The infamous eco-anarchist John Zerzan whose books have resulted in recent interviews byViceandBelievermagazines, checks in with further provocative articles about the chaotic results of civilization and technology.
Says novelist Lang Gore in his introduction:
The present collection of essays continues the overarching thrust of John's scholarship, unveiling the post-apocalyptic nature of our times by noting the apocalypse was yesterday, several thousand years ago, to be precise, and that nothing produced by civilization can ever redeem the systematic attempt it has undertaken these (very) few millennia to destroy or alienate any human connection with the earth.
In fact, when civilized Europeans imposed themselves everywhere on Earth, they created a terminal crisis for themselves by their very contact with indigenous societies. Suddenly, those with eyes to see and ears to hear could recognize that patriarchy, property and authority, and certainly slavery, were neither necessary nor desirable, let alone determined by 'human nature.'
Edelweiss galleys available
co-op availableTable of Contents
Introduction
The Absent Age, by Lang Gore
Part I: Origins
Preface
In the Beginning
Numb and Number
Origins of the One Percent
Arrivederci Roma
Industrialism and its Discontents: the Luddites and their Inheritors
Part II: Situations
Preface
Next What
Blown Away: Guns and Random Mass Shootings
Vagaries of the Left
Faster! The Age of Acceleration
A Word on Civilization and Collapse
Part III: Inspirations
Preface
Animal Dreams
Losing Consciousness
The Sea
What Does it Mean to be Healthy?
Why Hope?
John Zerzan (born 1943) is an American anarchist and primitivist philosopher and author. His works criticize agricultural civilization as inherently oppressive, and advocate drawing upon the ways of life ofl“^