In this daring essay inspired by Nietzsche,
Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari redefine the relation
between the state and its war machine. Far from being a
part of the state, warriers (the army) are nomads who always
come from the outside and keep threatening the authority
of the state. In the same vein, nomadic science keeps infiltrating
royal science, undermining its axioms and principles. Nomadology is
a speedy, pocket-sized treatise that refuses to be pinned
down. Theorizing a dynamic relationship between sedentary
power and "schizophrenic lines of flight," this
volume is meant to be read in transit, smuggled into urban
nightclubs, offices, and subways.
Deleuze and Guattari propose a creative and resistant ethics of
becoming-imperceptible, strategizing a continuous invention of
weapons on the run. An anarchic bricolage of ideas uprooted from
anthropology, aesthetics, history, and military strategy, Nomadology carries
out Deleuze's desire to "leave philosophy, but to leave it
as a philosopher." |