Now available: All notebooks from 001-100

Documenta (13)-e-books

German Site

  • Abraham Cruzvillegas
  • Ada Lovelace
  • Alanna Heiss
  • Alejandro Jodorowsky
  • Alexander Kluge
  • Alexei Penzin
  • Ana Prvacki & Irina Aristarkhova
  • Andrew Ross
  • Annemarie Sauzeau
  • Anton Zeilinger
  • Avery F. Gordon
  • Ayreen Anastas & Rene Gabri
  • Bambule:
  • Bifo - Franco Berardi
  • Bifo - Franco Berardi
  • Boris Groys
  • Brian Holmes
  • Bruno Bosteels
  • Carolyn Christov-Bakargiev
  • Carolyn Christov-Bakargiev
  • Christian Kuhtz
  • Christoph Menke
  • Chus Martínez
  • Claire Pentecost
  • Cornelius Castoriadis
  • Critical Art Ensemble
  • Daniel Heller-Roazen
  • Dario Gamboni
  • David Levi Strauss
  • David Link
  • Dietmar Dath
  • Dinh Q Lê
  • Donna Haraway
  • Dorothea von Hantelmann
  • Doug Ashford, Julie Ault, Group Material
  • Durs Grünbein
  • Eduardo Viveiros de Castro
  • Emily Jacir & Susan Buck-Morss
  • Erkki Kurenniemi
  • Etel Adnan
  • Eyal Weizman
  • Francesco Matarrese
  • Furio Jesi
  • G.M. Tamás
  • George Chan
  • Graham Harman
  • Griselda Pollock
  • György Lukács
  • Hrach Bayadyan
  • Ian Wallace
  • Ida Applebroog
  • Ingo Niermann
  • Issa Samb
  • Iwona Blazwick
  • Jalal Toufic
  • Jill Bennett
  • Jimmie Durham
  • Jolyon Leslie
  • Judith Butler
  • Karen Barad
  • Kenneth Goldsmith
  • Lawrence Weiner
  • Lydia Davis
  • Mariam & Ashraf Ghani
  • Mariana Castillo Deball & Roy Wagner
  • Mario Bellatin
  • Mario Garcia Torres
  • Mark Lombardi
  • Marta Kuzma
  • Matias Faldbakken
  • Melanie Klein
  • Michael Hardt
  • Michael Taussig
  • Nalini Malani & Arjun Appadurai
  • Nanni Balestrini
  • Nawal El Saadawi
  • Pamela M. Lee
  • Pascal Rousseau
  • Paul Ryan
  • Péter György
  • Raimundas Malašauskas
  • Romaine Moreton
  • Rosemarie Trockel
  • Rudolf Arnheim
  • Salah M. Hassan
  • Salvador Dalí
  • Sarah Rifky
  • Silvia Federici
  • Sonallah Ibrahim
  • Song Dong
  • Stephen Muecke
  • Suely Rolnik
  • Thomas Mann & Theodor W. Adorno
  • Vandana Shiva
  • Vyacheslav Akhunov
  • W.J.T. Mitchell
  • Walter Benjamin
  • William Kentridge & Peter L. Galison
  • Édouard Glissant & Hans Ulrich Obrist
  • Éric Alliez
G.M. Tamás

G.M. Tamás

Innocent Power

In his essay, G. M. Tamás (*1948), Hungarian philosopher as well as former and actual dissident, examines the character of “innocent power.” Power is per se destructive, and its effects are visible in different kinds of ruins, such as romantic ruins, war ruins, and ruins created by contemporary art. Innocent power, like capital, is impersonal and conceptual; it is a collection of concepts that has the “legitimizing” character of “knowledge.” Its recognition as the prevalent order is linked to the way we know.  Thus, resistance against innocent power is illegal and unintelligent. But if there are still possible forms of resistance and rebellion against the consequences it may have, such as servitude and humiliation or deliberate imposition of misery, they are made ipso facto unreasonable.

G.M. Tamás
Innocent Power

By G.M. Tamás

Of the serie:
dOCUMENTA (13): 100 Notizen - 100 Gedanken No. 013

Deutsch/Englisch

2011. 24 pp., 1 ill.

15.10 x 21.10 cm
softcover

available

ISBN 978-3-7757-2862-1

€ 6.00

ISBN 978-3-7757-2862-1

Also available as e-book

€ 3.99

ISBN 978-3-7757-3042-6

Subscriptions to the whole notebooks series are also available:

100 Notes - 100 Thoughts
A series of 100 notebooks published in conjunction with dOCUMENTA (13)
Each is 24-48 pages; prices vary according to size
10.5 x 14.8 cm, € 4.00
14.8 x 21.0 cm, € 6.00
17.6 x 25.0 cm, € 8.00
Release dates from March 2011 to summer 2012
For end customers: Free delivery within Europe

approx. € 600,00

Order number: 317042