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Slavoj Žižek – A Revolution ne s’autorise que d’elle même

December 18th, 2009 Leave a comment Go to comments


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Think about marriage and divorce: the most intelligent argument for the right to divorce (proposed, among others, by none other than the young Marx) does not refer to common vulgarities in the style of “like all things, love attachments are also not eternal, they change in the course of time,” etc.; it rather concedes that indissolvability is in the very notion of marriage. The conclusion is that divorce always has a retroactive scope: it does not only mean that marriage is now annulled, but something much more radical – a marriage should be annulled because it never was a true marriage. And the same holds for Soviet Communism: it is clearly insufficient to say that, in the years of Brezhnev “stagnation,” it “exhausted its potentials, no longer fitting new times”; what its miserable end demonstrates is that it was a historical deadlock from its very beginning.

  1. December 19th, 2009 at 18:02 | #1

    This is excellent! Thank you for finding this.

  2. sodade
    December 23rd, 2009 at 08:50 | #2

    Hi,
    Your email address doesn’t work.
    At least not for me.
    kind regards
    s

  3. December 23rd, 2009 at 10:47 | #3

    email should work now.

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