John Hutnyk on Sun, 9 Aug 1998 14:09:46 +0200 (MET DST) |
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<nettime> derrida@marx.archive part two |
part two... //derrida.future-to-come =91there is not yet any democracy worthy of this name=92 (Derrida 1992:46) The =91still to come=92 becomes an important refrain - we come across it al= so in terms of Europe (in The Other Heading), Democracy, Justice (in Specters of Marx), and in the text of Archive Fever. What is this future time that is always deferred? Derrida says of the archive: =91It is a question of the future, the question of the future itself, the question of a response, of a promise and of a responsibility for tomorrow -if we want to know what it will have meant, we will know only in times to come- later on or perhaps never=92 (Derrida 1995/1996:36). Responsibility and promise are important words for the thinking of justice, no-one could doubt this.=20 With regard to reading protocol at least as pertains to the homogeneity of Marx, Derrida=92s strategy is as expected: =91I do not believe that one can speak, even from a Marxist point of view, of a homogenous Marxist text=92 (Derrida 1981:75). This is a telegraphed repetition of an earlier point that raises issues of responsibility, response and, at least an allusion to, political activity: =91we cannot consider Marx=92s, or Engel=92s or Len= in=92s texts as completely finished elaborations that are simply to be 'applied' to the current situation=92 (Derrida 1981:63). Not inconsistently with Marxism, he proclaims, reading as transformational. Although he has not yet found any - any? - =91protocols of reading=92 that satisfy him (Derrida 1981:63). On aufhebung, Derrida notes that =91there is always Aufhebung=92 (Derrida 1981:94), by which he seems to mean nothing less complicated or vague as that every repetition - even a reading - is transformational. The archivist always sorts the stacks, but is this revolutionary every time?=20 What theoretical and political resources are required that would be adequate not only to understand the contemporary character of capitalism - its speeds, its flows, its disguises and its delays - but also adequate to a practical and organised militancy against this capital? The partyless International is under theorised, but this does not mean that it is impossible to research these topics, to develop and further the sets of ideas that release and circulate struggles in ways that do more than any single-word single-issue spot-protests might do. Those who provided revolutionary organisational theory in the past were operating in a somewhat differently weighted informational zone, but this does not mean that Lenin, for example, was wrong to advise the Party that it must use the most advanced media tools at its disposal to debate, agitate and propagandise - hence Iskra and Pravda. Surely it is necessary to do more than produce old inky tabloids, or even more than say Gilroy or Clifford with their lists of what is interesting in the cross-border flows and alliances of modernity (Gilroy 1993, Clifford 1994, see Hutnyk 1997).=20 >From these beginnings it is possible to move to relate various contemporary struggles both politically and theoretically, to pursue internationalist work that is more than just publishing (or charity), and to promote a wild creativity that might, just might, inevitably realise the sense and reason of communist futures (which would, of course, not necessarily be the same as rule by communists[7]). Let us not be duped into thinking that we cannot analyse and act upon the manifestations, however fleeting, of contemporary appropriation and its forms - just-in-time delivery, service and information economies, flight-capital, hyper-crisis and super slump.=20 The flash world of speed-hype creates just enough smoke to disguise the expanding immiseration of the cul de sacs of development. If anything increases or intensifies it is the =91increasing exploitation of the peripheral proletariat in relation to that of the center=92 (Deleuze and Guattari 1972/1983:231). Large parts of Africa, South America, Asia, exist where previously development meant industrialisation, and today it means attaching local elite capital to multinational mobile capital and ensuring open markets for investment, generous tax concessions, labour deregulation, State subsidies and other privileges for capital to the loss of local livelihood. In this conjuncture, the impoverishment of life under neo-colonialism is exacerbated by a super-exploitation described as speed so as to ignore its effects. The colonised parts of the world - nearly everywhere now, including the inner urban metropoles, are denied web access and existence in the texts of cultural analysis except as exotic or erotic image sites at the end of jet streams or video documentary cameras. In the context of super-exploitation, financial hyper-transactions, structural adjustment, DFI, spiralling loan repayments and proliferating export processing zones, an analysis mesmerised by speed ends up saying that nothing can be done. At the most basic limit this even denies the option of simply growing more food, let alone to suggest any project of redistribution (half of those writing about development these days offer small-scale solutions like the wind-up radio and the other half offer development as a mode of ensuring Western market dominance, in say grain, and increasingly in manufacture - any serious level of redistribution does not figure in either set of calculations.[8] Where the realm of production used to bring us together while circulation atomised opportunities for class organisation, perhaps today=92s mediatised telematic societies offer a chance to extend co-operative self-activity. At one level it is the Derridean critique of the privileging of the authenticity or originality of presence (Derrida 1967/1974:137-8) that would provide some impetus for thinking that new forms of organising and alliance are possible across telematic zones. Why must radical political efficacy rely only upon the proximity of really existing factory and workplace cells, as opposed to, for example, shared experience not necessarily of immediately co-terminus space? This does not mean that the old styles of face-to-face branch and cell meetings, class solidarity, study groups, militant protest and action are out of order, but that these are not the only ways to go. Indeed, it is also a sectarian cul de sac to insist on incompatibility here in telematic times. Given an abundance of resources for organising, why despair in the face of speed?=20 Pessimism/Cynicism - Self doubt and cringe of the Western project manifests as an abstention from politics and a romantic valourisation of =91tribalismo=92 in the face of a rampant (capitalist) system which has reached, it seems - uncontrollability before which nothing can be done but withdraw. Fascination with speed - sitting grinning like a monkey at the zoo - or with technology leads to a descriptive wonder that may sometimes look elegant but offers only a deferral of despair. Dreaming of speed, or even of Capital somehow escaping its ties to labour (via automation, cyber-tronics etc.), ignores the ways that it is labour which actually moves production, not capital. Autonomy arguments apply here, but to celebrate speed or capital flight is to think paralysis - the abdication of class struggle. Other possible analyses of Fast Cap could proceed in a more adventurous tone, - the struggle is grim/not so grim etc. Instead of an international clique of deconstructing jurists, organised resistance around a series of struggles on an Internationalist register could be considered. Abject paralysis, however verbose, in the face of capital and telematics and a nostalgia for the pastoral face-to-face of community or old school vanguard might instead be reconfigured through recognition of new sites of contestation alongside older not yet exhausted ones. There would have to be more than textual eloquence and international emails to signal this recoding, based upon actually existing struggles and potential zones of engagement. Where Derrida mentions unemployment and homelessness, we might point to the struggles around the JSA in Britain (see Aufheben 4 for an excellent and informed discussion of this in relation to squatters, hunt saboteurs and the various campaign coalitions against the multifaceted Criminal Justice and Public Order Act of 1994 -http://jefferson.village.Virginia.EDU /~spoons/aut_html/auf4cjball.htm). Where Derrida mentions economic war or the global market, the campaigns against Maastricht and European Union, (Contra the Capital of Europe, Madrid Summit Alternative Declaration) or against ASEAN and APEC (The Manila Peoples Forum, for example - http://www.geocities.com/~cpp-ndf/intl3.htm). The various campaigns against Neo-Liberalism encompassing a politics that is anti-debt and anti-SAP also. The proliferation of the arms trade and nuclear weapons would suggest examination of the various Campaigns Against Militarism, for example in Europe and in Australia, if not almost everywhere to some degree, and of course in various political stripes. The issue of so-called inter-ethnic wars demands attention to movements against chauvinism such as the coalition against the Bharatiya Janata Party in India which brings together differing Communist and Progressive elements in principled, sometimes more, sometimes less, alliance and the issues of drug cartels and international law might suggest attention to the anti-heroin trade campaigns in Ireland, community struggles in the inner city which do not buy into the =91war-on-drugs=92 scare mongering of bureaucrats, or movement= s in several nations to regulate police powers and covert insurgency, usually backed by Reaganite Contra style cloak and dagger support, such as the people=92s movements in Latin America or Defence Campaigns against police violence in the UK (for example see http://les.man.ac.uk/transl_asia/amer.htm). To this I would add attempts to recruit and organise R&D workers of all levels to political action that addresses the Institutional role of research in technology development and expansion, mobilisations amongst professional and intellectual associations to reject co-option to good news consultancies and provision of alibis for transnational corporations, struggles against casualisation, wages for housework and against immigration law. Cultural work to foster alliances between anti-racists and anti-imperialist for co-operative struggle. Many more. What this requires is some effort to read at several speeds, working out the contemporary dynamics of class decomposition and recomposition, the relation of =91ethnicities=92 to political alliances, th= e practicalities of agitation and revolution adequate and necessary in the face of current restructurings, the tricks of subsumption and co-option. It in not necessary to cower in the confusion that comes from celebration of speed, nor only to revel in the dilettante semantic flamboyance of fashionable pessimism (which may be entertaining, and gets a few stage laughs, but). All this may proceed with Party and organisational structures to greater or lesser extent debated and disciplined in each case, but always more organised than Derrida=92s proposed anti-Party, anti-located, undeclared Pomo-International. (I am starting to slide into snide abuse here, so should temper this with less typing <control-enter> to send).=20 ----------- Footnotes [1] It seems a draft sketch of what became the Manifesto was produced by Engels on a train from Manchester to London as he made his way to the Communist League meeting of November 1847. This was added to slightly rewritten sections from Poverty of Philosophy and the German Ideology in December. The first three sections were written up by Marx in Brussels before a letter came from London on 26th January demanding the finished text - under threat of =91further disciplinary action=92 against comrade Ma= rx. The finished text was then sent =91a few weeks before Feb. 24th=92 (correspondence in MEGA). I guess we should assume by return mail at the beginning of February. This, I think, means Marx spent the =91festive season=92 correcting the manuscript. Thanks to Richard Barbrook for demanding the specifics on this point - it means that the 150th anniversary of the Manifesto is now at hand. Ho Ho Ho. [This paper was written late in 1997, the introductory paragraphs posted to <nettime> in November, and a fuller version was published in the christmas edition of Space and Culture, 1997(2):95-123. A still more elaborate version was published as a pamphlet by the Department of Social Anthropology, University of Manchster working papers series, and that text constitutes a chapter in a yet to be written - future-to-come book to be called Bad Marxism] [2] To keep the =91perhaps=92 temporally specific as well, this paper was presented as =91Forgotten Marx and Speed-hype in Capital: the Poverty of Philosophy=92 at the conference =91Time and Value=92, Lancaster University Institute for Cultural Research, in the Politics stream convened by Mick Dillon and Jeremy Valentine. It had an earlier manifestation as =91Speeding Marx in Derrida=92 at the Human Sciences Seminar of the Philosophy Department of Manchester Metropolitan University, and I especially thank Joanna Hodge for her comments. Scott McQuire has often discussed these issues with me, and pointed out some major glitches, as have Peter Phipps, Nikos Papastergiadis, Javier Taks, Peter Wade and Ben Ross. With regard to the auspicious, Donald F. Miller has been working on time for ages, and in a certain way this work is wholly indebted to conversations with him many years ago. More recently I have benefited from reading the work of Eugene Holland (1997), Ian R. Douglas (1997) and Nigel Thrift (1996), as well (inversely) from listening to the plenary presentation at =91Time and Value= =92 of Liz - =91I used to think that when I was a Marxist=92 - Grosz. The long version of the paper was published as a pamphlett by the Department of Anthropology at Manchester University and a shorter version of that appeard in Space and Culture volume 2, 1997. This text is an extract from there. Later ic can be reduced even further, the withering criticism of the mice will be deployed.=20 [3] Benjamin Franklin said that time was money. Though I think Marx convincingly shows that money is time, in the Poverty of Philosophy he wrote that =91time is everything=92 (MECW 6:127).=20 [4] While Derrida suggests that email transforms the =91entire=92 space of humanity =91in quasi-instantaneous fashion=92 (Derrida 1995/1996:17), Spiva= k offers a corrective: =91even as circulation time attains the apparent instanteneity of thought (and more), the continuity of production ensured by that attainment of apparent coincidence [note the =91apparent=92 used tw= ice already] must be broken up by capital: its means of doing so is to keep the labour reserves in the comprador countries outside of this instantaneity, thus to make sure that multinational investment does not realise itself fully there through assimilation of the working class into consumerist-humanism ... the worst victims of the recent exacerbation of the international division of labour are women=92 (Spivak 1987:166-7). Spivak=92s work is very important here, and worth a short aside to argue that while telecommunications research accelerates the technological means of extending relative surplus value extraction and not absolute, the obsolete forms of technology are dumped in the =91third world=92 where acro= ss the shifting boundary of the international division of labour a kind of negation of the negation operates this boundary to ensure superexploitation thrives. (This is a paraphrase, and ever so slight departure, from Spivak 1987:167). Suggestions that enthusiasm for theory production, subsidised computerised information retrieval and cultural studies should be subjected to scrutiny given the implication of these forms, as a part of general telematics, in =91entrenching the international division of labour and the oppression of women=92 have rarely been taken up= , and so often the =91dark presence of the third world=92 (Spivak 1987:167) i= s ignored in a frenzy of speed mania. As Spivak points out in response to a quip that she was a kind of luddite, this is not to deny the workers word processors, or the comforts of cupaccinos, but to remind the cupaccino-drinking worker and the word-processing critic the =91actual price-in-exploitation of the machine producing coffee and words=92 (Spivak 1987:167). Cupaccino=92s for all is certainly a slogan I would adopt, but i= t is also important to work against the reality that we now have only cupaccinos for some. The internet is not about universal access yet, the fruits of advanced capitalist production, science, medicine, central heating, air-conditioning, entertainment and 200 TV channels (and still nothing to watch) have yet to be delivered to all - and indeed, by the logic of capitalism cannot be delivered to all, thus =91we=92 [all of us] w= ill have to take them. You know the routine here, get out the flags. [5] see Hutnyk, John [forthcoming] =91Copper, Connectivity, Anthropology an= d the Mines=92 in the Journal of Redistributive Justice - JRJ [6] Obviously a bad allusion to Derrida=92s excellent article =91Of an Apocalyptic Tone Recently Taken in Philosophy=92 which is clearly an inspiration for this writing. [7] My debt here is to (ex) members of Left Alliance, especially Ben Ross and Angie Mitropoulis, but also Cass Bennett, Hazel Blunden, Lucy Blamey, Marcus Strom, Vanessa Chan, Melanie Hood, Chris Francis and others. //red salute.learn-to-like-it.=20 [8] see Hutnyk, John (forthcoming) =91The Wind-Up Radio and Other Small-Scale Tekno Tricks=92 in JRJ. Clifford, James 1994 =91Diasporas=92 Cultural Anthropology 9(3):302-338 Deleuze, Gilles and Guattari, Felix 1972/1983 Anti-Oedipus: Capitalism and Schizophrenia, Viking, New York Derrida, Jacques 1967/1976 Of Grammatology, translation and introduction by Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore. Derrida, Jacques 1967/1978 Writing and Difference, translated, with an introduction and additional notes, by Alan Bass, Routledge and Kegan Paul, London. Derrida, Jacques 1981 Positions, translated and annotated by Alan Bass, University Of Chicago Press, Chicago. Derrida, Jacques 1984 =91Of an Apocalyptic Tone Recently Adopted in Philosophy=92, Oxford Literary Review, 6(2):3-37.=20 Derrida, Jacques 1992 =91Force of Law: the =93Mystical Foundations of Authority=94=92 in Deconstruction and the Possibility of Justice, eds Corne= ll, Drucilla, Rosenfeld, Michel and Carlson, David Gray, Routledge, New York pp 3-67 Derrida, Jacques 1993/1994 Spectres of Marx: the State of the Debt, the Work of Mourning and the New International, Routledge, New York Derrida, Jacques 1995/1996 Archive Fever: A Freudian Impression, University of Chicago Press, Chicago Derrida, Jacques 1994/1997 The Politics of Friendship, Verso, London Douglas Ian, R 1997 =91Power Dreaming of a Fast Globe=92 unpublished paper Fortunati, Leopoldina 1981/1995 The Arcane of Reproduction: Housework, Prostitiution, Labour and Capital Autonomedia, New York Gilroy, Paul 1993 The Black Atlantic: Modernity and Double Consciousness Routledge Holland, Eugene 1997 =91Derrida=92s Marx ver= sus Deleuze=92s=92 South Atlantic Quarterly July. Hutnyk, John 1996 The Rumour= of Calcutta: Tourism, Charity and the Poverty of Representation, Zed books, London Hutnyk, John 1997 =91Adorno at Womad: South Asian Crossovers and the Limits of Hybridity-talk=92 in Debating Cultural Hybridity Zed books, Londo= n Hutnyk, John 1998 =91Jim Clifford=92s Ethnographica=92 in Critique of Anthropology4.. Marx, Karl 1847 The Poverty of Philosophy - from the Marx WWW archive. Marx, Karl, 1867/967Capital Vol 1. Progress Press, Moscow.=20 Marx, Karl and Engels, Friedrich 1848/1952 Manifesto of the Communist Party, Progress Press, Moscow. Marx, Karl and Engels, Friedrich 1848/1970 Manifest der Kommunistischen Partei, Dietz Verlag Berlin. Marx, Karl and Engels Friedrich, MEGA. Marx, Karl and Engels, Friedrich, MECW McQuire, Scott, 1997 Visions Of Modernity: Representation, Memory, Time and Space in the Age of the Camera Sage, London. Sharma, Sanjay, Hutnyk, John, and Sharma, Ashwani 1996 Dis-Orienting Rhythms: the Politics of the New Asian Dance Music Zed books, London Spivak, Gayatri Chakravorty 1985 =91Scattered Speculations on the Question of Value=92 Diacritics, Winter 73-93 Spivak, Gayatri Chakravorty 1987 In Other Worlds Methuen, New York. Spivak, Gayatri Chakravorty 1995a =91Supplementing Marx=92 in Magnus, Bernd and Cullenberg, Stephen eds Wither Marxism: Global Crises in International Perspective, Routledge, New York. Spivak, Gayatri Chakravorty 1995b =91Ghostwriting; Diacritics 25 (draft copy) Spivak, Gayatri Chakravorty 1996 The Spivak Reader, eds Donna Landry and Gerald Maclean, Routledge, New York Thrift, Nigel 1996 =91New Urban Eras and Old Technological Fears:= =20 Reconfiguring the Goodwill of Electronic Things=92 in Urban Studies 33(8):1463-1493 [John Hutnyk is the author of The Rumour of Calcutta: Tourism, Charity and the Poverty of Representation, and a co-editor, with Sanjay and Ashwani Sharma, of Dis-Orienting Rhythms: the Politics of the New Asian Dance Music, both published in 1996 by Zed books. A forthcoming book, edited with Raminder Kaur, called Travel Worlds: Journeys in Contemporary Cultural Politics will be published by Zed in December 1998] --- # distributed via nettime-l : no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a closed moderated mailinglist for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@desk.nl and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # URL: http://www.desk.nl/~nettime/ contact: nettime-owner@desk.nl