The one piece that had the most impact on me on the topic of control societies is Nick Land's Meltdown, and a lot of his CCRU stuff from his academic days explicitly deals with Deleuze after all.
Man, I have a hard enough time reading Deleuze, but Nick Land can be totally incomprehensible. At times it seems he takes schizoanalysis a bit too literally - I expect any philosopher I read to have made up at least a dozen words or phrases by the end of a work, but with Land every sentence contains a new concept that remains totally undefined.
And then there's "cooking lobsters with jake and dinos" from fanged noumena.
My impression is that rather than decoding his works rationally, you're supposed to kind of soak in the vibe and the high-level concepts, but I don't know if that's due my incomprehension or if it's the intended way to read him.
No I think that's fair. This particular one I think was originally a spoken word performance over jungle music or something and it's more like cyberpunk fiction than a philosophical text.
And when you get to his later work and he goes into numerology it gets really weird. It takes a while to get used to but there's some truly insightful stuff in his earlier, more coherent work in particular. And he had an underrated influence on a lot of British cultural figures all across the spectrum.
I'm... more familiar with Land's more recent works, but in my understanding that is a more recent turn, and the CCRU stuff I'd find more agreeable, but I haven't gotten around to it. I'll read this later, thank you.
http://www.ccru.net/swarm1/1_melt.htm
It's incredible to me that this was published in 1995 rereading it today.