Is aggression inevitable?
E105

Is aggression inevitable?

“There is no such thing as a raw, natural, aggressive urge that underlies human violence. While we inherit defense mechanisms, they work only when triggered culturally.” So opens John Protevi’s Regimes of Violence: Toward a Political Anthropology, which takes as its biocultural basis that social practices shape our bodies and minds, and analyzes human aggression throughout history: early nomadic foragers, organized sports, berserkers and blackout rages, maroons escaping slavery, the January 6th invasion of the US Capitol, and responses to the Covid-19 pandemic. Protevi entwines the philosophical with the anthropological and considers why humans’ capacity for cooperation and sharing is persistently overlooked by stories of aggression and warfare.

This book is an important contribution to the studies of Deleuze and Guattari, and here, Andrew Culp (Dark Deleuze) and Protevi (“joyous Deleuze”) dig into myriad shades of human expression from philosophical and cultural perspectives.



John Protevi is professor of French studies and philosophy at Louisiana State University and author of Regimes of Violence: Toward a Political Anthropology; Political Affect: Connecting the Social and the Somatic; Life, War, Earth: Deleuze and the Sciences; and Edges of the State.


Andrew Culp is director of the MA Aesthetics and Politics program at California Institute of the Arts and author of Dark Deleuze and A Guerrilla Guide to Refusal



Episode references:
Francisco Varela
Evan Thompson
Esequiel Di Paolo
Hanne De Jaegher
Francisco Varela, Eleanor Rosch, Evan Thompson / The Embodied Mind
Wilhelm Reich
Baruch Spinoza
Sigmund Freud 
Gustave Le Bon
Jeremy Gilbert / Common Ground
Manuel DeLanda / War in the Age of Intelligent Machines
Deleuze and Guattari / Anti-Oedipus
Bataille
Nietzsche
Marx
Freud
Deleuze and Guattari / A Thousand Plateaus
Claude Lévi-Strauss / Wild Thought
Lisa Adkins / The Time of Money
Andrew Culp / Dark Deleuze
Deleuze and Guattari / What Is Philosophy?
Suzanne de Brunhoff / Marx on Money
Quentin Badaire
Lewis Henry Morgan
Hobbes
Locke
Daniel Luban / Hobbesian Slavery (essay in Political Theory)
Rousseau


Case studies discussed in this episode:
Berserkers
Esprit de Corps
Robert Bales
Shenetta White-Ballard


Praise for the book:
"A brilliant and novel political anthropology that updates our most entrenched philosophical biases and looks to a politics of joy beyond the relations of command."
—Davide Panagia



Regimes of Violence: Toward a Political Anthropology by John Protevi is available from University of Minnesota Press.