1. The active and passive revolution
Limited, Inc.
“I’m so bored. I hate my life.” - Britney Spears
Das Langweilige ist interessant geworden, weil das Interessante angefangen hat langweilig zu werden. – Thomas Mann
"Never for money/always for love" - The Talking Heads
Monday, December 08, 2025
Revolution and legitimacy
Friday, December 05, 2025
The man in the crowd, circa 2025
“With a cigar in my mouth and a newspaper in my lap, I had been amusing myself for the greater part of the afternoon, now in poring over advertisements, now in observing the promiscuous company in the room, and now in peering through the smoky panes into the street. This latter is one of the principal thoroughfares of the city, and had been verý much crowded during the whole day.”
Wednesday, December 03, 2025
imperial dialectics
When I was a twenty five year old sprout in NOLA, I read a book by a popular Scottish historian, Angus Calder, about the foundation of the British Empire : Revolutionary Empire. It rocked my world.
What made this book different from the usual procession of imperial icons that storyboard the history of the empire, breaking it down to a series of adventures, was Calder's total grasp of the ebbs and flows of the imperial world. For Calder, the colonial models have to be seen in terms of their first instantiation in the British isles themselves –in Wales, Ireland and Scotland. Raleigh, for instance, not only founded the first, shortlived colony on the Eastern seaboard, but he was also planning on colonizing Ireland. He drew up a frankly genocidal plan for getting rid of the Irish, which, while not unleashed (at least in that form) upon the Irish, certainly was unleashed, later, on the Iroquois, the Cherokee, the Algonquin, etc. Calder's point is that imperialism and the history of England, and by extension the Western countries, is not such that one can segregate the forces at work in the colony from those at work in the mother country. Instead, there was a constant exchange of models between the periphery and the center – the periphery being forged in the center, and vice versa. The experience of the "factory" in Jamaica -- the way in which sugar cane was cultivated, harvested and milled by slaves -- was imported to the factory models in England. The clearing of the Highlands, that fight against a tenacious, clan based mountain people, preludes struggles in India.
It was once said that the British acquired their empire in a “fit of absent-mindedness”. The absent-mindedness is really about the historiography, not the empire-building.
This same logic applies to the American empire. Foreign policy is not one of those forgiveables, which we give to the “progressive” presidents so that we can have our sub-standard social insurance. Foreign policy is a pretty accurate way of understanding the thinking of those in power when they do not have a strong democratic curb.
This is why Biden’s supplying Israel with the means to commit genocide casts such a light on the way the establishment Democrats think. This is why Hilary Clinton’s bizarrely conspiratorial remarks at the Israel Hayom summit (aka the Likud is great! Festival) which blamed the “perception” of genocide on Tik Tok are not the mere ravings of a has been, but are the very rhetoric of insider Dem politicos who are even now wondering how to pull off a victory while maintaining the Biden-Trump world order – and will likely succeed, if the past is any prologue.
Monday, December 01, 2025
Hondurus in the news
When you help render a country helpless before its most ruthless and vile people - as the U.S. has done time after time in the Caribbean and Central America and Latin America - people will flee.
And where do they flee? Well, in the American sphere, they flee North.
Wednesday, November 26, 2025
the mafia bourgeoisie
In the late 19th century, the nascent science of criminology had settled on two principles. One was that criminals, by definition, were degenerates – people from the margins with inherited vices. The other principle was that civil society was upheld by the bourgeois virtues. If you have degenerates, you must have a norm. The bourgeoisie was it. What Max Weber would later call the protestant ethic was theorized, by the classic liberal, as the material product of capitalism. Honesty, hard work, savings, were not simply norms, but functioned as the basis for a market-based economy.
Tuesday, November 25, 2025
all that is old is new again: on Guy Davenport's The symbol of the archaic
One of the great essays in my life is Guy Davenport’s The
Symbol of the Archaic, which appeared in the Georgia Review in 1974. I’m
not sure when I read it – perhaps back in my high school days.
Essays are not given enough credit. We think of them as
lesser creatures, where the great beasts are poems and novels. Myself, I grant
the utility of these categories without taking them too seriously. Although The
Symbol of the Archaic is not one of Pound’s Cantos, it definitely takes
from the Cantos the traveling technique, that of a movie camera thrust among
personal and cultural bric-a-brac, whose speed – the movie camera’s – is adjusted
to a personal sensibility recognizing in the very instant of demonstration the
connections that may or may not be in operation in some real history, some real
slice of multitudinous life. And isn’t this what we all dream of?
The content of Davenport’s essay, a theme to which he
returns again and again, is the overlap of the modern (which encompasses a
certain 18th century and goes right up to the non-sequitorial magisterial
which came out of Olson’s typewriter at the end of his life) and the archaic,
that which is lost in deep time. The inscrutable rubbish and signs left by
paleolithic hominids.
This is how Davenport begins:
"Four years ago there was discovered near Sarlat in the Dordogne the rib of an ox on which some hunter had engraved with a flint burin seventy lines depicting we know not what: some god, some animal schematically drawn, a map, the turning of the seasons, the mensurations of the moon."
The ox rib and its inscrutable scribble helps Davenport move on to the whole ephemeral nature of civilization (and, indeed, the ephemeral nature of its discontents), and the way the poets have taken it up, and the impossible nostalgia for what was lost. Davenport was, politically, a standard American liberal, but culturally, he was a conservative of the Hugh Kenner variety. Thus, the wrecks of what was lost imply the wreckers, and we among them. It is a strain of political impossibilism hymned by John Ruskin in the great proto-Canto, Fors Clavigera, and it leads to a certain melancholy which is ultimately foreign to the American writer, who are the spawn of discovery – that adventurer’s justification, eventually, for every bushwacking and seizure.
Modernism, when Davenport wrote this essay, was still
exciting. For me, an awkward sixteen year old in Clarkston, Georgia, modernism
looked like a way out of suburban flatheadedness. I little knew that it had
given up the ghost to – whatever eclectic thing we have had since. I am rather
happy that, at the moment in all the arts, there is a return to modernism –
from the margins, from the black dada of Adam Pendleton.
I think Davenport captures something that was silently
programmatic in modernism, which was its invention of the pre-historic, the
archaic:
“If we say, as we can, that the archaic is one of the great
inventions of the twentieth century, we mean that as the first European
renaissance looked back to Hellenistic
Rome for a range of models and symbols, the twentieth century has looked back
to a deeper past in which it has imagined it sees the very beginnings of tion.
The Laocoon was Michaelangelo's touchstone; the red-stone kourus from Sounion
was Picasso’s.”
Here – as I was dreaming up this little essayistic ditty – I
want to jump to a little remarked, but remarkable, piece of reportage by the Communist
Egon Erwin Kisch that is included in his Gesammelte Werke 5: Das Kriminalkabinett
von Lyon (The criminological cabinet of curiosities in Lyon). Which contains,
surprisingly enough, a superposition of the archaic (stones with markings, rather
like those of the ox-bone) and the most modern (fingerprints). And which I
think is just a beautiful essay. Yesterday I put up an image from that piece.
It shows a burglar with a jimmy in one hand and a revolver in the other. The
burglar, through some complicated heist slapstick, fell into a pile of sand,
leaving this impression, which was latter captured by pouring plaster of paris
in the indentation in the sand, which was later used in the court case against
the burglar.
But I think I’ll do
this later.
Friday, November 21, 2025
Cheney's death march
Fred Licht begins his essay on Goya’s Charles IV and his Family with this exemplary paragraph:
“Ever since Theophile Gautier described Goya's Charles IV and His Family (Fig. 1) as "the corner baker and his wife after they won the lottery," scholars, amateurs, and casual visitors to the Prado have asked themselves how it was possible for Goya's royal patrons to accept so degrading a portrait.1 Even if one takes into consideration the fact that Spanish portraiture is often realistic to the point of eccentricity, Goya's portrait still remains unique in its drastic description of human bankruptcy.”
Revolution and legitimacy
1. The active and passive revolution "The ideological hypothesis could be presented in the following terms: that there is a passive r...
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LI feels like a little note on politics is called for. The comments thread following the dialectics of diddling post made me realize that, ...
