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Mapledurham's avatar

As ever, a wonderful, thought-provoking piece.

This might not be the way you want to go with these ideas but your description (especially in conclusion) of a fragmentation of thought and attention reminded me of conversations I’ve had with female, working-class, and/or minority academics, in which ‘the book’ appears as a now-impossible project only achievable by those with the resources (material, emotional, temporal, mental, etc) to step out of the flow of demands and distractions, and then focus at sufficient length. In other words, the world has now organised itself in such a way that the extension of thought across units of time longer than a few days or weeks is a function of privilege - and those of us without privilege, finding ourselves on the outside (even when we occupy positions ostensibly on the inside), do with that what we can.

So maybe what I’m sensing in your piece is that ‘too late capitalism’ (with its constant crises, vast inequalities and rising supremacism) has put a massive pram in the hallways of all those who feel the effects of those forces immediately upon them, all who have (now) been made subaltern.

Your work, consistently brilliant, gives me hope that what comes out of that situation can be the most compelling and necessary forms of thinking - not despite but because of that situation.

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atomless's avatar

Call them “immediacy style” or “auto-theoretical”, or whatever other coinage one can summon, perhaps these posts, these snippets of participation, of noticing and wrestling with the deluge of contemporary culture is all there really is? The flood that necessitates algorithmic sorting and filtering and has us operating as fleshy datafication subprocesses, also overwhelms academia, after all? Either way, these are the posts I look forward to most.

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