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Index
Cover
Title
Copyright
Contents
Foreword
Introduction
Making Sense of Mass Revolt
The Eros Effect
Related Traditions
Structure of the Book
Notes
Section One: The Eros Effect
1. Remembering May ’68: An Interview with George Katsiaficas
2. Eros and Revolution
Limits of the Eros Effect
Revisiting the Eros Effect
Carl Jung and Synchronicity
Eros’ Aesthetic Dimension
Activating the Eros Effect
Notes
3. From Marcuse’s “Political Eros” to the Eros Effect: A Current Statement
Developing the Eros Effect
Capitalism’s Colonization of the Unconscious
Explaining Uprisings: Are Social and Economic Factors Enough?
The Future of the Eros Effect
Notes
Section Two: Extensions and Elaborations
4. Eros in a One-Dimensional Society: Katsiaficas, Marcuse, and Me
One-Dimensional Sleepwalking and the Erotic Drive to Wake Up
Marcuse, Katsiaficas, and the Possibility of Emancipatory Social Change
The Dialectical Tension in Eros
The Eros Effect and Democratic Attunement: Toward a New Sensibility
Individual and Structural Transformation
Notes
5. Rethinking the Eros Effect: Sentience, Reality, and Emanation
First Principle: The Sentient Body
Second Principle: The Creation of Reality
Third Principle: Bodily Emanation
Concluding Remarks: An Ontology of Perpetual Resistance
Notes
6. Revolt as Reason, Reason as Revolt: On the Praxis of Philosophy from Below
Revolt and Reason
Intellect of Revolt, Not Analysis of Revolt
Sketching the Logic of Revolt
The Praxis of Philosophy from Below
Notes
7. The Eros Effect and the Embodied Mind
The Eros Effect
The Embodied Mind
Application and Analysis of Embodied Politics
Imagination in Revolt
Instinct and a Liberated Rationality
Embodying a New Sensibility
Notes
Section Three: Case Studies
8. Kindling for the Spark: Eros and Emergent Consciousness in Occupy Oakland
Gathering the Kindling
Emergent Consciousness
Smoldering Embers
Widening the Cracks
Notes
9. Eros Effect as Emergency Politics: Empathy, Agency, and Network in South Korea’s Sewol Ferry Disaster
Overview: Tragedy, Emotion, Spontaneity, and Agency
Emergency, Paradox of Politics, and Human Agency
Emotion, Spontaneity, and the Eros Effect in Emergency Politics
From the Massacre to Networked, Emotional Combustions
Empathy, Promise, and Motherhood
Emergency Politics of the Eros Effect
Notes
10. Climatology of the Eros Effect: Notes from the Japanese Archipelago
Eros as Battleground
Organizing, Spontaneity, and the Trans-Asiatic Underclass
Between Archipelago and Insularity
Japan’s ’68
Autonomy of Life-Principles and Its Territory
Notes
Section Four: Rejoinders
11. Feminism and the Eros Effect
Introduction
The Critique of the Critique of Repression
Love as Work
Conclusion: The Problem of Spontaneity
Notes
12. Waves of Protest, the Eros Effect, and the Social Relations of Diffusion
Idle No More: A Wave of Protest
Trying to Understand Variation in Waves of Protest
Waves Across the Land
Temporal Variation
Tactical Variation
Variation in Size and Quantity of Events
Lacunae
Conclusion
Notes
13. Eros Effect or Biological Hatred?
I
II
III
IV
V
Notes
Afterword
From 1968 to 2011 and Beyond
A Life Dedicated to Love and Struggle
Spontaneous Combustion and the Present Moment
Notes
Contributors
Index
Back Cover
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