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siting futurity
heavily on cultural theorists.2 Not only does space continue to
be “the valorized site of political life” (Sharma 2014, 10), but
in our age of extraction, it has morphed into what Saskia Sas-
sen has termed “extreme territories” (Torino 2017). What now
dominates our political imaginary is, as Bruno Latour makes a
point of in his recent work on climate change, regressive territo-
rial language: an “attachment to the soil” [“attachement au sol”]
based on a refusal to recognize common ground or share the
planet’s limited and increasingly harmed and drained resources
(Delbourgo 2018). This attachment, as Delbourgo perceptively
notes, tends to be characterized “by a yearning to retreat from
‘the global’ to ‘the local,’ and to define ourselves as defending
our soil from external enemies who will not only land but also
somehow destroy us.”3
As the readings in this book make clear, flights toward the lo-
cal need not involve retreat, nor need they be based on a regres-
sive “attachment to the soil.” On the contrary, even among the
Europeans so rightly provincialized in postcolonial discourse,
there are territorial languages of location worth recuperating
because they reflect progressive, indeed often radical ways of
engaging with the local, ways based on principles that focus on
the amelioration of social inequality by fundamentally altering
value systems so as to discourage capital reproducing by exploit-
ative, competitive, and hierarchical means. The question is how
to go about locating and analyzing these local languages. The
2 Mark Fisher’s work and fate are emblematic and deserving of further at-
tention (Fisher 2014).
3 Delbourgo further notes that “Ironically, such nativism — truth to soil, if
you like — is driven by escapist flight: flight from the reality of anthropo-
genic climate change, and flight from empirical evidence to ‘alternative
facts.’ Trumpism is the ultimate mental staycation: there is only here,
and there is nothing outside of here to care about. Let’s lock ourselves
in. In other words, the political world now under construction is one of
paradoxical flight toward the local, rather than away from it; we don’t share
the same planet, and so there’s no common ground. If any grassroots con-
nected all of us once upon a time, those roots seem to have been pulled
up like so many inconvenient weeds in the name of protection from our
enemies” (Delbourgo 2018).
Siting Futurity
The “Feel Good” Tactical Radicalism of Contemporary Culture in and around Vienna
- Titel
- Siting Futurity
- Untertitel
- The “Feel Good” Tactical Radicalism of Contemporary Culture in and around Vienna
- Autor
- Susan Ingram
- Verlag
- punctumbooks
- Ort
- New York
- Datum
- 2021
- Sprache
- englisch
- Lizenz
- CC BY-NC-SA 4.0
- ISBN
- 978-1-953035-48-6
- Abmessungen
- 12.6 x 20.2 cm
- Seiten
- 224
- Schlagwörter
- activism, Austria, contemporary art, contemporary theater, protest culture, radicalism, social protest, Vienna
- Kategorie
- Geographie, Land und Leute
Inhaltsverzeichnis
- Preface 11
- Introduction 19
- 1. (Re)Forming Vienna’s Culture of Resistance: The Proletenpassions @ #Arena 39
- 2. Converting Kebab and Currency into Community on Planet #Ottakring 57
- 3. Lazarus’s Necropolitical Afterlife at Vienna’s #Volkstheater 81
- 4. Hardly Homemad(e): #Schlingensief’s Container 101
- 5. From Grand Hotels to Tiny Treasures: Wes Anderson and the Ruin Porn Worlds of Yesterday 119
- 6. Capitalism, Schizophrenia, and #Vanlife: The Alpine Edukation of Hans Weingarter 143
- 7. #Hallstatt: Welcome to Jurassic World 161
- Bibliography 189
- Filmography 215