140 Quotes by Mark Fisher

  • Author Mark Fisher
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    The pandemic of mental anguish that afflicts our time cannot be properly understood, or healed, if viewed as a private problem suffered by damaged individuals.

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  • Author Mark Fisher
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    Those who can’t remember the past are condemned to have it resold to them forever.

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  • Author Mark Fisher
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    The long, dark night of the end of history has to be grasped as an enormous opportunity. The very oppressive pervasiveness of capitalist realism means that even glimmers of alternative political and economic possibilities can have a disproportionately great effect. The tiniest event can tear a hole in the grey curtain of reaction which has marked the horizons of possibility under capitalist realism. From a situation in which nothing can happen, suddenly anything is possible again.

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  • Author Mark Fisher
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    We could go so far as to say that it is the human condition to be grotesque, since the human animal is the one that does not fit in, the freak of nature who has no place in the natural order and is capable of re-combining nature’s products into hideous new forms.

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  • Author Mark Fisher
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    The role of capitalist ideology is not to make an explicit case for something in the way that propaganda does, but to conceal the fact that the operations of capital do not depend on any sort of subjectively assumed belief. It is impossible to conceive of fascism or Stalinism without propaganda – but capitalism can proceed perfectly well, in some ways better, without anyone making a case for it.

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  • Author Mark Fisher
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    Lowering our expectations, we are told, is a small price to pay for being protected from terror and totalitarianism.

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  • Author Mark Fisher
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    If the figure of discipline was the worker-prisoner, the figure of control is the debtor-addict.

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  • Author Mark Fisher
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    The idea that the world we experience is a solipsistic delusion projected from the interior of our mind consoles rather than disturbs us, since it conforms with our infantile fantasies of omnipotence; but the thought that our so-called interiority owe its existence to a fictionalized consensus will always carry an uncanny charge.

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