What can the thought of Deleuze and Guattari do today? This concern resonates throughout the book, stressing concepts of a collective work that tended meeting points between diverse spheres of the arts, humanities and social sciences.
Interdisciplinary dialogue is the legacy of a work written in four hands where theory and practice are closely linked: the problem is not to answer what they mean but how the concepts can contribute to enhancing useful knowledge for life. In other words, it is about turning the concepts into a "war machine" from which to create new weapons of analysis and resistance to the present. Ecological devastation, the emergence of microfascisms and new forms of social control are some of today's problems, when capitalism shines in its ability to capture any domain of existence, to adapt and strengthen itself with each crisis.
This book brings togeth...read more