Zizek is quite a prolific writer, and so I hence hope you’ll forgive me for linking to a book that I haven’t myself read, but this book appears to be the one which is most geared towards the question at hand (especially given that it shares its name with Zizek’s talk).
As I side note, I must admit that I do completely understand the frustration that comes with people constantly posting videos like this in an attempt to justify themselves, hence I can understand you posting what you did as a response to that.
I just finished “First As Tragedy Then As Farce”, and I’m a little disappointed. The book is full of pointing out contradictions and problems, suggesting interpretations, and criticizing everything left and right. While I found the writing style hard to follow and had lots of problems with the arguments, the main frustration was that he doesn’t attempt to build anything up. You wrote that I “criticise Zizek for not giving any alternatives to (cultural) capitalism, and yet he clearly has never been in the same room as a Zizek book”, but even now that I’ve read this book through I would make the same criticism. The closest he gets is saying that we need to make a fresh go of communism, from the beginning, but there’s nothing about why we should expect better results this time or how we should go about it.
Zizek is quite a prolific writer, and so I hence hope you’ll forgive me for linking to a book that I haven’t myself read, but this book appears to be the one which is most geared towards the question at hand (especially given that it shares its name with Zizek’s talk).
http://www.amazon.com/First-As-Tragedy-Then-Farce/dp/1844674282/ref=sr_1_5?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1376331792&sr=1-5
As I side note, I must admit that I do completely understand the frustration that comes with people constantly posting videos like this in an attempt to justify themselves, hence I can understand you posting what you did as a response to that.
Requested it from the library!
I hope you enjoy it. Even if you dislike his arguments, his writing style is wonderfully unique.
I just finished “First As Tragedy Then As Farce”, and I’m a little disappointed. The book is full of pointing out contradictions and problems, suggesting interpretations, and criticizing everything left and right. While I found the writing style hard to follow and had lots of problems with the arguments, the main frustration was that he doesn’t attempt to build anything up. You wrote that I “criticise Zizek for not giving any alternatives to (cultural) capitalism, and yet he clearly has never been in the same room as a Zizek book”, but even now that I’ve read this book through I would make the same criticism. The closest he gets is saying that we need to make a fresh go of communism, from the beginning, but there’s nothing about why we should expect better results this time or how we should go about it.