Articles by Malcolm Bull
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The Decline of Decadence
NLR 94, July-August 2015, pp. 83-104in
Subjects: Art , Philosophy
From Nietzsche to Lukács, decadence was a matter of cultural disintegration and social atomization under pressure of capitalist modernity, but such talk has dwindled. Malcolm Bull asks whether the private languages of conceptual art are decadent or undecadent. And is the market a substitute communicator of shared values?
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The Politics of Falling
NLR 86, March-April 2014, pp. 129-140in
Subjects: Philosophy
In conclusion, Bull replies to his critics, discussing the status of valuation and the scope of will to power; Heidegger and the question of nihilism; and the logic of extra-egalitarianism.
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Also available in Spanish -
Levelling Out
NLR 70, July-August 2011, pp. 5-24in
Subjects: Philosophy , Political Theory and Strategy
Beyond existing arguments about equality, might the praxes of permanent and passive revolution offer a way to conceptualize a more expansionary levelling? Drawing on motifs from Nietzsche, Babeuf, Marx and Gramsci, Malcolm Bull traces the contours and consequences of extra-egalitarianism.
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Also available in Spanish -
Green Cabinet, White Cube
NLR 62, March-April 2010, pp. 84-97in
Subjects: Aesthetics
The necessity of Arcadia, as fabular vantage-point for clear vision of the world we inhabit. Malcolm Bull follows a wooded path leading from the mythological parallels of Renaissance art to the modern gallery space.
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Also available in Spanish -
Introduction to Special Issue on Globalization and Biopolitics
NLR 45, May-June 2007, pp. 5-6in
Subjects: Social Theory
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Also available in Spanish -
Vectors of the Biopolitical
NLR 45, May-June 2007, pp. 7-25in
Subjects: Philosophy , Social Theory
Taking coordinates from Aristotle, Malcolm Bull finds in Agamben’s biopolitics and Nussbaum’s capabilities approach the disconnected fragments of a lost vision of society, adumbrated by Marx, glimpsed and rejected by Arendt. Strange meetings as the trajectories of the disenfranchised and the empowered, human and non-human, converge.
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Also available in Spanish and Italian -
States of Failure
NLR 40, July-August 2006, pp. 5-25in
Subjects: Philosophy , Political Theory and Strategy
The question of agency remains the central lacuna in the construction of systemic alternatives. Building on ‘The Limits of Multitude’ in NLR 35, Malcolm Bull proposes a reconceptualization of the relation between collective will and invisible hand. Can bearings drawn from Hegel, Gramsci, Sartre indicate the route to a new global order through dissolution of the Western imperial state?
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Also available in Spanish and Hungarian -
The Limits of Multitude
NLR 35, September-October 2005, pp. 19-39in
Subjects: Philosophy , Political Theory and Strategy
What, if any, agencies of political change exist today—and how should they be conceived? Tracing the long tradition of contrasts between a ‘people’ and a ‘multitude’, Malcolm Bull argues that the differing resolutions of them by Hobbes and Spinoza have descended to the twenty-first century, issuing into a contemporary stand-off between market globalization and populist reactions to it.
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Also available in Spanish and Italian -
Between the Cultures of Capital
NLR 11, September-October 2001, pp. 95-113in
Subjects: Aesthetics , Art
T. J. Clark’s landmark study, Farewell to an Idea, takes the art of modernism to be a convulsive attempt to imagine modernity in forms other than the triumph of capitalism. Malcolm Bull suggests it might be better conceived as a fold in the overlap between two contrasting cultures of capitalism, classical and commodity, of which only one is left today.
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Also available in Spanish -
Where is the Anti-Nietzsche?
NLR 3, May-June 2000, pp. 121-145in
Subjects: Philosophy
If uncritically lyrical receptions of Nietzsche are receding, who has truly resisted his ultimate seduction—‘reading for victory’? Mere rejection of Nietzsche’s ideals does not escape his lure, Malcolm Bull argues. Only the standpoint of the subhuman is proof against his ecology of value.
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Also available in Spanish and Japanese -
Slavery and the Multiple Self
NLR I/231, September-October 1998, pp. 94-131in
Subjects: Philosophy
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The Ecstasy of Philistinism
NLR I/219, September-October 1996, pp. 22-41in
Subjects: Aesthetics , Philosophy
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Vision and Totality
NLR I/207, September-October 1994, pp. 134-144in
Subjects: Aesthetics , Philosophy
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