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Liciaâs Lectures on Nothing
And God said let there be a little light: and there was this little light of nonbelonging, Lucecita and her âGĂ©nesis.â Her light is given brightest in an incoherence she bears. Itâs not that Lucecita canât but that no one can be the voice of the nation. Having already shown how the nation canât have a mother, Licia Fiol-Matta shows us that the nation canât have a voice, either. Women, in being continually enjoined to do the impossible, are irreducible to that imposition, which is why and how they carry the extranational flavor and desire of the nationâs refusal, its nonperformance. Licia allows us to hear Lucecitaâs perfectly deviant moral perfectionism (the truth; the objective account of the good life which is, eventually, crystallized into a sense of the absolute necessity of freedom): I have only one weaknessâ/âwhich I share with all my mightâ/âI must be free. I want to be perfect. I am not pro-independence, I am not a nationalist, I am nothing. The only thing you canât allow is to have your freedom taken from you because then you become nothing. I must be free. I desire freedom. I want to enjoy freedom. I have a taste for liberty. I can taste it. I can feel it in my mouth. Freedom is very sweet. The mouthfeel of freedom. Evangelical perfectionism, neither identification nor plenitude, but truth in transport, suspension, via signal not symbol, having refused the readily legible.
There is a discourse on nothing, on nothingness and nowhere, with which Licia begins. Is the lyrical content of âGĂ©nesisâ really lugubrious? What about that little drum figure, that husky-voiced intro to a bombast of strings and woodwinds? Isnât it the music and not the words that threaten too sweetly to overwhelm. What would it be for nothing to be left on earth? This pop-zen attitude hit the English-speaking world a couple of years later with John Lennonâs âImagine,â also echoing a convergence that had already occurred in Don Cherryâs 1970 Mu, re-echoed a few years later in Billy Prestonâs âNothing from Nothing.â But âthe nowhere that is Puerto Ricoâ is where it all begins, remaining special, as it were, in the manmade persistence of the storm. What is the nature of this sub-national, anti- and ante-national, international nowhere? If we consider the residual insurgency of the historical irrelevents, as Zbigniew Brzenski calls them, which Greil Marus famously recites in his history of punk music, Lipstrick Traces, then Lucecita is a punk artist, as much as The Slits, in being more + less than a âgreat woman singer.â More precisely, she exemplifies that proto-punk thing that constituted the insurgency that punk came along to mourn in its recrudescent whiteness. This is almost like the historical transition and loss of the lower east side, which will have already occurred by the mid-seventies, if youâll forgive that weird sleight of hand with tense and case, a subjunctivity already buried. What was the mood of the times? The loss will have occurred long ago. If it occurs, the loss will have occurred long ago
A ResistĂȘncia do Objeto: O Grito de Tia Hester
Este texto Ă© a introdução do livro In the Break: The Aesthetics of the Black Radical Tradition (2003), do poeta e filĂłsofo Fred Moten. Partindo da âcena primĂĄriaâ, tirada da Narrativa da vida de Frederick Douglass (1845), em que, ainda criança, Douglass testemunha o açoitamento de sua Tia Hester, Moten aborda a possibilidade de resistĂȘncia dos objetos, usa Marx para analisar o valor das mercadorias/pessoas escravizadas, e associa os gritos que respondem Ă s chicotadas Ă s potĂȘncias disruptivas da performance preta que, como argumenta, ecoam nos gestos contemporĂąneos de artistas como Abbey Lincoln, Max Roach e James Brown
Music and Economic Planning
The Le Mardi Gras Listening Collective is a group of friends who listen to music together and is named after a bar in Pittsburgh where the collective was conceived. In this article we consider ways by which music might be a mode of planning opposed to individuation and measure, and beyond the instrumentalities to which music itself is often submitted. We do so by thinking about how jazzâwhere it takes on the improvisatory character of the busker, rehearsal, or jamâbecomes a form of love. We consider the song as an expression of antagonism that the song itself cannot contain. We ask if we might conceive music as a mode of criminality opposed to the violence and discipline imposed upon the body by capital. We look to understand capitalism by situating the plantation system at its center. We ask what sort of place our listening takes place in and how the song might inhabit it. We wonder what it might mean for all of this to remain unresolved, and how to remain attuned to that irresolution as a form of planning social life
Excerpts of "All that Beauty"
This article comprises excerpts of the book: Moten, F. (2019). All that Beauty. Letter Machine Editions
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