋下了一颗种子,让我开始用一种全新的、更具批判性的眼光去审视日常的信息流。这本书更像是一次智力上的洗礼,而非一次轻松的阅读旅程。
评分继承詹明信“认知映射(翻译成“图绘”真的没问题吗……?)”的衣钵,“绝对的制图学”基本是rephrase一遍《地缘政治美学》的要点。作者似乎是译介巴丢的有名的马克思主义者,怎么会如此紧密地走詹明信的路线?看点都在具体的分析内容上了,但其实也还挺干涩的……
评分作者是挺纯粹的马克思主义者吧。关于社会与犯罪的章节很有用。
评分继承詹明信“认知映射(翻译成“图绘”真的没问题吗……?)”的衣钵,“绝对的制图学”基本是rephrase一遍《地缘政治美学》的要点。作者似乎是译介巴丢的有名的马克思主义者,怎么会如此紧密地走詹明信的路线?看点都在具体的分析内容上了,但其实也还挺干涩的……
评分继承詹明信“认知映射(翻译成“图绘”真的没问题吗……?)”的衣钵,“绝对的制图学”基本是rephrase一遍《地缘政治美学》的要点。作者似乎是译介巴丢的有名的马克思主义者,怎么会如此紧密地走詹明信的路线?看点都在具体的分析内容上了,但其实也还挺干涩的……
评分作者是挺纯粹的马克思主义者吧。关于社会与犯罪的章节很有用。
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