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Sylvère Lotringer

Sylvère Lotringer (15 October 1938 – 8 November 2021) was a French-born literary critic and cultural theorist. Initially based in New York City, he later lived in Los Angeles and Baja California, Mexico.[8][9] He is best known for synthesizing French theory with American literary, cultural and architectural avant-garde movements as founder of the journal Semiotext(e) and for his interpretations of theory in a 21st-century context.[10][11][12] He is regarded as an influential interpreter of Jean Baudrillard's theories, among others.[13]

Sylvere Lotringer
Lotringer in 2008
Born(1938-10-15)15 October 1938
Paris, France
Died8 November 2021(2021-11-08) (aged 83)
Alma materUniversity of Paris
École pratique des hautes études
Spouses
  • Lucienne Binet (m. 1963–1976; sep. 1972, div. 1976)
  • Chris Kraus (c. 1983, m. 1988; sep. 2005, div. 2014)[4][5]
  • Iris Klein (c. 2006, m. 2014–)[6]
PartnerSusie Flato (c. 1972; sep. 1976)[7]
ChildrenMia Lotringer Marano (with Flato)[7]
Era20th-/21st-century philosophy
RegionWestern philosophy
Institutions
Doctoral advisorRoland Barthes, Lucien Goldman[2]
Notable studentsKathryn Bigelow
Tim Griffin
John Kelsey
Ariana Reines

Life and work edit

Lotringer was born in Paris to Doba (Borenstein) and Cudek Lotringer, Polish Jewish immigrants who left Warsaw for France in 1930, where they ran a fur shop.[14][15] His early life was marked by the Nazi occupation of Paris, and like his contemporaries Georges Perec and Sarah Kofman, he spent the war as a "hidden child."[2] In 1949, Lotringer emigrated to Israel with his family and returned to Paris the year after to join the left-wing Zionist movement Hashomer-Hatzair (The Young Garde) and became one of its leaders.[14] He left the movement eight years later. In 1957, while still at the lycée, Lotringer joined the editorial collective of La Ligne Générale headed by Perec. Taking its name from Sergei Eisenstein's famous film The General Line, this group of young Jewish men favored Hollywood westerns, slapstick and pre-Stalinist communism. The project was praised by Henri Lefebvre but strongly criticized by Simone de Beauvoir, who found it "politically irresponsible."

Entering the Sorbonne in 1958, Lotringer created L’Étrave, a literary magazine, with Nicole Chardaire and contributed to Paris-Lettres, the journal of the French Students' Association (1959–61).[14][16] As President of the UNEF freshman class at the Sorbonne, he led mobilizations against France's colonial Algerian War. In 1964, he entered the École pratique des hautes études, VIe section (sociology). He received his Ph.D. in the sociology of literature from the institution in 1967 after completing a dissertation on Virginia Woolf's novels under the supervision of Roland Barthes and Lucien Goldmann.[16][17] His work was aided by his friendship with Leonard Woolf and his acquaintance with T.S. Eliot and Vita Sackville-West, with whom he conducted interviews published in Louis Aragon's journal Les Lettres Francaises during his ten years as a correspondent.[14]

Avoiding French military service in Algeria, Lotringer spent 1962 in the United States and then taught for the French Cultural Services as a lecturer at Atatürk University in Erzurum, Turkey from 1965 to 1967.[18] He returned to the United States via Australia (where he briefly taught at the University of New South Wales) as an assistant professor of French at Swarthmore College in 1969.[16] Following two years as an associate professor at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, Ohio, he joined the faculty of Columbia University as a tenured associate professor of French and comparative literature in the autumn of 1972. He was promoted to full professor in 1985 and retired as professor emeritus in 2009.[1] He was also known for his second marriage (1988-2014; sep. 2005) to writer and filmmaker Chris Kraus.[9]

Lotringer died on Monday, 8 November 2021 in Baja California after a long illness.[19][20]

Cultural synthesis edit

Arriving in New York City in the early 1970s, Lotringer saw the opportunity to introduce French theorists whose work at that time was largely unknown in the US to the city's artistic and literary community.[9][8] Playing chess in the West Village with John Cage, he sensed similarities between Thoreau and the "chance operations" being practiced by Fluxus, William S. Burroughs, Brion Gysin and others, and the Nietzsche-inspired post-structuralist theorists.[18][17][21] Uninspired by the doctrinaire post-Frankfurt School Marxism of the American Left, he sought to introduce independently the more fluid and rhizomatic ideas of power and desire developed by Gilles Deleuze, Félix Guattari, and Michel Foucault.[9] In his book on French Theory's influence in the U.S., François Cusset wrote that Lotringer and Semiotext(e) "played a breathtaking role in the early diffusion of French theory," positioned along the "porous border between the university and the countercultural networks."[22] A few years later Lotringer discovered Paul Virilio's theory of speed and technology and Baudrillard's analysis of consumer culture's infinite exchangeability, introducing them in turn into American political discourse.[16][13]

A younger contemporary of Gilles Deleuze, Félix Guattari, Baudrillard, Virilio and Michel Foucault, Lotringer invited a small group of graduate students to study these thinkers, who were not yet on the curriculum. Together with his partner Susie Flato and graduate student John Reichman, he began the journal Semiotext(e) in 1973 with the goal of introducing French theory to America.[5][1][23] The group expanded and produced three issues on the epistemology of semiotics. In 1975, they staged the provocative Schizo-Culture conference on Madness and Prisons at Columbia University, where more than 2,000 attendees witnessed "show-downs" between Foucault, conspiracy theorist Lyndon LaRouche, Guattari, feminist Ti-Grace Atkinson, Ronald D. Laing, and others.[24][25][26] The event helped define a new mode of cultural discourse over the coming decade, and set the stage for future issues of Semiotext(e), which abandoned its scholarly format in favor of collaged images and texts by Deleuze, Foucault, Jean-François Lyotard, Guy Hocquenghem, Jacques Derrida, Heiner Müller and their (as Lotringer saw it) American counterparts: Cage, Burroughs, Richard Foreman, Jack Smith, Kathy Acker, and others.[25][27][28] In 1978, Lotringer staged The Nova Convention, a three-day homage to Burroughs at New York University and in the East Village. Featuring performances and talks by Patti Smith, Frank Zappa, Laurie Anderson, Terry Southern, Robert Anton Wilson, Timothy Leary, and Burroughs himself, the event acclaimed Burroughs as "a philosopher of the future [...] the man who best understood post-industrial society," and popularized his work among New York's punk "no-wave" generation. This provocative mix of street and academy, theory, art and politics, would become Semiotext(e)'s trademark.[29][14][11][30]

Determining that the collectivity that marked New York's cultural life was disappearing in the 1980s, Lotringer ceased regular publication of the Semiotext(e) journal in 1985, though book-length issues appeared into the 1990s. In its place, he instituted the Semiotext(e) "Foreign Agents" series—a collection of "little black books" by French theorists. Published with no introductions or afterwords, the books were conceived to present "theory brut" (like champagne) into the American cultural marketplace. The series debuted in 1983 with Baudrillard's Simulations, excerpted by Lotringer from Symbolic Exchange and Death (1977) and Simulacra and Simulations (1981). Simulations spawned a new art movement and served as the theoretical template for the Keanu Reeves movie, The Matrix (1999). Simulations was followed later that year by Pure War, his book-length conversation with Paul Virilio, in which the "philosopher of speed" expounded his vision of bunker archeology, accidents and dromology. The last, On the Line, by Deleuze and Guattari, included Rhizome, which anticipated Internet culture.

In 2004, Hedi El Kholti began working as an art director with Lotringer and Kraus on Semiotext(e) and soon after joined them as a co-editor.[10][5]

Teaching and influence edit

Teaching 20th century French literature and philosophy at Columbia University for 35 years, Lotringer elaborated connections between modernist literature and fascism in his lectures, interpreting the "crazed modernists" Antonin Artaud, Georges Bataille, Louis-Ferdinand Céline, and Simone Weil as harbingers of the Jewish Holocaust.[31][2][8][32] As a scholar of the 20th century, he emphasized the experiential, "pre-modern" political roots of French theories that are often misread as cavalier orgies of cruelty, envisaging them as an attempt to create symbolic antidotes to both fascism and consumerism.[31]

Lotringer influenced the work of former students including filmmaker Kathryn Bigelow,[33][21] semiotician Marshall Blonsky, art critics Tim Griffin and John Kelsey,[34][22] actor Jim Fletcher,[9] and poet Ariana Reines.[5][35] He appears as a quasi-fictional character in Kathy Acker's Great Expectations and My Mother: Demonology,[36][37] in Chris Kraus' I Love Dick, Alien & Anorexia and Torpor,[38][39][40] and in Eileen Myles' Inferno.[41] Lotringer was also Jean Baudrillard Chair and Professor of Philosophy at The European Graduate School.

New politics edit

Defining himself as a "foreign agent provocateur" in the United States, Lotringer traveled to Italy in 1979 and 1980 to document first-hand Italy's embattled post-Marxist Autonomia movement and secure their legacy.[2][42] His participant-observation with the innovative political movement resulted in Italy: Autonomia – Post-Political Politics, a 1980 special publication of Semiotext(e).[18] In 1992, he sought out former Black Panther Dhoruba al-Mujahid bin Wahad, who had just been provisionally released from prison after spending 19 years incarcerated on a charge of "sedition." Lotringer invited Dhoruba to produce a Semiotext(e) book vindicating and updating the Black Panther Party's position. The result was Still Black, Still Strong, an anthology of writings by Assata Shakur, Mumia Abu-Jamal and Bin-Wahad.[16][43][29]

In 2001, Lotringer co-edited the ironically titled Hatred of Capitalism: A Semiotext(e) Reader. Released in the wake of the September 11 attacks, the anthology strove to clarify Semiotext(e)'s composite vision of politics, intelligence and radical humor.[44][29] Summing up the Semiotext(e) self-styled mission, Lotringer used an observation made to him by filmmaker Jack Smith as an epigraph: "The world is starving for thoughts. If you can think of something, the language will fall into place, but the thought is what's going to do it".[45]

Realizing that the Foreign Agents books of the 1980s were being absorbed within mainstream academe, Lotringer sought out new works that would address global politics from the perspective of activism. He commissioned Israeli journalist Amira Hass' award-winning Reporting From Ramallah (2003), and French military specialist Alain Joxe's Empire of Disorder (2002) for Semiotext(e). Resuming his dialogue with Paul Virilio in Crepuscular Dawn (2002), he pushed the philosopher to elaborate on the historical antecedents and repercussions of genetic engineering. His third dialogue with Virilio, Accident of Art (2006), expanded the Virilian notion of "accident" to encompass the impact of war on contemporary art.[2] In 2006, he returned to his interest in Italian political theory, commissioning and publishing works by Paolo Virno, Franco Berardi, Christian Marazzi and Antonio Negri.[46][47][48]

Decorations edit

Publications edit

  • "Barthes After Barthes," Frieze, 2011.
  • Pure War, with Paul Virilio, Semiotext(e) History of the Present, Cambridge: 2008 (first published by Semiotext(e) Foreign Agents, New York: 1983).
  • Overexposed: Perverting Perversions, Pantheon, New York: 1987 and Semiotext(e) History of the Present, Cambridge: 2007.
  • David Wojnarowitz: A Definitive History of Five or Six years on the Lower East Side, Cambridge: Semiotext(e), 2006
  • "Forget Baudrillard," in Forget Foucault, Semiotext(e) History of the Present, Cambridge: 2006.
  • Pazzi di Artaud, Medusa, Milan: 2006.
  • The Accident of Art, with Paul Virilio, Semiotext(e), Cambridge: 2005.
  • The Conspiracy of Art, with Jean Baudrillard, Semiotext(e), Cambridge: 2005.
  • Oublier Artaud, Sens and Tonka, Paris: 2005.
  • Boules de Suif, Sens and Tonka, Paris: 2005.
  • "My '80s: Better Than Life," Artforum, April 2003.
  • Fous d’Artaud, Sens and Tonka, Paris: 2003.
  • The Collected Interviews of William S. Burroughs, Cambridge: Semiotext(e), 2002
  • Crepuscular Dawn, with Paul Virilio, Semiotext(e), Cambridge: 2002.
  • "Time Bomb," in Crepuscular Dawn, Semiotext(e), Cambridge: 2002.
  • French Theory in America, New York, Routledge: 2001
  • Nancy Spero, London: Phaedon Press: 1996.
  • Foreign Agent: Kuntz in den Zeiten des Theorie, Merve Verlag, Berlin: 1992.
  • Germania, with Heiner Müller, Semiotext(e), New York: 1990.
  • Antonin Artaud, New York: Scribners & Sons: 1990.
  • Philosophen-Künstler, Merve Verlag, Berlin: 1986.
  • "Uncle Fishook and the Sacred Baby Poo-poo of Art," with Jack Smith in SchizoCulture, Semiotext(e) ed. III, 2, 1978.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Columbia University. Sylvère Lotringer, Professor Emeritus of French, Faculty. Retrieved 7 October 2021.
  2. ^ a b c d e f The European Graduate School. Sylvère Lotringer, Faculty. Retrieved 7 October 2021.
  3. ^ Institute for Doctoral Studies in the Visual Arts. Sylvère Lotringer, People. Retrieved 7 October 2021.
  4. ^ Wertheim, Bonnie. "Chris Kraus, Author of 'I Love Dick,' Returns to the Bronx," The New York Times, 11 May 2017. Retrieved 7 October 2021.
  5. ^ a b c d Lvoff Sophie T. "The Center Is Not the Center: An Interview with Chris Kraus," Los Angeles Review of Books, 23 February 2019. Retrieved 7 October 2021.
  6. ^ Klein, Iris. "The Mighty Otto," Animal Shelter, Fall 2013, p. 173–186.
  7. ^ a b Lotringer, Sylvère and David Morris (eds). Schizo-Culture, Los Angeles: Semiotexte, 2013. Retrieved 7 October 2021.
  8. ^ a b c Hultkrans, Andrew. "Bookforum talks with Sylvère Lotringer," 14 September 2015. Retrieved 7 October 2021.
  9. ^ a b c d e Schwarz, Henry and Anne Balsamo. "Under the Sign of Semiotext(e): The Story According to Sylvere Lotringer and Chris Kraus," Critique, Spring 1996, p. 205–21.
  10. ^ a b Darms, Lisa. "Semiotext at the Biennial: An Interview with Hedi el Kholti," Hyperallergic, 17 May 2014. Retrieved 7 October 2021.
  11. ^ a b Whitney Museum of American Art. Semiotext(e) 2014 Biennial. Retrieved 7 October 2021.
  12. ^ Semiotext(e). Sylvère Lotringer. Retrieved 7 October 2021.
  13. ^ a b Lotringer, Sylvère. "Jean Baudrillard," Artforum, Summer 2007. Retrieved 7 October 2021.
  14. ^ a b c d e Grau, Donatien. Sylvère Lotringer, purple Magazine, Fall/Winter 2016. Retrieved 7 October 2021.
  15. ^ Traub, Alex (22 November 2021). "Sylvère Lotringer, Shape-Shifting Force of the Avant-Garde, Dies at 83". The New York Times.
  16. ^ a b c d e Thomas, Jonathan. "Sylvère Lotringer," The Third Rail, Issue 6, 2016. Retrieved 7 October 2021.
  17. ^ a b Marzoni, Andrew. "A Small but Important Job: Gary Indiana’s “Vile Days,'" Los Angeles Review of Books, 13 December 2018. Retrieved 7 October 2021.
  18. ^ a b c Waltemath, Joan. "A Life in Theory: Sylvère Lotringer with Joan Waltemath," The Brooklyn Rail, September 2006. Retrieved 7 October 2021.
  19. ^ "Sylvère Lotringer est mort, la French Theory perd son passeur" Liberation, (in French) November 2021. Retrieved 10 November 2021.
  20. ^ "Sylvère Lotringer (1938–2021)". Artforum. Artforum International Magazine. 10 November 2021. Retrieved 10 November 2021.
  21. ^ a b Hond, Paul. "Shoot Shoot, Bang Bang: The visceral cinema of Kathryn Bigelow ’79SOA has heady theoretical roots," Columbia Magazine, Winter 2009-10. Retrieved 7 October 2021.
  22. ^ a b Cusset, François. French Theory: How Foucault, Derrida, Deleuze, & Co. Transformed the Intellectual Life of the United States, Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press, 2008. Retrieved 7 October 2021.
  23. ^ Lotringer, Sylvère. "My ’80s: Better Than Life," Artforum, April 2003. Retrieved 7 October 2021.
  24. ^ Hultkrans, Andrew. "Empire State of Mind," Artforum, 20 November 2014. Retrieved 7 October 2021.
  25. ^ a b Fletcher, Jim. "Semiotext(e)’s Schizo-Culture," Artforum, April 2014. Retrieved 7 October 2021.
  26. ^ Hothi, Ajay. “Schizo-Culture: Cracks In The Street,” Artforum, 2014. Retrieved 7 October 2021.
  27. ^ Griffin, Tim. "Theoretical Physic," Artforum, April 2010. Retrieved 7 October 2021.
  28. ^ The New York Times. "Avant‐Garde Unites Over Burroughs," 1 December 1978, p C11. Retrieved 7 October 2021.
  29. ^ a b c Morris, David. "Four Decades of Semiotext(e)," Frieze, 9 September 2013. Retrieved 7 October 2021.
  30. ^ Apter, Emily. "The Whitney Biennial," Artforum, May 2014. Retrieved 7 October 2021.
  31. ^ a b Kelsey, John. "Electroconvlusive Lit: Sylvère Lotringer’s Mad Like Artaud," Texte Zur Kunst, Issue No. 100/ December 2015. Retrieved 7 October 2021.
  32. ^ Lewis, Paul."A Saintly Jew Whose Spirituality Rejected Jews," The New York Times, 20 November 1999. Retrieved 7 October 2021.
  33. ^ Dargis, Manohla. "Action!" The New York Times, 18 June 2009. Retrieved 7 October 2021.
  34. ^ French Culture. "France Honors David Lang and Tim Griffin," Awards. Retrieved 7 October 2021.
  35. ^ Museum of Modern Art. "A Cine Virus Evening with Michael Oblowitz and Sylvère Lotringer," Events. Retrieved 7 October 2021.
  36. ^ Acker, Kathy. Great Expectations, New York: Penguin Classics, 1983. Retrieved 7 October 2021.
  37. ^ Acker, Kathy. My Mother: Demonology: A Novel, New York: Grove Press, 1994. Retrieved 7 October 2021.
  38. ^ Kraus, Chris. I Love Dick, New York: Semiotext(e), 1997. Retrieved 7 October 2021.
  39. ^ Kraus, Chris. Aliens & Anorexia, New York: Semiotext(e), 2000. Retrieved 7 October 2021.
  40. ^ Kraus, Chris. Torpor, Los Angeles: Semiotext(e), 2006. Retrieved 7 October 2021.
  41. ^ Myles, Eileen. Inferno (A Poet's Novel), New York: OR Books, 2010. Retrieved 7 October 2021.
  42. ^ Kellogg, Carolyn. "How leftist intellectuals once approached bifurcated Berlin," Los Angeles Times, 8 November 2009. Retrieved 7 October 2021.
  43. ^ Dhoruba, Bin Wahad, Assata Shakur and Mumia Abu-Jamal. Still Black, Still Strong Survivors of the U.S. War Against Black Revolutionaries, Jim Fletcher, Tanaquil Jones and Sylvère Lotringer (eds.), Books. Retrieved 7 October 2021.
  44. ^ Power, Nina. "Intelligence Agency," Frieze, 1 September 2009. Retrieved 7 October 2021.
  45. ^ Kraus, Chris and Sylvère Lotringer. Hatred of Capitalism : a Reader, Los Angeles: Semiotext(e), 2001. Retrieved 7 October 2021.
  46. ^ Lotringer, Sylvère and Antonio Negri. "A Revolutionary Process Never Ends," Artforum, May 2008. Retrieved 7 October 2021.
  47. ^ Lotringer, Sylvère. "The Great Refusal," Artforum, May 2008. Retrieved 7 October 2021.
  48. ^ Smith, Jason. "A New Geometry: Paolo Virno and 'Autonomia,'" Artforum, January 2008. Retrieved 7 October 2021.

External links edit

  • A Life in Theory: Sylvère Lotringer with Joan Waltemath, The Brooklyn Rail, 2006
  • From New York No Wave to Italian Autonomia: an Interview With Sylvère Lotringer, Interventions, 2014
  • Resisting No Matter What. A Conversation with Sylvère Lotringer, Artpulse, 2015
  • Bookforum talks with Sylvère Lotringer, Bookforum, 2015
  • Sylvère Lotringer interview, purple MAGAZINE, 2016
  • Sylvère Lotringer Interview, The Third Rail, 2016
  • Sylvère Lotringer Monogamy. This American Life. WBEZ. Episode 95: Monogamy)
  • Antonin Artaud | Sylvère Lotringer; All Paranoiacs, Interview with Paule Thévenin, 2018
  • Mack Lecture: Sylvère Lotringer on Antonin Artaud, 2015
  • Nietzsche in New York, Der französische Verleger Sylvère Lotringer, Profile, Jean-Claude Kuner, WDR /Deutschlandfunk, 2018
  • Jean Baudrillard, le cool prophète, various speakers incl. Sylvère Lotringer, 2014
  • Verbrennungen der Angs, von Jean-Claude Kuner, 2021, Hörspiel, SRF (play based on Lotringer’s interviews with Antonin Artaud’s psychiatrists)

sylvère, lotringer, october, 1938, november, 2021, french, born, literary, critic, cultural, theorist, initially, based, york, city, later, lived, angeles, baja, california, mexico, best, known, synthesizing, french, theory, with, american, literary, cultural,. Sylvere Lotringer 15 October 1938 8 November 2021 was a French born literary critic and cultural theorist Initially based in New York City he later lived in Los Angeles and Baja California Mexico 8 9 He is best known for synthesizing French theory with American literary cultural and architectural avant garde movements as founder of the journal Semiotext e and for his interpretations of theory in a 21st century context 10 11 12 He is regarded as an influential interpreter of Jean Baudrillard s theories among others 13 Sylvere LotringerLotringer in 2008Born 1938 10 15 15 October 1938Paris FranceDied8 November 2021 2021 11 08 aged 83 Ensenada Baja California MexicoAlma materUniversity of ParisEcole pratique des hautes etudesSpousesLucienne Binet m 1963 1976 sep 1972 div 1976 Chris Kraus c 1983 m 1988 sep 2005 div 2014 4 5 Iris Klein c 2006 m 2014 6 PartnerSusie Flato c 1972 sep 1976 7 ChildrenMia Lotringer Marano with Flato 7 Era20th 21st century philosophyRegionWestern philosophyInstitutionsColumbia University 1 European Graduate School 2 Institute for Doctoral Studies in the Visual Arts IDSVA 3 Doctoral advisorRoland Barthes Lucien Goldman 2 Notable studentsKathryn BigelowTim GriffinJohn KelseyAriana Reines Contents 1 Life and work 2 Cultural synthesis 3 Teaching and influence 4 New politics 5 Decorations 6 Publications 7 References 8 External linksLife and work editLotringer was born in Paris to Doba Borenstein and Cudek Lotringer Polish Jewish immigrants who left Warsaw for France in 1930 where they ran a fur shop 14 15 His early life was marked by the Nazi occupation of Paris and like his contemporaries Georges Perec and Sarah Kofman he spent the war as a hidden child 2 In 1949 Lotringer emigrated to Israel with his family and returned to Paris the year after to join the left wing Zionist movement Hashomer Hatzair The Young Garde and became one of its leaders 14 He left the movement eight years later In 1957 while still at the lycee Lotringer joined the editorial collective of La Ligne Generale headed by Perec Taking its name from Sergei Eisenstein s famous film The General Line this group of young Jewish men favored Hollywood westerns slapstick and pre Stalinist communism The project was praised by Henri Lefebvre but strongly criticized by Simone de Beauvoir who found it politically irresponsible Entering the Sorbonne in 1958 Lotringer created L Etrave a literary magazine with Nicole Chardaire and contributed to Paris Lettres the journal of the French Students Association 1959 61 14 16 As President of the UNEF freshman class at the Sorbonne he led mobilizations against France s colonial Algerian War In 1964 he entered the Ecole pratique des hautes etudes VIe section sociology He received his Ph D in the sociology of literature from the institution in 1967 after completing a dissertation on Virginia Woolf s novels under the supervision of Roland Barthes and Lucien Goldmann 16 17 His work was aided by his friendship with Leonard Woolf and his acquaintance with T S Eliot and Vita Sackville West with whom he conducted interviews published in Louis Aragon s journal Les Lettres Francaises during his ten years as a correspondent 14 Avoiding French military service in Algeria Lotringer spent 1962 in the United States and then taught for the French Cultural Services as a lecturer at Ataturk University in Erzurum Turkey from 1965 to 1967 18 He returned to the United States via Australia where he briefly taught at the University of New South Wales as an assistant professor of French at Swarthmore College in 1969 16 Following two years as an associate professor at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland Ohio he joined the faculty of Columbia University as a tenured associate professor of French and comparative literature in the autumn of 1972 He was promoted to full professor in 1985 and retired as professor emeritus in 2009 1 He was also known for his second marriage 1988 2014 sep 2005 to writer and filmmaker Chris Kraus 9 Lotringer died on Monday 8 November 2021 in Baja California after a long illness 19 20 Cultural synthesis editArriving in New York City in the early 1970s Lotringer saw the opportunity to introduce French theorists whose work at that time was largely unknown in the US to the city s artistic and literary community 9 8 Playing chess in the West Village with John Cage he sensed similarities between Thoreau and the chance operations being practiced by Fluxus William S Burroughs Brion Gysin and others and the Nietzsche inspired post structuralist theorists 18 17 21 Uninspired by the doctrinaire post Frankfurt School Marxism of the American Left he sought to introduce independently the more fluid and rhizomatic ideas of power and desire developed by Gilles Deleuze Felix Guattari and Michel Foucault 9 In his book on French Theory s influence in the U S Francois Cusset wrote that Lotringer and Semiotext e played a breathtaking role in the early diffusion of French theory positioned along the porous border between the university and the countercultural networks 22 A few years later Lotringer discovered Paul Virilio s theory of speed and technology and Baudrillard s analysis of consumer culture s infinite exchangeability introducing them in turn into American political discourse 16 13 A younger contemporary of Gilles Deleuze Felix Guattari Baudrillard Virilio and Michel Foucault Lotringer invited a small group of graduate students to study these thinkers who were not yet on the curriculum Together with his partner Susie Flato and graduate student John Reichman he began the journal Semiotext e in 1973 with the goal of introducing French theory to America 5 1 23 The group expanded and produced three issues on the epistemology of semiotics In 1975 they staged the provocative Schizo Culture conference on Madness and Prisons at Columbia University where more than 2 000 attendees witnessed show downs between Foucault conspiracy theorist Lyndon LaRouche Guattari feminist Ti Grace Atkinson Ronald D Laing and others 24 25 26 The event helped define a new mode of cultural discourse over the coming decade and set the stage for future issues of Semiotext e which abandoned its scholarly format in favor of collaged images and texts by Deleuze Foucault Jean Francois Lyotard Guy Hocquenghem Jacques Derrida Heiner Muller and their as Lotringer saw it American counterparts Cage Burroughs Richard Foreman Jack Smith Kathy Acker and others 25 27 28 In 1978 Lotringer staged The Nova Convention a three day homage to Burroughs at New York University and in the East Village Featuring performances and talks by Patti Smith Frank Zappa Laurie Anderson Terry Southern Robert Anton Wilson Timothy Leary and Burroughs himself the event acclaimed Burroughs as a philosopher of the future the man who best understood post industrial society and popularized his work among New York s punk no wave generation This provocative mix of street and academy theory art and politics would become Semiotext e s trademark 29 14 11 30 Determining that the collectivity that marked New York s cultural life was disappearing in the 1980s Lotringer ceased regular publication of the Semiotext e journal in 1985 though book length issues appeared into the 1990s In its place he instituted the Semiotext e Foreign Agents series a collection of little black books by French theorists Published with no introductions or afterwords the books were conceived to present theory brut like champagne into the American cultural marketplace The series debuted in 1983 with Baudrillard s Simulations excerpted by Lotringer from Symbolic Exchange and Death 1977 and Simulacra and Simulations 1981 Simulations spawned a new art movement and served as the theoretical template for the Keanu Reeves movie The Matrix 1999 Simulations was followed later that year by Pure War his book length conversation with Paul Virilio in which the philosopher of speed expounded his vision of bunker archeology accidents and dromology The last On the Line by Deleuze and Guattari included Rhizome which anticipated Internet culture In 2004 Hedi El Kholti began working as an art director with Lotringer and Kraus on Semiotext e and soon after joined them as a co editor 10 5 Teaching and influence editTeaching 20th century French literature and philosophy at Columbia University for 35 years Lotringer elaborated connections between modernist literature and fascism in his lectures interpreting the crazed modernists Antonin Artaud Georges Bataille Louis Ferdinand Celine and Simone Weil as harbingers of the Jewish Holocaust 31 2 8 32 As a scholar of the 20th century he emphasized the experiential pre modern political roots of French theories that are often misread as cavalier orgies of cruelty envisaging them as an attempt to create symbolic antidotes to both fascism and consumerism 31 Lotringer influenced the work of former students including filmmaker Kathryn Bigelow 33 21 semiotician Marshall Blonsky art critics Tim Griffin and John Kelsey 34 22 actor Jim Fletcher 9 and poet Ariana Reines 5 35 He appears as a quasi fictional character in Kathy Acker s Great Expectations and My Mother Demonology 36 37 in Chris Kraus I Love Dick Alien amp Anorexia and Torpor 38 39 40 and in Eileen Myles Inferno 41 Lotringer was also Jean Baudrillard Chair and Professor of Philosophy at The European Graduate School New politics editDefining himself as a foreign agent provocateur in the United States Lotringer traveled to Italy in 1979 and 1980 to document first hand Italy s embattled post Marxist Autonomia movement and secure their legacy 2 42 His participant observation with the innovative political movement resulted in Italy Autonomia Post Political Politics a 1980 special publication of Semiotext e 18 In 1992 he sought out former Black Panther Dhoruba al Mujahid bin Wahad who had just been provisionally released from prison after spending 19 years incarcerated on a charge of sedition Lotringer invited Dhoruba to produce a Semiotext e book vindicating and updating the Black Panther Party s position The result was Still Black Still Strong an anthology of writings by Assata Shakur Mumia Abu Jamal and Bin Wahad 16 43 29 In 2001 Lotringer co edited the ironically titled Hatred of Capitalism A Semiotext e Reader Released in the wake of the September 11 attacks the anthology strove to clarify Semiotext e s composite vision of politics intelligence and radical humor 44 29 Summing up the Semiotext e self styled mission Lotringer used an observation made to him by filmmaker Jack Smith as an epigraph The world is starving for thoughts If you can think of something the language will fall into place but the thought is what s going to do it 45 Realizing that the Foreign Agents books of the 1980s were being absorbed within mainstream academe Lotringer sought out new works that would address global politics from the perspective of activism He commissioned Israeli journalist Amira Hass award winning Reporting From Ramallah 2003 and French military specialist Alain Joxe s Empire of Disorder 2002 for Semiotext e Resuming his dialogue with Paul Virilio in Crepuscular Dawn 2002 he pushed the philosopher to elaborate on the historical antecedents and repercussions of genetic engineering His third dialogue with Virilio Accident of Art 2006 expanded the Virilian notion of accident to encompass the impact of war on contemporary art 2 In 2006 he returned to his interest in Italian political theory commissioning and publishing works by Paolo Virno Franco Berardi Christian Marazzi and Antonio Negri 46 47 48 Decorations editOfficer of the Order of Arts and Letters 2015 Publications edit Barthes After Barthes Frieze 2011 Pure War with Paul Virilio Semiotext e History of the Present Cambridge 2008 first published by Semiotext e Foreign Agents New York 1983 Overexposed Perverting Perversions Pantheon New York 1987 and Semiotext e History of the Present Cambridge 2007 David Wojnarowitz A Definitive History of Five or Six years on the Lower East Side Cambridge Semiotext e 2006 Forget Baudrillard in Forget Foucault Semiotext e History of the Present Cambridge 2006 Pazzi di Artaud Medusa Milan 2006 The Accident of Art with Paul Virilio Semiotext e Cambridge 2005 The Conspiracy of Art with Jean Baudrillard Semiotext e Cambridge 2005 Oublier Artaud Sens and Tonka Paris 2005 Boules de Suif Sens and Tonka Paris 2005 My 80s Better Than Life Artforum April 2003 Fous d Artaud Sens and Tonka Paris 2003 The Collected Interviews of William S Burroughs Cambridge Semiotext e 2002 Crepuscular Dawn with Paul Virilio Semiotext e Cambridge 2002 Time Bomb in Crepuscular Dawn Semiotext e Cambridge 2002 French Theory in America New York Routledge 2001 Nancy Spero London Phaedon Press 1996 Foreign Agent Kuntz in den Zeiten des Theorie Merve Verlag Berlin 1992 Germania with Heiner Muller Semiotext e New York 1990 Antonin Artaud New York Scribners amp Sons 1990 Philosophen Kunstler Merve Verlag Berlin 1986 Uncle Fishook and the Sacred Baby Poo poo of Art with Jack Smith in SchizoCulture Semiotext e ed III 2 1978 References edit a b c Columbia University Sylvere Lotringer Professor Emeritus of French Faculty Retrieved 7 October 2021 a b c d e f The European Graduate School Sylvere Lotringer Faculty Retrieved 7 October 2021 Institute for Doctoral Studies in the Visual Arts Sylvere Lotringer People Retrieved 7 October 2021 Wertheim Bonnie Chris Kraus Author of I Love Dick Returns to the Bronx The New York Times 11 May 2017 Retrieved 7 October 2021 a b c d Lvoff Sophie T The Center Is Not the Center An Interview with Chris Kraus Los Angeles Review of Books 23 February 2019 Retrieved 7 October 2021 Klein Iris The Mighty Otto Animal Shelter Fall 2013 p 173 186 a b Lotringer Sylvere and David Morris eds Schizo Culture Los Angeles Semiotexte 2013 Retrieved 7 October 2021 a b c Hultkrans Andrew Bookforum talks with Sylvere Lotringer 14 September 2015 Retrieved 7 October 2021 a b c d e Schwarz Henry and Anne Balsamo Under the Sign of Semiotext e The Story According to Sylvere Lotringer and Chris Kraus Critique Spring 1996 p 205 21 a b Darms Lisa Semiotext at the Biennial An Interview with Hedi el Kholti Hyperallergic 17 May 2014 Retrieved 7 October 2021 a b Whitney Museum of American Art Semiotext e 2014 Biennial Retrieved 7 October 2021 Semiotext e Sylvere Lotringer Retrieved 7 October 2021 a b Lotringer Sylvere Jean Baudrillard Artforum Summer 2007 Retrieved 7 October 2021 a b c d e Grau Donatien Sylvere Lotringer purple Magazine Fall Winter 2016 Retrieved 7 October 2021 Traub Alex 22 November 2021 Sylvere Lotringer Shape Shifting Force of the Avant Garde Dies at 83 The New York Times a b c d e Thomas Jonathan Sylvere Lotringer The Third Rail Issue 6 2016 Retrieved 7 October 2021 a b Marzoni Andrew A Small but Important Job Gary Indiana s Vile Days Los Angeles Review of Books 13 December 2018 Retrieved 7 October 2021 a b c Waltemath Joan A Life in Theory Sylvere Lotringer with Joan Waltemath The Brooklyn Rail September 2006 Retrieved 7 October 2021 Sylvere Lotringer est mort la French Theory perd son passeur Liberation in French November 2021 Retrieved 10 November 2021 Sylvere Lotringer 1938 2021 Artforum Artforum International Magazine 10 November 2021 Retrieved 10 November 2021 a b Hond Paul Shoot Shoot Bang Bang The visceral cinema of Kathryn Bigelow 79SOA has heady theoretical roots Columbia Magazine Winter 2009 10 Retrieved 7 October 2021 a b Cusset Francois French Theory How Foucault Derrida Deleuze amp Co Transformed the Intellectual Life of the United States Minneapolis MN University of Minnesota Press 2008 Retrieved 7 October 2021 Lotringer Sylvere My 80s Better Than Life Artforum April 2003 Retrieved 7 October 2021 Hultkrans Andrew Empire State of Mind Artforum 20 November 2014 Retrieved 7 October 2021 a b Fletcher Jim Semiotext e s Schizo Culture Artforum April 2014 Retrieved 7 October 2021 Hothi Ajay Schizo Culture Cracks In The Street Artforum 2014 Retrieved 7 October 2021 Griffin Tim Theoretical Physic Artforum April 2010 Retrieved 7 October 2021 The New York Times Avant Garde Unites Over Burroughs 1 December 1978 p C11 Retrieved 7 October 2021 a b c Morris David Four Decades of Semiotext e Frieze 9 September 2013 Retrieved 7 October 2021 Apter Emily The Whitney Biennial Artforum May 2014 Retrieved 7 October 2021 a b Kelsey John Electroconvlusive Lit Sylvere Lotringer s Mad Like Artaud Texte Zur Kunst Issue No 100 December 2015 Retrieved 7 October 2021 Lewis Paul A Saintly Jew Whose Spirituality Rejected Jews The New York Times 20 November 1999 Retrieved 7 October 2021 Dargis Manohla Action The New York Times 18 June 2009 Retrieved 7 October 2021 French Culture France Honors David Lang and Tim Griffin Awards Retrieved 7 October 2021 Museum of Modern Art A Cine Virus Evening with Michael Oblowitz and Sylvere Lotringer Events Retrieved 7 October 2021 Acker Kathy Great Expectations New York Penguin Classics 1983 Retrieved 7 October 2021 Acker Kathy My Mother Demonology A Novel New York Grove Press 1994 Retrieved 7 October 2021 Kraus Chris I Love Dick New York Semiotext e 1997 Retrieved 7 October 2021 Kraus Chris Aliens amp Anorexia New York Semiotext e 2000 Retrieved 7 October 2021 Kraus Chris Torpor Los Angeles Semiotext e 2006 Retrieved 7 October 2021 Myles Eileen Inferno A Poet s Novel New York OR Books 2010 Retrieved 7 October 2021 Kellogg Carolyn How leftist intellectuals once approached bifurcated Berlin Los Angeles Times 8 November 2009 Retrieved 7 October 2021 Dhoruba Bin Wahad Assata Shakur and Mumia Abu Jamal Still Black Still Strong Survivors of the U S War Against Black Revolutionaries Jim Fletcher Tanaquil Jones and Sylvere Lotringer eds Books Retrieved 7 October 2021 Power Nina Intelligence Agency Frieze 1 September 2009 Retrieved 7 October 2021 Kraus Chris and Sylvere Lotringer Hatred of Capitalism a Reader Los Angeles Semiotext e 2001 Retrieved 7 October 2021 Lotringer Sylvere and Antonio Negri A Revolutionary Process Never Ends Artforum May 2008 Retrieved 7 October 2021 Lotringer Sylvere The Great Refusal Artforum May 2008 Retrieved 7 October 2021 Smith Jason A New Geometry Paolo Virno and Autonomia Artforum January 2008 Retrieved 7 October 2021 External links editA Life in Theory Sylvere Lotringer with Joan Waltemath The Brooklyn Rail 2006 From New York No Wave to Italian Autonomia an Interview With Sylvere Lotringer Interventions 2014 Resisting No Matter What A Conversation with Sylvere Lotringer Artpulse 2015 Bookforum talks with Sylvere Lotringer Bookforum 2015 Sylvere Lotringer interview purple MAGAZINE 2016 Sylvere Lotringer Interview The Third Rail 2016 Sylvere Lotringer Monogamy This American Life WBEZ Episode 95 Monogamy Antonin Artaud Sylvere Lotringer All Paranoiacs Interview with Paule Thevenin 2018 Mack Lecture Sylvere Lotringer on Antonin Artaud 2015 Nietzsche in New York Der franzosische Verleger Sylvere Lotringer Profile Jean Claude Kuner WDR Deutschlandfunk 2018 Jean Baudrillard le cool prophete various speakers incl Sylvere Lotringer 2014 Verbrennungen der Angs von Jean Claude Kuner 2021 Horspiel SRF play based on Lotringer s interviews with Antonin Artaud s psychiatrists Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sylvere Lotringer amp oldid 1215516613, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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