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Title: Defeated Spirit?
Author: John Zerzan
Date: November 19, 1981
Language: en
Topics: Fifth Estate, letter, Fifth Estate #307
Source: Retrieved on 8th June 2022 from https://radicalarchives.org/2010/09/06/defeated-spirit-jz-to-fe/
Notes: From Fifth Estate #307 (vol. 15, no. 6), Nov. 19, 1981, p 2.

John Zerzan

Defeated Spirit?

To the Editors:

The latest issue, containing much excellent analysis of our

techno-morass and its processes, nonetheless has bothered me.

The absence of a connection between the critique and its use is the most

troublesome feature. From the articles I have a persistent sense of the

too-remote, the academic; that of a profound indictment minus any

everyday applications.

Aside from some very visionary-sounding phrases, the only concrete

references to a radical anti-technology approach were calls for “a

defense of every little commodity,” which strikes me as merely

reformist, and for a “critical sociology,” which could suggest, of

course, a retention of specialization of even the university!

To me the technology critique is the first coherent, contemporary attack

on no less than every mediation and representation in social life, and

therefore exhilarating. But it is not so far for the FE authors: “We are

in eclipse; the human spirit is moribund,” says the introduction to the

last issue.

This defeated spirit tends to inform the paper, and renders the goal of

liberation an impossible (or even cynical) idea to the “Paleolithic

Liberation Organization” which produces it. The depth of misery is laid

out for all to see–only there’s really zero hope for breaking what we

can so clearly understand. Thus, the critique remains a banality:

everyone can know it and no one can win. Perfect example is quoting

Jacques Ellul at great length–Ellul who is equally known as lay Catholic

theologian as for his (trenchant) ideas about the “Technological

Society.”

As the situationists used to counsel, “Nihilists! One more effort if you

would be revolutionaries.”

Not in eclipse,

not even close,

John Zerzan

Newport, OR