After the hard work: therapies for the new millennium
Article Sidebar
Google Scholar citations
Main Article Content
Art has long called for a more fulfilling future by appealing to individual emancipation, organisational emancipation and the “coming community”. In parallel, proposals are emerging that complicate some of the strategic assumptions of such rhetoric, since they are inseparable from a given cultural logic related to the liberal subject. Proposals making the case for a fatigue that is capable of deactivating the “neuronal violence” that contemporary capitalism unleashes (Han); the political potential of “exhaustion” (Bifo); and the need to recover sleep after its attack (Crary), would become programmatic restrictions that have endorsed numerous practices and talks speculating on a future that should no longer be thought of from the perspective of forms of action linked to the insurrectional tradition. Indeed, it would not be difficult to link these speculations to a longer philosophical, aesthetic tradition that challenged the so-called vita activa as a preliminary step towards establishing a better future. This article aims to address the implications of these “escape channels” on the basis of art and literature from the point of view of their close links with an ideological and economic situation that in one way or another overdetermine the proliferation of futures, that “after the hard work” they will only be viable through resignation therapeutics.
Article Details
Copyright
For all articles published in Artnodes that are subject to a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International licence, copyright is retained by the author(s). The complete text the license can be consulted at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/. You may copy, distribute, transmit and adapt the work, provided you attribute it (authorship, journal name, publisher) in the manner specified by the author(s) or licensor(s).
Authors are responsible for obtaining the necessary licences for the images that are subject to copyright.
Assignment of intellectual property rights
The author non exclusively transfers the rights to use (reproduce, distribute, publicly broadcast or transform) and market the work, in full or part, to the journal’s editors in all present and future formats and modalities, in all languages, for the lifetime of the work and worldwide.
I hereby declare that I am the original author of the work. The editors shall thus not be held responsible for any obligation or legal action that may derive from the work submitted in terms of violation of third parties’ rights, whether intellectual property, trade secret or any other right.
Rafael Pinilla, Universitat de Barcelona Universitat Oberta de Catalunya
Rafael Pinilla Sánchez has a PhD in History of Art and a Master's in Advanced Studies in History of Art from the University of Barcelona. His main research interests relate to contemporary art and its links with the transformations in the productive sphere and labour redeployment. He is an associate researcher of the Art, Globalization, Interculturality Research Group at the University of Barcelona; Technical and Planning Secretary of the Journal of Global Studies and Contemporary Art (REGAC); member of the Academic Council of the Autonomous University of Mexico City's Economy and Culture Forum; member of the Art Research Network of the Autonomous University of Querétaro; and member of the Academic Council and Editorial Team of the Autonomous University of Puebla's publishing house: Colección La Fuente/Publicaciones de Estética y Arte. He has published articles in journals, catalogues and online platforms, collaborated on exhibition projects (Museum of Art of the National University of Colombia, Bogotá; National Museum of Fine Arts, Santiago de Chile; Pavilion, Bucharest) and has held courses and workshops that address the relationships between contemporary art and labour redeployment.
Similar Articles
- Cristina Albu, Five Degrees of Separation between Art and New Media: Art and Technology Projects under the Critical Lens , Artnodes: No. 11: (November 2011). NODE 11. Hybrid Discourses (coord.: Pau Alsina)
- Renzo Filinich, Daniela 1991 Cespedes, Process of individuation in hybrid ecologies: on the relationship between art, machines and natural systems , Artnodes: No. 33: (January 2024). NODE 33. Media Artivism: On the Archaeology and History of Digital Culture for Social Change (Guest Editors: Carolina Fernández-Castrillo & Diego Mantoan)
- Gemma San Cornelio, Art and identity: a utopian relationship with technology , Artnodes: No. 3 (2004): NODE 3. Heterotipies
- Michele Emmer, Visible perfection: maths and art , Artnodes: No. 4: (July 2005). NODE 4. Calculability (Editor: Pau Alsina)
- Inke Arns, Code as performative speech act , Artnodes: No. 4: (July 2005). NODE 4. Calculability (Editor: Pau Alsina)
- Rosa Berbel, Ghostly body, wounded nature: utopian potentialities in Ana Mendieta’s Siluetas series , Artnodes: No. 31: (January 2023). NODE 31. Possibles II (Editors: Pau Alsina & Andrés Burbano)
- Umberto Roncoroni Osio, Veronica Crousse Rastelli, Augmented virtuality: emerging processes, art and digital media , Artnodes: No. 17: (June 2016). NODE 17. Art and Education (Editor: Aida Sánchez de Serdio)
- Santiago Ortiz, Narrative, life, art and code , Artnodes: No. 4: (July 2005). NODE 4. Calculability (Editor: Pau Alsina)
- Sonia 1972 Ríos Moyano, Leticia Crespillo Marí, Javier 1979 González Torres, Anthropological narratives of machinic otherness at the dawn of posthuman and transhuman theories. A first approach from movies and streaming series , Artnodes: No. 32: (July 2023). NODE 32. Possibles III (Editors: Pau Alsina & Andrés Burbano)
- Griselda Vilar Sastre, Alejandro Barranquero, Audiovisual practises in the 15M: technological innovation, documentary and video artivism , Artnodes: No. 33: (January 2024). NODE 33. Media Artivism: On the Archaeology and History of Digital Culture for Social Change (Guest Editors: Carolina Fernández-Castrillo & Diego Mantoan)
<< < 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 > >>
You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.