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Letters on the Autonomy Project

Janet Sarbanes

Published on June 2, 2022 by punctum books

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Pages
198 pages
Languages
English
Dimensions
5⤫8 in.
ISBN (Paperback)
ISBN: 978-1-68571-042-2 (Paperback)
ISBN (PDF)
ISBN: 978-1-68571-043-9 (PDF)
LCCN
LCCN: 2022939551
BISAC subject codes
BISAC: PHI019000, POL035000
Thema subject codes
THEMA: JPWG, QDTS

In the face of rising authoritarianism and on the heels of urgent struggle, autonomy calls to us. How might we excavate the theory and history of autonomous politics to arrive at new possibilities for radical democracy and the radical imaginary? How can we rethink the ways in which artistic autonomy is theorized and practiced beyond the shrunken horizon of liberal individualism? How might we understand political and artistic autonomies as linked, rather than diametrically opposed? And what role does radical pedagogy have to play in all of this?

Framed by the thought of Cornelius Castoriadis, and engaging with Marxist, Black Radical, and Feminist approaches to liberation, as well as movements such as Occupy, Black Lives Matter, Me Too, Letters on the Autonomy Project understands autonomy to be the capacity of a society, a community or an individual to modify its form. As Castoriadis argues, the struggle for self-determination requires unlimited questioning of the way things are, but also that we do or make something new in light of this interrogation. Autonomy is thus equally a project for thought, for education, for politics, and for art.

Stylistically, these open letters, addressed inclusively to artists, activists, and academics, are modeled on the philosophical letters of Friedrich Schiller on the one hand and the revolutionary communiqués of the Zapatistas on the other. Performing a kind of writing-as-praxis, they seek to grasp the potential of our moment with reference to historical and contemporary instances of political autonomy, notions of artistic autonomy, and art practices that connect the two. They also look at the possibilities of educating for autonomy, which cannot itself be taught. If we are indeed living in a time of creative struggle to remake the whole of society, then an understanding of the autonomy project—and how theory, pedagogy, activism, and art might contribute to it—is of burning relevance.

Biographies

  • Janet Sarbanes

    (Author) (opens in new tab)

    California Institute of the Arts

    Janet Sarbanes is the author of the short story collections Army of One (Otis Books, 2008) and The Protester Has Been Released (C&R Press, 2017). The 2017 recipient of a Creative Capital/Andy Warhol art writer’s grant, she has published art criticism and other critical writing in museum catalogues, anthologies, and journals, including East of Borneo, Afterall, and the Los Angeles Review of Books. Her essay on Shaker aesthetics and utopian communalism received the Eugenio Battisti prize from the Society for Utopian Studies. She teaches in the MFA Creative Writing Program and in the MA of Aesthetics and Politics program in the School of Critical Studies at CalArts.

Additional resources

Interview with the author

Urban Futures: From Islands of Commons to Collective Autonomy(opens in new tab)

LeftEast / Noah Brehmer, Stefan Christoff, Mary Taylor, and Janet Sarbanes

blog

Note from LeftEast editors. We repost the recording of Stefan Christoff’s interview with Mary Taylor and Noah Brehmer on Free City Radio, and the text From Islands of Commons to Collective Autonomy that was published in e-flux journal, entitled From Islands of Commons to Collective Autonomy: Mary N. Taylor and Janet Sarbanes in conversation. The Commonist Horizon: Urban Futures Beyond Capitalism (2023, Common Notions Press) is a conversation across 5 cities, 3 of them in formerly state socialist Europe.

From Islands of Commons to Collective Autonomy(opens in new tab)

e-flux Journal / Mary N. Taylor and Janet Sarbanes

blog

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Genres

  • New Left Thought
  • Pedagogies
  • Philosophy

Keywords

  • art
  • autonomy
  • Cornelius Castoriadis
  • pedagogy
  • politics
  • praxis