Alchemical production

23 02 2008

Like lots of writers, I often turn to the word “produced” to describe the effects of relations. I used to write “constitute” every other sentence, but rid myself of the bad habit. But “produced” is bothering me these days. As a term, it is tremendously entangled with forms of making in capital formation. Moreover, the more I pay attention to the genealogy of the term “reproduction” the more uncomfortable I become using its relative “produce” so casually. While I don’t mind the implication that capital is part of the story of “making” in the contemporary world, at the same time I think there is another implication, unthought perhaps, at least unanalyzed, that capital precedes the capacity to be made or to act (rather than territorializing capacities in a co-emergent fashion) or that capital is at stake in “the last analysis.

So, I’ve been playing with the idea of drawing on terms for “making” from the days before industrial capitalism. Reproduction is preceded by terms like “generation” which in turn were accompanied by such actions as “fermenting” and “concocting.” I REALLY like “ferment” given its double meaning of making and insurgence.

I’m already very fond of “conjuring” and look forward to the day when I might use the term “miraculate.”

In a more chemical domain, “bind” and “affinity.”

Other possibilities: evoke and invoke, ripen, sympathies, amalgamation, circulation, coagulation, combustion, composition, concoction, corrosion, crystallization, dessication, detonation, digestion, disintegration, distillation, evaporation, extraction, fermentation, filtration, fixation, granulation, ignition, incineration, melting, precipitation, preparation, separation, sublimation, and vitrification.

Thoughts?





Working with affect?

22 02 2008

Typing here, now, is a moment of immaterial labor in an economy of affects. so, the conversations around affective labor would say. I’ve been reading some of this work, and wanted to try out some thoughts about affect. But by affect, here, I do not mean emotion, nor even a property particular to bodies or living being, but more abstractly as the “power to act”. Moreover, this “power to act” is not a given property, but is emergent and evoked in complex, dynamic, historically specific assemblages/relations. The affect, as the power to act, is the power to respond to power. Or put slightly differently, the capacity to respond to capacity. Read the rest of this entry »





Notes on Working Group meeting

15 02 2008

Tartine Bakery (Feb 2008) was very good for the exchange of productive ideas on technopolitics.

Notes below, posted belatedly some months later (June 2008),  rather fragmented.

THE COPY: [see French OED; "copious"] ; M-C-M

Copy as generative of value? Profit not from innovation but about imitating, copying

Innovation or copying should not be mapped onto stages of growth.

Post-industrial play of signs; Materiality of replication

The vital copy (generic living vaccines)

Generativity in a distributed ontology – allows traffic across domains to crystallize under the sign of reproduction

- what are the domains crystallizing under this sign?

What are the generative formations that are not completely subsumable under teh sign of capital? Gift/hacker? Public domain?

The opposition between Public Domain and private/capitalized domain : these markings always produce their consstitutive outside

Tim Mitchell: essay on de Soto – see Lancaster sociology site “Mystery of Capitalism”

Miranda Joseph – Against the Romance of community; new work on debt

Geeta Patel – work on credit, rish

Baudrillard; Hillel Schwartz; Walter Benjamin; Stengers; Derrida (Given Time); Natalie Zemon Davis (book on gift giving);  Mbembe (Necropolitics; superfluity)

Time and Accumulation: standard model of scientific truth (philosophy of science; recall Sandra Harding’s critique of objectivity as masculinist, what is the next round of feminist critiques of objectivity that dont take us down the standpoint road?)

Surplus, Excess: valuations of multiplicity

Death: Last chapter of Dolly book (on culling); Kathy High on lab rats

Cori: Clinical trials mobilize populations as resources; testing is crucial to figuring epidemiology