Tag: ISSA school

  • The “Dream Valley” Conspiracy

    The “Dream Valley” Conspiracy

    Towards Archipelagos of Permanent Autonomous Zones

    Photo: Old stone house
    ISSA before the reconstruction of the old stone house, 2022

    It all started with a sort of conspiracy.
    Now you probably think we’re crazy – flat-earthers, lizard people believers, X-Files fans, Davos conspiracy theorists, chemtrail enthusiasts, deep-state believers, Pizzagate supporters… or maybe a whole universe of conspiracies comes to mind.

    Conspiracy obviously became a bad word.
    Everything became a conspiracy, and conspiracy became everything.
    These days, just like genocide, conspiracy is live-streamed. 

    Who would be crazy enough to proclaim to be a conspirator.

    But what if there is no collective action or understanding of the world without conspiracy?

    When we say it all started with conspiracy, we think of the original, primordial conspiracy: the conspiracy of breathing together, not simply living together, in the same rhythm or in many different ones. 

    Among perceptive thinkers, at least three of them have deepened our understanding of conspiracy in relation to breathing and rhythm. One is the great educator Ivan Illich, the other is the semiotician Roland Barthes, and last but not least, our own conspirator Franco “Bifo” Berardi.

    In his lecture “The Cultivation of Conspiracy”, given in 1998 on the occasion of receiving the Culture and Peace Prize of Bremen, Illich reminds us that the origin of the word conspiracy and the prototype of conspiracy lies in the celebration of the early Christian liturgy in which, no matter the origin, men and women, Greeks and Jews, slaves and citizens, engender a physical reality that transcends them. The shared breath, the con-spiratio, is the peace understood as the community that arises from it.

    “Community”, says Illich a few years before his death, “is not the outcome of an act of authorative foundation, nor a gift from nature or its gods, nor the result of management, planning and design, but the consequence of a conspiracy, a deliberate, mutual, somatic and gratutious gift to each other.”

    The original meaning of conspiratio, which brings us closer to Roland Barthes, comes from the mouth-to-mouth kiss among the faithful attending services: originally it represented a commoning of breath. 

    At his late lectures at Collège de France, later published as How To Live TogetherRoland Barthes became captivated by communities in which everyone follows their own rhythms, while at the same time there are parts of the community that have a common rhytm. The main objective of these communities, according to Barthes, was “to safeguard rhuthmos, that is to say, a flexible, free mobile rhythm; a transitory, fleeting form, but a form nonetheless”.

    These kind of “idiorryhythmic constellations” and forms of living together came to life in the Syrian and Egyptian deserts. Throughout human history anchorites, hermits, and outcasts sought to escape the rules and control of higher powers. The rhythm Barthes researched was a rhythm “that allows for approximation, for imperfection, for a supplement, a lack, an idios: what doesn’t fit the structure”. 

    “There is a consubstantial relationship between power and rhythm”, warns Barthes, “before anything else, the first thing that the power imposes is a rhythm (to everything: a rhythm of life, of time, of thought, of speech.” 

    In his book Breathing: Chaos and Poetry, published just a year before the brutal murder of George Floyd and the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, one of the conspirators behind ISSA, Franco “Bifo” Berardi, claims that the words “I can’t breathe” expresses the general sentiment of our times: 

    “Physical and psychological breathlessness everywhere, in the megacities choked by pollution, in the precarious social condition of the majority of exploited workers, in the pervading fear of violence, war, and aggression.”

    It is precisely respiration that, according to Bifo, can help us understand the contemporary chaos: the process of “breathing with chaos” or “chaosmosis”, which he defines as ‘osmosis with chaos’, is where a “new harmony emerges, a new sympathy, a new syntony.’”

    We need to not only learn how to breathe together again but also how to breathe with chaos. 

    “Dream Valley” on Vis

    S’nova dolca, “The Dream Valley”, island Vis

    When we first arrived to the “Dream Valley” on the island of Vis, a dense, overgrown pine forest covered the land. 

    The last time it was cultivated was more than half a century ago, half a century before we placed our feet and hands on it – to establish a school from the future, on a remote Adriatic Island. 

    The only remnants on that hill near Tito’s cave, for several centuries cultivated as fruitful vineyards, were the ruins of an old stone house once used for wine storage and a small area to shelter a donkey, the true proleterian among animals. 

    The donkey, one of the symbols of the Meditteranean, was domesticated approximately five to seven thousand years ago in Africa and since then, after spreading rapidly through Eurasia, it was mainly used for work. Donkeys were champions of carrying. But we could find none on our island to help us carry the material uphill in order to reconstruct the old stone house. 

    The glorious – and strenuous – time of the donkey, at least in this part of the world, was done. The owners of the few remaining donkeys on the island rightly concluded that borrowing them for our crazy project would be too demanding on the first proletarians.

    So, we had no other option but to carry quite literaly tons and tons of material: from wood, sand and gravel to tools and hundreds of books by hand and foot. Luckily, thanks to an early donation by our only seemingly unlikely conspirator, Pamela Anderson, the first tools we invested in – after realizing the symbol and soul of the Meditteranean is disappearing – were “electric donkeys”.

    The “electric donkey” can also be used for transfer of books to ISSA

    We still carry tons of material uphill by hand and foot, but now we at least have the benefit of modern technology: two electric wheelbarrows. But even with our “electric donkeys”, our project still sometimes reminds us of a Mediterranean version of Fitzcarraldo.

    We are not Klaus Kinski in Werner Herzog’s movie transporting a steamship over the Anders mountains to build an opera house, but we are determined to build our School in the forest in the hills, with no option but to carry everything uphill. 

    We do not plan to build an opera house, that is a bit too bourgeois for us. Although even an opera could take place here. 

    Besides renovating the old stone house and transforming it into the headquaters for the island school – with water and solar power, compost toilets and showers, classrooms in the middle of nature, residencies, and a library – we are also dreaming of creating an amphitheater in the “Dream Valley”.

    The part of the island where ISSA is being born is originally called Sinova dolca (the “Son’s Valley”), but also S’nova dolca, which could be interpreted as “Dream Valley”.  At least that is the meaning we like to ascribe to it.

    Who are we and why are we doing this? 

    At first, people thought we were crazy. Many islanders probably still think so.

    Why would anyone, in times of global tourism and global crisis, invest their time and life into something so slow and without any financial profit? 

    Why would anyone build a school on a remote island in the midst of the Adriatic Sea, in a part of the island that was abandoned overgrown by forests for more than half a century?

    Who are we?

    We are wild dreamers, artists and poets, philosophers and activists, drystonewallers and builders, who got tired of waiting for the “day after”, the day after a fundamental event that would change the contemporary way we live together, not only among humans, but among other species, with animals and all other sorts of living beings, including our only planet. 

    Why are we doing this?

    We are not preppers. We are not preparing for the “day after” the cataclysm. We know it has already happened.

    We are not merely concerned with our own survival nor are we interested in surviving for survival’s sake. 

    Unlike the current-day preppers, with their private jets, nuclear bunkers, libertarian cities and escape plans to New Zealand or Mars, we are not abandoning humanity or the planet.

    As D. H. Lawrence memorably said in Lady Chatterley’s Lover

    “Ours is essentially a tragic age, so we refuse to take it tragically. The cataclysm has happened, we are among the ruins, we start to build up new little habitats, to have new little hopes… We’ve got to live, no matter how many skies have fallen”.

    We’ve got to live, no matter how many skies have fallen.

    But how do we need to live? 

    What kind of habitats can we and must we build? 

    Slowly, we arrive at the age-old question of philosophy: What is “good life”?

    And what is “good life” in our contemporary times, in the end of times, in times of extinction? 

    But before, if ever, we arrive to a proper – ontological, ethical, political, social – answer to this crucial question, we must go back to the island, to this place on Earth that was always, even when it was still a mountain, connected to the mainland. 

    And before we come back to the future island, we must place it somewhere.

    We must place it in the archipelago. 

    What is an archipelago?

    The most common definition of an archipelago is a “group of islands”, but this standard definition mainly addresses its spatial dimension. 

    An archipelago is not only temporal occurrence, it is both spatial and temporal, geological and cultural, natural, and artificial.

    The word archipelago originally comes from arche, from the Greek word for “original”, “principal”, “source of action”, “first principle”, and pelago, meaning “deep”, “sea” and – “abyss”. 

    Interestingly, the great Croatian poet Tin Ujević, in his beautiful text on the island of Vis, Komiža and the archipelago where we founded ISSA (“Nit u srcu mora: Komiža na Visu“, 1930) mentions the connection between the origin of the word of Adriatic and its relation to the abyss:

    “Finally, in a mournful, bathed wasteland, I personally rehearsed an impossible thing, happiness. It was an escape from all the pressures of reality. Here I took into my soul all the infinite seas on which I have never vomited, and who would not want to live like this in nature, in an oceanic, Otahite happiness? I said: Vis is dearer to me than the entire Adriatic, and Saint Andrew is even dearer to me than Vis. Atlantic and Pacific waters come to me, not just the Adriatic. And that Hadria, I told the listeners, comes from the Dravidian word ‘Hodru’, which in Dravidian means Abyss (abyss), because in ancient times, water really broke through here and submerged inhabited and cultivated areas.”

    Geological evidence we have today proves that, indeed, that is how the Adriatic was created when water submerged the land. 

    This archipelago and its future islands were a result of an abbys of gigantic proportions, a consequence of an underwater volcano more than 220 million years ago, when the supercontinent Pangea still dominated the world.

    Around 20,000 years ago, during the Last Glacial Maximum, sea levels began to rise in the Adriatic region. From the top of the hill at ISSA, we can see what is now called Dalmatia and the highest parts of the Dinaric Mountains along the eastern coast of the Adriatic. All the islands we can see from here – Hvar, Brač, Korčula, Pelješac – were once part of the mainland. 

    The Adriatic during the Last Glacial Maximum, around 20,000 years ago

    Before the ice started melting, the Adriatic Sea was 120 meters lower, and hunter-gatheres were still roaming through its valleys. As sea levels began rising, soon they had to adopt and find other ways of survival. Now, it was the sea that was the future. Then came the agricultural revolution, herding and domestication of animals. And the donkeys.

    But it would be wrong to think of the Neolithic and agricultural revolution as an event, a sudden change, like a rapid rise in sea levels and hunter-gatherers immediately stopping hunting for animals and becoming fishermen. The available data shows that the Neolithisation of the Adriatic was a complex and arrhytmic process that took almost a thousand years to establish. 

    Here the recent book by David Wengrow & David GraeberDawn of Everything, is useful to get a better understanding of history as an archipelagic process itself. 

    Unlike Steven Pinker or Yuval Noah Harari and their teleological notion of history connected to the ideology of “progress”, Wengrow and Graeber convincingly argued that long after the agricultural revolution, there was no fixed model of social organisation but a multiplicity of social arrangements. In short, our prehistory was not uniform but consisted of myriad forms of living together – even before the agricultural revolution, there were large cities, some monarchies, some egalitarian, others were seasonal. 

    In short, history and social change itself is an archipelagic process. 

    So, what is an archipelago? 

    It is a document of a previous catastrophe, of many previous catastrophes. 

    And of renewal, at the same time. 

    What was once a catastrophe is now today’s archipelago. 

    What was once a mountain, is now an island. 

    An archipelago is evidence of both revolution and evolution. 

    What is an island? 

    An island, even though the word in many Slavic languages originates from “stream” and “current” (Croatian otok from tokteći okolo, Serbian ostrvo from strujastream, Slovak ostrov, Ukranian ostriv), is not simply a place sourrounded by water. 

    As Gilles Deleuze notes in Desert Islands: “It is an island or a mountain, or both at once: the island is a mountain under water, and the mountain, an island that is still dry. Here we see original creation caught in a re-creation, which is concentrated in a holy land in the middle of the ocean.”

    Gilles Deleuze on a beach, Big Sur, California, 1975 (Photo by Jean-Jacques Lebel)

    In other words, to perceive an island as an island would mean not to perceive geology, the vast past and major planetary events that have led to what would become future islands. 

    Deleuze goes on even more poetically: 

    “Some islands drifted away from the continent, but the island is also that toward which one drifts; other islands originated in the ocean, but the island is also the origin, radical and absolute. Certainly, separating and creating are not mutually exclusive: one must hold one’s own when one is separated, and had better be separated to create anew; nevertheless, one of the two tendencies always predominates. In this way, the movement of the imagination of islands takes up the movement of their production, but they do not have the same objective. It is the same movement, but a different goal. It is no longer the island that is separated from the continent, it is humans who find themselves separated from the world when on an island. It is no longer the island that is created from the bowels of the earth through the liquid depths, it is humans who create the world anew from the island and on the waters. “

    So, what is an island?

    An island is primarily a possibility to construct not only a different spatiality, but a different temporality, ways of living-together, of co-breathing, of having a rhythm or idiorhythmy. 

    An island is also an object of desire. 

    A sort of utopian desire: from Plato’s travel to Sicily in order to convince a tyrant of his ideal society, Thomas More’s Utopia depicting a fictional island society, Shakespeare’s The Tempest taking place on a remote magical island, Aldous Huxley’s Island, the legendary pirate haven Libertalia placed on Madagascar, or even Hollywood blockbusters such as The Beach with Leonardo di Caprio placed on Thailand (and ruined its beautiful beach by over-tourism). 

    But an island also, very often, turns out to become a dystopia. Think of William Golding’s Lord of Flies set on a remote, uninhabited tropical island or of, more recently, Hunger Games set in a post-apocalyptic archipelago and Michel Houllebecq’s The Possibility of an Island

    When you think of islands, it is impossible not to think of colonialism and imperialism at the same time. 

    You can also think of Próspera, a private libertarian island in Honduras. Or you could think of Praxis

    But be warned: this is not to be confused with the famous 20th century Yugoslav philosophical school called Praxis which organized the Korčula Summer School on an Adriatic island. The new Praxis is another libertarian dream of a private island somewhere in the Mediterranean. 

    As long as there are islands, the tension between utopia and dystopia was and always will exist.

    And we are not ashamed to be called naive, romantic, or even crazy for trying to bring to life the utopian desire of our future islands. 

    A gratuitous gift to each other

    As we carry tons of material uphill, while we build and share our breaths and rhythms in the “Dream Valley”, we are not simply building a school. The school is, as we love to say, building us. 

    What we are learning once again is how to breathe together – how, through cooperation and the pure joy of community building, we can create something bigger than ourselves, both in terms of the individuals involved and temporality behind and in front of us. 

    We have learned patience and pomalo from the island through its nature, the climate, the winds, and the waves, its people, and its traditions. 

    We have also learned that we must embrace – following the footsteps of the great philosopher from Martinique, Édouard Glissant – the archipelagic thought as an alternative epistemology and way of thinking that accepts ambiguities, different rhythms, ruptures, and interactions of all sorts. 

    Unlike the continental thought, this archipelagic, southern thought – and practice (praxis) – challenges the universalistic idea of thought promoted by the Enlightenment, which not only diminished all non-Western knowledge, but also prepared ground for imperialism, colonialism and totalitarianism. 

    In his essay on Herman Melville, Gilles Deleuze writes about an affirmation of the world as process and as an archipelago. He understands archipelagoes as a “world in process,” which is connected to multiplicity. 

    It all starts from “the affirmation of a world in process, an archipelago. Not even a puzzle, whose pieces when fitted together, would form a whole, but rather a wall of loose, uncemented stones, where every element has a value in itself but also in relation to others: isolated and floating relations, islands and straits, immobile points, and sinuous lines. ” 

    And it is here where we arrive at a quite unexpected encounter. The encounter between Deleuze and one of our favorite activities at ISSA – namely, dry stone walling.

    Building uncemented stones has been an integral part of the Mediterranean for centuries, even millenia. The function of dry-stone walls vary and can be all at the same time – protection against soil erosion, collection of water, protection against wind, landscape architecture…

    What Deleuze, although you never imagine him as a dry stone waller, points towards are the archipelagic nature of the stone walls themselves. While walls are usually built to divide, they were also used to connect and provide well-being to communities around the Meditteranean. 

    We are not only interested in learning from those who have thought future islands in myriad ways before us, we are keen to learn from dry stone walls, from the oak tree in front of our School, from the cicadas and their ryhthms, from the winds and from the island itself. 

    We are not interested in building a sort of a temporary autonomous zone. We know everything is temporary.

    Yet there is also eternity by the stars, as Louis-Auguste Blanqui, another great conspirator who spent over half of his adult life in jail, declared in his “astronomical hypothesis” in the year of the Paris Commune. 

    In this eternity by the stars, we are opening our sails towards archipelagos of permanent autonomous zones.

    These zones already exist in many places of the world, as a consequence of conspiracy, a deliberate, mutual, somatic, and gratuitous gift to each other.

    We are not the first, and hopefully not the last.

    Srećko Horvat, September 2024, Vis

  • About ISSA

    About ISSA

    The Island School of Social Autonomy (ISSA) is a place that imagines, experiments with, and cultivates forms of knowledge production and sharing that go beyond traditional notions of education and its purpose. It also fosters modes of living that extend beyond mere survival in the “age of extinction.”

    We perceive social autonomy as the ability of individuals to function as cooperative group members, engaging in communal self-governance while being aware of the interconnectedness and interdependence of communities within broader networks (or archipelagoes) of human and non-human life-organization. Autonomy does not imply isolation but rather the ability to make autonomous decisions, through mechanisms of collective deliberation, about how to live together and take responsibility for caring for those that are not able to make them (children, non-human living worlds, etc.)

    With ISSA, our aim is to cultivate ways of living, learning, and teaching together. We seek to explore autonomy as a political strategy and a model for social organization. Additionally, we adopt a hands-on approach to design, experimentation, and the implementation of processes, goods, and services. We collaboratively engage in discussions, physical labor, and the development of joint projects and programs, working with individuals and collectives. Throughout our endeavors, we remain guided by our motto: “We build the school, the school builds us” (“Mi gradimo školu, škola gradi nas”).

    Why a School?

    We’re starting a School on an island in the middle of the Adriatic Sea because we believe that the future lies in the archipelagos of autonomy. Moreover, we recognize that the contemporary educational system, as highlighted by the eminent educator and philosopher Ivan Illich in his groundbreaking book “Deschooling Society” (1971), has turned into an “advertising agency that makes you believe that you need the society as it is”.

    Education as we know it, is a relatively recent invention. Until the 19th century, children from middle-class families were educated at home with the assistance of private tutors. It was only with the rise of industrial society that the modern school system became the central mediator of socialization. This shift resulted in the removal of socialization from both the family and the community. The education system transformed into a statist institution rather than a communal one, thus becoming one of the fundamental pillars of social order, based on nation-states, their economies, and various hierarchies related to gender, race, and more.


    Throughout the 20th century, the prevailing model of education transformed into a process that engineered consumers who propelled economic “growth” and (national) citizens responsible for political rights and obligations. In the 21st century, the privatization of education and knowledge, coupled with the penetration of technology into every sphere of life, including education, led to the proliferation of techno-solutionist approaches and reasoning. As Wendi Brown notes this diminishing separation between economy and polity brought about a situation wherein political principles of equality and freedom no longer figure as alternative social and moral referents to those of the market. Contrary to this, we want to create condition where public resources are not to be used “for some new device that makes people learn” but for, as Ivan Illich suggested, “the creation of a new style of educational relationship between man and his environment. To foster this style, attitudes toward growing up, the tools available for learning, and the quality and structure of daily life will have to change simultaneously.”

    Illich observed that urban life tends to become increasingly reliant on bureaucratic civic services, which in our present context, can be viewed as bureaucratic business services. We now heavily rely on complex technological systems owned by large private tech companies in almost every aspect of our lives. This trend of data collection, surveillance, and behavioral engineering promotes predictable and automated human behavior. Illich diagnosed this particular way of life as an ideal “pan-hygienic world,” a world where all interactions between individuals and between individuals and their surroundings result from foresight and manipulation. The school itself has “become the planned process that tools man for a planned world, the principal tool to trap man in man’s trap.”


    What is missing in this reality is the essence of the true master-disciple relationship. It is not about simply reproducing socially “suitable” individuals, but about a shared understanding between the master and pupil that their relationship is invaluable and mutually beneficial.

    Aristotle referred to this relationship as a “moral type of friendship” that operates without fixed terms. The master acts towards the pupil as they would towards a friend, providing gifts or engaging in any other action out of genuine care. Thomas Aquinas described this form of teaching as an act of love and mercy. Illich reminds us that this kind of teaching is always a luxury for the teacher and a form of leisure (from the Greek term skhole, from which our word “school” originates) for both the teacher and the pupil. It is an activity that holds meaning for both parties and serves no ulterior purpose.

    In the current convergence of multiple crises (environmental, political, economic, etc.), it is precisely this form of teaching, devoid of fixed terms, which functions as a moral type of friendship that must be reinvented. Although it may not prevent mass extinction, it has the potential to create an actual, existing social and educational experiment and provide a platform for contemplating a different world.

    Why Vis?

    “I am at the Philippines of the Adriatic,” wrote the great poet Tin Ujević of his trip to the island of Vis in 1930. “I find myself in the deep heart of the deep sea. It was the fairies themselves who brought me here, on an unknown date when the globe fell asleep, and no one could see me. I am a part of the empire of adventures, a miracle of events. I finally experienced what the world has forgotten. And I became the owner of a mystery.”

    Vis’ mystery to us seems rooted in both its philosophy of pomalo (“take it slow” or festina lente) and the fact that throughout its history it was always distant enough to remain mysterious while also being at the center of events.

    The earliest known inhabitants of Vis were Illyrian tribes, most likely Liburni, who settled on the island during the late Bronze Age. In the 4th century BC, ancient Greeks colonized the island when Dionysius the Elder, the tyrant of Syracuse, founded the colony of Issa. It later became an independent polis, with its own currency and colonies. Subsequently, it became a part of the Roman Empire until its collapse. From then until 1797, Vis was under the rule of the Republic of Venice, after which it was passed to Napoleon and then to the Kingdom of Italy. The island was then ruled by the Austrian Empire for over a century. Following World War I, it briefly became part of Italy once again and later joined the Kingdom of Yugoslavia.


    During World War II, after a two-year fascist occupation, Vis became the starting point for the final phase of the Yugoslav antifascist liberation struggle. Interestingly, it was the Yugoslav People’s Army (JNA) that removed the island from tourist maps and preserved some of its authenticity. From 1944 until the collapse of Yugoslavia in 1991, Vis served as one of the strategically crucial Adriatic army bases, prohibiting foreign visitors. It remained relatively untouched by global tourism until the late 1990s.

    Apart from its intriguing history, what distinguishes Vis is its geological past. The Vis Archipelago consists partially of the oldest rocks in the Adriatic Sea, dating back around 220 million years. This uniqueness sets it apart from other Adriatic islands. During that time, there was an active volcano deep beneath the surface, and if one knows where to look, petrified lava, volcanic bombs, ash, salt, and sedimentary rocks can still be found along the beaches of Komiža. Additionally, Vis benefits from its own water sources, unlike the rest of the Adriatic islands.


    It is not a romantic notion of “escaping” catastrophe because we are well aware that there is no escape. Climate crisis, microplastics, capitalism, and other challenges are reaching even the most remote shores. Nor is it merely a variation of Voltaire’s famous line from “Candide” that suggests we should tend to our own garden, implying that self-sufficiency is both possible and desirable on “our” island.

    The selection of Vis represents a symbolic gesture, affirming the significance of certain local characteristics that we find important, such as pomalo or the antifascist legacy. Simultaneously, it is a coincidence, an accidental convergence of people, ideas, and energies, as well as a personal and collective decision made every day. It serves as a reminder that we always find ourselves in a tangible material reality fixed in a specific place while being shaped by processes originating elsewhere.

    Similar to ISSA itself, the island of Vis embodies an essential dialectic relationship between autonomy and dependency, nature and society, local and global. For ISSA, it is not an either-or situation.

    Why Here and Now?

    In Aldous Huxley’s utopian novel “Island,” he writes about an imaginary island located somewhere in the Pacific Ocean. The society inhabiting this island enjoys universal economic well-being and a high level of respect for individual rights and freedoms. Individuals are also provided ample opportunities for emotional and spiritual growth. Among the island’s many peculiarities are specially trained birds called mynas, whose purpose is to intermittently screech out “Attention!” and “Karuṇā,” reminding the inhabitants to live in the present moment and cultivate compassion. The island remains untainted by modern-day civilization, capitalism, imperialism, and domination. However, it is destined to be engulfed by these forces.

    Our island is not innocent, and we acknowledge that there is no outside. We are deeply entrenched within the belly of the beast. We understand that we are starting from a point of ruins, destruction, and smoke. Yet, our island is not alone; it is part of an archipelago consisting of isles, caves, valleys, and swamps where alternative forms of life persist or are reborn. These possibilities exist within the philosophy of buen vivir embraced by indigenous groups in South America, in Jason Moore’s concept of world-ecology, in shadow libraries hosted on secret servers, in the notion of public wealth, in participatory processes within communities, and countless other places and spaces.

    In conclusion, as the impending catastrophes we face are both local and global in nature, so too is ISSA. Our school is not merely a space for contemplation but a place of action. Its role is to explore and address the significant challenges ahead through the process of teaching and learning, while also practicing social autonomy in the present moment.

    Faced with the end of the world, how do we educate ourselves for the “age of extinction”? What type of education do we need to secure a future? Moreover, how can we achieve a “good life” amidst extinction, and what does “good life” truly mean? Finally, what forms of social organization and coexistence can we foster because of, or despite, the impending disaster?

    You might also want to read Bifo’s text “Why starting a School today?”