فهرست مطالب :
1. Introduction
Guy Debord’s Masterwork
Debord as the SI’s Main Archivist
Debord’s Practice of Exclusion in Shaping the SI
Including All Seventy SI Members in this Book
Rationale for Summarizing the Contents of Internationale Situationniste
Chapter Overviews
A Review of the Scholarship about the SI
Art History and the SI
Film Studies and the SI
Psychogeography and the Dérive
Détournement
The Spectacle
The SI in (Though Mostly Absent from) Education
Notes
2. Guy Debord, the Lettrists, and the Lettrist International, 1951–1957
Debord’s Background
Guy Debord Meets Isidore Isou and the Lettrists
Debord Moves to Paris, Joins the Lettrists
Mension and Papai
Ivan Chtcheglov
Michele Bernstein
Treatise on Slime and Eternity
Gil Wolman’s Film L’Anticoncept
Howls in Favor of Sade
Debord Splits from the Lettrists
The Formation of the Lettrist International: Phase 1 (1952–1953)
Ivan Chtcheglov’s “Formulary for a New Urbanism”
Psychogeography and the Dérive
“Theory of the Dérive”
The End of the LI’s First Phase
The Lettrist International, Phase 2 (1953–1957)
Alexander Trocchi
The LI Becomes More Politically Attuned
The LI Becomes More Exclusive
Chtcheglov’s Exclusion from the LI
The LI Takes on a New Enemy: Urbanism
Debord and Asger Jorn Meet
Détournement
A New Cartography: The Naked City
Jorn & Debord’s Fin de Copenhague
Now, the SI
Notes
3. The SI’s First Phase, Part One, 1957–1958
“One Step Back”
Debord’s Exclusion of Gil Wolman
The Founding of the Situationist International
Debord’s Report on the Construction of Situations
Dada and Surrealism
The Spectacle
Recuperation
Democracy at Work in Cosio
Debord’s Book Mémoires
The “Sabotage in Cosio”
The SI’s Second Conference, January 1958, Paris
Hans Platschek and the Founding of the German Section of the SI
The “Battle of Brussels”
Gallizio’s Turin Exhibition of Industrial Painting
The Guglielmi Affair, 1958
Internationale Situationniste, Issue One, June 1958
The Algerian War (1954–1962)
Provocative Images of Young Women
Debord’s Role in the SI’s First Year
Notes
4. The SI’s First Phase, Part Two, 1958–1960
Debord Persuades Constant to Become More Involved in the SI
Jorn Recruits the Spur Group
Debord’s Tape-Recorded Lecture at the Surrealist Event
Internationale Situationniste, Issue Two, December 1958
Spur Impresses Debord by Perpetrating a Scandal
New Members and Another Exclusion
The SI’s Third Conference, April 1959, Munich
Debord Publishes Mémoires and Meets Jorn’s Brother, Jorgen Nash
Debord Orchestrates a Convergence of Interventions in May 1959
Constant’s New Babylon
Jorn’s Modification Paintings
Gallizio’s Cavern of Anti-Matter Exhibit
Debord Criticizes Constant’s Forum Special Issue
Debord Confides in Constant and Becomes More Critical of Gallizio
Debord’s On the Passage of a Few People through a Rather Brief Moment in Time
Internationale Situationniste, Issue Three, December 1959
Debord and Henri Lefebvre Meet in Early 1960
The World as Labyrinth
Debord Excludes Har Oudejans and Anton Alberts
Debord Plans More Shake-Ups within the SI, and Gallizio Is Excluded
Debord Recruits Attila Kotanyi
Constant Resigns
Notes
5. The SI’s First Phase, Part Three, 1960–1962
The “Left Wing” and the “Right Wing” of the SI
Debord Recruits Attila Kotanyi
Jorn Recruits More Painters
Issue Four of Internationale Situationniste, June 1960
SI Member Andre Frankin’s Avant-Garde Play
Debord’s Collaboration with Daniel Blanchard of Socialism or Barbarism
Michele Bernstein’s Novelistic Détournement All the King’s Horses
The SI’s Fourth Conference, September 1960, London
Declaration of the 121
Internationale Situationniste, Issue Five, December 1960
Nash & the Spur Artists Perpetrate a Scandal and Make a Movie
Raoul Vaneigem
Raoul Vaneigem Meets Debord and Bernstein
Vaneigem and Kotanyi
Debord’s Third Film Critique of Separation
Wyckaert Is Excluded, Spur Breaks with van de Loo
Asger Jorn Resigns from the SI
Debord Resigns from Socialism or Barbarism (SB)
Debord’s Tape Recorded Lecture
Spur Artists Seek Refuge from Legal Troubles at Nash’s Drakabygget Farm
Internationale Situationniste, Issue Six, August 1961
The SI’s Fifth Conference, August 1961, Gothenburg
The Hamburg Theses
Bernstein Publishes The Night, Her Second Novelistic Détournement
Spur Artists Are Subjected to Legal Charges
Spur #7
The Exclusion of Spur & the Resignation of the Scandinavian Members
The End of the SI’s First Phase
Notes
6. The SI’s Second Phase, Part One, 1962–1966
Internationale Situationniste, Issue Seven, April 1962
The Second Situationist International
The SI’s Sixth Conference, November 1962, Antwerp
Internationale Situationniste, Issue Eight, January 1963
Debord and the SI Split from Henri Lefebvre
Debord Meets Alice Becker-Ho
Rene Vienet
Debord Meets with Zengakuren Members
Destruction rsg-6, June 1963
Attila Kotanyi & Peter Laugesen Are Excluded
Abraham Moles (aka “Lil’ Head”)
Internationale Situationniste, Issue Nine, August 1964
Chtcheglov’s “Letters from Afar”
Bernstein’s Article for the Times Literary Supplement
Trocchi’s Exclusion
Mustapha Khayati Contacts Debord
JV Martin’s Arrest & His House Is Blown Up
The SI’s First Attack on Abraham Moles (March 1965)
Khayati and Debord’s “Address to Revolutionaries in Algeria and All Countries”
Debord’s Article on the Watts Uprising
Debord Broadens the SI’s Reach into the United Kingdom and the United States
Internationale Situationniste, Issue Ten, March 1966
The SI’s Seventh Conference, July 1966, Paris
The Formation of the English Section of the SI
Now, the SI
Notes
7. The SI’s Second Phase, Part Two, 1966–1967
Student Protests before the Strasbourg Scandal
The Beginning of the Strasbourg Scandal
On the Poverty of Student Life
The Return of the Durutti Column
Protests at the University of Strasbourg, Fall 1966
The Garnautins
The SI Becomes Infamous
An American Section of the SI Begins to Take Shape46
Bruce Elwell, Robert Chasse, and Tony Verlaan
The English Section, David Wise, and Ben Morea
Internationale Situationniste, Issue Eleven, October 1967
Bernstein Resigns in Late 1967
The Society of the Spectacle and The Revolution of Everyday Life
Debord’s The Society of the Spectacle
Vaneigem’s The Revolution of Everyday Life
Vaneigem Travels to New York City
The Exclusion of the SI’s English Section
The SI Moves on from Strasbourg to Nanterre
Notes
8. The SI’s Second Phase, Part Three, 1967–1968
Nanterre University, 1967–1968
The SI’s Initial Presence at Nanterre University
Daniel Cohn-Bendit Becomes the Recognized Leader of the Radical Students
Riesel and the Enragés Contact Debord
Nanterre University, January to Early May, 1968
Students Arrested at the Sorbonne (May 2–6)
The Enragés and Other Radicals Occupy the Sorbonne (May 6)
More Violent Clashes (May 7 to 9)
The First “Night of the Barricades” (May 10)
The Sorbonne Occupied Again (May 14)
Worker Occupations of Factories (May 14–17)
The Council for the Maintenance of Occupations, aka the CMDO (May 17 to Mid-June)
More Wildcat Strikes and Ten Million People Stop Working (May 18–29)
De Gaulle’s May 30 Speech, Which Ends May ’68
The SI and Enragés Leave Paris
Rene Vienet’s Book about May ’68
Naïve Dreamers
Notes
9. The SI’s Third Phase, 1968–1972
Fame and New Members in the French Section after May ’68
The Formation of the American Section
The Formation of the SI’s Italian Section
The Return of Charles Fourier: The French Section’s Last Public Action
The Italian and American Sections Publish Their Own Journals
Debord Begins to Have Doubts about the SI’s French Section
Debord Steps down as Editor of Internationale Situationniste
Internationale Situationniste, Issue Twelve, September 1969
The SI’s Eighth (and Final) Conference, September 1969, Venice
Exclusion of Alain Chevalier and Debord’s Hard Line about Participation
After Venice, Vaneigem Felt that the SI was a “Dead Movement”
“Is the Reichstag Burning?”
The Orientation Debate Becomes the Means for Weakening the SI
The Resignation of Patrick Cheval
The Exclusions of Chasse and Elwell, Decided in Wolsfeld and Trier
Tensions Mount in the Italian Section, Leading to More Exclusions
Beaulieu’s Resignation
Debord’s “Remarks on the SI Today”
Salvadori’s Exclusion
Verlaan and Horelick Respond to Debord
Debord, Vienet, and Riesel Form a Tendency Aimed at Vaneigem
Vaneigem’s Letter of Resignation (November 14, 1970)
Horelick and Verlaan Are Excluded, Ending the American Section
Debord’s Response to Vaneigem’s Resignation
Sebastiani’s “Resignation”
The Last Departures
The Last Months of the Situationist International
Debord’s Masterwork: The Situationist International
Notes
10. On the Passage of Guy Debord’s Life after the Situationist International, 1972–1994
Asger Jorn’s Death
Michele Bernstein and Ralph Rumney Get Married
The Film The Society of the Spectacle
Champot
Ingirum imus nocte et consumimur igni
Arles
The Assassination of Gerard Lebovici
Considerations on the Assassination of Gerard Lebovici
Editions Gerard Lebovici and Debord’s The Game of War Board Game
Debord’s Comments on The Society of the Spectacle
The ICA’s Traveling Museum Exhibition about the SI
Leaving Editions Gerard Lebovici
Debord’s Last Years
Guy Debord: His Art and His Times
Notes
Appendix 1: Membership of the Situationist International
Notes
Appendix 2: The Return of the Durutti Column
Introduction
Notes
Appendix 3: Delirium: Ivan Chtcheglov’s Last Dérive
Appendix 4: Chronology of the Lettrist International and the Situationist International
1951
1952
1953
1954
1955
1956
1957
1958
1959
1960
1961
1962
1963
1964
1965
1966
1967
1968
1969
1970
1971
1972
Bibliography
Index