"Totality for Beginners" and a Situationist competition!

Avid Verso readers and SI devotees know that McKenzie Wark’s The Beach Beneath the Street features a dustjacket that folds out to a full-length double-sided poster, doubling as a graphic essay. The graphic essay, “Totality for Beginners,” is illustrated by Kevin C. Pyle with texts selected by McKenzie Wark.

“Totality for Kids” is the interactive version of the graphic essay, hosted by Vectors Journal and available at www.beachbeneaththestreet.com.

To introduce you to “Totality for Kids,” we are announcing our latest online competitionNow we’re aware that our last competition proved time-consuming for many participants, resulting in a marked decrease in worker productivity. To ensure that doesn’t happen again, we have made this competition much easier, less open to interpretation and less time-consuming.

In fact, all the answers can be found within the “Totality for Kids” site.

Here are the rules:

Time
There will be three questions a day, beginning on September 12 and ending on September 16. Contestants should submit their answers to all fifteen questions by email after the final questions are posted on September 16.

We will post the proper email address to submit answers to at that time.

Winners

There will be one winner for North America and one winner for the UK and the rest of the world.

There will also be five runners-up for each region.

The winner will be the first entry received with all fifteen correct  answers. The runners-up will be the following five people to email with all correct answers. Please do not enter before the final questions are published on September 16th. 

Prizes

The two winners will receive:

Volumes 1–3 of Critique of Everyday Life
The Situationists and the City
Panegyric
Comments on the Society of the Spectacle
The Beach Beneath the Street 
The Beach Beneath the Street poster

The runners-up will each receive a poster and a copy of Panegyric.

Remember to please do not post answers to the competition questions in the comments below. Answers posted below will be deleted and not counted.

Questions
Note that all questions refer to the site www.beachbeneaththestreet.com.

Day 1:

1. Which quarter of Paris does the narrative start in?
Saint-Germain-des-Prés

2. Where did one of the characters throw up?
Monieu’s

3. Who opened the bar L’Homme de Main?
Ghislain de Marbaix


Day 2:

4. Who said the following, and where was it said: “While I have written much less than most people who write, I have drunk much more than most people who drink.”
Guy Debord in Panegyric

5. Poetry should be made (and unmade) by whom?
By all

6. I take my desires for reality—what do I take reality for?
My desires


Day 3:

7. Who mounted the pulpit of Notre Dame and announced the death of God?
Michel Mourre

8. “Let the dead bury the dead.” Debord is quoting which author quoting which religious text?
Marx, quoting Gospel of Matthew

9. What is the film advertised between Critique of Separation and Breathless?
The Naked City


Day 4:

10. What Debord film title is a palindrome?
In girum imus nocte et consumimur igni

11. Who came up with the line, “Our ideas are on everybody’s mind”?
René Viénet

12. “We live to tread on kings.” Who said this, and in what Situationist text is it cited?
Shakespeare (Henry IV), cited in Debord’s Society of the Spectacle


Day 5:

13. Why should we beware of the man with the bullhorn?
He is thinking to himself: “I must follow them, for I am their leader.”

14. Sociologists and psychologists are the new what?
Cops

15. What can you get a 5% raise with?
Unions

The competition has ended, and all winners have been notified. Thank you for participating! For those who didn’t win, there will be more opportunities in the future. Subscribe to our Twitter feed and Facebook page to stay abreast.

More in #Competitions

3 comments

What?!? Another one? Are you serious?

Look, my draft isn't going to write itself. You Versonians need to knock this s#%t off. 

I'm already in therapy from my failure at the last contest, and now you are back again, beckoning and beguiling. 

And what kind of metric do you use for winning? Whoever gets there first with all the right answers!  I mean what kind of standard is that? Whoever is the most efficient and timely worker gets the spoils? That sounds to me like a reward for market efficiencies! You're a bunch of crypto-capitalists!

Man, I hope I win.

Cheers,
Brent 
Brent Garland / 12 September 2011 1 person thinks so
All true, Brent, and most amusingly put. Best of luck.
Mc Kenzie Wark / 13 September 2011
Is there some reason most of the Verso material on this piece calls it "Totality for Beginners" but the piece calls itself "Totality for Kids" - which is, among other things, the title of Joshua Clover's nifty book of poems (even if his title might have an origin or two)?
Ian Balfour / 14 September 2011

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