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Egreso: Sobre Comunidad, Duelo y Mark Fisher

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Este libro es el primero que considera el legado del escritor y crítico cultural Mark Fisher. Su punto de partida es el momento en que un grupo de sus alumnos de posgrado recibe la noticia de su suicidio. Afectado por el vacío de la pérdida, Matt Colquhoun, uno de esos estudiantes, logra hilvanar un texto elegíaco, híbrido, a medio camino entre la memoria coral y la investigación teórica.

¿Pero puede ser la muerte el punto de partida de algo? ¿De qué? El “espacio de duelo” abierto entre colegas, compañeros y amigos tras esa dolorosa jornada de 2017, la experiencia de un padecer colectivo y de un sentido de solidaridad renovado que se expresó en eventos conmemorativos, conversaciones después de hora en el campus universitario y noches de baile melancólico, se convierten en la incitación ideal para el abordaje de uno de los mayores interrogantes fisherianos: ¿qué tipo de lazos comunitarios podemos todavía cultivar bajo las formas atomizadas de existencia contemporánea? Esta cuestión, de una urgencia que se manifiesta hoy tanto en la alarmante propagación de subculturas neorreaccionarias como en la impotencia de la izquierda para producir sentidos comunes más allá de las reivindicaciones identitarias, es central para considerar las vías de escape de las estructuras sociales hegemónicas. Solo la vivencia de una comunidad permitirá sentar las bases de una renovada conciencia política.

Es siguiendo este espíritu que Colquhoun nos propone valorar el aporte de Fisher sin acudir a la figura canonizable del autor. Deja que hablen a través de él las fuerzas impersonales que siempre intentó evocar, acentuando su capacidad para tejer redes y pensar con otros. Al revivir sus días como “estudiante renegado” miembro de la Unidad de Investigaciones sobre Cultura Cibernética, sus años como agitador en la blogósfera, o la resonancia afectiva que impactó en personas como Simon Reynolds, Sadie Plant o Kodwo Eshun, este libro mapea los diferentes umbrales de canalización colectiva mediante los cuales Fisher intentó escapar del realismo capitalista. Las implicaciones del término “egreso”, una fórmula que aparece en sus últimos escritos para establecer un paralelismo entre el contacto con el más allá de los personajes de Lovecraft y una posible fuga del sistema, constituyen el entramado a partir del cual imaginar otros mundos posibles.

368 pages, Paperback

First published March 10, 2020

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Matt Colquhoun

8 books81 followers

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Displaying 1 - 18 of 18 reviews
Profile Image for goopycarb.
44 reviews1 follower
February 16, 2021
“Death is real
Someone’s there and then they’re not
And it’s not for singing about
It’s not for making into art
When real death enters the house, all poetry is dumb
When I walk into the room where you were
And look into the emptiness instead
All fails
My knees fail
My brain fails
Words fail”

Excerpt From
Egress: on Mourning, Melancholy and Mark Fisher
Matt Colquhoun
*
A stirring, melancholy book about death, friendship and Mark Fisher’s philosophy. I felt the emptiness oozing through many times, it seemed as if words could fail any minute but it didn’t. Matt writes beautifully, and what’s more comforting to me is that it resembles the melancholy signature to Mark’s own writing, as if the book was haunted with it. It is the personal and the political in one, with somber undertones that unsurprisingly worked for both. I especially enjoyed the brief analyses of shows such as The Walking Dead and Westworld (since I watched these shows) because it provided such an interesting perspective I would not have considered before. As usual, the concept of The Outside and The Real and The Other will forever be enigmatic, elusive and fascinating to me.
Profile Image for Mihai Tapu.
5 reviews21 followers
April 19, 2022
"Take care. It's a desert out there..."
Profile Image for D.
314 reviews31 followers
January 4, 2022
Entré a este libro esperando un comentario sobre las principales ideas de Mark Fisher y, sobre todo, un relato del duelo de quien fue su alumno y amigo. Además de eso, Egreso es un trabajo brillante de teoría social. De algún modo, Colquhoun logró algo que pensaba que era imposible: en lugar de saltar "de lo personal a lo político", de moverse entre dos terrenos, lo que de por sí habría bastado, encontró el punto en el que ambas cosas ya están hechas de una misma materia. Egreso rompe las jerarquías: se puede comentar una reunión de amigxs de Fisher, un libro de filosofía contemporánea y una serie de televisión en el mismo nivel. Y como si esto fuera poco, el trabajo sobre los conceptos de Fisher los dota de nueva vida, los continúa sin traicionarlos; en particular, la noción de "egreso" que da nombre al título parece permitir que nazca una teoría fisheriana luego de Mark. Colquhoun, finalmente, también hace un trabajo reflexivo sobre la amistad como categoría filosófica: la teoría se dobla sobre sí misma, da lugar a sus propias condiciones.

Y me hizo lagrimear. Un libro brillante.
Profile Image for Lucy.
75 reviews
Read
January 6, 2022
a fitting tribute to mark fisher stylistically; the interweaving of colquhoun's personal experience of grieving fisher's loss within the goldsmiths community with theoretical analysis of fisher's work and that which fisher citied (both in terms of straight theory and the cultural affects). at points it becomes colquhoun's own analysis of cultural products, obviously inspired by fisher (and the writing on westworld and on the walking dead is really interesting) but drifts a bit far from the act of remembering fisher and engaging directly with his work. i do guess that the best way to remember mark fisher is to continue work in a similar vein, but whether this is the place for it is the question. most importantly though, colquhoun stresses the key point of fisher - the point often eclipsed by the misreading of capitalist realism as doomer - is that of community, of reaching beyond the parameter of the atomised individual and into community, towards each other.
Profile Image for Joel.
152 reviews26 followers
April 20, 2021
A reasonably strong work from Matt Colquhoun, Egress is keenly aware of it's own blindspots while offering insights into the revolutionary powers of friendship and community. I think I would have gotten more out of it had I been more familiar with the works of Colquhoun's key touchstones (Bataille, Blanchot, Marcuse, et al.). Keen to see where Colquhoun goes next, both in reflecting on the work of Mark Fisher and developing his own line of thought.
31 reviews
April 20, 2020
great book. much respect to Colquhoun for tackling a very complex and emotionally charged issue, at both the communal and individual level.
Profile Image for Dominik.
176 reviews8 followers
November 13, 2024
Stan żałoby po Fisherze.
Colquhoun usiłuje wziąć w garść to, co pozostawił po sobie Mark, ale osobliwy (słownikowo) sposób, łącząc autobiograficzne treści z lewicowo-skręcającą filozofią, przede wszystkim Bataillem, Deleuzem, Guattarim, Blanchotem, Landem, Weil czy Wendy Brown. W ostatniej kwestii udaje się to całkiem zręcznie dzięki porównawczej analizie pism wyżej wymienionych z dziedzictwem Fishera, wyłaniając źródła teoretyczne dla realizmu kapitalistycznego, anulowaniu przyszłości i osobliwego i dziwacznego. Kluczowym pojęciem jest tu Zewnętrze, które jednak w przedstawionym świetle brzmi raczej jak iteracja lub synonim dla Realnego Lacana - jeśli jest inaczej, to niestety stworzenie rozróżnienia się nie udało. Wyjście, w tym wypadku, byłoby zatem wkroczeniem w Zewnętrzne (Realne), czyli... po prostu transgresją na Bataillowski wzór.
książka ma działać jako nieśmiałe przedstawienie szerokości tego, czym Fisher się zajmował przez czas pisania, jednak z różnym skutkiem. przykładowo, podnoszenie (nie)świadomości w oparciu o Luckasa, chyba najciekawszy aspekt późnego Fishera, jest potraktowany raczej niedogłębnie, jako pretekst dla umieszczenia zedytowanej magisterki w książce. poza niewielkimi fragmentami autobiograficzne skręty dają niewiele zwrotnych idei na podnoszone tematy - autobiografia zetem nie służy politycznemu publicznemu, a raczej personalnemu i prywatnemu, co... mija się z celem książki. autor obiecuje też choćby pokazać związki pomiędzy Fisherem a Spinozą, ale totalnie się nie wywiązuje ze swojej obietnicy, a szkoda, bo to mogłoby być najwcześniejsze, nawet wcześniejsze od Schillera źródło rewitalizacji filozofii przedmarksistowskiej do celów lewoskrętnych.
godne pochwały są natomiast przecięcia Landowskiej krytyki lewicy z polityką Fishera i treściwe wprowadzenie w akceleracjonizm.
nie unika się tu niestety romantyzacji głównej postaci. paradoksalny skręt w indywidualizm - skupiwszy się nobilitacji życia, pism i biografii trafia się w ścianę jednostkowości, zamiast skupieniu na grupie lub chociaż idei, która by tę grupę wzbogaciła.
Profile Image for Ryan.
386 reviews14 followers
November 10, 2025
I swear I (probably) understand (some of) this book. What I have trouble with though, is translating that understanding from the depths of my brain to actual words that makes sense to myself and other people. I know it about writer/philosopher/musician Mark Fisher. I know it's about mourning and escaping the capitalist hellscape we live in and maybe music. And, most importantly, it's about community.
I underlined a fairly large amount of lines, and even made some notes in the margins, but none of them feel like they can help get me towards an uncluttered, sensical review. I need someone out there to also read this book, and then sit down with me and have a long, boring conversation about it.
I can say that I got some music recommendations and will probably re watch both Walking Dead and Westworld. Other than that I was just happy to get through it without giving up or feeling like a complete moron.
Profile Image for Jackson Ford.
104 reviews4 followers
February 22, 2023
If you’re a Mark Fisher fan at all, this is a must read. Colquhoun summarizes the essential parts of Fisher’s thoughts in the context of the ongoing engagement of the swirling cultural, socio-political, and economic madness that we call the modern world. Additionally, Colquhoun elucidates the emotional experience of life and community after Mark’s passing. Throughout the book he creatively engrafts readers into Fisher’s optimism and imagination. It was encouraging see many interactions with contemporary black anticolonial writers, as well as experience Colquhoun’s own critical engagement with televisions shows, movies, and literature.
Profile Image for Er Yáñez.
307 reviews4 followers
April 8, 2025
I've come to realize why I resonate so much with Fisher's work by the way Colquhon tackles with integrity and tenderness the way community is a necessity through even the most personal process of grief. By way of Colquhon's writing shines a need to not let the personal be apart from the political or even the theoretical, to write with others in mind, for others and the effects we collectively have on one another. It's beautiful while a bit convoluted. This is emotionally powerful. No passing is in vain and we must continue not "legacies" but the fullest experience of ideas. Even in pain there's a chance to continue and find hope.
115 reviews7 followers
Read
January 31, 2021
i've been following the xenogothic blog for a while and although there's not a huge amount of content here you couldn't get from reading that, or even better Fisher himself, the framing of the problems of left melancholy for lost futures in juxtaposition with specific mourning of Fisher really makes it hit home. really nice, thoughtful secondary reading
Profile Image for Goatboy.
273 reviews115 followers
March 24, 2024
Very enlightening work by someone who was one of Fisher's students when he passed away. Does a great job of reviewing Fisher's works while also incorporating those thoughts into a memoir of experiencing the devastating event of Fisher's suicide, all while tying thoughts outward to other philosophers and thinkers. If you are already a Fisher fan you probably need to read this.
Profile Image for Danny Mason.
342 reviews11 followers
May 22, 2022
I bought this when I finished all of Fisher's own books so that I could keep going deeper into that world but never actually got around to reading it. Now that I'm delving back into Fisher for my dissertation, I figured this was a good time to finally pick it up.

I thought Colquhoun dealt with the problem of trying to write about Fisher in a personal and emotionally sensitive way while also keeping to the tone of what is mostly an academic text really well. It never felt like the links between the real world events and the theory were arbitrary or insensitive, but importantly related to another.

It's a dense book, in a good way in that it's packed full of ideas and I found myself pretty regularly taking notes and plucking out interesting concepts, but also in the sense that I could sometimes tell it began life as a dissertation. I've seen on Twitter that Colquhoun is writing a new book and I'm really looking forward to it, you could kind of tell that the best parts of this book were the parts that were written last so hoping that form keeps up.
Displaying 1 - 18 of 18 reviews

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