http://www.spiegel.de/...
"Zizek loves to correct viewpoints when precisely the opposite is considered correct. He calls this counterintuitive observation. His favorite thought form is the paradox. Using his psychoanalytical skills, he attempts to demonstrate how liberal democracy manipulates people. One of his famous everyday observations on this subject relates to the buttons used to close the door in elevators. He has discovered that they are placebos. The doors don't close a second faster when one presses the button, but they don't have to. It's sufficient that the person pressing the button has the illusion that he is able to influence something. The political illusion machine that calls itself Western democracy functions in exactly the same way, says Zizek."
"I know that people often think I'm an idiot," he says that evening, "that nostalgic Leninist. But I'm not crazy. I'm much more modest and much more pessimistic."
Why pessimistic? In fact, it isn't absurd at all to assume that capitalism and democracy have reached a dead end. "That's true," says Zizek, "but I believe that the left is, tragically, bereft of any vision to be taken seriously. We all wish for a real, authentic revolution! But it has take place far away, preferably in Cuba, Vietnam, China or Nicaragua. The advantage of that is that it allows us to continue with our careers here."
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Blog Archive
-
▼
2010
(83)
-
▼
July
(11)
- how to break the vicious econmic cycle
- Truth vs. "Home in Palo Alto with a swimming pool"
- Julian Assange: Why the world needs WikiLeaks
- french letter(s)
- berlusconi vs. communism-redefined
- a stroll on the bio-pharma lane
- the socioeconomics of the quiet
- The political illusion machine that calls itself W...
- Dylan Ratigan, MSNBC, on a prime cause of America...
- William Kunstler, The Terrible Myth
-
▼
July
(11)
No comments:
Post a Comment