Benedict Seymour
is a writer, filmmaker and a contributing editor of Mute magazine. He has written and made films about urban regeneration and gentrification with the research group The London Particular, and explored the links between financialization and cultural-social contraction in a number of articles and essays, including "Drowning by Numbers: The Non-Reproduction of New Orleans". He is currently working on a film about the origins of the financial crisis in the obsolescence of the value-form -- working title, "The Price of Everything". He holds the position of Lecturer in Fine Art on the MFA at Goldsmiths College London.
Eurozine Articles
The critical divide
Marxism: Radical alternative or totalitarian relic?
While an historical-materialist approach to both culture and society has strong critical potential in western Europe, many eastern European intellectuals regard it sceptically. Does Marxism -- or even leftist politics -- mean one thing in the West and another in the East? [more]
Blurred boundaries
Sport, art and activity
Is the convergence of art and sport under the pressure of pseudo-participatory spectacle undermining the utopian potential of both? Benedict Seymour goes back to the future to recover the new kind of activity which, in different ways, is still informing them. [more]
Drowning by numbers
The non-reproduction of New Orleans
After the actual hurricane that hit New Orleans in late August 2005 came the second hurricane of neo-liberal looting. The vacuum left by the evacuation of the working-class population and the storm’s destruction of infrastructure produced the dream conditions for economic "restructuring". [more]











