Radical new critical theory for the twenty-first century: how to think about the Anthropocene
McKenzie Wark is the author of A Hacker Manifesto, Gamer Theory, 50 Years of Recuperation of the Situationist International and The Beach Beneath the Street, among other books. He teaches at the New School for Social Research and Eugene Lang College in New York City.
A wonderful book ... informative and moving ... a great recovery of
an instructive life and literary effort. The book makes the case
for a kind of political vision and action we need to recognize and
enact. A true pleasure to read
*Kim Stanley Robinson*
A call to arms in which art and leisure, science and philosophy
hack into each other in order to produce a way of thinking that
works on both a pragmatic (proletarian) and a philosophical
(bourgeois) level. It's also his own version of Back to the Future
(1985), in which Wark comes across as a bit of a Marty McFly,
dashing back to the past to proclaim new heroes and new solutions
to problems in the present - principally climate change
*Art Review*
A very imaginative, historically smart, politically generative
thesis . that I think we urgently need
*Donna Haraway*
Molecular Red seeks to put scholarship to work. The result is a
playbook for the Anthropocene, a set of moves and strategies
extracted from an unexpected canon of texts formed by a mash-up of
the Soviet avant-garde and the Californian high-tech imaginary.
Remnants of the two great empires of the twentieth century are
pitted against the rapacious insurgency of their
twenty-first-century progeny, playfully named by Wark as the Carbon
Liberation Front
*Radical Philosophy*
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