Artikelen

The Nearly Forgotten Futures of Acid Communism: Foucault and Antonioni at Zabriskie Point

Auteurs

  • Todd Landon Barnes Ramapo College of New Jersey (LCCT)

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.21827/krisis.45.1.42381

Trefwoorden:

Acid communism, Psychedelics, Foucault, Aesthetic theory, Marxism, Antonioni

Samenvatting

With a focus on the 1970s—in particular, narratives recounting Michel Foucault’s 1975 LSD experience at Zabriskie Point in Death Valley, as well as Michelangelo Antonioni’s 1970 film Zabriskie Point—this article seeks to recover any politically or aesthetically radical potential that psychedelics might still retain, given neoliberalism’s recent recouperation, containment, legalization, medicalization, and even promotion of these drugs. Drawing upon work by Mark Fisher, Herbert Marcuse, and others, I read these two events (Foucault’s LSD experience and Antonioni’s film) emblematically and genealogically, as symptoms or representations of how larger discourses, ideas, and bodies intersected with psychedelics in the 1970s.

Biografie auteur

Todd Landon Barnes, Ramapo College of New Jersey (LCCT)

Todd Landon Barnes is Professor and Convener of Literature at Ramapo College of New Jersey, where he also teaches courses in the Philosophy program. He holds a Ph.D. in Rhetoric, with a Designated Emphasis in Film Studies, from the University of California, Berkeley. His book, Shakespearean Charity and the Perils of Redemptive Performance, was published by Cambridge University Press in 2020. His research and publications have focused on the fields of Shakespeare, critical theory, performance studies, and film studies.

Gepubliceerd

2025-12-17

Citeerhulp

Barnes, Todd Landon. 2025. “The Nearly Forgotten Futures of Acid Communism: Foucault and Antonioni at Zabriskie Point”. Krisis | Tijdschrift Voor Hedendaagse Filosofie 45 (1): 59-74. https://doi.org/10.21827/krisis.45.1.42381.