This performative, multi-media lecture re-reads Guy Debord’s book, The Society of the Spectacle (1967) with reference to the global Occupy movement, and the role social media and the Internet play in the facilitation and hindrance of this recent form of political activism. Debord claims that all ‘having’ — that is, all forms of accumulating capital — ‘derives its immediate prestige and its ultimate purpose from appearances’, and that individual reality, which is shaped by social forces, can ‘appear only if it is not actually real (Debord, thesis 18).’ Using the multiple functions and staggering proliferation of various image making technologies used to record and represent OCCUPY actions as a starting point, we respond to Debord’s propositi...
This essay provides an overview of some of the ideas concerning temporality that underpin Guy Debord...
This thesis explores the environmental movement’s controversial use of spectacular media to incite s...
In this paper, the author will offer a new and specofoc reading of the contemporary media society, t...
This paper is the textual component of a dialogic, performative, multi-media lecture that rereads Gu...
Spectacle 2.0 recasts Debord's theory of spectacle within the frame of 21st century digital capitali...
During the 1960s, the ‘Situationists’ defined ‘The Society of the Spectacle’ as the alienation of th...
The Situationist International (1957-72) and the groups that preceded it, such as the Lettrist Inter...
The advanced stage of capitalism that we now live in has brought many changes to the way that societ...
Linking the terms ‘spectacle’ and ‘speculation’ by virtue of their etymological roots (from the Lati...
Guy Debord (1931-1994) was the director of the International situationniste journal and de facto lea...
This study attends to Guy Debord's proposal of the "Society of the Spectacle", attempting to underst...
The Occupy movement has emerged in a historical crisis of global capitalism. It struggles for the re...
This paper argues that Debord’s La Société du Spectacle was a syncretism of contemporary US criticis...
In the wake of the events of September 11, 2001, the RETORT Collective published a collection of ess...
This paper presents an analysis of the visuality of Occupy Wall Street arguing that visuality was a ...
This essay provides an overview of some of the ideas concerning temporality that underpin Guy Debord...
This thesis explores the environmental movement’s controversial use of spectacular media to incite s...
In this paper, the author will offer a new and specofoc reading of the contemporary media society, t...
This paper is the textual component of a dialogic, performative, multi-media lecture that rereads Gu...
Spectacle 2.0 recasts Debord's theory of spectacle within the frame of 21st century digital capitali...
During the 1960s, the ‘Situationists’ defined ‘The Society of the Spectacle’ as the alienation of th...
The Situationist International (1957-72) and the groups that preceded it, such as the Lettrist Inter...
The advanced stage of capitalism that we now live in has brought many changes to the way that societ...
Linking the terms ‘spectacle’ and ‘speculation’ by virtue of their etymological roots (from the Lati...
Guy Debord (1931-1994) was the director of the International situationniste journal and de facto lea...
This study attends to Guy Debord's proposal of the "Society of the Spectacle", attempting to underst...
The Occupy movement has emerged in a historical crisis of global capitalism. It struggles for the re...
This paper argues that Debord’s La Société du Spectacle was a syncretism of contemporary US criticis...
In the wake of the events of September 11, 2001, the RETORT Collective published a collection of ess...
This paper presents an analysis of the visuality of Occupy Wall Street arguing that visuality was a ...
This essay provides an overview of some of the ideas concerning temporality that underpin Guy Debord...
This thesis explores the environmental movement’s controversial use of spectacular media to incite s...
In this paper, the author will offer a new and specofoc reading of the contemporary media society, t...