The Composition of Movements to Come

Aesthetics and Cultural Labour After the Avant-Garde

Stevphen Shukaitis author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Rowman & Littlefield International

Published:18th Dec '15

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

This hardback is available in another edition too:

The Composition of Movements to Come cover

This book explores the links between art, activism, and political change, particularly through the lens of the avant-garde in The Composition of Movements to Come.

In The Composition of Movements to Come, the author delves into the interplay between political change and social movements, emphasizing the role of autonomist politics and radical aesthetics. The text poses critical questions about how avant-garde art can disrupt established economic and political structures, and how the realms of art, aesthetics, and activism interconnect. It challenges readers to consider how creative spaces can foster new forms of governance and production, ultimately reshaping our understanding of resistance.

The book revisits historical avant-garde movements, including the Situationists and revolutionary Constructivism, through an autonomist Marxist lens. By expanding the analysis beyond a simplistic class framework, it encourages a broader exploration of cultural labor and the dynamics of resistance associated with it. This examination reveals a complex process of refusal—rejecting the separation of art from everyday life while simultaneously addressing how capitalist systems attempt to reconcile these tensions.

The Composition of Movements to Come opens up a fresh perspective on everyday politics, suggesting that the avant-garde's legacy is deeply intertwined with contemporary political economy. It invites readers to rethink the relationship between art and activism, positioning the history of the avant-garde as a crucial reference point for understanding modern movements and their potential for transformative change.

“Shukaitis's project is further distinguished by his emphasis on using avant-garde artistic practices as a means of mobilizing labor’s autonomy within deterritorialized capitalist spaces. [T]his is where the drift of his research moves into high gear.” * Critical Inquiry *
Stevphen Shukaitis's new book makes a forcible and compelling contribution to a rejuvenated discussion on avant-garde art and politics. . . .This is much to appreciate in Shukaitis's book. . . .[It is] a strategic vision, and Shukaitis's Dada games and partisan misdirection make for a spirited experiment in pataphysical writing in the context of the real subsumption of labor. * Afterimage *
With The Composition of Movements to Come Stevphen Shukaitis does again what he has been doing as an author and editor for years: pushing the boundaries of intellectual and activist thought on the Left. By insisting that culture be understood strategically, rather than merely employed tactically, Shukaitis has unlocked the secret of an affective and effective artistic activism for our times. Brilliant and useful. -- Stephen Duncombe, New York University; Co-Director, Center for Artistic Activism
I was convinced it was impossible to say something new about politics and the avant-garde, and I really enjoyed being proved wrong in so many different ways. -- David Graeber, Professor of Anthropology, London School of Economics
Stevphen Shukaitis has produced an exposition on the strategic – as opposed to purely tactical – possibilities immanent within the post-war avant-garde that is as beautiful as the chance meeting of Autonomous Marxism and the Situationist International on the dissecting-table of critical theory. -- Gregory Sholette, Assistant Professor of Sculpture and Social Practice at Queens College Art Department, The City University of New York
Can strategy emerge from out of the diverse, fragmentary and temporary tactics of contemporary social movements? In this important book, which offers telling historical perspectives and is at the same time forged in the practice of political opposition, Stevphen Shukaitis offers a sustained argument that it can, and that it should. -- Julian Stallabrass, Courtauld Institute of Art
This is a really thought provoking book, and I would recommend it to anyone who wants to think about art in ways that are thoroughly social, and that try very hard indeed to rescue a radical politics from the global institutions of art capitalism. * Culture Machine *

ISBN: 9781783481729

Dimensions: 236mm x 163mm x 20mm

Weight: 485g

198 pages