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A Thousand Years of Nonlinear History by Manuel De Landa
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A Thousand Years of Nonlinear History

by Manuel De Landa

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a practical application of Deleuze & Guattari, think "The Geology of Morals" chapter of ATP except a whole book. My only complaint would be DeLanda's reliance on other authors and the numerous quotations (feels really weird reading ATP quotes...some of them I can tell he's going to use before they even come up) but in the end that's just because he's summarizing a massive amount of research that I wouldn't bother to read otherwise. The conclusion was excellent, and also owed the most to D&G, but I'd still like to see more of an impact to stratification, to use a debate term. Also, I was surprised that the section on language was actually the least interesting when I assumed it would be the best; probably the middle section (on genes and flesh) I liked the best. ( )
  phette23 | Oct 19, 2009 |
Utterly fascinating. Events of the last millennium—including the rise of cities and capitalist "antimarkets," the circulation of organisms and plagues, and the development of languages and Foucaultian institutions—all viewed through the lens of complexity science. Wide-ranging; consistently intriguing. ( )
  jbushnell | Nov 14, 2006 |
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Systems theory in anthropology

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Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 0942299329, Paperback)

Following in the wake of his groundbreaking War in the Age of Intelligent Machines, Manuel De Landa presents a radical synthesis of historical development over the last one thousand years. More than a simple expository history, A Thousand Years of Nonlinear History sketches the outlines of a renewed materialist philosophy of history in the tradition of Fernand Braudel, Gilles Deleuze, and Félix Guattari, while also engaging the critical new understanding of material processes derived from the sciences of dynamics. Working against prevailing attitudes that see history as an arena of texts, discourses, ideologies, and metaphors, De Landa traces the concrete movements and interplays of matter and energy through human populations in the last millennium.

De Landa attacks three domains that have given shape to human societies: economics, biology, and linguistics. In every case, what one sees is the self-directed processes of matter and energy interacting with the whim and will of human history itself to form a panoramic vision of the West free of rigid teleology and naive notions of progress, and even more important, free of any deterministic source of its urban, institutional, and technological forms. Rather, the source of all concrete forms in the West's history are shown to derive from internal morphogenetic capabilities that lie within the flow of matter-energy itself.

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:18 -0400)

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