Brian Holmes on Tue, 30 Sep 2003 21:46:24 +0200 (CEST) |
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Re: <nettime> Re: markets, states, associations (was: reverse engineered freedom...) |
Just to continue this dialogue with Ryan on the idea of concieving society as a force field between three poles: >the US New Deal policies could be seen as restrictive >on markets or as a tactic of preservation of them by >the state. Those policies did both: and don't forget the threat posed to markets by the Soviet revolution at exactly that time. The state effectively saw restriction as preservation. Ultimately that would develop into the general picture of Keynesianism, which only took holdin Europe after the war. One of the founding analyses of Italian autonomism says that the Keynesian notion of "effective demand" (meaning that better wages should be paid so that worker demand can fuel the economy) is a recognition - and integration - of the working class into state capitalism. That gives you the consumer society. The whole point of autonomia in the sixties was to exit from this system of co-management. Which was an attempt to reassert some kind of existence for a pole outside both market and state. >but that example only holds for the >historical and ideological conditions of the US. Not at all: Nazism itself was also considered a "third way" between capitalism and communism. All the retreats to national management of the economy, after the breakdown of the late-nineteenth century form of globalization, were attempts to put the lid back on the detabilizing, innovating, atomizing forces of free markets and recover some kind of national, territorial cohesion. Even Stalin set out for "socialism in one country." This is a kind of territorial imperative that emerges in reaction to the deterritorialization of the earlier period. I believe it lets you see a state function of solidarity (or redistribution, if you prefer) that is not reducible to the notion of the state as "executive committee of the bourgeoisie" (Marx). The point is that solidarity is not always pretty, even if it is sometimes very necessary. Responding to a world market crisis that is overdetermined by the extreme alienation of large parts of the world-system, Bush and the neocons are attempting to generate a new form of national cohesion and discipline on the basis of a more-or-less fascist rhetoric and division into us and them. The deterritorialization of the market-driven nineties has wreaked tremendous effects. Democratic politics is essentially the different kinds of responses that can be brought to the need for some kind of solidarity, and then the responses to the more-or-less repressive functioning of that solidarity, once it's established. But as Rancière has observed, politics in this sense is rare. Please note: I'm not saying all these things because I'm either "pro-state" or "anti-market". It's like being for or against a hurricane. These processes are beyond us. We have to try to inflect them within the range of our capacities (generally very small). >And with the commercial interests invested in military >ventures in the US, which pole is dominant there? In these reactionary moments, there seems to emerge a perfect synergy betwen the private arms industry and the state's attempt to acheive national cohesion by emphasizing the role of the military. Hard to tell who's leading who: the industrialists see war as a chance to jump start the economy, the state power brokers see it as a chance to get hold of society again. But it's a dead-end synergy: after all, it was Hitler's recipe too. Today, with less intensity than in the 20s-30s, you also see the assertion of the forces outside state and market, perceived as dangerous by both. Seattle or S-11 anyone? There again, no guarantee that the autonomous demands are going to be the right ones. One of the more somber things that you can perceive with historical goggles is that the assertion of free association has in the past led to a new pact between market and state in order to just wipe out the destabilizing demands emanating from citizens (Spartacus rebellion, Spanish anarchists, the entire Western European left in the 30s, the Italian movements of the 70s, etc.). >don't many of the desires shaping all of the poles transgress >those boundaries? Probably it would be more clear and intuitive if you imagined the situation as a kind of love-and-death mating ritual between two armored dinosaurs, capitalism and the state, applauded, advised, hissed and booed and cheered by ecstatic and terrified citizens about the size of contemporary mice, who are constantly in danger of being crushed by either or both. If you invented coalitions of hardy spectators daring to climb up the tyranosaurus-like backbone of one of these raging monsters so as to point its head in a particular direction, or at least blinker an eyeball, then you could inject the dimension of free association into the picture. And if you revealed that the dinosaurs were actually mechanical robots, then you include the revolving-door phenomenon of all the work teams and engineers constantly shuttling between one and the other. You want international dynamics? Imagine all the orgiastic alliances of cooperation and rivalry that are conceivably possible between differently sized and variously armored species of dinos... But then you would also have to somehow integrate the complex pacts established between the prehistoric furies and a whole range of grass eaters, from the gigantic Brontosaurus that would today be a European farmers union, to the lowly trilobite networker trying to get away from it all under the cover of a reticular ocean. Petrodactyl activists, NGOs and human rights lawyers are only a detail in this picture, but an important one. Who can truly believe, as the latter claim to or feign to, that T. Rex has really agreed not to go rampaging in that corner of the continent where all the eggs are gestating in the warm sand? It seems unlikely that Rex's pea brain can be concerned with such things. And yet the intricate forest of social movements, human rights initiatives and philosophical ideals has helped fashion the very terrain in which the struggle of the dim-witted giants takes place. And whenever the eggs do get wantonly trampled (think of the World Wars) then the whole conditions of the free-for-all between the states and the markets is renegotiated with extra attention to the desires of the plant eaters. So all of this does, yes, form a kind of overarching ecology. >i'm thinking of how the model is useful for tactical >activist organizing and production, how are those >desires figured? In my view, the idea of the Bureau d'Etudes maps that have been referred to in some other posts is that if we can grasp and widely convey the networks of power between capitalist, state and civil-society actors, then we can more effectively set off designer battles between them. Becoming collectively intelligent enough to chose specific issues for the kinds of effects they will produce. Like hacking a video game. I think you know the one I mean: Jurrasic Park, of course... best, Brian # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net