"MAN THING IN A film by Tom Tykwer" "faraswe cantell,this imagedoesnothavespecific objects." "Atleasttheyare not visible... aremicroscopicallysmalloraretoofar...  tobecapturedbycamerasatthistime." "Yetweseeone thing:thesky." "Heavenisnotageographicalterm, notaspecificplace...  oranobject." "Still,weseeand knowwhereyouare...  ie,alwaysaboveus." "thatisdonethe sky" "Theuniversemightsay ." "Butforgetthatfor amoment." "Letusturntotangiblethings." "Wearein thecityinastreet ." "Thereisabuilding... afacade." "couldsayit 'saday likeanyother ." "Aplacelikenoother." "Awomanis rushed." "Waita minute,justasecond." "What we see" "Anorder,adispositionofthings,substances,materials... andamongthem,aperson." "personhasahistorythat cannotcounthere." "Behindthewallsthereareprobablymorepeople." "behindthings,behindeveryoneofthem,morepeople... morestories." "Thetextileindustryisoneofthe oldest ... andthenumbersand revenue,oneofthe mostimportantsectors." "Theskirtis likeasingletubethatsurroundsthetwolegs." "pants,a tubeforeachleg." "Anatomicalskeletonsof Paleolithiclegsandfeet... originatedthetheorythatweuseshoes40,000yearsago ." "IntheMiddleAges,thebagsweremadeofleatherandusedthe beltformen." "thenbecamean accessorytothefemalewhenhe wonthebelt." "Manymaterialscomefromcountrieswithcheaplabor... likeChina,India,SouthKoreaandTaiwan ." "numberindicatesabuildingonthestreet andisusedasreference." "Thenumberingof plotsofland ismadebytheDepartment." "Topographic." "Thehomeowneris responsiblefor installingthecard." "In1899,thecompanyHaudegenPaulCo." "HeadquarteredinBerlin... launchedthefirstdoorphone." "Onlycallsreceived,not allowedtoanswerthem." "1.intercomwaslaunchedin1935byABGylling." "basedtelephonetechnology,was the firstofitskind." "in1951wasonlypossibletospeakwithout losingvolume." "Mostlocksarecylindrical." "wereinventedby LinusYaleJr.inNew Yorkin 1865 ." "Several  pin, pushed by gravity or springs ...  thecorelockuntilthekeypushthemintothebox...  withthedivisionplanebetweenthecoreandbox." "Gridsareproducedsince1929 ... byLichtgittergesellschaft." "In  wells covered by the grid is stored coal or potatoes ...  andaretypicalofbuildingsbuilt inBerlin from1880." "Plates  gas supply and water ...  indicatethelocationofundergrounddrainsandvalves... givingaccessto theblockvalvesofthe gasand water." "Thenumbersto therightofT. .." "showsthedistancetotheright valve ." "Thenumberson theleftindicatethedistancetothevalve totheleft ." "Thenumbersbelowthe T,indicatethestraight-linedistancebetweentheplateandthevalve ." "Allnumbersaregiveninmetersanddecimetres." "Thecobblestonesaremadeoflarge stones... cutinvariousways." "Gneiss,therawmaterialisextractedfromthequarrywithexplosives ... andprocessedmechanically." "Thepiecesarecut withsaws forstone ... ordiamondsaws." "Thestonesarearrangedonabedofsandorgravel." "materialisthemortarjoints." "Under theaction ofdynamic loads... buildingreactswithelasticdeformation." "thecurbis installedona bedofconcrete... tohaveauniformheight." "Alongthecurbthereisastraightlinecobblestone... inthenext,theyarearrangeddiagonallyorpolygonal." "A very practical  construction." "The stones are of brick rubble." "Thesidewalkmustmeetspecificrequirements." "musttakeplacefor two pedestrianswith umbrellas,pass." "Pedestriansalwayswanttokeep acertaindistance." "Itshouldbe notedthat46%ofpedestrians... carryluggage,apurseorsomething." "Embeddedinthesidewalkarethecapsof thegasandwater." "Stainlesssteelfastenerspreventthecoversfromgetting lost." "coverstheboxcoverofthedistributionofgas... ordrinkingwatertothesewer system." "The company's initial  are printed on the covers." "So  might recognize the supply lines, destroyed in 1945." "Inwintercoversfrozenorsnow-covered... arelocatedby aplatelocatedincolumnsorbuildings... closetothedistributionboxes." "Thegumhasalong history." "IntheStoneAge ,ithasbeenchewed treeresin." "Today,thegumisproducedfrompetrochemicalsubstances." "Shehasabout50-60%sugar... andtherestissyntheticresin ." "The 1st  gum factory was founded in 1848 by John Curtis Jackson ..." "U.S.." "In1862,the1st GermancigarettefactorywasopenedinDresden." "cigarette,weseeherewith abutt... hadanactivelifeof7minutes." "Itsproductionandconsumptionareexpectedbefore theshort." "Itisbelievedthatifyousmoke40thousand yearsago ... ieduringthewholeevolutionofman ." "WheredidIquit?" "Here ,perhaps?" "Right ." "Maybe not." "steelstrapsthatholdpipestobuildings... weredevelopedearlierfor warships." "KaiserWilhelm,KingofPrussia... launchedthefirstregulationsforthetransitofvehicles in1909." "Thelawof movementofmotorvehicles." "Thelastchangeinthesymbolsofthetrafficcode... wasmadein 1997." "Detailsingraphicalrepresentationswere abandoned... infavorof simpleand cleanlines." "graphitecomprisestextsand pictorialrepresentations... inpublicspacesmadewith spray,felt-tippen...  orscratchedsurfaceswithsharpobjects." "Initially,thegraffitiwas associatedwith abstractpainting... calligraphyandcomics." "Graffitihasbecomepartofyouth culture." "Intheworldofhip-hop,graffitiisoneofthefourelements...  withrap,discoand breakdance." "At first glance, seems to be a commodity a trivial thing and that is understandable by itself." "His analysis shows that it is a very complex thing, full of metaphysical subtleties and theological sophistry ..." "Capital I. Merchandise and money 1." "The goods d) The fetish character of the commodity and its secret" "Torch of Freedom" "What is commodity fetishism?" "What in the festivities" "Great French Revolution, the scene provided by David the torch of freedom is called, and is (for centuries) within the true man of Western Europe, a bright light or a coal burning " "[...] The Inner Light" "Would be a divine spark?" "" "It is the seat of the obligation to save money, commitment, the formation of asset " "Need and oppression will never fade this inner light, by contrast, is burned by external constraint " "[...] Suddenly, after two hundred years" ""Invention of freedom,"" "it is evident that all objects, that men shall exchange sports lighting " "The exchange value shines as an image or plan as before consciousness " "With this observation, Antonio Gutierrez-Fernandez, president of the academy in Havana, opens his lecture before the central committee " "The small circle of supporters of the republic is once a week for lectures / training [...]" "With examples of Karl Marx can not be explained, as the lamp of the soul of the Cuban work / [...]" "Fernandez-Gutierrez refutes the thesis that Cubans are a people easily flammable " "Instead, there is a bright light or a lamp of the soul to shine in every man's world " "[...] These phenomena of light, which Gutierrez-Fernandez calls the guiding lights, however, are covered by sparks billion in goods, that will flood Cuba," "If the defense of the republic fails " "The lights that indicate the value of the goods, so to say how the funeral lights dead labor, conceal the inner light is visible more in lean years and times of need " "Family tomb Highgate Cemetery" "The real monument and tomb " "Karl Marx in London" "Hello Does anyone remember where is the tomb of Karl Marx?" "I do not remember where it is." "Can anyone tell me?" "Anyone remember where is the tomb of Karl Marx?" "Yes?" "In the first track?" "Well, sorry." "Thank you." "What  cemetery beautiful." "That helped." "You  provides community service" "No." "Community service would have them here ... if he had killed someone." "This is voluntary." "Volunteer." "Wetourwithatour guide." "Andit 'sfree." "Ina Londoncemeteryfor amemorial... afuneralmonumenttoMarx ... butheis notburiedthere." "It's just a memorial built by the Russians." "His actual tomb is hidden in the cemetery because he was Jewish." "Andyouwerethere... andsomeoneshowedthemwherehewas therealgrave" "I was photographing the memorial when a man came and said ..." ""You know that the dead do not move, do you?"" "Really?" " Yes." "He was a gardener?" "There was a man ...  a group of volunteers working for the cemetery." "A group that cares for the dead?" "Not the dead ...  tracks around the dead." "is an ancient cemetery?" "Yes." "Andheshowedthe way ,but foundthetomb." "So  asked for help with a machine" "He explained that this was not the real grave." "I asked him if he could show us the true." "He agreed, so we ... but he did not know exactly where it was." "There is much grass in the cemetery, so it was very difficult to find." "So called central to his walkie-talkie ... to ask if they knew where she was." "Then a person came and showed us where it was." "Andhow?" "It is atombstone?" "A broken headstone." "What does it say?" "Karl Marx." "is where is he buried?" "Yes." "The tomb true" "In 1929, the great Russian director ..." "Sergei Eisentein planned filming ... two books:" "1." "Ulysses by James Joyce;" "2." "The Capital Karl Marx " "What motion pictures ... and transformations ("Metamorphoses") ... he had in view?" "All things are men bewitched " "Peter Sloterdijk on metamorphosis of added value" "Eisensteinprovidedafter"October"... film" DasKapital"of Marxand "Ulysses"byJoyce atthe sametime." "Aboldplan...  itcameafteragreatsuccess." "MR. BLOOM, HERO OF ROMANCE ULYSSES If you, as a philosopher," "MR. BLOOM, HERO OF ROMANCE ULYSSES look at this ... whatwouldyouthinkhedid?" "Whatwouldamovielike that" "WhatimagesarethereinMarx" "We have a clue ... what Eisenstein might have thought at that moment ... the parallelism between the two texts, at first sight inexplicable." "What he sees on "Capital" at the same time, fascinating in "Ulysses"?" "I guess the answer would be something like this ..." "Peter Sloterdijk, Philosopher Eisenstein realized that ..." "Marx in "Capital" ... the archetypal adventurer ... in a way, a systems theory of adventure ... a journey through the world of the soul ... is overridden by the journey into the world of money." "And so we enter a world that, in the design of James Joyce ... consists entirely of metamorphoses." "Ulysses is not just a man ... traveling through the Mediterranean." "Instead, he experiences the complete transformation ... during a day." "He does not need much more time than this ... to undergo a metamorphosis." "course,itcomesasa liar ,andtells stories... towinhospitality...  anditturnsyourdestination,infact,himself ... andhasseriousdifficultiestoreturntooriginalform,inIthaca." "And the same happens with the money in general." "Homer gives us two major epithets ... that have already been given to a person ... in reference to his Odysseus, which in Latin becomes Ulysses." "One of the epithets is "polymetis", which has a lot of cunning." "But then he says something amazing ... and calls "polymechanos" ... which means "man of many strategies."" "Polymechanosisastrategist,nota craftsman." "A man who uses cunning ... the material to do something he would not do for themselves." "And that is what makes money, too." "In essence, money is a great strategist ... or a great artist of transformation ..." "Calling the matter to the dressing room, say ... and turns through dress ... do not wear yourself." "And I think if you ... sneak into this imaginative intelligence ... the great director in 1929 ... can reach a pole like this, which feels that the world has strength ... generating processing by themselves ... that is, invite the matter ... that, philosophically speaking, has a bad reputation, a reputation for volatile ... malleability, even debauchery ... and calls on the matter to the biggest dressing room ... ever, that is ... capitalist industry ... to make it take forms that would never have dreamed." "Anaturalhistoryofsocieties,andman...  characterizethissocialhumanbeing,whatisman." "Thisisyourtheme." "Not only is the natural history ... is also a kind of theatrical history of man ... common history of man and matter." "It is the postulate of Marx stronger ... they should tell stories about the nature ... as stories of the common natural and unnatural ... or the natural and the supernatural." "This eruption continued for one thing into another, that's the key ... for the understanding of "Capital" and Marx's thought in general." "He is able to demonstrate ... that nothing is as it seems, everything is in disguise ... always find the material disguised ... least in the state of the raw materials claim ... and so-called natural resources ... which is also an interesting metaphor bourgeois ... with his conception of nature as a treasure chest." "But if we look beyond the raw materials, natural resources ... everything we encounter in the world of value ... in the commodity world, already dressed, wrapped ... material is masked part ... theatrical history of the value and valued area." "iswhenwe seeinMarx thecriticofideology." "Therefore,itis thegreatestthinker... generationafterHegel." "This means, while it ... learned ... to formulate new questions for human intelligence ... that can only be made ... when the great cycle of "serious thought" runs out ... which seems to have been concluded with Hegel." "The man has ..." "Marx is among the first to see new man ... brings together various types of intelligence." "There is an intelligence that I would call intelligence credulous or serious ... and from it emerge workers and believers." "It is an intelligence created for serious matters." "A second intelligence, the intelligence of the fraudster ... or engineer, or quack, as anthropologists say ... is a character that appears in many mythologies." "Jason." "Jason is one of them." "There Loki in Germanic mythology." "Hermes, of course ... the deceiver god par excellence." "But it embodies other intelligence ... intelligence that tells us ... not to believe anything at face value ... you can not take anything seriously." "The other intelligence tells us to take things seriously ... that we must confront ourselves and believe." "And these two intelligences struggle ... within us since time immemorial." "And Marx is part of the first generation of intellectuals ... that came after this great cycle of seriousness ... which culminated in Hegel ... and puts the two types of intelligence into open fighting among themselves." "Thus, it is a generation of post-philosophers philosophy." "That is, a sophist ..." "He takes up this way combative intelligence." "To some extent also has the thought of a lawyer ... ie everything that is said is part of a claim ... and not just a simple description of the facts." "The 1st intelligence focuses on the facts ... while the other, the charlatan, or a lawyer ..." "Their shape is serious ... that he cultivated this intelligence misleading ... who knows that everything is part of a claim, an effect ... a strategy of representation." "And now he tries, dealing with both sides at once ... play these two types of intelligence against each other." "These are the dramatis personae." "Absolutely." "Asyourimaginarypartofthetheater... thisisyourgame." "If  Eisenstein could make his film ...  woulduseit as astartingpoint... indramaturgicalterms." "wouldprovidethegoods,themaskofbourgeois... maskcharacter... butbehindthismaskispassionatecharacters... widelydescribedby Balzac." "Sothismetamorphosisalsorefers... theongoingtransformationofthepeoplerepresented... andtheobjectsbeingportrayed." "I think Marx ... was one of the inventors of Figure Bourgeois ... as a dramatic character in some respects." "And this is something we can see in Balzac ... the figure of the miser ... that emerges in the 17th century with Molière ... and develops a little more in the 18th century." "Balzac to crystallize ... this demonic figure of the banker ... metaphysicsthathasacold ..." "E- a wonderful daughter." "Yes." "forwhomtheact ofgiving..." "It's torture." "The human incarnation of accumulation." "But it had to be invented, because capitalists are not so ... aremorecommon." "Are common and if they are innovative, it is because something pushes them ... must strive to be original ... involuntarily original, because the credit ... knows no forgiveness ... and the creditor may threaten to charge." "There's even clarifying explanations on Modernity ... social and psychological ... who claim that any modern state ... revolves around the figure of the judge ... holding the most important function of state authority ... ie, to ensure the claim." "We still see it in today's world ... the famous Hermes guarantees from the German government ... to ensure the reliability of credit abroad ... being, say, the state itself ... as the credit guarantee ... which shows that maintaining this core belief ... maintain the belief in the credit ... should be a major concern of the state." "Maybe we should rewrite the history of the modern state ... this perspective ... to illustrate that the times that the State acted ... as guarantor of non-nihilistic values ​​..." "This is promoted when the belief ... not only by the famous alliance between throne and altar ... but the alliance, perhaps even deeper ... between the throne and the credit system ..." "Theuseof trusts." "Infarmingcommunities,thereissomethingmore... thatcomesfrompre-capitalistsociety..." "loyalty for loyalty." "Loyalty for loyalty." "That is why the scandal that erupted in France in the early 18th century ... with the introduction of paper money was ... a shock pre-nihilist." "cansaythatrevolutionfailedbecauseoflack of confidence... becausehecouldnot respondtocredit" "E- assignees lost their value." "They lost, of course." "Theresultof therevolutionwasbased onit... all expropriated land, ready for redistribution." "This does not work." "Does not work." "And before, there is also the history of English ... financier who persuaded the French king ... to participate in an experiment with paper money." "This was a harbinger of default on the dome of the State." "Hence arose a revolutionary dynamic ... that undermined the confidence ... the ability of the state as guarantor." "If you look at the reason behind the rule of reason of state ... we always return to the same point." "If you want to build credibility ... not so much the personal integrity of politicians that counts ... but the state's commitment to ensure its smooth operation." "Tokeepthingsreliable,andhorizons,stable ." "And ensure that the accumulated wealth does not disintegrate overnight." "This is the mandate that all representatives now use ... for this lot ..." "Judgement of the modern economy, the Black Friday ... 1929 never be repeated." "This was a flood ... that, despite the biblical warrant, fell back on humanity." "BANKERSTOSTOPACTINGACTIONisthe contextinwhich Eisenstein... makeshissketches...  thinkingof"Capital."" "24OCTOBER1929AND ,inthecentralcommittee... fewremainingTrotskyites...  saythatnow,afterBlackFriday... couldbuyGeneralElectric... totheSovietUnion,with money..." "EmeraldCzar,resourcesintheUrals ... seemsthattrainswerereadyatthe borders... tomaketheseoffers,make transferstothe West." "If we consider the Black Friday ... as a ... as a guest writer ... we can say that Eisenstein would have found these successes ... addition of "Ulysses" and "Capital" ..." "A third source of ideas ... which shows ... that in this great game of disguises value ... can also be moments ... an exhibition unbearable ..." "Thatmustbe remediedbyforce." "Thecrisis ,thefalloftheStockExchangeuntil1934." "Andwhatanswercan wegive China,theThirdReich,Italy...  andRoosevelt,thissituation" "Well, you have to call ... an ecumenical council of capitalism ... to restore faith in the system." "Halfway between the 1st and 2nd Vatican Councils ... the Vatican capitalists ... had to restore faith in cash ... in view of the catastrophe of 1929." "beliefinthehealingpoweroftheft... thatcantakethe goldinNorway,Greece orFranceetc... andkeepthemfor the GermanReich... getovertheold faitheconomic... thathadbeensodiscreditedin1929... thatis,as faithwouldovercomeallcredit issues ." "faiththatwe cangoback tothe16thcentury ,say." "Not only to the 16th century, but the beginning of all empires ... that began as operating systems." "In other words, where the key to value creation ... in its early manifestations ... is revealed as the other ..." "Peter Sloterdijk, Philosopher already have something of value ... that only require travel expenses, not production." "I just have to be able to finance a military expedition ... and have the assurance that I can go home." "In other words ..." "I have mastered the art of military campaigns." "The trip is not enough." "It has to master the back too." "If mastered these two things, the round trip ... becomes a master of attack ..." "Master the art of drawing ... and apparently that was solved by a whole ..." "The problem of enrichment ... until they start with Modernity industrialization ... inaugurating a new form of looting ... and another form of value creation." "And then it becomes much more difficult to say what they have to do ... to have control over the riches of the world." "You  in 2008 ..." "INDUSTRYINSIDEMEN/...could ,philosophically," "INDUSTRYINSIDEMEN/...approaching"TheCapital "..." "MARXANDTHETHEORYOFFAIRY TALE...withcategoriessimilar... andwriteastoryaboutanger ,astoryaboutlove... ortheattraction,and soon... however,therichworldofsubjectivity... wouldhavelearnedofindustrialization,anexternalfactor." ""LANDSCAPEINDUSTRY-Butafter50or100years..." ""LANDSCAPEINDUSTRY...externalgrowthinthe economy..." "ASOPENBOOK... isaninnermostloop..." "ASOPENBOOK... insidepeople..." "PSYCHOLOGYOFHUMAN"withsimilarmetamorphoses... enormousforcesareunleashed... tore-entertheeconomyasamotivation." "Doitright" "Becausethisis theideathat youadopt inyourbooks... notrestrictthesemovementstothings... becausethingsandgoods,goodsthatarenow ...  arenotobjective,but ratherhumanqualitiescrystallized." "Men  metamorphosed, as in fairy tales." "Right." "I also think ..." "How the "Seven Ravens."" "The best approach to the universe ... of Marx's analysis of capital ... is through the theory of fairy tale." "I think the history of capitalism ... is something like a gigantic expansion ... fairy tale "The Three Golden Hairs of the Devil."" "But when one seeks a solution ... a release, a treasure ... you need a helper." "These are the famous assistants in the morphology of the story ..." "Propp's and Greimas ... the great French structuralists." "tales,womenare,inthis case ,thegrandmotherofthedevil...  thathelpsthechildborn lucky... getthreehairsfromthedevil ." "These figures may be people helpers ... they are also devices, ie amulets." "We return to the amulet in a minute ... because Marx was the first to understand ... the merchandise is never just what it seems ... but yes, it also has a character of amulet." "hidesa goodperson,manypeoplebehindit." "Yes, and all things, in fact, people are enchanted." "From this perspective it becomes clear ..." "When only the best storyteller is able ... to penetrate the world of Karl Marx." "The world's most brilliant analysis of enchantment ... that never existed." "You have to ... theeconomyonlyworkswith thesespells." "It should have been banned since the beginning read "Capital" alone." "It would have been a canon." "Maybe it's a failure ..." "I would have to be made to Lenin and co." "From the perspective of today." "They should have created a canon and said ..." ""If anyone read 'The Capital' without" Metamorphoses "of Ovid on the side ... is the wrong way. "" "Donotsay"LeninandCo."." "Becauseheis ,say,avery high ... despitethemistakes,likemany ,andbeunilateral." "Thisrule,Ithink,isthecentralpoint." "Marxcanalsobesettomusic... theirtexts,andtheyturn ." "In fact, Marxism as a whole ... formed an erroneous canon of their classic ... particularlyintheunfortunatetrio Marx ,Engels,Lenin ." "It is the canon  wrong." "If you delete  Ovid, the fourth man ...  ina group... obtaina Marxismamputee...  basicallypositivistMarxism." "This is the ruin of Marxism, have underestimated ... his own metaphysical component wonderfully ... and have competed with positivism ... bourgeois science ... on behalf of "use value"." "It was a generation ..." "De- false objectivity." "False-objectivity." "Had always dreamed of value in use ... to rob the valuables of their mystifying elements ... and transporting people to a barren kingdom ... where the goods were free of any enchantment ... and people could return to the real relations between them." "This was one way left to positivism ... and it was very, very destructive." "It was also a category mistake in relation ... the meaning of society." "Is that the bottom was confused ... a utopia of small groups with a theory of large groups." "In small groups, people can achieve ... totally different ways of coexistence." "For our project biological or evolutionary ..." "We are herd animals ... ran well with 20, 50, 100, if any." "Everything that exceeds that figure ... must be dealt with abstractions, symbolic constructions." "And who understands, who agrees with the idea ... that is not possible to change the world ... in a circle of friends ... learn, in my view, the first lesson of socialism." "And you can then begin to handle the elements telecomunicativos ... necessary for human coexistence ... in a positive direction, which is fundamental." "We can not put much faith in our small group reflections." "We work on the basis that another fairy tale ... the political fairy tale to make the world a community ... and think of humanity as a circle of friends and family ... isanatavism." "It is an atavism, but above all, is a dangerous illusion ... confuses us regarding our transcendental elements ..." "Because  leads us to create false idols ...  falsesymbols,likethe conceptofnation... anidentitythat,byfar, itseems acommunity... representedbyflagsand pictures..." "but it is not, and can not be." "It can not be the same ...  because only through a monumental mistake emotional ... people can generate feelings of family ... for 50 or 100 million people." "And like detectives  philosophical ...  nowwediscover,alongwith Marx ,Engels,Lenin ..." "OsipMandelstam... initiatinga personaloppositiontoStalinisminfull... andendingwithhis death... andthepoemsofTristia... writinginspiredby Ovid...  whenOvidwasbanishedtotheBlackSea,and longedforRome... andfollowhisfootsteps,butwiththeexperience... theterribleexperienceofthe20thcentury." ""MyCentury,My Beast"...  isoneof itscyclesofpoems ." "Yes,theanalogyisvery expressive... when Mandelstam Ovid rediscovers the Black Sea ... and revive the context of Ovid ... ie, the constant looking to Rome ... this constant attempt to get ... a private audience with Augustus imaginary ... and be able to say: "I did not do any harm, just ..."" "bitingyourtonguehas betrayedhim." "Biting my tongue broke loose for a minute ... but you are the first and only they should understand ... it is the son of the Muses ... that can be absorbed with difficult business ... but actually, you're one of us. "" "Certainly, many writers of the period of Stalinism ... looked towards Moscow with the feeling that the only player ... that really mattered to them ... was sitting in the Kremlin, working late into the night." "THECHARMOF THEDARKPOWER/Inanother classof enchantment..." "THECHARMOF THEDARKPOWER/...olderthanthat of"Capital"..." ""introjectionofAGGRESSOR"... istheideathattheevil god ..." ""introjectionofAGGRESSOR"... may haveamomentofkindness." "Introjectiontheaggressor..." "And believe that the person ... possessed by the demon of rigor ... the person who left the state to penetrate her ..." "Nowadays this is no longer common, because politicians no longer allow ... the state to penetrate its interior, but consider an employer." "notincorporatemore." "And if they do, would be interesting, but dangerous ... most politicians today have ... an employee-employer relationship with the state and society." "Therewouldsuspectthismanofatrace ofthemonarch... andifit is cruel,the suspicionisunfounded." "Yes, because this man enters the coldest of all monsters ..." "Nietzsche described ... and develop something that people generally do not have and can not have ... the accuracy of the superman." "The king, judge, bailiff and executioner ... are figures in which the state can show his hand tight ... are all derived from the monarchical function." "Thisfunctionis controlledbytheintelligencethatspoke..." "faith-based ..." "In faith-...  and that takes things seriously ... and is always close to death because that is the most serious ... that can happen to those who think the state in terms of death." "Andinanyevent,even underinhumaneconditions..." "Accordingly,Thoas,of "Iphigenia"isa characterveryseriously... thatcannotbekilled." "Yes, because he embodies in himself the will of the state ... and the purpose of being present in the next generation ... and the next, and in a hundred generations." "So it has got to be an incarnation of need." "It never penetrates the human soul together." "Even the writers tend to get away from him and move away from the necessary." "Even Virgil  ...  mentallyveryclosetotheEmpire... requiredmorespacefor yourideas... greater than the own Augustus." "Not to speak of Ovid ... it was almost a crook in the state." "And that's what probably resented Augusto ... and why this language declared a state crime biting ... its greatest poet and banished to the Black Sea ... where to devote to sing his sorrow." "But Mandelstam had every reason to sympathize with Ovid ... because he is obliged to send reports to Moscow ... a man who tried to embody this rigor ... that comes from the state, the need ... history." "In fact, he developed his own name for themselves ... a mythology of cruelty ... incitement to cruelty ... that ended up consuming his psyche." "isa typeof undergroundeconomy... counter-economy,whichshouldbetakenintoconsideration... andsometimesusesthe economy,tangentially... eg,fascism,fascismalsoinsofter... andissomethingthatreallyinterestsyou." "If youleaveitout... apartof beinghumanisno explanation." "Not everything  enters the world of commodities ...  apartouttherethat neverbecameamatterofstate." "It is also due to the fact that "Capital" and, therefore, Marx ... and all the rest need this man completely eroticized ..." "Your world view and to justify their system." "But they can only partially explain the man ... to translate the word "eros" and "desire" ... although it is rather strange to modern ears." "We have a concept of eros that now sounds different." "We think the sexual tension ... and beautiful things possible to obtain a price." "Lust and attraction." "Greed-and attraction." "And the pleasure of surrendering to the impulse itself and everything else." "The capitalist, in the characterization ... is a totally eroticized ... a devil who says ..." ""Others think that greed is bad, but between us, greed is good"." "This idea became popular." "The message reached the proletariat through modern advertising." "But in the last 200 years started to be effective ... a moral evil of the exception." "In politics, as far back as Machiavelli says there is a sector that ... the moral of the exception." "If a position of State ... if required to be captain, must also learn ... the exceptions of conventional Christian morality." "Taketheword"fetish"." "WHATcommodityfetishism?" "Whatdoes thewordfetish" "WHATcommodityfetishism?" "Itisakeyterm." "Theword"fetish"takesusbacktotheirAfricanorigins." "The etymology of this word takes us ..." "Portuguese trade with Africa." "Portuguese traders and missionaries perhaps ... observed ... that in Central Africa ... persisted peculiar rituals ... that give an eerie impression to the visitor Catholic ... because the link to an archaic state of your Catholic worship ... in fact, to the dark side of religion." "They noted that if there were statues ..." "Peter Sloterdijk, Philosopher iconography of the human form ... traits with respect horrendous ... andpracticedaritual... accordingtowhichhad toprovidethese figures... thesefetishesincomplete,withtheforcesofthesoul ." "Thus arose the famous men nail the Congo." "Some have up to 100 nails, and are all over the body ... a blanket of iron nails, the local production ... because since the Middle Ages ..." "Africa has its own production of iron." "And with each nail ... a wish or a curse is introduced into the body of the fetish." "ThisalsohappenedinWorldWar1... whendrovenailsintowoodenfiguresofHindenburg." "Youmustlinkeachnail with adonation." "Buttheideaof​ ​hammeringnailsintoa general-fieldmarshal ..." "INMEMORYOF CONSECRATIONAND PREACHINGareveredperson ..." "INMEMORYOF CONSECRATIONAND PREACHING...theyareallowed todoso,  theHindenburg..." "IRON(1915)...is interesting." "Sheseemsto embodyabasicidea... afigure,agesture... that appeals to those who had never done that." "These things suggest that there are ideas or gestures elementary ... which instantly meaningful to people ... even when performed first." "Thenthequalitiesofthemostvaluable,mostdedicated... goodsarechanneledbythedivisionoflabor... unconsciouslyandareembeddedingoods ... andthenreturntothemen... ascommodities." "It can also be a ball, or a tank Tiger." "A gesture like this seller may have settled on anything." "Something flows into the product." "Something that the thinkers of antiquity had already seen ... but not knowing this notion of work ... worked with the concept of "momentum" to describe ... this flow of subjective intentions and the product to ... with the terminology available at the time." "This means that if you want, the theory of momentum is ... the hidden history of modern theories of work ... as part of the mechanical observation ... that when an object is achieved ... retains the kinetic energy received." "This transfer of energy to think, has something of a mystery." "As my energy can be transferred to the thing?" "On the strength of a billiard ball moves to the other?" "At  coup." "But I can also call a stroke of a successful book." "IfI takethismomentum,asIsaid ... putsomethingin somethingofmylifetime." "But Marx also understood the intelligentsia as well." "This is like a great book that holds all the rage ... all the desires of generations past ... to generate an impulse to put an end ... global conditions in which perpetuate ... parts intolerable relations described herein." "Thisiswhatthe phrasemeans:"Theindustriallandscape... islikean openbookofhuman psychology... withthewholepre-history."Isthattheidea?" "That's it." "It means that we are constantly ... this panorama." "Wherever we look, we are in a kind of historical museum ..." "Goodcommenton it ,we arenot repeating." "Deciphering  relations, broke the spell." "I think this is the crux." "You can not start with something like revolutionary violence." "The work consists of profanity ... to return to production, which also means ..." "Unearthwhatis buriedasa treasurehunter." "But things have to dig beyond the goods." "Have to dig the curses carved into fetishes ..." "What  are extremely useful as antidotes." "Right." "You can use them again." "Humanity is ..." "They become." "Acursecanbecomesedimentedintoresentment... butcanalsobea curseforgotten... anddonotknow... youhavesomemagicalpower,beneficial." "wasdoneby people,and willfocusmucheffort ." "In short, those who venture in this field ... had the damn obligation ... and studying alchemy." "That is, this laboratory processing giant ... subjective and objective forces which is the human experience ... and everything that makes the experience, have to re-merge it, synthesize it ..." "Lateralizáit,breakit, "disserrere."" "And there is something ... as a final distillate causing ... the revolutionary explosion." "You can not say which reaction ... gives way to something better." "In this lab the 20th century ... saw large trials more or less bankrupt." "The forces with which they experienced are still with us." "There currently are reconstructed." "And more than ever, require an alchemy sensible ... that the light of experience ... help us understand these conditions enchanted." "You" "Marx considers a poet ..." "A poet-talented." "Sitting in the library  most imposing of London ...  extractsfragmentsof history,and writesapoeticaccount... aroundthesecorefantasy." "It is the backbone of his theory." "notunfairof youtodegradethisscientificmaterialist... callinghimapoet?" "Degrade?" "A poetic metaphor is the highest form of perception." "In the 16th century in Britain, houses of farmers ... were burned, land expropriated and turned into pasture." "Flocks of sheep graze where people lived." "This is how Marx describes." "This is the primitive accumulation." "The land is only useful as pasture for sheep ... whose wool is consumed in the Netherlands, where the capital is flourishing." "This generates  return." "You must accumulate assets originating in terms of money ... for the exchange process begins moving." "This can be done by burning up the boxes ... yielding a profit of 2000% in the opium trade with China ... in the slave trade or theft." "There must be some kind of early settlement." "He brings misery." "E-poverty fosters intelligence." "Those who suffered a fire in their homes, the dispossessed ... mass flow to London." "Those who resort to theft are sent to the gallows." "Others develop their creativity from the suffering." "startwork,or in thefieldoftheir predispositions... plowanareaof​ ​willingnesstowork... thatproducesspecialfacultiesasin agreenhouse." "Atreasurein man." "Ibelievethisiswhat Marx meant." "Original audio of a labor struggle (1965)" ""We were prepared to go on strike on Thursday morning at six o'clock. "" "Attention,thisspeaksindustrialunionofMinesandEnergy." "Comrades,collectivebargaining,entrepreneurshave turnedtheir backs on." "In our  vote to strike, show them ...  thatwedecidedtogoon strikeforour demands ." "We want our conditions ..." "Arendt that the Lord required, are met." "Until now, we who give away." "This time, we will not yield." "We are increasingly poor, and businessmen, richer." "To show us where is the economic miracle." "So I hope that the union of Mines and Energy ... fight for us and make us to receive the salary ... we had before." "Work in the mines for 16 years ... and what he had before, no longer have." "Supporting the claims of the union and hope there's a breakthrough." "Only the strike." "workersvoteof 5inthemorninguntilmidnight." "Thereisno reason..." "UNEXPECTEDLY, DIRECTION dissipated STRIKE / ... nor do we want to say." "UNEXPECTEDLY, STRIKE THE DIRECTION dissipated Through negotiations ... thereisno waytogeta betterdealthanthis." "We know that a strike will not get it." "It's what I'm saying." "I'm saying this." "Then you can say what they want." "IIRC,untilafew days,ourleadersencouragedus... to plan a strike ... even the smallest details ... and that our colleague Heinz Vetter ... a few hours before the strike started ... encouraged us, saying that lançáramos a rocket ... would fall squarely on the business ..." "I must say that the fact that we have now to speak of an agreement ... is an unhappy ending." "Never planned a strike as serious as this!" "And when things got serious, when it became obvious ... some people may have thought: "They're bluffing."" "No!" "Five minutes before 12pm, the miners felt that they meant ... even among the mines, which, as they say now they are about to close." "So they made concessions to us." "But we are not satisfied with the concessions." "iswhattheythinkallmembers." "Theworstthingis..." "Arendt  My dear Walter ..." "I must tell you that despite the harsh criticism ... we must promote the union." "Even if you criticize our ideas, we must unite as one organization." "But most critical, Walter Arendt ... and you yourself say, is that it was inevitable." "We have said several times to our colleagues here ..." "You told us ... when the question arose in local groups." "We do not have ..." "Many colleagues ask ..." "That serves to increase salaries?" "The price is having to download." "We said, 'Do not We influence it." "It is a political issue ... we need a contingency plan." "And now, these minor increases for two years ... imply freeze wages while prices rise." "We categorically reject." "I came here today, as many of you ... as you all ... with a mandate that I was commissioned." "And this mandate is ordered by our members ..." "We're counting on you today!" "We expect a response from you!" "With regard to this commitment, the answer can only be ... we reject." "Because I dare say, and nobody can refute it ... that with the same rapidity with which the legal representative Beitz ..." "Berthold Beitz, sat down to negotiate after the revolt of metallurgical ... with the same speed will be willing to negotiate ... against a refusal on our part." "I doubt anyone can prove differently." "Ladies and gentlemen, we as employees in any way we want something ... as colleagues of the Board." "No!" "We want to faithfully transmit the spirit of our union." "And it behooves us all ... both the dome, as employees ... say "no" to this agreement." "We owe it to our members and our future as a union." "We have to tailor agreements if we are to live in this world." "Now criticize me for saying in Dortmund at the end of the congress ... that victory would be ours." "I say, "I said I wanted to lose?"" "The climate in Congress, and the reactions to the proposals ... interpret as a sign ... that we should not take a vote to strike." "I'm glad, and I'll tell you why." "According to our bylaws ... the board, who was elected for a term of four years ... is responsible for the conduct and the fate of the organization." "The task of the delegates in congress ... is not only to account ... but to accept the decisions taken by the Board." "Therefore, we affirm ... this is a matter for the Board ... and the Board proposes to affiliates ... or rather, decided, unanimously ... accept this result." "Themajorityof delegatesrejectedtheagreement." "By statute, the direction of the strike can not be deposed." "We get it: commitment" "Crane Song Milchsack IV" ""My name is" "Milchsack number IV" "I drink lubricating oil, you drink beer." "I like coal, you eat bread." "You are not live," "I'm still not dead." "I do daily" "My tour." "I was here before you in the Ruhr Valley." "When you are no more" "I'll be still for long." "I know for his walk, "Crane Song Milchsack IV" "PASSWORD: "HAPPY FAIL" / "Everyone forges his happiness"" "Whatwouldbe the"failurehappy"" ""Failurehappy"... is an expression somewhat cynical ... people who think they're too attached ... the old safety standards ... job security, employment insurance, social security ..." "OSCAR Negt, Sociologist and, finally, we have to stop ... to see the failure, not as an attack on their identity ... but as the fact that there is something like losers ... and which also may be lost." "Losing -also serves to re-educate me ..." "And do not be ashamed or hide it ...  but to make public that today there are more losers than winners." "It is a lesson drawn from the risk society." "Whatistherisksociety?" "It is the idea that you make your own luck." "And getting lost is because he was not doing the right thing." "So you have to start from scratch ... and recognize that failure is not an objection to his efforts ... or to his character." "You must interpret the failure as a chance to start again ... and do differently." "That is, every man is an entrepreneur." "Every man should behave in an entrepreneurial way ... bankruptcies and failures and encourage us to learn." "In my opinion ... a theory is pretty weird ... which is currently emerging ... and spreading." "It is absolutely not the case ... that all people take the same risks." "If a manager loses his job important ... continues to be paid, or an employee or an intellectual ... compensationof$700 thousandmarks." "... Will not fall into a bottomless pit." "A normal worker, as opposed to a bank 50 ... who loses his job ... can not create courage, optimism ... when you see the prospects that you have left ... to get a decent job." "WHAT IT MEANS:" "SPEED DEVALUATION?" "There the term "speed ..." "WHAT IT MEANS:" "SPEED DEVALUATION?" "Devaluation ... "." "What is it?" "The rate of impairment can be characterized ..." "As the way things ... or relationships ... or thoughts ... are drawn into a whirl ... where only the newest and most original ... and that until now did not exist ... has commercial value, may be sold." "This applies to the entire public sphere at this time." "It is the search for intimacy, the rest of the unknown." "It causes a lot of noise in the media ... but one thing is misleading as seen today ... when many newspapers and news agencies ... employ liars who invent things ... they do not investigate anything, and simply make up stories." "And this increased rate of devaluation." "Even thought it seems that everything that is modern ... up-to-date today is more true ... than that which existed in the past." "This impulse to modernize ... ever think of something new." "But this is related ... with the production of wild ... in which the value of an ... depends on already exists like." "This is the case of fashion and right now ... is a trace of this disastrous season ... practicing the devaluation of memory and collective memory." "Brief history of the bourgeoisie " "This was the moment that we without realizing it, for five minutes were immeasurably high generous and electrical refreshed in July " "We were smart, no one could support us / orchids in cellophane / in rodeávamos chip, concert soloists." "Clouds that said I " "Extraordinary!" "" "[...] As sparrows, xingávamos confused " "Each had his own misfortune under the seat, hand " "Actually, it's a shame " "It was so practical " "The water flowed from the taps as nothing " "Do you remember?" "Simply anesthetized negligible for our feelings, ate bit " "Had only suspected, that all this would in five minutes, the Roastbeef Wellington would have a different taste, completely different for us " ""Revolutions are the locomotives of history"" "WalterBenjaminusedaquotationfromMarx..." ""Revolutionsarethelocomotivesofhistory."" "It is critical that makes Benjamin ... which says that perhaps the reality is quite different." "Revolutions are not the locomotives of history ... but rather, the emergency brakes ... that serve to lock ... a train that is headed for doom ..." "What are you going in the wrong direction." "By the way, and bad-for misfortune." "Revolutions are somehow like brakes of history." "Also played well ... the shooting of the clocks in the French Revolution." "For a moment, it is a pause." "Humanity is beginning to become aware ... such that the accelerations, such movements mean ... and collect what was left behind." "Therefore, the French Revolution requires ... according to the interpretation of Walter Benjamin, is that if there is an industrialization ... which ends with the old order ... then, at least politically, we must be the height of industrialization." "That's the idea." "We have to recover the story." "It is no coincidence that the French Revolution use the costume of Rome." "And the consul, the first consul, Napoleon is." "In other words ..." "He proclaims himself consul by Caesar." "Want to recreate a political capacity ... and also a capacity management technique of power ... lost since the fall of the Roman Empire ... and for which the French kings of the 18th century ... are nothing but clowns are unable ... are deposed because they are unable, not because they are guilty." "And that is why the paradigm Napoleonic ... is associated with a new legislation ... soloniana the constitution ... the constitution draconian ... recovery history." "Engels once said: "We have recovered the story."" "It explored the history, which included not been resolved ... the proletarian revolution." "And the French Revolution had something of that spirit as well ... not only the historical analogies ... but also ... by saying ... we really are the ones that put an end to this story of pain ..." "Through revolutionary change." "A story of pain." "A story that always hits the target with harshness ..." "And people remain passive." "And Napoleon said, "What is this drama ..." "Destination?" "Politics is the destination. "" "He is talking to Goethe." "And this is the conception of the revolution of Walter Benjamin ... after leaving this metaphor of the locomotive ... he associates with the speed and always go forward ... we are always ahead, always in progress." "This is even more pronounced ... the Communist version of what the French Revolution." "Avant-garde." "Being one step ahead ... he would say, is utter nonsense, is not revolutionary." "Rather, it is the revision history of undigested problems ..." "This is revolution." "On Marx:" "The Class Struggles in France" "Encyclopedia, Volume 1, 1751: "The reason is a torch, that was lit by nature and is determined to enlighten us," "authority, on the contrary, at best, is just a stick, that was created by human hands, and in case of weakness can help us on the way which leads us to the future / "" "JAN Czajkowski, PIANO" ""The revolution is very time consuming." "Jean Leclerc ... before joining the revolution, was tutor in rural properties ... and the homes of the gentry in the towns of Normandy." "If you pay ... he gave lessons to children." "Then, excited by the successes of 1792 ... founded schools for the revolution." "Adults, surprised by the revolt ... needed to learn." "Citizens had to organize." "In 1822, Jean had arrived ... revolutionary practice to teach the four groups of education." "Now this small clan who patiently led educational ... knew the meaning of training and revolutionary practice." "The revolution, however, had disappeared." "Neither the Bonaparte regime could be called revolutionary." "It had been seven years the king returned to rule." "Only now, at this moment, the revolution would have begun, Jean thought." "At least there would be some revolutionaries trained." "It took four years ... to train a group of 20 adults at a rapid pace, with a capacity of citizens ... ie, capable of generating the revolutionary process." "Teach them to shoot was faster. "" "Four excerpts from:" "Al gran sole Carico d'amore by Luigi Nono " "Staging by Martin Kusej the State Opera in Stuttgart" "Part I, V:" "Paris in revolt" ""A man looks the other"" "Around me, are the corpses of my friends, we won " "We won, but around are the corpses of my friends " "CHILE NEW SCHOOL" "Let'stalkaboutthisquestion:" "Whatisarevolutionary?" "Tobegin,arevolutionaryisaprototype,notaperson...  buta prototype... or an aggregate state ... a collective state of aggregation that is, someone, something ... arisesbecauseit is instigatedbyotherpeople" "Yes, someone who is, in principle, before anything ... have any characteristic ... is a synapse, a bridge." "That is, a special quality ... connect with each other situations end ... situations of initiation." "A revolutionary is, in principle, not so much a person in action ... but a careful observer ... in whose eyes will connect these declines ... the collapse of the regimes, either cautious or hasty ... a start time, or vice versa ... someone who can unite the past with the future disappear." "At this time, this junction ... appears the figure of the revolutionary, an expert on marriage ... the fusion of a beginning and an end." "This is an installation artist." "A man between two companies." "Between two societies, two times, two states, two collectives ... perhaps even between two ideas of man are at stake." "That is, the assembly is an artist, someone who can build a story ... who knows when it's time to make this assembly." "cansaythatMirabeau,theFrenchRevolutionwasrevolutionary?" "Inthissense,isa revolutionaryMirabeau..." "Himself, and in all its manifestations mythological ... because he saw the moment as one that was still being defined." "When you start talking, he does not know how it will end." "He only knows what will end up with something, and maybe start something new." "A grand example of rhetoric, if you will." "comestheemissaryoftheking, createdarealcourt...  andsays:"Theparliamentwasdissolved."" "Thenhemakeshis entrance,notknowingwhatto say... andsaysthatthe kingdoes notexist ." "Hetriesto dividethe parliament." "That is, it works with loose associations." "The emissary arrives, a message from the king ..." "Andthenextday did not believeinthat." "Therefore, it can not be seen as individual speaker ... but rather as a template temporal states ... a suspended time, ie, connections and joints ... that for a moment seem to stop." "There's something I've been through it." "Exactly." "So it's not a revolutionary is not "something" ... but sees himself at the time of his own coming-to-be." "He becomes, in the course of his speech, something that was not before." "He even brings potential for action ... that previously would not have been able to engender." "At the same time means ... that the revolutionary situation, which takes the form of a person ... should be considered an experimental situation." "In turn, this implies that time is not yet clear ... which social and political forces ..." "prevail." "If we imagine a group that merges ...  isa mimeticelement." "mutualimitationof somethingthatrequirestime." "Thatis,Icamewith notesoraspeechover... wouldnotwork." "And for one simple reason ... if the revolutions are characterized ... put to the test by the social and political ... dissolving old bonds and creating new ... then comes into play a force field ... it is not clear what skills are needed." "The revolutionary can be authoritarian, can be a good friend ... can be distinguished by their physical strength, his ability to work ... but also by misanthropy or excessive philanthropy." "All these moments, all these codes ... by which begin to take shape ... the social and political relations are questioned and there arises the problem ... cohesive factors of which are appropriate in this particular time." "It's charisma is the legal ... is the deepest friendship, is the community ... the emphasis on community etc?" "So  appear opposite models, such as Danton and Robespierre, eg." "Whatweretheiroccupations?" "Danton was a physician, I understand, Robespierre was a lawyer." "Somanylawyershad intervened... manyacademicsworkingintherevolution." "Yes Just by watching the decisive revolutionary ... is that they always show a high degree ... knowledge of social and political level specialist." "Rarely naive figures like Joan of Arc ... lead revolutions." "It is always a consortium of experts, technocrats ... experts ... workingaheadof anyarea... infrontof asocialmodernization... andtheyknowthatrevolutionsnever workwithoutknowledge." "Infact,thereisnoexampleofarevolutionary... thathasemergedfromaconditionofmisery." "MahatmaGandhiis anothertypeoffamily,therewasapeasant ." "MaoZedong... comesfromafamilyofrelativecomfort." "Takeany oneofthem." "Spartacusisagladiatoreducatedelite ." "Itcanbe aslave,buta slave elite ." "Sotherearemany examples ... butamongthosefromthegroup ofaffected... whoreallysufferfromthemisery... ofmiserable... thereareno abletotake onthiscomplicatedtask...  tobeamediatorbetweenseasons." "Yes and no." "You're right ... the fate of the stripped of his rights ... is not to find for you the way to the revolution ... this is crucial." "There is a form of disenfranchisement, neglect ..." "Deterioration of resources." "It." "This is a side." "On the other hand, do not forget ... that the revolutionary acts on behalf of his own person ... but it is the embodiment of something is always a dramatis personae ... an actor in the most elementary sense, you have to put something on the scene ... give expression to a collective." "And the question arises:" "What kind of characters ... genera, collectively make up a person?" "E. .." "also means ... that not only unites the revolutionary past and future at a decisive point ... but also ... joining something like the lights and shadows manifest social." "He plays the role of developer in the photographic sense ... he has to take the company, this patchwork quilt of darkness ... to rescue a new visibility." "That's why I think he should adopt the characteristics of places ... in conditions of poverty and deterioration ... unknown areas of the forest overall and shed light on these things." "Was the figure of the revolutionary, not only unites past and future ... but also something light." "couldhavebeenalibrarianinthe interior." "Yes, or a school teacher, having worked for the development ... an environmental activist, etc.." "But you must have the ability to shed light on things ..." "Emerging from the shadows." "Exactly." "In the French Revolution also one of the crucial factors ... was the spectacle of the royal house ... the locus of power, representation, Versailles." "can move away ..." "It." "Turn it suddenly on the set of people, the masses." "Put something on the scene who lived in the shadows ... observable outside." ""We will return, as mass without number;" "we will reach all the way, vengeful ghosts of darkness, we will arrive, providing hands to each other " "To  Tanja Bunke, I quoted, who fell in combat, a requiem ..." "Achorusof womensingsharmonieslikethese." "Very beautiful harmonies, surprisingly beautiful." "And then come the tenors singing the "Internationale" ... slowly." "It is well ..." "International,thefuture." "The future ... they do not finish the word, it disappears ... and then is only a memory." "The music is frozen completely." "It's beautiful, suddenly, very strange ... how people on stage ... who only have their voices ... duel with the orchestra with his whole arsenal." "You can even say it's one of the themes of the play." "In a simple way, not psychological, like Wagner ... where the orchestra already knows what the singer will think." "Here is the orchestra against the chorus, because it sounds louder." "Russian working-class suburb, 1905" "This distinguishes a composer who was watching the workers ... played their parts for them and asked ..." ""They recognize it has to do with you?"" "They said: "Yes, but our work reality is much worse." "That's nice. "Then he thought:" It must be bad." "It must be clear until captemos what happens here." "And this contrast ... with composer safe, functional apparatus of the opera ... here is very clear, because he's a songwriter ... for who, say, La Scala is the den of lions ... and a charge for La Scala has to be a blast ... not in that said Boulez ..." "JOHANNES HARNEIT, but MAESTRO compound to blow the roof." "The surprising to us today, 30 years later ... is that those who wanted to turn the opera house, destroying it ... as Richard Wagner, in fact, kept it alive." "We see people who work in a Russian factory ... and the score says, "In scena di suoni lime and martelli" ... that is, the sounds of hammers and files are heard." "We do this with percussion on stage ... and the music he composed, which in itself is destructive ... is overridden and returns to being destroyed by these sounds." "Perhaps because the workers have said "not enough"." "And this music, which in turn destroys ... is very aggressive, and listen to it, looks like this ..." "At first you think it is just noise." "So a note structure, always triple." "You can imagine a kind of machine ... and suddenly the music is very quiet ... and listening to Dubinushka ... corner of this war you mentioned, a Russian song, the call to strike." "Here the melody is played by the eardrum, as the prelude ... the orchestra stops playing." "And now you hear the drum." "I'll play with the accompaniment, which is how its destruction." "You acknowledge, but notes that the struggle to make way." "Nine states that when workers hear on stage ... stop working and the tympani are listening." "We do just that." "Then resume work." "It is the "fate motif" of the work ... all the time this triple exhortation ... both the capitalists under the motto "forward" ..." "As the Communists, who say "enough"." "It's like hitting the table." "Then with the percussion, the whole orchestra ... is something that crosses all the work and say "this has to stop."" "Now, continue the eardrums." "I'll play the melody again." "Here, the orchestra back ..." "And now we come to the end of this phase." "One reason completely tonal ear with the accompanying ... that sounds so ..." "You acknowledge, but it is overlaid, still can not emerge." "And now back to work again with this reason." "The orchestra increases the volume, quarter tones, aggressiveness." "Now, enter the factory director ... and whenever Ninth portrays conflicts between workers and employers ... it is very ironic ... that is, a second, think that it neutralizes ..." ""Now comes the big kitsch revolutionary opera" ... for which he was reprimanded in Germany." "He avoids it, jumping to the semiparódia a recitative." "Enter the boss with a huge chord sequence." "I can not play everything at once, have to play in succession." "All this sound is its harmony, and the strings are touching." "He sings: "Why have stopped working?"" "This part shall be governed as a recitative from Mozart or Wagner." "Now, we hear again the melody of the strike on the flute ... the loudest voice." "But underneath there is a cluster, semitones adjacent to one another ... woodwind." "The metal, a semitone higher up ... as an accompaniment underneath." "Now, a worker ... the bastard, the central figure of the 2nd half, says ..." ""Reducing our salary is unfair to drain swamps."" "The other workers shout "Unfair, unfair, unfair ... do with their own money, not ours. "" "Then the director reacts ... the sound of cymbals ... ie, only noise ..." "He says: "I order you back to work."" "The Dubinushka starts again, the music to strike, the flutes." "You feel like the strike is taking shape." "Basically, the choir sings:" ""You go to work."" ""Go to work yourself."" "Then comes the threat of employer, and the ninth is singing alone." "So can demonstrate power, needs no power ... just says: "If in 15 min. are not working, they will repent."" "They will pay dearly." "And the music of the strike reaches the final stage." "At the same time, the instruments are entered." "Start a flute, another already plays the 2nd half, and we note that the idea arises." "They say: "You can not reduce the salary, let's go on strike."" "Meanwhile, low Sing ..." "And Pawel says: "They have to go on strike."" ""Sciopero." Anyone who has tried to catch a train in Italy ... know that word." "There are still many strikes." "There is an idea that scares as here, where the threat alone is shocking." "After the tenors say "Scioperiamo" and low "Sciopero, sciopero."" "They agree." "Now comes the most chord of the orchestra ... also recitative." "And he says: "I will resign the whole world."" "The biggest threat." "So, Pawel answers ..." ""And who is going to work, then?"" "Pause." "Then the traitor, "delatore" ... new cymbals ... says: "Let's find them."" "And Pawel says: "Of course, the scabs."" "That is, here also requires a decision." "And once it starts, starts Dubinushka ... the melody we heard several times, and now all is sung by the choir." "It would be nice if there was no follow up ... you would think that is a musical ... because only sings the chorus members." "But there is a follow up, if you remember the beginning ... where there were three notes to the factory, now we quintilhas ... ie, more complex work that needs to be done." "And the orchestra throughout the chorus does not help at all ... but re-represent the counterpart ... and plays the following monitoring." "You have to imagine them together." "It rules." "It's really an amazing song." "Ifyouthinkin70years peopleclashedwiththatmelody...  butdidnotpay attentiontowhatwasopposed tothatmelody." "Andthat'sthecraziestthing,peopledidnot likethe melody... but did not mention the war he wanted to show." "And I think it is fantastic." "The monitoring is so heavy ... the chorus, all on the scene trying to sing it ... and are happy to hit the right note." "The monitoring ... is impossible to separate one tone." "Had he done that ... would have been clear." "But it is precisely what he does." "And he did not do so is a sign ... her way of saying: "This world is no more."" "After the strike is repeated in the song, which is interesting." "Nono writes signs of repetition, something that was taboo." "In the new serial music ... was composed, by definition, without repetition." "This element strophic, this repetition is one of the great contradictions of Nono." "The decision to strike takes time, determination ... and return these forms to be possible." "JOHANNES HARNEIT, REGENT But not in the sense of returning to repeat ... but to show a thought process." "We represent this ... repeating it again, starting softly ... and let the decision come about gradually." "This is another ... moments well prepared ... as in the beginning, where the eardrums back again ... to keep the public abreast of everything in the score ... and nothing is reserved for the experts ... but it is accessible to everyone." "It is important to achieve this." "Factory director" "(Aka Minister Thiers, oppressor of the Commune)" "Pawel, the worker is murdered." "By Pawel funeral lament," "Deola, Tanjai / Many women in mourning" ""Production." "Means of production and relations of production." "Foreign relations of production and circulation." "SIBERIA, JANUARY 1918 Forms of state and conscience ... relationship with respect to production and distribution." "Relations and family law." "Warnings about aspects that should be mentioned here and not forgotten." "The war before peace." "Manner in which, during the war and armies ... certain economic relations such as wage labor ... machinery etc ... developed before the bourgeois society." "The relationship between force production ... and relations of movement were evident in the army. "" ""Production." "Means of production and relations of production." "Foreign relations of production and circulation." "Forms of state and conscience ... relationship with respect to production and distribution." "Relations and family law." "Warnings about aspects that should be mentioned here and not forgotten." "The war before peace." "Manner in which, during the war and armies ..."