Gilded Age Austerity

Social theorist Melinda Cooper frames 20th and 21st century economic activity as the responsibilization of individuals for the costs of social reproduction, and the plundering of public coffers for private gain – two different but complementary mechanisms for contemporary accumulation. We’ll explore the latter mechanism in a reading session on Cooper’s latest book Counterrevolution: Extravagance and Austerity in Public Finance (Princeton UP 2024). Focus on the Introduction and Chapter Five. Join us Monday May 6, 4pm at the Lincoln Park Public Library Meeting Room (Red, Brown, Purple Lines: Fullerton). RSVP for PDFs.

Summer is upon us! Propose events, field trips, Hegel close-read ambitions and more to interccect at gmail.

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embracing alienation

InterCcECT is pleased – chuffed, fulfilled, unalienated even – to welcome two very special guests for a spring session “The Trouble with Alienation”. Visiting scholars Gregor Moder and Bara Kolenc, a new generation of Ljubljana school philosophers of psychoanalysis, Hegel, aesthetics, comedy, and then some (!) will each present a short talk and discussion will follow. Join us Monday 8 April at 4pm at UIC (601 S Morgan St, 20th Floor, Room 2028; Blue Line: UIC Halsted).

Mark your calendars now for the subsequent spring reading session Monday 6 May on the new Melinda Cooper! As always, email interccect@gmail to propose readings, works-in-progress groups, field trips, alienation activities galore.

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Integrating Paradox

In the grammars of theory, paradox is paramount, while integration, stability, or resolution tend to fall below the radar – or be roundly excoriated. A new book from the emblematic theory publisher Duke UP evaluates this habit of thought across traditions in law and the humanities and offers constructive alternatives. Professor Elizabeth Anker (English and Law) joins InterCcECT as a special guest to discuss On Paradox: The Claims of Theory. We’ll read the Introduction “On Paradox” and, ideally, Chapter 6: “What Holds Things Together: Toward an Integrative Criticism” (on Claudia Rankine’s Citizen). RSVP for PDF.

Monday 11 March, 4pm

UIC University Hall, room 2028 (20th Floor; 601 S Morgan St; Blue Line: UIC Halsted)

Mark your calendars for our next special guest visit, Monday 8 April with Gregor Moder and Bara Kolenc.

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Fascism Lately

In Late Fascism, old InterCcECTer Alberto Toscano offers a new intervention in what has come to be known as “the fascism debate.” How do we robustly conceptualize and historicize the authoritarian tendencies of the present and their activation of racism and sexism? 

Join InterCcECT for a reading session, focusing on chapters 1-3. 

Monday, 12 Feb, 4pm, at The Bourgeois Pig (red line: Fullerton)

RSVP for PDF. 

Mark your calendars now for two very special upcoming InterCcECT events this winter! 

11 March with special guest Elizabeth Anker, author of On Paradox!

8-12 April with special guest Gregor Moder! (exact date TBD very soon)

and if it floats your boat:

5 Feb Seminary Coop new book salon for Immediacy, Or, The Style of Too Late Capitalism

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Bad Education

Break goals at once over-ambitious and under-achieving? Nation-wide war on education got you down? Lee Edelman will not cheer you up!

But join InterCcECT anyway, for a reading session on the formidable queer theorist’s recent release, Bad Education: Why Queer Theory Teaches Us Nothing. We’ll read the intro and chapter two.

Monday 18 December

4pm at The Map Room

(Blue Line: Western)

RSVP for PDFs. Fire up your Theory New Year’s Resolutions! Traditionally we host an MLK day session; mark your calendars and send along reading recs.

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Neurosis, Kafka style: a miniseminar with Aaron Schuster

InterCcECT is delighted to again welcome visiting scholar Aaron Schuster for a miniseminar, this time on “The Neurotic Choice of Neurosis: Kafka, Psychoanalysis, Philosophy”. Join us Tuesday 7 November, 4pm at UIC English (University Hall, 601 S Morgan St, 18th floor, room 1850). We’ll read Kafka’s story “Investigations of a Dog” alongside “The Drive to Philosophize,” an excerpt from Schuster’s book-in-progress.

RSVP for the readings, and as always, contact us to propose events.

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Spherical Apartheid: a miniseminar with Christian Sorace

The philosopher Peter Sloterdijk’s Sphere Trilogy considers Bubbles, Globes, and Foam as organic models for biopolitics. Special guest Christian Sorace, Lecturer in Global China at the University of Cambridge, joins InterCcECT to present a critical exploration of this project, juxtaposing it to spherical cultural practices in Mongolia to show its limits and political obscenity while also probing the possibility of outlining communism within a biopolitical framework.

We’ll read a pre-circulated chapter and an excerpt from The Secret History of the Mongols and meet Christian for discussion at UIC, University Hall (601 S Morgan) room 1850 (18th Floor) Thursday 21 September, 4pm.

RSVP for the readings, and as always, contact us to propose events.

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the computational versus the digital

With LLMs perpetrating a massive new enclosure, and creative labor struggling militantly, the times are ripe to debate intelligence, creativity, pattern recognition, and counting. If quantification is the fundamental episteme of our times, does it follow that all forms of digital reason are alike? How do computational mediascapes draw upon the infrastructural logics of long ago centuries? What is the difference between adding up and speculation? The recent Critical Inquiry essay “On Addressability, Or What Even Is Computation?” offers some important distinctions and historicizations that ramify for cultural theory.

Stave off fall just a little longer! Join us Tues 29 Aug, 4pm, at The Map Room (Blue Line: Western).

Contact us for pdfs and to propose back-to-school events; mark your calendars for a visit from special guest Christian Sorace, “Spherical Apartheid” 21 Sept!

Would-be visitors please get in touch; InterCcECT hosts lectures, mini seminars, works-in-progress, and dinner/overnights.

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drive all night

Following on our recent readings about repression and compulsion, let’s dive into drive. To resurrect our old summer tradition, special guest Professor Chris Breu will anchor. We’ll read Lacan’s “On Freud’s Trieb”, Laplanche’s “Drive and Instinct”, and De Lauretis’s “Basic Instincts”. Familiarity with Freud’s “Instincts and their Vicissitudes” may be desirable.

Join us Tuesday 1 August, 4pm, Sheffields Beer and Wine Garden (outdoors; CTA Belmont on Red, Brown, Purple lines).

Contact us for pdfs or to propose additional summer plans.

Mark your calendars for a visit from special guest Christian Sorace, 21 Sept! Would-be visitors please get in touch; InterCcECT hosts lectures, mini seminars, works-in-progress, and dinner/overnights.

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geoengineering galaxy brain

Is critical theory equipped to evaluate the promise of geoenginnering? What is real cause for hope about the near future and what is real fantasy? InterCcECT continues hot ecomarx summer with Andreas Malm’s recent two part series The Future Is the Termination Shock: On the Antinomies and Psychopathologies of Geoengineering.

Join us Tuesday 20 June, 4pm, Half Sour.

Contact us for pdfs or to propose summer plans.

Mark your calendars for a visit from special guest Christian Sorace, 21 Sept! Would-be visitors please get in touch; InterCcECT hosts lectures, mini seminars, works-in-progress, and dinner/overnights.

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