ON WIELDING THE SUBVERSIVE SCALPEL
Published anonymously by Ken Knabb and others, including Isaac Cronin, under the name Council for the Eruption of the Marvelous.
Published anonymously by Ken Knabb and others, including Isaac Cronin, under the name Council for the Eruption of the Marvelous.
Article reprinted from the French journal CHRONIQUE DES SECRETS PUBLICS, published by the French "pro-situ" (post-situationist) group Centre de Recherche sur la Question Sociale, of which Charles was a member, along with Daniel Denevert and others.
Collects quotations from recent newspapers (including many mainstream publications such as Humanité and the New Republic) that commented on the Situationist International.
Pro-situationist tract exploring the subjectivity of revolutionary politics.
Brief communiqué from Ken Knabb's post-situationist (or "pro-situ") publishing house, the Bureau of Public Secrets.
Booklet by Knabb on the place of religion in situationist theory.
Scarce first edition, one of 750 copies.
Promotional sheet for books available from Ken Knabb's Bureau of Public Secrets, a situationist publishing concern active from the early 1970s to the present. No copies found in OCLC.
Text by Ken Knabb of the Bureau of Public Secrets, discussing Occupy Wall Street several weeks after it began.
Broadside by the American "pro-situationist" author Ken Knabb, discussing the 1979 Iranian Revolution; written in March, one month after the revolution's completion.
Short tribute to a Chinese left-libertarian group called "the 70s," who published the English-language magazine MINUS as well as the book THE REVOLUTION IS DEAD, LONG LIVE THE REVOLUTION (1976).
Leaflet by Knabb discussing the media's coverage of the Gulf War.
Leaflet from Ken Knabb's Bureau of Public Secrets, discussing recent demonstrations in France by "tens of thousands" of unemployed people at the Ecole Normale Superieure and Jussieu University.
Originally published as REICH: Mode d'emploi, by Editions Champ Libre (Paris, 1971), the book was translated and published in this form by Ken Knabb's Bureau of Public Secrets in 1973, and is an exploration of Wilhelm Reich's work within the context of situationist theory.