tobias v on Wed, 21 Aug 2002 02:44:02 +0200 (CEST) |
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Re: <nettime> Empire for Beginners - by Rob los Ricos |
on Empire ... One of the most important aspects of "Empire" is that it accepts Deleuze and Guattari's premise that capitalism heralds positive as well as negative change. In D+G's "Anti-Oedipus," they call this positive (although dangerous) element "axiomatization," the ceaseless, neverending process of decoding. Empire further enhances this decoding, aka deterritorialisation. To oppose Empire completely is to misunderstand the positive aspects of Empire as well as to believe that the opposition can exist and take place as an outside and an inside. The positive aspects of deterritorialisation found in Empire on a practical level include the globalisation of resistance, the internetworked contact of the revolutionary and the multitude, and the creation of new planes of resistance-- information networks. This is why the name "anti-globalisation movement" is such a misnomer, for the point is not (if one holds to the above) to oppose "globalisation" but to oppose the corporatisation of the globe. As far as I understand Negri and Hardt, _because there is no outside to Empire_ (as Rob Los Ricos seems, at points, to understand), resistance must be paradoxical and twofold: 1. at the level of the local, resistance must be made to capital at every turn; 2. at a general level, the connections of Empire -- such as the internet -- must be used _through_ Empire _against_ Empire. To outright oppose such technological developments would be to oppose and nullify new topographies of resistance. Indeed, there is a sense, to me, that _furthering_ Empire, ie pushing it to its breaking point, is a tactic worthy of consideration. Therefore, when I hear Los Ricos say that "Resistance must come from without," I find Ricos sadly missing the point of Negri and Hardt's thesis. Arguments over the language employed aside (in fact I believe Empire the book to be quite readable, a very clear and pragmatic assertion of the writing of Deleuze and Guattari and Debord, among others), Ricos, despite his attempts to understand this vast paradigm shift that Negri and Hardt attribute to the new Empire, still employs 18th/19th century paradigms of resistance -- ie, that resistance must come from "outside." The end of Rico's review falls completely apart, with one paragraph stating that "Anything which takes place within Empire can be recuperated for Empire's own needs. Anything. Everything. That's its nature." while the beginning sentence asserts that "But resistance to imperial power won't come from within," and the last paragraph stating that "Resistance must come from without, which means, primarily, creating human identities that emphasize our relationships with the biosystems we inhabit rather than with commodities, economics, the state or nationalities." What Hardt and Negri assert is that _there is no outside to Empire_, which pragmatically recognises Deleuze's assertion of difference over identity (I believe this can also be seen as a politics of a deconstruction put into praxis). Ricos seems rather confused as to Negri and Hardt's argument at this point, as he attempts to reassert "naturalistic" connections to bios and the formation of "identities." According to Deleuze in "Repetition and Difference," it is the problematic category of identity that leads to the quantitative exchange-value of capitalism; ie identity asserts exactly what Ricos wishes to avoid: nationalities and states and other hierarchical structurations. Exchange-value as axiomatization can be turned to positive affect as decoding, deterritorialisation; however, as that which forms identities, it leads to the master/slave, heteronormative and patriarchal relationships of capital: daddy-capital, mommy earth, child-consumer in the Oedipal family). Rico's plan to create identities that emphasize relationships with biosystems, if thought not in terms of identity but in terms of becoming and difference, is closer to the ethology that Deleuze employs: becoming-animal, becoming-orchid. However, it would seem that this distinction between identity and difference is lost on Rico, leaving Rico to assert a last-century stance of "outside" Empire, looking for that elusive ground to stand on, forcing the resistance to act as coloniser and Eurocentric explorer to find that new territory to inhabit beyond Empire so as to fight its borders in skirmishes, rather than resisting from the always already within and pushing its boundaries to the breaking point, stretching its membrane so thin across various systems that it cannot control, it loses all control of its control -- indeed, such are the basic premises found in much of Hakim Bey's work from the mid-80s, an anarchist with a subtle understanding of the positionings of resistance. Unlike Ricos, I do not believe Negri and Hardt profoundly misplace the struggles of indigenous peoples worldwide. What they see, however, is that indigenous systems are not "outside" Empire. What is ironic is that the model Ricos proposes -- fighting from outside -- is the territorial and colonial model that propels imperialism; he then attributes this to possibly non-territorial models of indigenous relationships to land as a strategy of resistance. We must ask: is not Ricos from the outside to these indigenous peoples? Is territory recoding indigenous peoples into Eurocentric models of being (the castle)? The questions revolve around appropriation and authenticity, and return us back to identity and the question of speaking-for-the-other. Indeed, it is the model of Negri and Hardt that more closely resembles indigenous conceptions of land as becoming-space rather than territory, such as the songlines of Australian aborigines. And it is necessary to realise that indigenous organisation does not a priori constitute a non-patriarchal, non-hierarchical modality of being; the indigenous form of life is not Good by virtue of its existence, and it too must be subject to a careful critique of profound respect. It must be noted that many indigenous organisations strive for self-sufficiency in capital and corporation. However, I cannot claim to speak on behalf of, nor to understand, indigenous arguments and beliefs. What I can say is that Hardt and Negri's view of history is propelled by the energy of protest and resistance. It is capital which changes only because of resistance, and not vice-versa. Therefore, Empire is a product of resistance: it is ours, and this is why there is no outside. I can sympathise with Rob Los Ricos. Like Negri, he is a political prisoner. Incarcerated and held by the State, to see the positive affect of Empire alongside the negative and the possibility of always already fighting from "within" must be incredibly, if not impossibly difficult. To say that there is no outside is not to succumb to frustration and defeat and selling-out; it is to shoulder responsibility for action and to realise one's always-already implication in Empire. One cannot escape one's function in the machine, even as that which creates a blockage. To say that there is no outside is to shout a positive affirmation of existence and agency: Yes! Yes! tobias c. van Veen tobias c. van Veen ----------- http://www.thisistheonlyart.com ------------- tobias@techno.ca + + + + = + + + + + - + + + + + <-----journalisms------------> [Montreal Correspondent & Lit.Ed] Capital Magazine - http://www.capitalmag.com [Montreal Correspondent] Butter Magazine - http://www.mmmbutter.com ----------------------------- [Panarticon Columnist] Discorder Magazine - http://www.citr.ca ----------------------------- [Resident Critic] http://www.incursion.org ----------------------------- # 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