Thursday, January 28, 2010

Trading civilisation for living

Until fairly recently – until civilization – nature was a subject, not an object. In hunter-gatherer societies no strict division or hierarchy existed between the human and the non-human. The participatory nature of vanished connectedness has to be restored, that condition in which meaning was lived, not objectified into a grid of symbolic culture. The very positive picture we now have of pre-history establishes a perspective of anticipatory rememberance: there is the horizon of subject-object reconciliation.

This prior participation with nature is the reverse of the domination and distancing at the heart of reification. It reminds us that all desire is a desire for relationship, at its best reciprocal and animate. To enable this nearness or presence is a gigantic practical project, that will make an end to these dark days.
John Zerzan, That thing we do, 1998, from Running on Emptiness: The Pathology of Civilization, Feral House, 2002

6 comments:

  1. Isn't that the truth, Patrick.

    Thanks for sharing this, sounds like essential reading for understanding the illness of civilization

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  2. yes, it's a cracker of a quote from a fire-cracker of a book.

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  3. Interesting post, must find out some more about this!

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  4. What an interesting post, great news!

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