{"version":"1.0","type":"rich","provider_name":"Context XXI","provider_url":"http:\/\/contextxxi.org","title":"The Situationist Frontier\n","author_name":"Paul&nbsp;Hammond (translation) \u25aa \nSituationistische Internationale","width":"1200","height":"800","url":"https:\/\/licra.contextxxi.org\/the-situationist-frontier.html","html":"\u003Ch4 class='title'\u003E\u003Ca href='https:\/\/licra.contextxxi.org\/the-situationist-frontier.html'\u003EThe Situationist Frontier\n\u003C\/a\u003E\u003C\/h4\u003E\u003Cblockquote class='spip'\u003EOne knows what the SI isn&#8217;t; what terrain it elects not to occupy any longer (or only in a marginal way, in its struggles against all existing conditions). It is more difficult to say where the SI is headed, to positively characterize the situationist project. Nevertheless, one can delineate, albeit fragmentarily, certain provisional positions along its way.\n\n\u003Cbr \/\u003EUnlike the hierarchical bodies of specialists that increasingly make up the bureaucracies, the armies and even the political&nbsp;\u003Ca href=\"..\/the-situationist-frontier.html\" class=' pts_suite'\u003E(...)\u003C\/a\u003E\u003C\/blockquote\u003E\n"}