#1
cool paper about retro-fetishism, apocolyptic themes, cannibalism, frederic jameson and walter benjamin

http://sites.williams.edu/cthorne/articles/the-revolutionary-energy-of-the-outmoded/
#2
this sounds really fucking gay. im glad you shared you'er insight about free willy fucking james walt cannabilly jamin copalyptic theobilism.
#3
the vision of a world "in which objects have been handed down, not for our consumption, but for our care," the desire for the return to some lost mystical union with a spiritualized realm of objects, these things the author has mistaken for something other than the dream of capital itself. if anything, objects should to be more instrumentalized, more subordinated to the concrete needs of embodied humanity, or consumers.

here's what elaine scarry, a smart person, says:

human indifference to other persons is often explained and implicitly excused by pointing out that those who are indifferent are absorbed by their material wealth. But it is a deconstruction of the very nature of material wealth to permit, let alone excuse, this inattention. We sustain this deconstruction by simultaneously surrounding ourselves with material objects in everyday life while philosophically divesting ourselves of them, verbally dismissing and discrediting the importance of the material realm. This act of philosophic divestiture does not work to diminish or even regulate our own desire for objects but only works to permit us to be free of worrying about the objectlessness of other persons. If we cling to objects, we should trust our own clinging impulse; and once we trust that impulse we will acknowledge that such objects are precious; and once we confess that they are precious we will begin to articulate why they are precious; and once we articulate why they are precious, it will be self-evident why our desire for them must be regulated and why their benefits must be equitably distributed throughout the world. It is by crediting them that we will reach the insight that we only pretend to reach when we discredit them.

#4
but we already have people that attribute blanket preciousness and sentimentality to inanimate objects, theyre called hoarders and theyre among the most alienated members of our society