Zizek analyzes the end of the world at the hands of the “four riders of the apocalypse”

“There should no longer be any doubt: global capitalism is fast approaching its terminal crisis. Slavoj Zizek has identified the four horsemen of this coming apocalypse: the worldwide ecological crisis; imbalances within the economic system; the biogenetic revolution; and exploding social divisions and ruptures.

But, he asks, if the end of capitalism seems to many like the end of the world, how is it possible for Western society to face up to the end times? In a major new analysis of our global situation, Zizek argues that our collective responses to economic Armageddon correspond to the stages of grief: ideological denial, explosions of anger and attempts at bargaining, followed by depression and withdrawal.

After passing through this zero-point, we can begin to perceive the crisis as a chance for a new beginning. Or, as Mao Zedong put it, “There is great disorder under heaven, the situation is excellent.” Slavoj Zizek shows the cultural and political forms of these stages of ideological avoidance and political protest, from New Age obscurantism to violent religious fundamentalism.

Concluding with a compelling argument for the return of a Marxian critique of political economy, Zizek also divines the wellsprings of a potentially communist culture—from literary utopias like Kafka’s community of mice to the collective of freak outcasts in the TV series Heroes.

Praise for In Defense of Lost Causes:

“Addictively eclectic.” Steven Poole, Guardian

“A wealth of political and philosophical insight.” — Terry Eagleton, The Times Literary Supplement

“A monument to imaginative, risk-taking and rigorous scholarship.” — Times Higher Education Supplement

“Exhilarating, inspiring, thought-provoking.” — David Schneider, Prospect

Slavoj Zizek is a Slovenian philosopher and cultural critic. He is a professor at the European Graduate School, International Director of the Birkbeck Institute for the Humanities, Birkbeck College, University of London, and a senior researcher at the Institute of Sociology, University of Ljubljana, Slovenia.

Publication
May 2010

432 pages

Cloth
ISBN-13: 978 1 84467 598 2
US$29.95 / £20 / CAN$37.50



Also available:

First as Tragedy, Then as Farce

Iraq: The Borrowed Kettle

In Defense of Lost Causes