39. Dissociation (w/ McKenzie Wark)
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About this listen
This episode covers a huge range of Wark's evolving project, from her early work on the NetTime listserv and the legendary A Hacker Manifesto (2004), which mapped the shift from industrial capital to the information economy and coined the term vectoralist class, to the decisive personal turn in Reverse Cowgirl (2020), where theory stopped being about something and started being inside it. We talk about what she calls "auto-textual" writing, the body as both subject and medium, and the annihilation of subjectivity through sex, drugs, and dancing.
One line from this conversation won't leave us: maybe we're entering an era defined less by an aesthetic of alienation than by an aesthetic of dissociation. If alienation belonged to industrial capitalism, dissociation might be its post-digital heir.
Critical (critical) Wark:
- Wark, McKenzie. A Hacker Manifesto. Harvard University Press, 2004.
- Wark, McKenzie. Gamer Theory. Harvard University Press, 2007.
- Wark, McKenzie. Capital is Dead: Is This Something Worse?. Verso, 2019.
- Wark, McKenzie. Reverse Cowgirl. Semiotext(e), 2020.
- Wark, McKenzie. Raving. Duke University Press, 2023.
- Wark, McKenzie, and Kathy Acker. I'm Very Into You: Correspondence 1995–1996. Semiotext(e), 2015.
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