rio wrote:
traptunderice wrote:
rio wrote:
listen to far right nonsense regularly
Bullshit, ass.
Lawks, take a chill pill, trapt. I'm exagerrating, for sure, but it's not exactly rare for you to sing the praises of Drudkh or Arghoslent.
I didn't mean for that to be mean spirited. Just a jab. Drudkh maybe, Arghoslent not so much.
rio wrote:
Quote:
I'm thinking their rejection of Stalinism while reappropriating The Sacred War as bm is really interesting insofar as Stalinism as commonly been criticized for its assumed humanism by people like Derrida, Foucault and Althusser. To redo a work of the USSR in a historically misanthropic genre with an emphasis on a pagan return to nature is a cool way of rejecting the primacy of man which Stalinism so highly touted. bm is a way of applying a Heideggerian criticism to the USSR in a nutshell.
I suppose so. I've never really understood where this Althusserian critique of Stalinism as "humanist" comes from, though. Because it places to much primacy on human agency, or something? But how precisely does that apply... where are the situations where Soviet Communism would have been better had it been less humanist....
I think it has something to do with Althusser's rupture in Marx. Althusser saw the USSR as maintaining humanistic values, the primacy of man over nature, individualism etc in order to maintain a petit-bourgeoisie class. Somehow Althusser make the jump to saying that's why Stalin committed the purges.
Insert Zizek. Zizek, I think in Lost Causes, framed Stalin's humanism as an attempt to prevent the USSR from a fall into Orwellian realms by rejecting the determinism inherent in biocosmism through the show trials as a way of reaffirming human agency and guilt. The guilty willfully chose to be treasonous; they weren't cogs in a machine. I don't know if I appreciate this view but it was this weird back handed attempt for Zizek to explain Althusser in a different way because most people think Althusser was dead wrong on this aspect?
The Heidegger aspect is most interesting since he rejects humanism as a bunk idea in and of itself, surrounded and perpetuated by a metaphysics that was just wrong, with catastrophic consequences through the domination of nature. Without this quest for technological dominance, we wouldn't have had one of the most environmentally disastrous states in the history of the world.