Skip to main content Skip to search Skip to search

Political Science Globalization

The Party without Bosses

Lessons on Anti-Capitalism from Félix Guattari and Luís Inácio 'Lula' da Silva

by (author) Gary Genosko

Publisher
ARP Books
Initial publish date
Jun 2003
Category
Globalization, Political, Political Parties
  • Paperback / softback

    ISBN
    9781894037181
    Publish Date
    Jun 2003
    List Price
    $10.95

Add it to your shelf

Where to buy it

Description

The former metalworker and trade union leader Lúis Inácio 'Lula' da Silva-known to everyone as Lula-was elected president of Brazil in late 2002 in his fourth attempt since founding the Workers' Party in 1980. The Party Without Bosses features a discussion between Lula and the psychoanalyst Félix Guattari that took place in the heady days after the birth of the Workers' Party. At the time, the optimism and radicalism of the 1970s in South America was beginning to fade in the face of Reaganism's gathering momentum, and the Left had entered a protracted period of frustration and defeat.The discussion is introduced by leading Guattari scholar Gary Genosko and in addition contains his lively diaristic essay on the 2002 campaign.

About the author

Gary Genosko is an independent writer, editor and cultural critic. He is the author of McLuhan and Baudrillard: The Masters of Implosion (Routledge 1999), Undisciplined Theory (Sage 1998), and Baudrillard and Signs: Signification Ablaze (Routledge 1994); and the editor of The Guattari Reader (Blackwell 1996), among other works. He teaches social and political theory at Lakehead University, and has written extensively on the life and work of activist-intellectual Félix Guattari.

Gary Genosko's profile page

Editorial Reviews

It is precisely the inappropriateness of Genosko's book that makes it so facsinating and so pertinent. Resisting the tendency to be merely another example of the work prescribed by Empire, The Party Without Bosses nevertheless demands that the interview between Guattari and Lula, along with Guattari's work on the IWC, remains applicable-even contemporary with present work on globalization. Genosko actively resists a narrow, temporal determinism, seeing the anachronistic as a site that must be opened again and again within what is considered present. - Politics and Culture

Other titles by