Raids on Human Consciousness: Writing, Anarchism, and ViolenceHowever one looks at violence -- as an instrument of bureaucracy or ideology; as a product of racial, gender, or class antagonisms; or as the inevitable result of power politics -- it is an integral part of every social system and is one of the most pressing problems of our tortured century. In Raids on Human Consciousness Arthur Redding examines the contention that violence, be it the mass product of revolutionary uprising or a private sadomasochistic indulgence, may be taken to instill in those who commit it the capacity for radical change. Conscious that mainstream theory considers violence deviant, a departure from the normal equilibrium of social and aesthetic structures, while other critiques take it to be integral to any dynamic system, Redding begins with the anarchist inquiry into the relationship of violence to the imaginary representation of modern communities. He explores the "public images" of anarchism in literature and popular culture and emphasizes the diverse strategies by which modern writers encounter, derive, deflect, and manipulate fantasies of political violence. Redding recognizes that language fails when confronted with the extreme suffering of human bodies. Acknowledging that flesh is subject to war, torture, and everyday brutality -- violations to which language can never do justice -- he nonetheless finds it urgent to reclaim language on the far side of suffering. |
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In chapters 3 and 4 I will continue an inquiry into the place of Sorelian violence
within an emerging modern imaginary . ... I pursue the point in chapter 4 , in
which I argue that the fully modernist withdrawal from the political by such writers
as ...
18 See “ Realism and the Fantasy of Surveillance , ” the first chapter of Mark
Seltzer ' s Henry James and the Art of Power ( 1984 ) . For Seltzer the novel
presents a struggle between police techniques of observation and the fantasized
...
Yet in the work on Sorel that I discussed in my second chapter Benjamin comes
to quite different conclusions . For Benjamin , Sorel dramatizes in necessarily
limited terms a possibility in which history and all that claims it ( especially law )
will ...
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Raids on Human Consciousness: Writing, Anarchism, and Violence Arthur F. Redding No preview available - 1998 |