Semiotext(e)

American independent publisher of literature


title: "Semiotext(e)" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["book-publishing-companies-based-in-california", "publishing-companies-established-in-1974", "political-book-publishing-companies", "1974-establishments-in-the-united-states", "small-press-publishing-companies"] description: "American independent publisher of literature" topic_path: "geography/united-states" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Semiotext(e)" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::summary American independent publisher of literature ::

::data[format=table title="Infobox publisher"]

FieldValue
imageFile:Semiotext(e),_Vol._2_No._2,_Georges_Bataille,_Magazine,_1976.jpg
captionSemiotext(e), Vol. 2 No. 2, issue on Georges Bataille (1976)
founded1974
founderSylvère Lotringer
keypeopleHedi El Kholti, Chris Kraus, Sylvère Lotringer
countryUnited States
headquartersLos Angeles
distributionMIT Press
publicationsBooks, magazines, pamphlets
imprintsActive Agents, Foreign Agents, Intervention Series, Native Agents and Animal Shelter
url
::

| image = File:Semiotext(e),_Vol._2_No._2,_Georges_Bataille,_Magazine,_1976.jpg | caption = Semiotext(e), Vol. 2 No. 2, issue on Georges Bataille (1976) | parent = | status = | founded = 1974 | founder = Sylvère Lotringer | keypeople = Hedi El Kholti, Chris Kraus, Sylvère Lotringer | country = United States | headquarters = Los Angeles | distribution = MIT Press | publications = Books, magazines, pamphlets | topics = | genre = | imprints = Active Agents, Foreign Agents, Intervention Series, Native Agents and Animal Shelter | revenue = | numemployees = | nasdaq = | url =

Semiotext(e) is an independent publisher of critical theory, fiction, philosophy, art criticism, activist texts and non-fiction.

History

Founded in 1974, Semiotext(e) began as a journal that emerged from a semiotics reading group led by Sylvère Lotringer at the Columbia University philosophy department. Initially, the magazine was devoted to readings of thinkers like Nietzsche and Saussure. In 1978, Lotringer and his collaborators published a special issue, Schizo-Culture, in the wake of a conference of the same name he had organized two years before at Columbia University. The magazine brought together writers, artists, and thinkers such as Gilles Deleuze, Kathy Acker, John Cage, Michel Foucault, Jack Smith, Martine Barrat and Lee Breuer. Schizo-Culture brought out connections between "high theory" and underground culture that had not yet been made, and forged the "high/low" aesthetic that remains central to the Semiotext(e) project.

As the group dispersed over time, issues appeared less frequently. In 1980, Lotringer began to assemble the Foreign Agents series, a group of "little black books", often culled from longer texts, to polemically debut the work of French theorists to US readers. He was aided in this by Jim Fleming, whose collective press Autonomedia would be Semiotext(e)'s distributor for the next twenty-one years. Jean Baudrillard’s Simulations was the first of these books to appear, followed by titles by Gilles Deleuze, Felix Guattari, Paul Virilio, Jean-François Lyotard and Michel Foucault, among others. Spin magazine cited the little black books as "Objects of Desire" in a 19XX design feature.

In 1990, Chris Kraus proposed a new series of fiction books by American writers, which would become the Native Agents imprint. Kraus worked at the St. Marks Poetry Project and saw an overlap between the theories of subjectivity advanced in the Foreign Agents books and the radical subjectivity practiced by female first-person fiction writers. Designed to promote an anti-memoiristic "public I", the series published Kathy Acker, Barbara Barg, Cookie Mueller, Eileen Myles, David Rattray, Ann Rower, Lynne Tillman and many others.

A third series, Active Agents, began in 1993 with the publication of Still Black Still Strong by Dhoruba Bin Wahad, Assata Shakur and Mumia Abu-Jamal, with the goal of presenting explicitly political, topical material. It has also published texts by Kate Zambreno, Bruce Hainley, and Eileen Myles.

In 2001 Semiotext(e) changed its base of operations from New York City to Los Angeles, ceasing its involvement with Autonomedia to begin an ongoing distribution arrangement with MIT Press. Hedi El Kholti, the Moroccan-born artist and writer who co-founded the now-defunct Dilettante Press, became Semiotext(e)’s art director. As the decade progressed, El Kholti saw a need to re-imagine the Semiotext(e) project beyond the small-format books of the series. Earlier titles would be republished as large-format books within the new History of the Present imprint.

In 2004, El Kholti became managing editor of the press. He, Kraus and Lotringer then became joint, list-wide co-editors. Semiotext(e)'s new goal was to advance its original conflation of literature and theory, and to expand the anti-bourgeois queer theory presented in early issues of the Semiotext(e) journal.

The purview of Native Agents expanded to include science fiction books by Maurice Dantec and Mark von Schlegell and works by writers like Tony Duvert, Pierre Guyotat, Travis Jeppesen, Grisélidis Real, Bruce Benderson, and Abdellah Taïa. Aware that the theorists he introduced in the 1980s had by now been absorbed into the academic mainstream, Sylvère Lotringer turned his attention to Italy's post-Autonomia critical theory, commissioning and publishing works by Franco 'Bifo' Berardi, Paolo Virno, Antonio Negri, Christian Marazzi [fr], Maurizio Lazzarato and others. Semiotext(e) also became the English-language publisher for Peter Sloterdijk’s notable Spheres trilogy. Re-visioning New York's ‘last avant-garde’ of the 1980s, Semiotext(e) published archival works by or about some of that era's most important artists, including Penny Arcade, Gary Indiana and David Wojnarowicz.

Semiotext(e) was invited to participate as an artist in the 2014 Whitney Biennial, for which it produced twenty-eight pamphlets by writers and artists associated with the press. These included "new, commissioned works by Franco “Bifo" Berardi, John Kelsey, Chris KrausEileen Myles, Ariana Reines, and Abdellah Taïa, among others, and previously unpublished texts by such influential twentieth-century figures as Simone Weil, Julio Cortazar, and Jean Baudrillard."

Semiotext(e) Intervention Series

Semiotext(e) publishes the Intervention Series (2009—present), an ongoing series of short books on subjects related to left-wing politics. Topics of the series include anti-capitalism, anti-authoritarianism, post-structuralism, feminism, and economics. All books in the series are designed by Hedi El Kholti. The series is notable for its first installment: The Coming Insurrection by The Invisible Committee, a French pseudonymous author (or authors). Upon its release, the book was condemned by American conservative commentator Glenn Beck, who described it as a dangerous radical leftist manifesto. The Coming Insurrection is also known for its association with the legal case of the Tarnac Nine, a group of nine people, including Julien Coupat, who were arrested in Tarnac, rural France, on November 11, 2008, on suspicion of sabotaging French railways. The method of sabotage actually used was similar to one suggested in the book, and members of the group were suspected to be members of the Invisible Committee. Coupat later co-founded Tiqqun, a short-lived philosophical magazine whose work is also represented in the Intervention Series.

Major topics of the series include French anarchism (The Invisible Committee, Tiqqun), Italian Marxist economic criticism (Maurizio Lazzarato, Franco Berardi, Christian Marazzi) and violence in the context of the Mexican drug war (Sergio González Rodríguez, Sayak Valencia). Other topics discussed include art history (Gerald Raunig, Chris Kraus), racism and the criminal justice system (Houria Bouteldja, Jackie Wang), continental philosophy (Jean Baudrillard, Peter Sloterdijk), and contemporary culture (François Cusset, Jennifer Doyle, Paul Virilio).

Although the series treats a variety of subjects in left-wing politics and culture, there are also commonalities and through-lines among the works. Several of the series' entries address the 2008 financial crisis and the consequent protest movements of the early 21st century, particularly Occupy Wall Street and the Arab Spring; these are compared by several of the series' authors with the French protests of May 1968 and the Italian Years of lead. In the context of these protest movements, authors in the series describe a tendency to refuse to seize political power, thus also refusing to engage with states, businesses, and traditional power entities in expected ways. This refusal of power is also described as "destituent". Twentieth-century continental philosophy is frequently cited by the series' authors, particularly the work of Deleuze and Guattari, Michel Foucault, and Giorgio Agamben. Several of the series' authors decry the state of exception, a legal theory attributed to the German jurist Carl Schmitt (and later criticized and further theorized by Agamben as well as Achille Mbembe), which posits that the state has authority to act outside the rule of law in extreme circumstances (e.g. a state of emergency) in the name of the public good. Works in the series also criticize Richard Nixon's decision to remove the United States from the gold standard in 1971, and French television executive Patrick Le Lay who stated that his network's job was to sell Coca-Cola to its viewers via advertising, not provide content.

::data[format=table title="The Semiotext(e) Intervention Series"]

NumberAuthorTitleDateSummary
1Various authorsAutonomia: Post-Political Politics1980/2007"The only first-hand document and contemporaneous analysis of the most innovative post-'68 radical movement in the West, the creative, futuristic, neo-anarchistic, postideological Autonomia."
1The Invisible CommitteeThe Coming Insurrection2009"A call to arms by a group of French intellectuals that rejects leftist reform and aligns itself with younger, wilder forms of resistance."
2Christian Marazzi [fr]The Violence of Financial Capitalism2009/2011"An innovative analysis of financialization in the context of postfordist cognitive capitalism." New edition: "An updated edition of a groundbreaking work on the global financial crisis from a postfordist perspective."
3Guy HocquenghemThe Screwball Asses2009"A founder of queer theory contends that the ruling classes have invented homosexuality as a sexual ghetto, splitting and mutilating desire in the process."
4TiqqunIntroduction to Civil War2010"Activists explore the possibility that a new practice of communism may emerge from the end of society as we know it."
5Gerald Raunig [de]A Thousand Machines2010"The machine as a social movement of today's "precariat"—those whose labor and lives are precarious."
6Jean BaudrillardThe Agony of Power2010"Baudrillard's unsettling coda: previously unpublished texts written just before the visionary theorist's death in 2007."
7TiqqunThis is Not a Program2011"An urgent critique of the biopolitical subject and omnipresent Empire."
8Chris KrausWhere Art Belongs2011"Chris Kraus examines artistic enterprises of the past decade that reclaim the use of lived time as a material in the creation of visual art."
9Jarett KobekATTA2011"A disorienting fictionalized portrayal of 9/11 mastermind Mohamed Atta and the meaning of madness."
10Paul VirilioThe Administration of Fear2012"A new interview with the philosopher of speed, addressing the ways in which technology is utilized in synchronizing mass emotions."
11Sergio González RodríguezThe Femicide Machine2012"An account and analysis of the systematic murder of women and girls in the Mexican border town of Ciudad Juárez."
12TiqqunPreliminary Materials for a Theory of the Young-Girl2012"A theoretical dissection of capitalism's ultimate form of merchandise: the living spectacle of the Young-Girl."
13Maurizio LazzaratoThe Making of the Indebted Man2012"A new and radical reexamination of today's neoliberalist "new economy" through the political lens of the debtor/creditor relation."
14Franco "Bifo" BerardiThe Uprising2012"A manifesto against the concepts of growth and debt, and a call for a reinvestment in the social body."
15Gerald Raunig [de]Factories of Knowledge, Industries of Creativity2013"With the economy deindustrialized and the working class decentralized, a call for alternative horizons for resistance: the university and the art world."
16Peter SloterdijkNietzsche Apostle2013"Peter Sloterdijk's essay on Friedrich Nietzsche and the benefits and dangers of narcissistic jubilation."
17Maurizio LazzaratoGoverning by Debt2015"An argument that under capitalism, debt has become infinite and unpayable, expressing a political relation of subjection and enslavement."
18The Invisible CommitteeTo Our Friends2015"A reflection on, and an extension of, the ideas laid out seven years ago in The Coming Insurrection."
19Jennifer DoyleCampus Sex, Campus Security2015"A clear-eyed critique of collegiate jurisprudence, as the process of administering student protests and sexual-assault complaints rolls along a Möbius strip of shifting legality."
20Sergio González RodríguezThe Iguala 432017"A well-researched and powerfully argued account of the disappearance of forty-three students and an analysis of the cruelty that normalizes atrocity."
21Jackie WangCarceral Capitalism2018"Essays on the contemporary continuum of incarceration: the biopolitics of juvenile delinquency, predatory policing, the political economy of fees and fines, and algorithmic policing."
22Houria Bouteldja [fr]Whites, Jews, and Us2017"A scathing critique of the Left from an indigenous anti-colonial perspective."
23The Invisible CommitteeNow2017"A new political critique from the authors of The Coming Insurrection, calling for a 'destituent process' of outright refusal and utter indifference to government."
24Sayak ValenciaGore Capitalism2018"An analysis of contemporary violence as the new commodity of today's hyper-consumerist stage of capitalism."
25François CussetHow the World Swung to the Right2018"An examination of the reactionary, individualist, cynical, and belligerent shift in global politics to the right, implemented both by the right and the establishment left."
26Franco "Bifo" BerardiBreathing2019"The increasingly chaotic rhythm of our respiration, and the sense of suffocation that grows everywhere: an essay on poetical therapy."
27Sergio González RodríguezField of Battle2019"The emergence of a geopolitical war scenario, establishing a form of global governance that utilizes methods of surveillance and control."
28TiqqunThe Cybernetic Hypothesis2019"An early text from Tiqqun that views cybernetics as a fable of late capitalism, and offers tools for the resistance."
29Maurizio LazzaratoCapital Hates Everyone: Fascism or Revolution2021
::

Notes

References

Bibliography

References

  1. [http://www.aaronvandyke.net/summer_readings/Kraus_Chris-interview-It%27s%20Very%20Sad%20Really-Mousse.pdf “It’s Very Sad, Really: Art Writing, Orphaning, Migration of the Humanities and (No) Information – Conversation with Chris Kraus,”] Mousse Magazine 39, December 2013.
  2. [http://www.designingculture.net/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2010/06/Balsamo_Critique_1996_Semiotexte.pdf “Under the Sign of Semiotext(e): The Story According to Sylvere Lotringer and Chris Kraus”] (with Anne Balsamo) Critique 37.3 (Spring 1996): 205–221.
  3. [http://hyperallergic.com/126272/semiotexte-at-the-biennial-an-interview-with-hedi-el-kholti/ "Semiotext at the Biennial: An Interview with Hedi el Kholti."] Hyperallergic. May 17, 2014.
  4. [https://www.nytimes.com/2013/11/15/arts/design/the-2014-whitney-biennial-is-taking-shape.html ”The 2014 Whitney Biennial Is Taking Shape,”] by Carol Vogel, ''[[The New York Times. NY Times]]'', November 14, 2014.
  5. "Semiotext(e)".
  6. Flood, Alison. (February 19, 2010). "Glenn Beck sends 'evil' anarchist manual's sales rocketing".
  7. ''To Our Friends'', p. 11.
  8. ''This is Not a Program'', pp. 19–22.
  9. ''Breathing'', p. 9.
  10. Sylvère Lotringer, Introduction, ''The Agony of Power'', p. 29.
  11. ''How the World Swung to the Right'', p. 151.
  12. ''Now'', p. 79.
  13. ''The Making of the Indebted Man'', p. 90.
  14. ''The Uprising'', p. 95.
  15. ''Factories of Knowledge, Industries of Creativity'', p. 45.
  16. ''Now'', p. 34.
  17. ''How the World Swung to the Right'', pp. 157–158.
  18. ''Field of Battle'', p. 147.
  19. ''The Uprising'', p. 87.
  20. ''How the World Swung to the Right'', p. 23.
  21. ''The Agony of Power'', pp. 37–38.
  22. ''How the World Swung to the Right'', p. 77.
  23. (2007). "Autonomia: Post-Political Politics". Semiotext(e).
  24. "Autonomia: Post-Political Politics". MIT Press.
  25. (2009). "The Coming Insurrection". Semiotext(e).
  26. "The Coming Insurrection". MIT Press.
  27. (2009). "The Violence of Financial Capitalism". Semiotext(e).
  28. "The Violence of Financial Capitalism". MIT Press.
  29. (2011). "The Violence of Financial Capitalism, New Edition". Semiotext(e).
  30. "The Violence of Financial Capitalism, New Edition". MIT Press.
  31. (2009). "The Screwball Asses". Semiotext(e).
  32. "The Screwball Asses". MIT Press.
  33. (2010). "Introduction to Civil War". Semiotext(e).
  34. "Introduction to Civil War". MIT Press.
  35. (2010). "A Thousand Machines: A Concise Philosophy of the Machine as Social Movement". Semiotext(e).
  36. "A Thousand Machines". MIT Press.
  37. (2010). "The Agony of Power". Semiotext(e).
  38. "The Agony of Power". MIT Press.
  39. (2011). "This Is Not a Program". Semiotext(e).
  40. "This Is Not a Program". MIT Press.
  41. (2011). "Where Art Belongs". Semiotext(e).
  42. "Where Art Belongs". MIT Press.
  43. (2011). "ATTA & THE WHITMAN OF TIKRIT". Semiotext(e).
  44. "ATTA". MIT Press.
  45. (2012). "The Administration of Fear". Semiotext(e).
  46. "The Administration of Fear". MIT Press.
  47. (2012). "The Femicide Machine". Semiotext(e).
  48. "The Femicide Machine". MIT Press.
  49. (2012). "Preliminary Materials for a Theory of the Young-girl". Semiotext(e).
  50. "Preliminary Materials for a Theory of the Young-Girl". MIT Press.
  51. (2012). "The Making of the Indebted Man: An Essay on the Neoliberal Condition". Semiotext(e).
  52. "The Making of the Indebted Man". MIT Press.
  53. (2012). "The Uprising: On Poetry and Finance". Semiotext(e).
  54. "The Uprising". MIT Press.
  55. (2013). "Factories of Knowledge, Industries of Creativity". Semiotext(e).
  56. "Factories of Knowledge, Industries of Creativity". MIT Press.
  57. (2013). "Nietzsche Apostle". Semiotext(e).
  58. "Nietzsche Apostle". MIT Press.
  59. (2015). "Governing by Debt". Semiotext(e).
  60. "Governing by Debt". MIT Press.
  61. (2015). "To Our Friends". Semiotext(e).
  62. "To Our Friends". MIT Press.
  63. (2015). "Campus Sex, Campus Security". Semiotext(e).
  64. "Campus Sex, Campus Security". MIT Press.
  65. (2017). "The Iguala 43: The Truth and Challenge of Mexico's Disappeared Students". Semiotext(e).
  66. "The Iguala 43". MIT Press.
  67. (2018). "Carceral Capitalism". Semiotext(e).
  68. "Carceral Capitalism". MIT Press.
  69. (2017). "Whites, Jews, and Us: Toward a Politics of Revolutionary Love". Semiotext(e).
  70. "Whites, Jews, and Us". MIT Press.
  71. (2017). "Now". Semiotext(e).
  72. "Now". MIT Press.
  73. (2018). "Gore Capitalism". Semiotext(e).
  74. "Gore Capitalism". MIT Press.
  75. (2018). "How the World Swung to the Right: Fifty Years of Counterrevolutions". Semiotext(e).
  76. "How the World Swung to the Right". MIT Press.
  77. (2019). "Breathing: Chaos and Poetry". Semiotext(e).
  78. "Breathing". MIT Press.
  79. (2019). "Field of Battle". Semiotext(e).
  80. "Field of Battle". MIT Press.
  81. (2019). "The Cybernetic Hypothesis". Semiotext(e).
  82. "The Cybernetic Hypothesis". MIT Press.

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