Harman Patil (Editor)

Future Primitive and Other Essays

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3.8/5
AbeBooks

Media type
  
Paperback

ISBN
  
1-57027-000-7

Originally published
  
1 December 1994

Subject
  
Anarcho-primitivism

Preceded by
  
Elements Of Refusal

3.8/5
Goodreads

Publication date
  
December 1, 1994

Pages
  
192 pages

OCLC
  
30630861

Author
  
John Zerzan

Country
  
United States of America

Future Primitive and Other Essays t2gstaticcomimagesqtbnANd9GcQ85IkQxGHgY3Fh1k

Publisher
  
Autonomedia, Anarchy: a Journal of Desire Armed

Genres
  
Anthropology, Political Economy

Similar
  
John Zerzan books, Anarchism books, Other books

Future Primitive and Other Essays is a collection of essays by anarcho-primitivist philosopher John Zerzan published by Autonomedia in 1994. The book became the subject of increasing interest after Zerzan and his beliefs rose to fame in the aftermath of the trial of fellow thinker Theodore Kaczynski and the 1999 anti-WTO protests in Seattle. It was republished in 1996 by Semiotext(e), and has since been translated into French (1998), Turkish (2000), Spanish (2001), and Catalan (2002). As is the case with Zerzan's previous collection of essays, Elements of Refusal, Future Primitive is regarded by Anarcho-Primitivists and technophobes as an underground classic.

Thesis

Future Primitive is an unequivocal assertion of the superiority of the hunter-gatherer lifestyle. Zerzan rejects the thesis that time and technology are neutral scientific realities, arguing instead that they are carefully constructed means of enslaving people. He cites as examples the computer and the Internet, which he maintains have an atomizing effect on society, creating novel divisions of labour, demanding ever increasing efficiency and portions of leisure time. Life prior to domestication and agriculture, Zerzan argues, was predominantly one of "leisure, intimacy with nature, sensual wisdom, sexual equality and health". In the Paleolithic era, as The Wall Street Journal summarized Zerzan's thesis, "people roamed free, lived off the land and knew little or nothing of private property, government, money, war, even sexism. In the wild, the shackles of civilization weren't necessary, as people were instinctively munificent and kind, the primitivist argument goes."

References

Future Primitive and Other Essays Wikipedia