Franco Berardi
Personal Information
Description
Franco "Bifo" Berardi is an influential political philosopher of the Italian autonomist tradition.
Books
Precarious Rhapsody
An infinite series of bifurcations: this is how we can tell the story of our life, of our loves, but also the history of revolts, defeats and restorations of order. At any given moment different paths open up in front of us, and we are continually presented with the alternative of going here or going there. Then we decide, we cut out from a set of infinite possibilities and choose a single path. But do we really choose? Is it really a question of a choice, when we go here rather than there? Is it really a choice, when masses go to shopping centers, when revolutions are transformed into massacres, when nations enter into war? It is not we who decide but the concatenations: machines for the liberation of desires and mechanisms of control over the imaginary. The fundamental bifurcation is always this one: between machines for liberating desire and mechanisms of control over the imaginary. In our time of digital mutation, technical automatisms are taking control of the social psyche. Franco "Bifo" Berardi is a contemporary writer, media-theorist and media-activist. He founded the magazine A/traverso (1975-1981) and was part of the staff of Radio Alice, the first free pirate radio station in Italy (1976-1978). He is author of numerous books, including Cyberpunk, The Panther and the Rbizome, Politics of Mutation, Philosophy and Polities in the Twilight of Modernity, and The Factory of Unhappiness. He is currently collaborating on the magazine DeriveApprodi as well as teaching social history of communication at the Accademia di belle Arti in Milan. --Book Jacket.
The second coming
Jesus Christ was very clear. One day he will return -- and none of us knows when. Vocal fanatics claim to know the details of the Second Coming, causing many Christians to all but ignore the good news that Jesus is coming again. Yet God's own Word commands us to know the signs of the times, to remain watchful, and to be ready -- whenever Christ comes. This book is a straightforward, in-depth exploration of the key biblical texts regarding the Second Coming: most notably, Christ's longest and most important eschatological message, the Olivet Discourse. As you study what the Word of God says about these matters, it will stir in your heart an earnest longing for Christ's return -- as well as a certainty about how to live expectantly until he comes again. - Back cover.
Futurability
We live in an age of impotence. Stuck between global war and global finance, between identity and capital, we seem to be incapable of producing the radical change that is so desperately needed. Is there still a way to disentangle ourselves from a global order that shapes our politics as well as our imagination? In his most systematic book to date, renowned Italian theorist Franco Berardi tackles this question through a solid yet visionary analysis of the three fundamental concepts of Possibility, Potency, and Power. Characterizing Possibility as the content, Potency as the energy, and Power as the form, Berardi suggests that the road to emancipation unravels from the awareness that the field of the possible is only limited, and not created, by the power structures that implement it. Other futures and other worlds are always already inscribed within the present, despite power's attempt at keeping them invisible. Overcoming any temptation of giving in to despair or nostalgia, Berardi proposes the notion of 'futurability' as a way to remind us that even within the darkness of our current crisis lies dormant the horizon of possibility.
Aceleracionismo
El aceleracionismo es una herejía política: sostiene que hay deseos, tecnologías y procesos que el capitalismo hace surgir y de los que se alimenta, pero que no puede contener; y que es necesario acelerar estos procesos para empujar al sistema más allá de sus límites. Teniendo como antecedentes teóricos al notable “Fragmento sobre las máquinas” de Marx, los volúmenes sobre capitalismo y esquizofrenia de Deleuze y Guattari, y la ficción especulativa de autores como Samuel Buttler, William Gibson y J.G. Ballard (para quien “el futuro es una mejor guía para el presente que el pasado”), los aceleracionistas se preguntan cómo liberar las fuerzas productivas cautivas bajo la ideología neoliberal, para redirigirlas hacia objetivos comunes. En este proyecto, la actual base material no necesita ser destruida, sino que es reapropiada como plataforma de lanzamiento hacia un futuro postcapitalista. Pues, ciertamente, aún no sabemos lo que un cuerpo tecno-social moderno puede hacer. Desde la publicación en 2013 del “Manifiesto por una Política Aceleracionista” de Alex Williams y Nick Srnicek estas tesis han sido adoptadas por un grupo convergente de nuevas iniciativas progresistas, al mismo tiempo que vehementemente contestadas por sus críticos. Este rico intercambio, que intentamos reflejar en la presente antología, tuvo la virtud de reactivar y actualizar un campo histórico de tensiones cuyo eje es la relación entre los efectos alienantes de la tecnología y el sistema de valor capitalista. A la desesperanza dominante en la izquierda contemporánea, que se consuela con la estridente denuncia o con la creencia autocomplaciente de que mantener una adusta crítica desde el refugio de la teoría o la “indeterminación” del arte constituye resistencia, el aceleracionismo contrapone una imagen especulativa de otros futuros posibles y un mapa cognitivo para la identificación de aquellos elementos de este sistema que pueden ser eficaces en una transición a esa otra forma de vida. ¿Es posible concebir a la inteligencia artificial, la biotécnica y el dinero virtual como algo más que medios de producción optimizados para la obtención de rendimiento económico? ¿Y en qué podría convertirse el concepto mismo de lo “humano” si algunas de estas potencialidades latentes, tales como la abolición de la necesidad de trabajar o la crisis de las categorías esencialistas de identidad, fueran liberadas al interior de un nuevo socius postcapitalista? Se trata de un debate fundamental a la hora de abrir nuevas perspectivas para las aventuras sociales y políticas por venir.
Heroes
The New York Times bestselling author lays down the laws.As a rebellion brews among the vampires of Vegas, the dissidents target three visiting Enforcers of the Nighthawk line. And only their mortal companion can save their immortal souls.
The soul at work
In this book, Franco Berardi presents an examination of new forms of alienation in our never-off, plugged-in culture - and a clarion call for a 'conspiracy of estranged people'.
After the Future
After the Future explores our century-long obsession with the concept of "the future." Beginning with F. T. Marinetti's "Futurist Manifesto" and the worldwide race toward a new and highly mechanized society that defined the "Century of Progress," highly respected media activist Franco Berardi traces the genesis of future-oriented thought through the punk movement of the early '70s and into the media revolution of the '90s. Cyberculture, the last truly utopian vision of the future, has ended in a clash, and left behind an ever-growing system of virtual life and actual death, of virtual knowledge and actual war. Our future, Berardi argues, has come and gone; the concept has lost its usefulness. Now it's our responsibility to decide what comes next. Drawing on his own involvement with the Autonomia movement in Italy and his collaboration and friendship with leading thinkers of the European political left, including Félix Guattari and Antonio Negri, Berardi presents a highly nuanced analysis of the state of the contemporary working class, and charts a course out of the modern dystopian moment. Franco Berardi, better known in the United States as "Bifo", is an Italian autonomist philosopher and media activist. One of the founders of the notorious Radio Alice, a pirate radio station that became the voice of the autonomous youth movement of Bologna in the late 1970s, Bifo is the author of multiple works of theory, including the recently published The Soul at Work and "The Post-Futurist Manifesto."--Publishr's website.
