I cannot rid myself of the feeling that I’m not in the right place.
Franz Kafka, Advocates (via wordsnquotes)
almost home
sheepfilms
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ
No title available
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me

roma★

Andulka
macklin celebrini has autism

titsay

Kaledo Art
Monterey Bay Aquarium
cherry valley forever

#extradirty
NASA
Show & Tell

Origami Around

shark vs the universe

Janaina Medeiros
we're not kids anymore.
KIROKAZE

seen from Türkiye

seen from Türkiye
seen from Uganda

seen from Malaysia

seen from United States
seen from Sweden

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States

seen from South Korea

seen from United States
seen from Germany

seen from Brunei
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Panama

seen from Brunei

seen from Kenya

seen from Malaysia

seen from United States

seen from France
@twilightofthesubject
I cannot rid myself of the feeling that I’m not in the right place.
Franz Kafka, Advocates (via wordsnquotes)
he has two (2) pairs of glasses on his person
the glasses get caught together, and a struggle ensues
It’s dialectical
It is by speed and slowness that one slips in among things, that one connects with something else. One never commences; one never has a tabula rasa; one slips in, enters in the middle; one takes up or lays down rhythms.
Deleuze, Spinoza: Practical Philosophy, 123 (via deleuzecleuze)
Terror unendingly renews with advancing age. Without end, it returns us to the beginning. The beginning that I glimpse on the edge of the grave is the pig in me which neither death nor insult can kill. Terror on the edge of the grave is divine and I sink into the terror whose child I am.
Georges Bataille, My Mother (via rangordnung)
"It is only due to a predominance of influences that are not only entirely morally indifferent, but indeed — from a human perspective — indescribably cruel, that nature has been capable of constructive action. Specifically, it is solely by way of the relentless, brutal culling of populations that any complex or adaptive traits have been sieved — with torturous inefficiency — from the chaos of natural existence. All health, beauty, intelligence, and social grace has been teased from a vast butcher’s yard of unbounded carnage, requiring incalculable eons of massacre to draw forth even the subtlest of advantages. This is not only a matter of the bloody grinding mills of selection, either, but also of the innumerable mutational abominations thrown up by the madness of chance, as it pursues its directionless path to some negligible preservable trait, and then — still further — of the unavowable horrors that ‘fitness’ (or sheer survival) itself predominantly entails. We are a minuscule sample of agonized matter, comprising genetic survival monsters, fished from a cosmic ocean of vile mutants, by a pitiless killing machine of infinite appetite (This is still, perhaps, to put an irresponsibly positive spin on the story, but it should suffice for our purposes here.)
Nick Land
Lack is created, planned, and organized in and through social production….Desire does not lack anything; it does not lack its object. It is, rather, the subject that is missing in desire, or desire that lacks a fixed subject
deleuze and guattari, anti oedipus (via lazz)
When I speak…I belong, whether or not I know it, to a network of powers of which I make use, struggling against the force that asserts itself against me. All speech is violence, a violence all the more formidable for being secret and the secret center of violence; a violence that is already exerted upon what the word names and that it can name only by withdrawing presence from it—a sign, as we have seen, that death speaks (the death that is power) when I speak.
Maurice Blanchot (trans. Susan Hanson), The Infinite Conversation (via mothwood)
Albert Camus, The Fall
In the end, glorification of splendid underdogs is nothing other than glorification of the splendid system that makes them so.
Theodor Adorno, “They, the people” Minima Moralia: Reflections from Damaged Life, trans. E.F.N. Jephcott, pg.28
And there was this – I know I’m taking a long time to answer your question – there was this way in which I all of a sudden realized that the point of being post-modern or being avant-garde or whatever wasn’t to follow in a certain kind of tradition: that all that stuff is BS imposed by critics and camp followers afterwards; that what the really great artists do, and it sounds very trite to say it out loud, but what the really great artists do is they’re entirely themselves. They’re entirely themselves. They’ve got their own vision, their own way of fracturing reality. And that if it’s authentic and true, you will feel it in your nerve endings. And this is what “Blue Velvet” did for me. I’m not suggesting it would do it for any other viewer, but I all of a sudd– Lynch very much helped snap me out of a kind of adolescent delusion that I was in about what sort of avant-garde art could be. And it’s very odd because film and books are very different media. But I remember, I remember going with two poets and one other student fiction writer to go see this and then all of us going to the coffee shop afterwards and just, you know, slapping ourselves in the forehead. And it was this truly epiphanic experience.
David Foster Wallace on Blue Velvet, Charlie Rose Interview. (via weisstonedimmaculate)
If there is one question I dread, to which I have never been able to invent a satisfactory reply, it is the question what am I doing.
Samuel Beckett, Molloy
‘How strange,’ Juliana said. 'I never would have thought the truth would make you angry.’ Truth, she thought. As terrible as death. But harder to find.
Philip K. Dick, The Man in the High Castle (via rangordnung)
Nietzsche is the great exemplar of complicating thought, exploiting knowledge in the interest of interrogations (and this is not in order to clarify and focus, but to subtilize and dissociate them). Complicating thought strengthens the impetus of an active or energetic confusion – delirium – against the reactive forces whose obsessive tendency is to resolve or conclude.
Nick Land, “Shamanic Nietzsche” (via rextalionis)
Nick Land, The Thirst for Annihilation