Quiver: New Weapons for Thought

quiver

Post-Deleuzian political thinking as an instrument of combat. Unapologetically queer, feminist, anti-capitalist, and abolitionist.

Episodes

  1. 05/23/2021

    Reading Group 7 - Institutional Analysis

    On May 3rd, Quiver discussed “Institutional Analysis.” Our conversation centered on the work of Frantz Fanon. We provided two readings. The first contextualizes the work of Fanon within social psychiatry, the institutional psychotherapy movement, and his historical context (Caribbean, French, and North African). The reading visits Fanon during his work at the Blida-Joinville Psychiatric Hospital in Blida, Algeria. Inspired by thriving experiments in Saint-Albian led by the anti-fascist Tosquelles, Fanon sought to bring social, cultural, and political methods to the repressive environment of Blida-Joinville. He fought the prison-like atmosphere with a “disalienated psychiatry” through collective works, hands-on activities, group sports, a newsletter that explained treatments, and film club to breathe life into the space. But he considered it a failure, as in the deeply-segregated institution it only seemed to help the white patients and not the Muslim ones. After submitting his resignation, he was expelled from the country and moved to Tunisia where he linked up the Algerian combatants of the FLN. The second reading is an extended journal that chronicles Fanon’s time at Blida-Joinville in vivid detail. Fanon co-wrote it with Jacques Azoulay (whose dissertation he supervised) to outline the challenges of working at Blida-Joinville with the hopes of finding some theoretical insights. They describe the particulars of the stifling structure of the hospital, practical details of their experimental attempts to combat them, and an insightful post-mortem on why they feel they failed.

  2. 05/08/2021

    Reading Group 4 - Exhaustion

    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”

  3. 02/23/2021

    Reading Group 2 - The Subject

    On February 15th, Quiver convened its second reading group over Zoom. During that session, we explored the concept of “subjects.” We started with the infamous short excerpt on voluntary servitude and Reichian group fantasy from Anti-Oedipus. Then, we moved to the distinction between post-Althusserian social subjection and Mumford's machinic enslavement. Our conversation worked through political concepts of the subject, state, and capitalism. But we also wondered, how must we rethink D&G to confront the intolerable anti-blackness of this world. This led to a truly rhizome of ideas, texts, references and resonances... here some of them: - (00:15:30) “Discourse on Voluntary Servitude”: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Discourse_on_Voluntary_Servitude - (00:18:00) Eduardo Cadava, Peter Connor, and Jean-Luc Nancy (ed.) - ''Who Comes After the Subject'': https://monoskop.org/File:Cadava_Eduardo_Connor_Peter_Nancy_Jean_Luc_Who_Comes_After_the_Subject_1991.pdf - (00:24:30) The Deleuze dictionary - “molar”: https://deleuze.enacademic.com/110/molar // “molecular”: https://deleuze.enacademic.com/111/molecular - (01:19:00) Andrew Culp - Draft on Maurizio Lazzarato’s “Signs, machines, subjectivities”: https://anarchistwithoutcontent.files.wordpress.com/2015/02/lazzarato-signs-and-machines-intro-chp-1-chp-2.pdf - (01:21:30) Jason Read on Sarah Jaffe’s book “Work Won’t Love You Back”: http://www.unemployednegativity.com/2021/02/whats-love-got-to-do-with-it-on-sarah.html - (01:32:30) Michael Hardt - “The Withering of Civil Society”: https://sci-hub.se/10.2307/466673 - (01:36:00) Michelle Koerner on Deleuze’s missing quotation of Jackson: https://read.dukeupress.edu/genre/article-abstract/44/2/157/5631/Line-of-Escape-Gilles-Deleuze-s-Encounter-with?redirectedFrom=fulltext - (01:42:30) Fred Moten & Saidiya Hartman at Duke University | The Black Outdoors: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t_tUZ6dybrc - (01:44:00) Daniel Colucciello Barber - On Black Negativity: https://www.societyandspace.org/articles/on-black-negativity-or-the-affirmation-of-nothing — As an experiment in opacity, all voices were modulated. Special thank you to CEER - Quiver To listen to Quiver as a podcast, visit https://anchor.fm/q-iver/ or find it on any major podcast platform. To RSVP for future Events, view readings, or subscribe to our mailing list, visit ourquiver.org.

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Post-Deleuzian political thinking as an instrument of combat. Unapologetically queer, feminist, anti-capitalist, and abolitionist.