Fotografía de autor
32 Obras 88 Miembros 2 Reseñas

Sobre El Autor

Laurent de Sutter is Professor of Legal Theory at Vrije Universiteit Brussel.

Obras de Laurent de Sutter

Deleuze and law (2009) — Autor — 7 copias
Althusser and Law (2013) 4 copias
Theorie van de kamikaze (2017) 3 copias
Metafisica della puttana (2014) 3 copias
Pornostars (2007) 2 copias
Le livre des trahisons (2016) 2 copias
Magic (2015) 2 copias
Poetique de la police (2017) 2 copias
Zizek and law (2015) 2 copias

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Fecha de nacimiento
1977-12-24
Género
male
Nacionalidad
Belgium
Lugar de nacimiento
Brussels, Belgium

Miembros

Reseñas

Dans son dernier livre, Laurent de Sutter tisse le lien de l'histoire de la production des psychotropes pour mieux souligner le but commun de cette réorganisation chimique de l'homme : éteindre la vie, pousser les individus à l'aliénation, à refuser toute excitation et donc toute sublimation. La dépossession de la chimie même de nos corps a pour but de nous enlever notre énergie vitale, de nous tenir rationnels pour nous laisser au travail, 24/24 comme dirait J. Crary. Notre chimie est le lieu même de la reprogrammation psychopolitique ourdie par le narcocapitalisme. "L'âge de l'anesthésie est l'âge où chaque problème doit être considéré comme relevant de celui qui en souffre, sans que jamais, jamais, celui-ci puisse être réinscrit dans ce qui le dépasse". C'est court. Pêchu. Finalement parfois un peu convenu.… (más)
½
 
Denunciada
hubertguillaud | otra reseña | Sep 23, 2017 |
The unifying theme of Narcocapitalism is the de-excitement of the masses. If you can keep people calm, you can manipulate them as desired. So the psychological, political and capitalistic ends can be achieved. This is an unusual thesis, and de Sutter gathers unusual underpinnings to pull it together.

He starts with the invention of anesthesia, which transformed surgery and the ability of doctors to manipulate (individual) bodies. This evolved to the introduction of cocaine into seemingly everything, but especially via drugmakers. If people were calmed by cocaine and its derivatives, they would be less agitated and activist, and better consumers – all benefits to capitalism. Drugs evolved to change the circadian rhythm, allowing soldiers to kill without sleep, night clubbers to stay up endless hours, workers to be pressed for more productivity. Possibly the oddest evidence resides in birth control pills, which men feared would excite, rather than de-excite women into having non-productive sex at will. This went against all the principles of control – except the better consumer aspect.

Today, we have massive opioid and anti-depressant pandemics, which serve to calm the nerves and dull the thought processes of millions. No one is ever cured of anything; they are simply kept de-excited. The drugmakers are in narco-heaven. Even as taking the drugs is illegal, designing them, making them and selling them to doctors and pharmacies is not. It’s the true hypocrisy and contraction of the capitalist system.

As I read, I kept thinking correlation is not causation, and de Sutter’s arguments didn’t bowl me over. But they are outside the box, which is always of interest to me.

David Wineberg
… (más)
2 vota
Denunciada
DavidWineberg | otra reseña | Jul 14, 2017 |

Estadísticas

Obras
32
Miembros
88
Popularidad
#209,356
Valoración
½ 2.6
Reseñas
2
ISBNs
43
Idiomas
6

Tablas y Gráficos