Welcome to Bookmarker!

This is a personal project by @dellsystem. I built this to help me retain information from the books I'm reading.

Source code on GitHub (MIT license).

Activity

You added a note
4 months ago

the reading list is determined by a need to live

The bulk of the book is not about such things. It is rather about what one can think by extension from such experience. It is about mapping the commodity economy centered on the management of bodies, sexes, identities, or what Preciado calls the “somatico-political,” of how it finds itself both mak…

—p.220 General Intellects: Twenty-Five Thinkers for the Twenty-First Century Paul B. Préciado: The Pharmo-Porno Body Politic (219) by McKenzie Wark
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4 months ago

today's vectoral class has no need of the mass worker project/billboards

The disinvestment in higher education may be more explicable in terms of labor-market requirements. Today’s vectoral class has no need of the mass worker. Labor is bifurcated between a small core of a highly skilled hacker class using or designing information technology and a vast precarious popula…

—p.188 Wendy Brown: Against Neoliberalism (172) by McKenzie Wark
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4 months ago

the family is the minimal unit of communism

Brown shows that there’s a slippage in neoliberal thought about the subject, between the individual and the family. Homo economicus is still imaged as a male head of a household, or at least one with the benefits of such a household. He may no longer have slaves, but someone tends the kids and does…

—p.183 Wendy Brown: Against Neoliberalism (172) by McKenzie Wark
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4 months ago

the overdeveloped world

The developed world became the overdeveloped world. Commodification ran up against the limits of what it could claim to organize efficiently or effectively. Whole chunks of social life had to be hacked off and fed into the flames to keep the steam up. Commodification moved on from land to things to…

—p.179 Wendy Brown: Against Neoliberalism (172) by McKenzie Wark
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4 months ago

not the only ideology of the tech world

What I find missing in Dean is the sense of a struggle over how tech and flesh were to coadapt to each other. Let’s not forget the damage done to the conversation about the politics of technology by the Cold War purge, in which not only artists and writers were blacklisted, but scientists and engin…

—p.149 Jodi Dean: Decline in Symbolic Efficiency (145) by McKenzie Wark