Resistance in times of ecopanic Towards an eco-emancipation Chapter 1. Freedom and resistance 1.1 Existentialism: doomed to be free 1.2 Fascism and the banality of evil 1.3 Critique of instrumental reason 1.3.1 Dialectics 1.3.2 Enlightenment and technology 1.4 Individualization or ego-emancipation 1.4.1 Critical subject and subversive bodies 1.4.2 Discourse and resistance 1.4.3 ‘Man’ as discourse Chapter 2. Discourse and doom thinking 2.1 First indication of a discourse shift: entrenched in paradoxes 2.1.1 Political paradoxes 2.1.2 Existential frictions 2.1.3 Macropolitics: fragmentation and polarization 2.2 Doom thinking: from religious soteriology towards dialectical utopism 2.3 Dying or becoming extinct 2.3.1 Future scenario or scenario without a future 2.3.2 Statistics: knowledge of the State 2.4 Anthropocene or Capitalocene? Chapter 3. From the pyramid to networks 3.1 Percepts and metaphors 3.2 Pyramidical orientation: linear-exclusive 3.2.1 Hierarchical architecture: top-down 3.2.2 Hierarchy: mode of being, mode of seeing? 3.3 Network orientation: circular-inclusive 3.3.1 Cybernetics: cyborg as homo informans 3.3.2 Individual: node in networks 3.4 Philosophical extrapolations 3.4.1 Deleuze: from tree to rhizome 3.4.2 Foucault: supplementary-dispositional resistance Chapter 4. Integral resistance 4.1 Being interested: scaled political reflaction 4.1.1 Politics: acting within power relations 4.1.2 Scaled political action: dividual, ego, individual, subject, nation state, VN 4.2 Macropolitical opposition: revolt and rebellion 4.2.1 Spectrum of resistance: extremist or participatory resistance 4.2.2 Connective, transversal and collective resistance: from interface to face-to-face 4.3 Mesopolitical resistance: circular valorization 4.4 Micropolitical subversion: self-differing 4.4.1 Changing the world: the personal is political!