Twilight of the Machines
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Average customer review:Product Description
"John Zerzan can now credibly claim the honor of being America's most famous anarchist. His writing is sharp, uncompromising, and tenacious."-Derrick Jensen, Utne Reader
The mentor of the green anarchist and neo-primitive movements is back with his first book in six years, confronting civilization, mass society, and modernity and technoculture-both the history of its developing crisis and the possibilities for its human and humane solutions.
As John Zerzan writes, "These dire times may yet reveal invigorating new vistas of thought and action. When everything is at stake, all must be confronted and superseded. At this moment, there is the distinct possibility of doing just that."
Previous works from John Zerzan include Elements of Refusal, Future Primitive, Against Civilization, Running on Emptiness, and Questioning Technology. He has also contributed to Apocalypse Culture, Telos, and Fifth Estate. An Oregonian with degrees from Stanford University and San Francisco State University, he is an editor of Green Anarchy magazine. Read more at JohnZerzan.net.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #577193 in Books
- Published on: 2008-04-01
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Paperback
- 260 pages
Features
- ISBN13: 9781932595314
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- Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.
Customer Reviews
An Updated Version of Elements of Refusal
Zerzan updates his exploratory work on the illness of a "productionist civilization"(as he calls it) that began with the collection of essays entitled Elements of Refusal, but this time Zerzan leaves out all the post-Left labor studies stuff.
The principal issue facing mankind as Zerzan sees it is that civilization itself is so alienating and harmful to to our health and contentment that nothing less than a full renunciation of it will enable life to survive on earth. Zerzan then goes on to make his case for this thesis.
One unique feature of Twilight is that it contains the only positive review of Unabomber Theodore Kaczynski's The Unabomber Manifesto: Industrial Society and Its Future I've ever read, as well as comparing Kaczynski favorably with philosopher Frederich Nietzsche.
The amazing thing about civilization and its "discontents" says Zerzan is that just when you think it can't possibly get any worse for us, it does. But not for much longer he predicts. The present downward course of productionist civilization is going to kill us all if we don't shut it down soon.
All in all Zerzan has written a very challenging book and deserves more recognition as the preeminent philosopher of anarchism. An accolade usually accorded to the likes of Noam Chomsky, Anton Pannekoek, or Murray Bookchin.
I recommend Twilight of the Machines to those interested in exploring the possibility of a post-Left anarchism.
The finest political analyst of our time
Zerzan is the best, most thorough, social and political analyst of our time. He is literally the only one to look civilization-as-we-know-it square and tell it like it is. His books are essential tools for dispelling the miasmas
of the last 10,000 years and getting into recovery.
Uninspired and Uninspiring
I wonder at the irony of someone railing against civilization and "symbolic culture" using turgid "intellectual" prose to spew out an academically flavored pastiche of platitudes and cliches.
The second part of the book is supposed, according to the author, to have a "more contemporary focus". I guess it does: it is full of self-reverential references to the black bloc anarchist movement. There is also plenty of discussion of deservedly obscure intellectuals of the most predictably useless sort. Oddly enough there is a chapter that contains some gossipy, snarky commentary about Theodore Kaczynski (and Friedrich Nietzsche!). However pointless and demented the actions of Kaczynski, at least he did something other than pontificate and posture. Zerzan peforms his anti-civilization act for his fans from the comfort of a U.S. city.
I suspect that if you gathered up all the "anarcho-primitivism" activists and plunked them down in a wilderness they would not long survive. Anarcho-primitivism is a mostly theoretical endeavor to be carried out from the comfort of a coffee house with a zippy Internet connection.
As a wholesome alternative to Zerzan and his ilk I'd suggest the recently published (in English) Can Life Prevail? by Pentti Linkola. At least the Finnish deep ecologist has walked the walk. Linkola's anti-civilization polemics have the feel of something that came from a lifetime of real world experience.




