enough! (or, too much)
A Footnote to a New Theory of entirely too much
I guess to do it right I would have to add how globalization has created a planet full of contending cultures such as previously existed only in isolated zones, and I would have to bring my theory into contention against those three books that Everybody Has Read Or Pretends He or She Has Read: Empire, Multitudes, and now Commonwealth.
But cut me some slack, I just now figured out how all this fits together, and I have always had difficulty framing all this in terms of Commonly Accepted Categories, even though it consists of a bunch of commonly accepted categories, just categories commonly accepted in different academic disciplines, which don’t seem to like to converse with one another.
I guess to do it right I would have to add how globalization has created a planet full of contending cultures such as previously existed only in isolated zones, and I would have to bring my theory into contention against those three books that Everybody Has Read Or Pretends He or She Has Read: Empire, Multitudes, and now Commonwealth.
But cut me some slack, I just now figured out how all this fits together, and I have always had difficulty framing all this in terms of Commonly Accepted Categories, even though it consists of a bunch of commonly accepted categories, just categories commonly accepted in different academic disciplines, which don’t seem to like to converse with one another.
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I really love reading your posts!
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(Anonymous) 2009-12-11 05:11 pm (UTC)(link)no subject
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(Anonymous) 2009-12-12 05:46 pm (UTC)(link)I do think the matter deserves to be pursued by those who've read both Negri and more Evola than I have. There are so many crypto-, semi-, or quasi-Guenonian writers scattered across the respectable intellectual landscape--Eliade, Schumacher, even Wendell Berry--that it wouldn't be inherently surprising for Negri to have been impressed at one time with that sort of thing and then covered up his tracks. RC