
New Books in Science, Technology, and Society McKenzie Wark, “Molecular Red: Theory for the Anthropocene” (Verso, 2015)
Oct 10, 2016
McKenzie Wark, a scholar in media studies and culture, dives into her acclaimed work, 'Molecular Red: Theory for the Anthropocene.' She interlaces Soviet and American contexts to explore labor's centrality in knowledge production. Wark discusses Alexander Bogdanov’s influence on understanding ecological crises and critiques of society through literature, notably by Andrey Platonov. She also connects these ideas to Kim Stanley Robinson’s Mars Trilogy, showcasing how science fiction can envision better futures amidst current societal challenges.
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Molecular Flows and Metabolic Rifts
- Molecular flows of elements like carbon, nitrogen, and phosphorus define Earth's metabolic rifts.
- Labor extracts but these flows don't return, creating unsustainable ecological imbalances.
Bogdanov's Tectology Explained
- Bogdanov's tectology studies how labor organizes knowledge across fields by transferring and testing concepts.
- He envisioned conscious, cooperative knowledge production as essential to building worlds.
Platonov’s Comradeship and Nature
- Platonov stresses comradeship as shared danger, critiquing unequal burdens in Soviet life.
- His proletarian modernist writings reveal the persistent struggle between labor and an indifferent nature.











