TY - JOUR A1 - Wiemann, Dirk T1 - Too Poor for Debt T2 - Coils of the Serpent N2 - Deleuze launches his description/prediction of the emergence and imminent consolidation of the society of control as a postscript. The text thus announces itself as an afterthought, a supplement appended to some complete larger textual body, from which it is, however, unmoored as it is launched as an independent self-standing text that, moreover, does not indicate to what it is an addendum but instead, on what it speaks. By this token, the Postscript unhinges the conventional notion according to which a supplement signals “the addition of something to an already complete entity” (Attridge 1992: 77). By marking his text as the adjunct to an absent main body, Deleuze appears to concede and at the same time emphatically embrace the necessary incompleteness of this short précis on the post-disciplinary regime. My argument in the following will be that the supplementary status of the Postscript does not so much signal some subversive or dissident gesture in the name of the minor or the molecular (even though it does that, too); instead, it primarily serves to keep at bay and contain an exteriority that it aims to ‘confine by exclusion’1; and that exteriority, I will argue, is the Third World. Y1 - 2020 UR - https://publishup.uni-potsdam.de/frontdoor/index/index/docId/49719 UR - https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:bsz:15-qucosa2-728571 SN - 2510-3059 VL - 6 IS - 2 SP - 100 EP - 110 PB - Universität Leipzig CY - Leipzig ER -