1 hr 52 min

Reading Group 4 - Exhaustion Quiver: New Weapons for Thought

    • Philosophy

On March 22nd, Quiver hosts a conversation about “exhaustion.”

Understanding that the unfolding crisis is a disaster long in the  making, we invite participants to discussion exhaustion, stress, and  burnout.

Our two readings begin with a section of “How to Make Yourself a  Body Without Organs” from A Thousand Plateaus. There we learn that the  BwO is not the enemy of organs but of organisms, and learn strategies to  survive the three great strata of the organism, significance, and  subjectification.

The second reading  is the now-classic essay “We Are All Very Anxious.”  As situated by its subtitle, “Six Theses on Anxiety and Why It is  Effectively Preventing Militancy, and One Possible Strategy for  Overcoming It,” we are interested in how ideas about feeling frayed,  overwhelmed, and undone contribute to militant practice.

Other concepts and readings we suggest participants explore are:


D&G’s use of Laing’s expression on method “breakthrough not breakdown” found in Anti-Oedipus
the notion found across Capitalism and Schizophrenia that the decoded flows of capital are constantly repelling its own limits
The  section  on F. Scott Fitzgerald’s “The Crack-Up” (to be contrasted with  the royal “break” and  nomadic war machine’s “rupture”) in the “Three  Novellas” plateau.
Deleuze's “Three Group-Related Problems” on antipsychiatric politics (or more broadly, the first Molecular Revolution book).
Peter Pál Pelbert’s Cartography of Exhaustion
Colectivo Situaciones, “Politicizing Sadness”

On March 22nd, Quiver hosts a conversation about “exhaustion.”

Understanding that the unfolding crisis is a disaster long in the  making, we invite participants to discussion exhaustion, stress, and  burnout.

Our two readings begin with a section of “How to Make Yourself a  Body Without Organs” from A Thousand Plateaus. There we learn that the  BwO is not the enemy of organs but of organisms, and learn strategies to  survive the three great strata of the organism, significance, and  subjectification.

The second reading  is the now-classic essay “We Are All Very Anxious.”  As situated by its subtitle, “Six Theses on Anxiety and Why It is  Effectively Preventing Militancy, and One Possible Strategy for  Overcoming It,” we are interested in how ideas about feeling frayed,  overwhelmed, and undone contribute to militant practice.

Other concepts and readings we suggest participants explore are:


D&G’s use of Laing’s expression on method “breakthrough not breakdown” found in Anti-Oedipus
the notion found across Capitalism and Schizophrenia that the decoded flows of capital are constantly repelling its own limits
The  section  on F. Scott Fitzgerald’s “The Crack-Up” (to be contrasted with  the royal “break” and  nomadic war machine’s “rupture”) in the “Three  Novellas” plateau.
Deleuze's “Three Group-Related Problems” on antipsychiatric politics (or more broadly, the first Molecular Revolution book).
Peter Pál Pelbert’s Cartography of Exhaustion
Colectivo Situaciones, “Politicizing Sadness”

1 hr 52 min