1
Bureaucratic
capitalism has found its legitimation in Marx. I am not referring here
to orthodox Marxism's dubious merit of having reinforced the
neocapitalist
structures whose present reorganization is an implicit homage to Soviet
totalitarianism; I am emphasizing the extent to which Marx's most
profound
analyses of alienation have been vulgarized in the most commonplace
facts,
which, stripped of their magical veil and materialized in each gesture,
have become the sole substance, day after day, of the lives of an
increasing
number of people. In a word, bureaucratic capitalism contains the
palpable
reality of alienation; it has brought it home to everybody far more
successfully
than Marx could ever have hoped to do, it has banalized it as the
diminishing
of material poverty has been accompanied by a spreading mediocrity of
existence.
As poverty has been reduced in terms of mere material survival, it has
become more profound in terms of our way of life -- this is at least
one
widespread feeling that exonerates Marx from all the interpretations a
degenerate Bolshevism has derived from him. The "theory" of peaceful
coexistence
has accelerated such an awareness and revealed, to those who were still
confused, that exploiters can get along quite well with each other
despite
their spectacular divergences.
2
"Any act,"
writes Mircea Eliade, "can become a religious act. Human existence is
realized
simultaneously on two parallel planes, that of temporality, becoming,
illusion,
and that of eternity, substance, reality." In the nineteenth century
the
brutal divorce of these two planes demonstrated that power would have
done
better to have maintained reality in a mist of divine transcendence.
But
we must give reformism credit for succeeding where Bonaparte had
failed,
in dissolving becoming in eternity and reality in illusion; this union
may not be as solid as the sacraments of religious marriage, but it is
lasting, which is the most the managers of coexistence and social peace
can ask of it. This is also what leads us to define ourselves -- in the
illusory but inescapable perspective of duration -- as the end of
abstract
temporality, as the end of the reified time of our acts; to define
ourselves
-- does it have to be spelled out? -- at the positive pole of
alienation
as the end of social alienation, as the end of humanity's term of
social
alienation.
3
The socialization
of primitive human groups reveals a will to struggle more effectively
against
the mysterious and terrifying forces of nature. But struggling in the
natural
environment, at once with it and against it, submitting to its most
inhuman
laws in order to wrest from it an increased chance of survival -- doing
this could only engender a more evolved form of aggressive defense, a
more
complex and less primitive attitude, manifesting on a higher level the
contradictions that the uncontrolled and yet influenceable forces of
nature
never ceased to impose. In becoming socialized, the struggle against
the
blind domination of nature triumphed inasmuch as it gradually
assimilated
primitive, natural alienation, but in another form. Alienation became
social
in the fight against natural alienation. Is it by chance that a
technological
civilization has developed to such a point that social alienation has
been
revealed by its conflict with the last areas of natural resistance that
technological power hadn't managed (and for good reasons) to subjugate?
Today the technocrats propose to put an end to primitive alienation:
with
a stirring humanitarianism they exhort us to perfect the technical
means
that "in themselves" would enable us to conquer death, suffering,
discomfort
and boredom. But to get rid of death would be less of a miracle than to
get rid of suicide and the desire to die. There are ways of abolishing
the death penalty than can make one miss it. Until now the specific use
of technology -- or more generally the socioeconomic context in which
human
activity is confined -- while quantitatively reducing the number of
occasions
of pain and death, has allowed death itself to eat like a cancer into
the
heart of each person's life.
4
The prehistoric
food-gathering age was succeeded by the hunting age during which clans
formed and strove to increase their chances of survival. Hunting
grounds
and reserves were staked out from which outsiders were absolutely
excluded
since the welfare of the whole clan depended on its maintaining its
territory.
As a result, the freedom gained by settling down more comfortably in
the
natural environment, and by more effective protection against its
rigors,
engendered its own negation outside the boundaries laid down by the
clan
and forced the group to moderate its customary rules in organizing its
relations with excluded and threatening groups. From the moment it
appeared,
socially constituted economic survival implied the existence of
boundaries,
restrictions, conflicting rights. It should never be forgotten that
until
now both history and our own nature have developed in accordance with
the
movement of privative appropriation: the seizing of control by a class,
group, caste or individual of a general power over socioeconomic
survival
whose form remains complex -- from ownership of land, territory,
factories
or capital, all the way to the "pure" exercise of power over people
(hierarchy).
Beyond the struggle against regimes whose vision of paradise is a
cybernetic
welfare state lies the necessity of a still vaster struggle against a
fundamental
and initially natural state of things, in the development of which
capitalism
plays only an incidental, transitory role; a state of things which will
only disappear when the last traces of hierarchical power disappear --
along with the "swine of humanity;' of course.
5
To be an
owner is to arrogate a good from whose enjoyment one excludes other
people
-- while at the same time recognizing everyone's abstract right to
possession.
By excluding people from the real right of ownership, the owner extends
his dominion over those he has excluded (absolutely over nonowners,
relatively
over other owners), without whom he is nothing. The nonowners have no
choice
in the matter. The owner appropriates and alienates them as producers
of
his own power, while the necessity of ensuring their own physical
existence
forces them in spite of themselves to collaborate in producing their
own
exclusion and to survive without ever being able to live. Excluded,
they
participate in possession through the mediation of the owner, a
mystical
participation characterizing from the outset all the clan and social
relationships
that gradually replaced the principle of obligatory cohesion in which
each
member was an integral part of the group ("organic interdependence").
Their
guarantee of survival depends on their activity within the framework of
privative appropriation. They reinforce a right to property from which
they are excluded. Due to this ambiguity each of them sees himself as
participating
in ownership, as a living fragment of the right to possess, and this
belief
in turn reinforces his condition as excluded and possessed. (Extreme
cases
of this alienation: the faithful slave, the cop, the bodyguard, the
centurion--creatures
who, through a sort of union with their own death, confer on death a
power
equal to the forces of life and identify in a destructive energy the
negative
and positive poles of alienation, the absolutely submissive slave and
the
absolute master.) It is of vital importance to the exploiter that this
appearance is maintained and made more sophisticated; not because he is
especially machiavellian, but simply because he wants to stay alive.
The
organization of appearance is bound to the survival of his privileges
and
to the physical survival of the nonowner, who can thus remain alive
while
being exploited and excluded from being a person. Privative
appropriation
and domination are thus originally imposed and felt as a positive
right,
but in the form of a negative universality. Valid for everyone,
justified
in everyone's eyes by divine or natural law, the right of privative
appropriation
is objectified in a general illusion, in a universal transcendence, in
an essential law under which everyone individually manages to tolerate
the more or less narrow limits assigned to his right to live and to the
conditions of life in general.
6
In this
social context the function of alienation must be understood as a
condition
of survivaL The labor of the nonowners is subject to the same
contradictions
as the right of privative appropriation. It transforms them into
possessed
beings, into producers of their own expropriation and exclusion, but it
represents the only chance of survival for slaves, for serfs, for
workers--so
much so that the activity that allows their existence to continue by
emptying
it of all content ends up, through a natural and sinister reversal of
perspective,
by taking on a positive sense. Not only has value been attributed to
work
(in its form of sacrifice in the ancien régime, in its
brutalizing
aspects in bourgeois ideology and in the so-called People's
Democracies),
but very early on to work for a master, to alienate oneself willingly,
became the honorable and scarcely questioned price of survival. The
satisfaction
of basic needs remains the best safeguard of alienation; it is best
dissimulated
by being justified on the grounds of undeniable necessities. Alienation
multiplies needs because it can satisfy none of them; nowadays lack of
satisfaction is measured in the number of cars, refrigerators, Tvs: the
alienating objects have lost the ruse and mystery of transcendence,
they
are there in their concrete poverty. To be rich today is to possess the
greatest number of poor objects.
Up to now
surviving has prevented us from living. This is why much is to be
expected
of the increasingly evident impossibility of survival, an impossibility
which will become all the more evident as the glut of conveniences and
elements of survival reduces life to a single choice: suicide or
revolution.
7
The sacred
presides even over the struggle against alienation. As soon as the
relations
of exploitation and the violence that underlies them are no longer
concealed
by the mystical veil, there is a breakthrough, a moment of clarity, the
struggle against alienation is suddenly revealed as a ruthless
hand-to-hand
fight with naked power, power exposed in its brute force and its
weakness,
a vulnerable giant whose slightest wound confers on the attacker the
infamous
notoriety of an Erostratus. Since power survives, the event remains
ambiguous.
Praxis of destruction, sublime moment when the complexity of the world
becomes tangible, transparent, within everyone's grasp; inexpiable
revolts
-- those of the slaves, the Jacques, the iconoclasts, the Enrage's,.the
Communards, Kronstadt, the Asturias, and--promises of things to come --
the hooligans of Stockholm and the wildcat strikes... only the
destruction
of all hierarchical power will allow us to forget these. We aim to make
sure it does.
The deterioration
of mythical structures and their slowness in regenerating themselves,
which
make possible the awakening of consciousness and the critical
penetration
of insurrection, are also responsible for the fact that once the
"excesses"
of revolution are past, the struggle against alienation is grasped on a
theoretical plane, subjected to an "analysis" that is a carryover from
the demystification preparatory to revolt. It is at this point that the
truest and most authentic aspects of a revolt are reexamined and
repudiated
by the "we didn't really mean to do that" of the theoreticians charged
with explaining the meaning of an insurrection to those who made it --
to those who aim to demystify by acts, not just by words.
All acts
contesting power call for analysis and tactical development. Much can
be
expected of:
- the
new proletariat,
which is discovering its destitution amidst consumer abundance (see the
development of the workers' struggles presently beginning in England,
and
the attitudes of rebellious youth in all the modern countries);
- countries
that
have had enough of their partial, sham revolutions and are consigning
their
past and present theorists to the museums (see the role of the
intelligentsia
in the Eastern bloc);
- the
Third World,
whose mistrust of technological myths has been kept alive by the
colonial
cops and mercenaries, the last, over-zealous militants of a
transcendence
against which they are the best possible vaccination;
- the
force of
the SI ("our ideas are in everyone's mind"), capable of forestalling
remote-controlled
revolts, "crystal nights" and sheepish resistance.
8
Privative
appropriation is bound to the dialectic of particular and general. In
the
mystical realm where the contradictions of the slave and feudal systems
are resolved, the nonowner, excluded as a particular individual from
the
right of possession, strives to ensure his survival through his labor:
the more he identifies with the interests of the master, the more
successful
he is. He knows the other nonowners only through their common plight:
the
compulsory surrender of their labor power (Christianity recommended
voluntary
surrender: once the slave "willingly" offered his labor power, he
ceased
to be a slave), the search for the optimum conditions of survival, and
mystical identification. Struggle, though born of a universal will to
survive,
takes place on the level of appearance where it brings into play
identification
with the desires of the master and thus introduces a certain individual
rivalry that reflects the rivalry between the masters. Competition
develops
on this plane as long as the relations of exploitation remain
dissimulated
behind a mystical opacity and as long as the conditions producing this
opacity continue to exist; as long as the degree of slavery determines
the slave's consciousness of the degree of lived reality. (We are still
at the stage of calling "objective consciousness" what is in reality
the
consciousness of being an object.) The owner, for his part, depends on
the general acknowledgment of a right from which he alone is not
excluded,
but which is seen on the plane of appearance as a right accessible to
each
of the excluded taken individually. His privileged position depends on
such a belief, and this belief is also the basis for the strength that
is essential if he is to hold his own among the other owners; it is his
strength. If, in his turn, he seems to renounce exclusive appropriation
of everything and everybody, if he poses less as a master than as a
servant
of public good and defender of collective security, then his power is
crowned
with glory and to his other privileges he adds that of denying, on the
level of appearance (which is the only level of reference in unilateral
communication), the very notion of personal appropriation; he denies
that
anyone has this right, he repudiates the other owners. In the feudal
perspective
the owner is not integrated into appearance in the same way as the
nonowners,
slaves, soldiers, functionaries, servants of all kinds. The lives of
the
latter are so squalid that the majority can live only as a caricature
of
the Master (the feudal lord, the prince, the major-domo, the
taskmaster,
the high priest, God, Satan ...). But the master himself is also forced
to play one of these caricatural roles. He can do so without much
effort
since his pretension to total life is already so caricatural, isolated
as he is among those who can only survive. He is already one of our own
kind (with the added grandeur of a past epoch, which adds an exquisite
savor to his sadness); he, like each of us, was anxiously seeking the
adventure
where he could find himself on the road to his total perdition. Could
the
master, at the very moment he alienates the others, see that he reduces
them to dispossessed and excluded beings, and thus realize that he is
only
an exploiter, a purely negative being? Such an awareness is unlikely
and
would be dangerous. By extending his dominion over the greatest
possible
number of subjects, isn't he enabling them to survive, giving them
their
only chance of salvation? ("Whatever would happen to the workers if the
capitalists weren't kind enough to employ them?" the high-minded souls
of the nineteenth century liked to ask.) In fact, the owner officially
excludes himself from all claim to privative appropriation. To the
sacrifice
of the non- owner, who through his labor exchanges his real life for an
apparent one (thus avoiding immediate death by allowing the master to
determine
his variety of living death), the owner replies by appearing to
sacrifice
his nature as owner and exploiter; he excludes himself mythically, he
puts
himself at the service of everyone and of myth (at the service of God
and
his people, for example). With an additional gesture with an act whose
gratuitousness bathes him in an otherworldly radiance, he gives
renunciation
its pure form of mythical reality renouncing common life, he is the
poor
man amidst illusory wealth, he who sacrifices himself for everyone
while
all the other people only sacrifice themselves for their own sake, for
the sake of their survival. He turns his predicament into prestige. The
more powerful he is the greater his sacrifice. He becomes the living
reference
point of the whole illusory life, the highest attainable point in the
scale
of mythical values. "Voluntarily" withdrawn from common mortals, he is
drawn toward the world of the gods, and his more or less established
participation
in divinity, on the level of appearance (the only generally
acknowledged
frame of reference), consecrates his rank in the hierarchy of the other
owners. In the organization of transcendence the feudal lord -- and,
through
osmosis, the owners of some power or production materials, in varying
degrees
-- is led to play the principal role the role that he really does play
in the economic organization of the' group's survival. As a result, the
existence of the group is bound on every level to the existence of the
owners as such, to those who, owning everything because they own
everybody,
also force everyone to renounce their lives on the pretext of the
owners'
unique absolute and divine renunciation. (From the god Prometheus
punished
by the gods to the god Christ punished by men, the sacrifice of the
Owner
becomes vulgarized, it loses its sacred aura, is humanized.) Myth thus
unites owner and nonowner, it envelops them in a common form in which
the
necessity of survival, whether merely physical or as a privileged being
forces them to live on the level of appearance and of the inversion of'
real life, the inversion of the life of everyday praxis. We are still
there
waiting to live a life less than or beyond a mystique against which our
every gesture protests while submitting to it.
9
Myth, the
unitary absolute in which the contradictions of the world find an
illusory
resolution, the harmonious and constantly harmonized vision that
reflects
and reinforces order--this is the sphere of the sacred, the extrahuman
zone where an abundance of revelations are manifested but where the
revelation
of the process of privative appropriation is carefully suppressed.
Nietzsche
saw this when he wrote "All becoming is a criminal revolt from eternal
being and its price is death." When the bourgeoisie claimed to replace
the pure Being of feudalism with Becoming, all it really did was to
desacralize
Being and resacralize Becoming to its own profit; it elevated its own
Becoming
to the status of Being, no longer that of absolute ownership but rather
that of relative appropriation: a petty democratic and mechanical
Becoming,
with its notions of progress, merit and causal succession. The owner's
life hides him from himself; bound to myth by a life and death pact, he
cannot see himself in the positive and exclusive enjoyment of any good
except through the lived experience of his own exclusion. (And isn't it
through this mythical exclusion that the non- owners will come to grasp
the reality of their own exclusion?) He bears the responsibility for a
group, he takes on the burden of a god. Submitting himself to its
benediction
and its retribution, he swathes himself in austerity and wastes away.
Model
of gods and heroes, the master, the owner, is the true reality of
Prometheus,
of Christ, of all those whose spectacular sacrifice has made it
possible
for "the vast majority of people" to continue to sacrifice themselves
to
the extreme minority, to the masters. (Analysis of the owner's
sacrifice
should be worked out more subtly: isn't the case of Christ really the
sacrifice
of the owner's son? If the owner can never sacrifice himself except on
the level of appearance, then Christ stands for the real immolation of
the owner's son when circumstances leave no other alternative. As a son
he is only an owner at a very early stage of development, an embryo,
little
more than a dream of future ownership. In this mythic dimension belongs
Barrès's well-known remark in 1914 when war had arrived and made
his dreams come true at last: "Our youth, as is proper, has gone to
shed
torrents of our blood.") This rather distasteful little game, before it
became transformed into a symbolic rite, knew a heroic period when
kings
and tribal chiefs were ritually put to death according to their "will."
Historians assure us that these august martyrs were soon replaced by
prisoners,
slaves or criminals. They may not get hurt any more, but they've kept
the
halo.
10
The concept
of a common fate is based on the sacrifice of the owner and the
nonowner.
Put another way, the notion of a human condition is based on an ideal
and
tormented image whose function is to resolve the irresolvable
opposition
between the mythical sacrifice of the minority and the really
sacrificed
life of everyone else. The function of myth is to unify and eternalize,
in a succession of static moments, the dialectic of "will-to-live" and
its opposite. This universally dominant factitious unity attains its
most
tangible and concrete representation in communication, particularly in
language. Ambiguity is most manifest at this level, it leads to an
absence
of real communication, it puts the analyst at the mercy of ridiculous
phantoms,
at the mercy of words -- eternal and changing instants -- whose content
varies according to who pronounces them, as does the notion of
sacrifice.
When language is put to the test, it can no longer dissimulate the
misrepresentation
and thus it provokes the crisis of participation. In the language of an
era one can follow the traces of total revolution, unfulfilled but
always
imminent. They are the exalting and terrifying signs of the upheavals
they
foreshadow, but who takes them seriously? The discredit striking
language
is as deeply rooted and instinctive as the suspicion with which myths
are
viewed by people who at the same time remain firmly attached to them.
How
can key words be defined by other words? How can phrases be used to
point
out the signs that refute the phraseological organization of
appearance?
The best texts still await their justification. When a poem by
Mallarmé
becomes the sole explanation for an act of revolt, then poetry and
revolution
will have overcome their ambiguity. To await and prepare for this
moment
is to manipulate information not as the last shock wave whose
significance
escapes everyone, but as the first repercussion of an act still to come.
11
Born of
man's will to survive the uncontrollable forces of nature, myth is a
public
welfare policy that has outlived its necessity. It has consolidated its
tyrannical force by reducing life to the sole dimension of survival, by
negating it as movement and totality.
When contested,
myth homogenizes the diverse attacks on it; sooner or later it engulfs
and assimilates them. Nothing can withstand it, no image or concept
that
attempts to destroy the dominant spiritual structures. It reigns over
the
expression of facts and lived experience, on which it imposes its own
interpretive
structure (dramatization). Private consciousness is the consciousness
of
lived experience that finds its expression on the level of organized
appearance.
Myth is
sustained by rewarded sacrifice. Since every individual life is based
on
its own renunciation, lived experience must be defined as sacrifice and
recompense. As a reward for his asceticism, the initiate (the promoted
worker, the specialist, the manager -- new martyrs canonized
democratically)
is granted a niche in the organization of appearance; he is made to
feel
at home in alienation. But collective shelters disappeared with unitary
societies, all that's left is their later concrete embodiments for the
benefit of the public: temples, churches, palaces... memories of a
universal
protection. Shelters are private nowadays, and even if their protection
is far from certain there can be no mistaking their price.
12
"Private"
life is defined primarily in a formal context. It is, to be sure, born
out of the social relations created by privative appropriation, but its
essential form is determined by the expression of those relations.
Universal,
incontestable but constantly contested, this form makes appropriation a
right belonging to everyone and from which everyone is excluded, a
right
one can obtain only by renouncing it. As long as it fails to break free
of the context imprisoning it (a break that is called revolution), the
most authentic experience can be grasped, expressed and communicated
only
by way of an inversion through which its fundamental contradiction is
dissimulated.
In other words, if a pos itive project fails to sustain a praxis of
radically
overthrowing the conditions of life -- which are nothing other than the
conditions of privative appropriation--it does not have the slightest
chance
of escaping being taken over by the negativity that reigns over the
expression
of social relationships: it is recuperated like the image in a mirror,
in inverse perspective. In the totalizing perspective in which it
conditions
the whole of everyone's life, and in which its real and its mythic
power
can no longer be distinguished (both being both real and mythical), the
process of privative appropriation has made it impossible to express
life
any way except negatively. Life in its entirety is suspended in a
negativity
that corrodes it and formally defines it. To talk of life today is like
talking of rope in the house of a hanged man. Since the key of
will-to-live
has been lost we have been wandering in the corridors of an endless
mausoleum.
The dialogue of chance and the throw of the dice no longer suffices to
justify our lassitude; those who still accept living in well-furnished
weariness picture themselves as leading an indolent existence while
failing
to notice in each of their daily gestures a living denial of their
despair,
a denial that should rather make them despair only of the poverty of
their
imagination. Forgetting life, one can identify with a range of images,
from the brutish conqueror and brutish slave at one pole to the saint
and
the pure hero at the other. The air in this shithouse has been
unbreathable
for a long time. The world and man as representation stink like carrion
and there's no longer any god around to turn the charnel houses into
beds
of lilies. After all the ages men have died while accepting without
notable
change the explanations of gods, of nature and of biological laws, it
wouldn't
seem unreasonable to ask if we don't die because so much death enters
--
and for very specific reasons -- into every moment of our lives.
13
Privative
appropriation can be defined notably as the appropriation of things by
means of the appropriation of people. It is the spring and the troubled
water where all reflections mingle and blur. Its field of action and
influence,
spanning the whole of history, seems to have been characterized until
now
by a fundamental double behavioral determination: an ontology based on
sacrifice and negation of self (its subjective and objective aspects
respectively)
and a fundamental duality, a division between particular and general,
individual
and collective, private and public, theoretical and practical,
spiritual
and material, intellectual and manual, etc. The contradiction between
universal
appropriation and universal expropriation implies that the master has
been
seen for what he is and isolated. This mythical image of terror, want
and
renunciation presents itself to slaves, to servants, to all those who
can't
stand living as they do; it is the illusory reflection of their
participation
in property, a natural illusion since they really do participate in it
through the daily sacrifice of their energy (what the ancients called
pain
or torture and we call labor or work) since they themselves produce
this
property in a way that excludes them. The master can only cling to the
notion of work-as-sacrifice, like Christ to his cross and his nails; it
is up to him to authenticate sacrifice, to apparently renounce his
right
to exclusive enjoyment and to cease to expropriate with purely human
violence
(that is, violence without mediation). The sublimity of the gesture
obscures
the initial violence, the nobility of the sacrifice absolves the
commando,
the brutality of the conqueror is bathed in the light of a
transcendence
whose reign is internalized, the gods are the intransigent guardians of
rights, the irascible shepherds of a peaceful and law-abiding flock of
"Being and Wanting-To-Be Owner." The gamble on transcendence and the
sacrifice
it implies are the masters' greatest conquest, their most accomplished
submission to the necessity of conquest. Anyone who intrigues for power
while refusing the purification of renunciation (the brigand or the
tyrant)
will sooner or later be tracked down and killed like a mad dog, or
worse:
as someone who only pursues his own ends and whose blunt conception of
"work" lacks any tact toward others' feelings: Troppmann, Landru,
Petiot,
murdering people without justifying it in the name of defending the
Free
World, the Christian West, the State or Human Dignity, were doomed to
eventual
defeat. By refusing to play the rules of the game, pirates, gangsters
and
outlaws disturb those with good consciences (whose consciences are a
reflection
of myth), but the masters, by killing the encroacher or enrolling him
as
a cop, reestablish the omnipotence of "eternal truth": those who don't
sell themselves lose their right to survive and those who do sell
themselves
lose their right to live. The sacrifice of the master is the matrix of
humanism, which is what makes humanism -- and let this be understood
once
and for all the miserable negation of everything human. Humanism is the
master taken seriously at his own game, acclaimed by those who see in
his
apparent sacrifice -- that caricatural reflection of their real
sacrifice
-- a reason to hope for salvation. Justice, dignity, nobility,
freedom...
these words that yap and howl, are they anything other than household
pets
whose masters have calmly awaited their homecoming since the time when
heroic lackeys won the right to walk them on the streets? To use them
is
to forget that they are the ballast that enables power to rise out of
reach.
And if we imagine a regime deciding that the mythical sacrifice of the
masters should not be promoted in such universal forms, and setting
about
tracking down these word-concepts and wiping them out, we could well
expect
the Left to be incapable of combating it with anything more than a
plaintive
battle of words whose every phrase, invoking the "sacrifice" of a
previous
master, calls for an equally mythical sacrifice of a new one (a leftist
master, a power mowing down workers in the name of the proletariat).
Bound
to the notion of sacrifice, humanism is born of the common fear of
masters
and slaves: it is nothing but the solidarity of a shit-scared humanity.
But those who reject all hierarchical power can use any word as a
weapon
to punctuate their action. Lautréamont and the illegalist
anarchists
were already aware of this; so were the dadaists.
The appropriator
thus becomes an owner from the moment he puts the ownership of people
and
things in the hands of God or of some universal transcendence whose
omnipotence
is reflected back on him as a grace sanctifying his slightest gesture;
to oppose an owner thus consecrated is to oppose God, nature, the
fatherland,
the people. In short, to exclude oneself from the physical and
spiritual
world. "We must neither govern nor be governed," writes Marcel Havrenne
so neatly. For those who add an appropriate violence to his humor,
there
is no longer any salvation or damnation, no place in the universal
order,
neither with Satan, the great recuperator of the faithful, nor in any
form
of myth since they are the living proof of the uselessness of all that.
They were born for a life yet to be invented; insofar as they lived, it
was on this hope that they finally came to grief.
Two corollaries
of singularization in transcendence:
- If
ontology
implies transcendence, it is clear that any ontology automatically
justifies
the being of the master and the hierarchical power wherein the master
is
reflected in degraded, more or less faithful images.
- Over
the distinction
between manual and intellectual work, between practice and theory, is
superimposed
the distinction between work-as-real-sacrifice and the organization of
work in the form of apparent sacrifice.
It would be
tempting to explain fascism -- among other reasons for it -- as an act
of faith, the auto-da-fé of a bourgeoisie haunted by the murder
of God and the destruction of the great sacred spectacle, dedicating
itself
to the devil, to an inverted mysticism, a black mysticism with its
rituals
and its holocausts. Mysticism and high finance.
It should
not be forgotten that hierarchical power is inconceivable without
transcendence,
without ideologies, without myths. Demystification itself can always be
turned into a myth: it suffices to "omit," most philosophically,
demystification
by acts. Any demystification so neutralized, with the sting taken out
of
it, becomes painless, euthanasic, in a word, humanitarian. Except that
the movement of demystification will ultimately demystify the
demystifiers.
14
By directly
attacking the mythical organization of appearance, the bourgeois
revolutions,
in spite of themselves, attacked the weak point not only of unitary
power
but of any hierarchical power whatsoever. Does this unavoidable mistake
explain the guilt complex that is one of the dominant traits of
bourgeois
mentality? In any case, the mistake was undoubtedly inevitable.
It was a
mistake because once the cloud of lies dissimulating privative
appropriation
was pierced, myth was shattered, leaving a vacuum that could be filled
only by a delirious freedom and a splendid poetry. Orgiastic poetry, to
be sure, has not yet destroyed power. Its failure is easily explained
and
its ambiguous signs reveal the blows struck at the same time as they
heal
the wounds. And yet -- let us leave the historians and aesthetes to
their
collections -- one has only to pick at the scab of memory and the
cries,
words and gestures of the past make the whole body of power bleed
again.
The whole organization of the survival of memories will not prevent
them
from dissolving into oblivion as they come to life; just as our
survival
will dissolve in the construction of our everyday life.
And it was
an inevitable process: as Marx showed, the appearance of exchange-value
and its symbolic representation by money opened a profound latent
crisis
in the heart of the unitary world. The commodity introduced into human
relationships a universality (a 1000- franc note represents anything I
can obtain for that sum) and an egalitarianism (equal things are
exchanged).
This "egalitarian universality" partially escapes both the exploiter
and
the exploited, but they recognize each other through it. They find
themselves
face to face confronting each other no longer within the mystery of
divine
birth' and ancestry, as was the case with the nobility, but within an
intelligible
transcendence, the Logos, a body of laws that can be understood by
everyone,
even if such understanding remains cloaked in mystery.
A mystery
with its initiates: first of all priests struggling to maintain the
Logos
in the limbo of divine mysticism, but soon yielding to philosophers and
then to technicians both their positions and the dignity of their
sacred
mission. From Plato's Republic to the Cybernetic State.
Thus, under
the pressure of exchange-value and technology (generally available
mediation),
myth was gradually secularized. Two facts should be noted, however:
- As
the Logos
frees itself from mystical unity, it affirms itself both within it and
against it. Upon magical and analogical structures of behavior are
superimposed
rational and logical ones which negate the former while preserving them
(mathematics, poetics, economics, aesthetics, psychology, etc.).
- Each
time the
Logos, the "organization of intelligible appearance:, becomes more
autonomous,
it tends to break away from the sacred and become fragmented. In this
way
it presents a double danger for unitary power. We have already seen
that
the sacred expresses power's seizure of the totality, and that anyone
wanting
to accede to the totality must do so through the mediation of power:
the
interdict against mystics, alchemists and gnostics is sufficient proof
of this. This also explains why present-day power "protects"
specialists
(though without completely trusting them): it vaguely senses that they
are the missionaries of a resacralized Logos. There are historical
signs
that testify to the attempts made within mystical unitary power to
found
a rival power asserting its unity in the name of the Logos -- Christian
syncretism (which makes God psychologically explainable), the
Renaissance,
the Reformation and the Enlightenment.
The masters
who strove to maintain the unity of the Logos were well aware that only
unity can stabilize power. Examined more closely, their efforts can be
seen not to have been as vain as the fragmentation of the Logos in the
nineteenth and twentieth centuries would seem to prove. In the general
movement of atomization the Logos has been broken down into specialized
techniques (physics, biology, sociology, papyrology, etc.), but at the
same time the need to reestablish the totality has become more
imperative.
It should not be forgotten that all it would take would be an
all-powerful
technocratic power in order for there to be a totalitarian domination
of
the totality, for the Logos to succeed myth as the seizure of the
totality
by a future unitary (cybernetic) power. In such an event the vision of
the Encyclopédistes (strictly rationalized progress stretching
indefinitely
into the future) would have known only a two-century postponement
before
being realized. This is the direction in which the
Stalino-cyberneticians
are preparing the future. In this perspective, peaceful coexistence
should
be seen as a preliminary step toward a totalitarian unity. It is time
everyone
realized that they are already resisting it.
15
We know
the battlefield. The problem now is to prepare for battle before the
pataphysician,
armed with his totality without technique, and the cybernetician, armed
with his technique without totality, consummate their political coitus.
From the standpoint
of hierarchical power, myth could be desacralized only if the Logos, or
at least its desacralizing elements, were resacralized. To attack the
sacred
was at the same time supposed to liberate the totality and thus destroy
power (we've heard that one before!). But the power of the bourgeoisie
-- fragmented, impoverished, constantly contested-maintains a relative
stability by relying on this ambiguity: Technology, which objectively
desacralizes,
subjectively appears as an instrument of liberation. Not a real
liberation,
which could be attained only by desacralization -- that is, by the end
of the spectacle -- but a caricature, an imitation, an induced
hallucination.
What the unitary vision of the world transferred into the beyond
(above)
fragmentary power pro-jects ('throws forward') into a state of future
well-being,
of brighter tomorrows proclaimed from atop the dunghill of
today-tomorrows
that are nothing more than the present multiplied by the number of
gadgets
to be produced. From the slogan "Live in God" we have gone on to the
humanistic
motto "Survive until you are old," euphemistically expressed as: "Stay
young at heart and you'll live a long time."
Once desacralized
and fragmented, myth loses its grandeur and its spirituality. It
becomes
an impoverished form, retaining its former characteristics but
revealing
them in a concrete, harsh, tangible fashion. God doesn't run the show
anymore,
and until the day the Logos takes over with its arms of technology and
science, the phantoms of alienation will continue to materialize and
sow
disorder everywhere. Watch for them: they are the first symptoms of a
future
order. We must start to play right now if the future is not to become
impossible
(the hypothesis of humanity destroying itself-and with it obviously the
whole experiment of constructing everyday life). The vital objectives
of
a struggle for the construction of everyday life are the sensitive key
points of all hierarchical power. To build one is to destroy the other.
Caught in the vortex of desacralization and resacralization, we stand
essentially
for the negation of the following elements the organization of
appearance
as a spectacle in which everyone denies himself, the separation on
which
private life is based, since it is there that the objective separation
between owners and dispossessed is lived and reflected on every level
and
sacrifice These three elements are obviously interdependent, just as
are
their opposites: participation, communication, realization. The same
applies
to their context nontotality (a bankrupt world, a controlled totality)
and totality.
16
The human
relationships that were formerly dissolved in divine transcendence (the
totality crowned by the sacred) settled out and solidified as soon as
the
sacred stopped acting as a catalyst. Their materiality was revealed
and,
as the capricious laws of the economy succeed those of Providence, the
power of men began to appear behind the power of gods. Today a
multitude
of roles corresponds to the mythical role everyone once played under
the
divine spotlight. Though their masks are now human faces, these roles
still
require both actors and extras to deny their real lives in accordance
with
the dialectic of real and mythical sacrifice. The spectacle is nothing
but desacralized and fragmented myth. It forms the armor of a power
(which
could also be called essential mediation) that becomes vulnerable to
every
blow once it no longer succeeds in dissimulating (in the cacophony
where
all cries drown out each other and form an overall harmony) its nature
as privative appropriation, and the greater or lesser dose of misery it
allots to everyone.
Roles have
become impoverished within the context of a fragmentary power eaten
away
by desacralization, just as the spectacle represents an impoverishment
in comparison with myth. They betray its mechanisms and artifices so
clumsily
that power, to defend itself against popular denunciation of the
spectacle,
has no other alternative than to itself take the initiative in this
denunciation
by even more clumsily changing actors or ministers, or by organizing
pogroms
of supposed or prefabricated scapegoat agents (agents of Moscow, Wall
Street,
the Judeocracy or the Two Hundred Families). Which also means that the
whole cast has been forced to become hams, that style has been replaced
by manner.
Myth, as
an immobile totality, encompassed all movement (consider pilgrimage,
for
example, as fulfillment and adventure within immobility). On the one
hand,
the spectacle can seize the totality only by reducing it to a fragment
and to a series of fragments (psychological, sociological, biological,
philological and mythological world-views), while on the other hand, it
is situated at the point where the movement of desacralization
converges
with the efforts at resacralization. Thus it can succeed in imposing
immobility
only within the real movement, the movement that changes it despite its
resistance. In the era of fragmentation the organization of appearance
makes movement a linear succession of immobile instants (this
notch-to-notch
progression is perfectly exemplified by Stalinist "Dialectical
Materialism").
Under what we have called "the colonization of everyday life," the only
possible changes are changes of fragmentary roles. In terms of more or
less inflexible conventions, one is successively citizen, head of
family,
sexual partner, politician, specialist, professional, producer,
consumer.
Yet what boss doesn't himself feel bossed? The proverb applies to
everyone:
You sometimes get a fuck, but you always get fucked!
The era
of fragmentation has at least eliminated all doubt on one point:
everyday
life is the battlefield where the war between power and the totality
takes
place, with power using all its strength to control the totality.
What do
we demand in backing the power of everyday life against hierarchical
power?
We demand everything. We are taking our stand in the generalized
conflict
stretching from domestic squabbles to revolutionary war, and we have
gambled
on the will to live. This means that we must survive as antisurvivors.
Fundamentally we are concerned only with the moments when life breaks
through
the glaciation of survival (whether these moments are unconscious or
theorized,
historical-like revolution-or personal). But we must recognize that we
are also prevented from freely following the course of such moments
(except
for the moment of revolution itself) not only by the general repression
exerted by power, but also by the exigencies of our own struggle, our
own
tactics, etc. It is also important to find the means of compensating
for
this additional "margin of error" by widening the scope of these
moments
and demonstrating their qualitative significance. What prevents what we
say on the construction of everyday life from being recuperated by the
cultural establishment (Arguments, academic thinkers with paid
vacations)
is the fact that all situationist ideas are nothing other than faithful
developments of acts attempted constantly by thousands of people to try
and prevent another day from being no more than twenty-four hours of
wasted
time. Are we an avant-garde? If so, to be avant-garde means to move in
step with reality.
17
It's not
the monopoly of intelligence that we hold, but that of its use. Our
position
is strategic, we are at the heart of every conflict. The qualitative is
our striking force. People who half understand this journal ask us for
an explanatory monograph thanks to which they will be able to convince
themselves that they are intelligent and cultured-- that is to say,
idiots.
Someone who gets exasperated and chucks it in the gutter is making a
more
meaningful gesture. Sooner or later it will have to be understood that
the words and phrases we use are still lagging behind reality. The
distortion
and clumsiness in the way we express ourselves (which a man of taste
called,
not inaccurately, "a rather irritating kind of hermetic terrorism")
comes
from our central position, our position on the ill-defined and shifting
frontier where language captured by power (conditioning) and free
language
(poetry) fight out their infinitely complex war. To those who follow
behind
us we prefer those who reject us impatiently because our language is
not
yet authentic poetry-the free construction of everyday life.
Everything
related to thought is related to the spectacle. Almost everyone lives
in
a state of terror at the possibility that they might awake to
themselves,
and their fear is deliberately fostered by power. Conditioning, the
special
poetry of power, has extended its dominion so far (all material
equipment
belongs to it: press, television, stereotypes, magic, tradition,
economy,
technology -- what we call captured language) that it has almost
succeeded
in dissolving what Marx called the undominated sector, replacing it
with
another dominated one (see below our composite portrait of "the
survivor").
But lived experience cannot so easily be educed to a succession of
empty
configurations Resistance to the external organization of life to the
organization
of life as survival contains more poetry than any volume of verse or
prose
and the poet in the literary sense of the word is one who has at least
understood or felt this But such poetry is in a most dangerous
situation
Certainly poetry in the situationist sense of the word is irreducible
and
cannot be recuperated by power (as soon as an act is recuperated it
becomes
a stereotype, conditioning, language of power). But it is encircled by
power. Power encircles the irreducible and holds it by isolating it;
yet
such isolation is impracticable. The two pincers are, first, the threat
of disintegration (insanity, illness, destitution, suicide), and
second,
remote-controlled therapeutics. The first grants death, the second
grants
no more than survival (empty communication, the company of family or
friendship,
psychoanalysis in the service of alienation, medical care,
ergotherapy).
Sooner or later the SI must define itself as a therapy: we are ready to
defend the poetry made by all against the false poetry rigged up by
power
(conditioning). Doctors and psychoanalysts better get it straight too,
or they may one day, along with architects and other apostles of
survival,
have to take the consequences for what they have done.
18
All unresolved,
unsuperseded antagonisms weaken. Such antagonisms can evolve only by
remaining
imprisoned in previous unsuperseded forms (anticultural art in the
cultural
spectacle, for example). Any radical opposition that fails or is
partially
successful (which amounts to the same thing) gradually degenerates into
reformist opposition. Fragmentary oppositions are like the teeth on
cogwheels,
they mesh with each other and make the machine go round, the machine of
the spectacle, the machine of power.
Myth maintained
all antagonisms within the archetype of Manicheanism. But what can
function
as an archetype in a fragmented society? In fact, the memory of
previous
antagonisms, presented in their obviously devalued and unaggressive
form,
appears today as the last attempt to bring some coherence into the
organization
of appearance, so great is the extent to which the spectacle has become
a spectacle of confusion and equivalences. We are ready to wipe out all
trace of these memories by harnessing all the energy contained in
previous
antagonisms for a radical struggle soon to come. All the springs
blocked
by power will one day burst through to form a torrent that will change
the face of the world.
In a caricature
of antagonisms, power urges everyone to be for or against Brigitte
Bardot,
the nouveau roman, the 4-horse Citroën, spaghetti, mescal,
miniskirts,
the UN, the classics, nationalization, thermonuclear war and
hitchhiking.
Everyone is asked their opinion about every detail in order to prevent
them from having one about the totality. However clumsy this maneuver
may
be, it might have worked if the salesmen in charge of peddling it from
door to door were not themselves waking up to their own alienation. To
the passivity imposed on the dispossessed masses is added the growing
passivity
of the directors and actors subjected to the abstract laws of the
market
and the spectacle and exercising less and less real power over the
world.
Already signs of revolt are appearing among the actors -- stars who try
to escape publicity or rulers who criticize their own power; Brigitte
Bardot
or Fidel Castro. The tools of power are wearing out; their desire for
their
own freedom should be taken into account.
19
At the very
moment when slave revolt threatened to overthrow the structure of power
and to reveal the relationship between transcendence and the mechanism
of privative appropriation, Christianity appeared with its grandiose
reformism,
whose central democratic demand was for the slaves to accede not to the
reality of a human life-- which would have been impossible without
denouncing
the exclusionary aspect of privative appropriation-but rather to the
unreality
of an existence whose source of happiness is mythical (the imitation of
Christ as the price of the hereafter). What has changed? Anticipation
of
the hereafter has become anticipation of a brighter tomorrow; the
sacrifice
of real, immediate life is the price paid for the illusory freedom of
an
apparent life. The spectacle is the sphere where forced labor is
transformed
into voluntary sacrifice. Nothing is more suspect than the formula "To
each according to his work" in a world where work is the blackmail of
survival;
to say nothing of the formula "To each according to his needs" in a
world
where needs are determined by power Any construction that attempts to
define
itself autonomously and thus partially, and does not take into account
that it is in fact defined by the negativity in which everything is
suspended
enters into the reformist project. It is trying to build on quicksand'
as though it were rock. Contempt and misunderstanding of the context
fixed
by hierarchical power can only end up reinforcing that context. On the
other hand, the spontaneous acts we can see everywhere forming against
power and its spectacle must be warned of all the obstacles in their
path
and must find a tactic taking into account the strength of the enemy
and
its means of recuperation. This tactic, which we are going to
popularize,
is detournement.
20
Sacrifice
must be rewarded. In exchange for their real sacrifice the workers
receive
the instruments of their liberation (comforts gadgets) but this
liberation
is purely fictitious since power controls the ways in' which all the
material
equipment can be used; since power uses to its own ends both the
instruments
and those who use them. The Christian and bourgeois revolutions
democratized
mythical sacrifice, the "sacrifice of the master." Today there are
countless
initiates who receive crumbs of power for putting to public service the
totality of their partial knowledge. They are no longer called
"initiates"
and not yet "priests of the Logos"; they are simply known as
specialists.
On the level
of the spectacle their power is undeniable: the contestant on "Double
Your
Money" and the postal clerk running on all day about all the mechanical
details of his car both identify with the specialist, and we know how
production
managers use such identification to bring unskilled workers to heel.
Essentially
the true mission of the technocrats would be to unify the Logos; if
only
-- because of one of the contradictions of fragmentary power -- they
weren't
so absurdly compartmentalized and isolated. Each one is alienated in
being
out of phase with the others; he knows the whole of one fragment and
knows
no realization. What real control can the atomic technician the
strategist
or the political specialist exercise over a nuclear weapon? What
ultimate
control can power hope to impose on all the gestures developing against
it? The stage is so crowded that only chaos reigns as master. "Order
reigns
and doesn't govern" (IS #6).
To the extent
that the specialist takes part in the development of the instruments
that
condition and transform the world, he is preparing the way for the
revolt
of the privileged. Until now such revolt has been called fascism. It is
essentially an operatic revolt--didn't Nietzsche see Wagner as a
precursor?-in
which actors who have been pushed aside for a long time and see
themselves
as less and less free suddenly demand to play the leading roles.
Clinically
speaking, fascism is the hysteria of the spectacular world pushed to
the
point of paroxysm. In this paroxysm the spectacle momentarily ensures
its
unity while at the same time revealing its radical inhumanity. Through
fascism and Stalinism, which constitute its romantic crises, the
spectacle
reveals its true nature: it is a disease.
We are poisoned
by the spectacle. All the elements necessary for a detoxification (that
is, for the construction of our everyday lives) are in the hands of
specialists.
We are thus highly interested in all these specialists, but in
different
ways. Some are hopeless cases: we are not, for example, going to try
and
show the specialists of power, the rulers, the extent of their
delirium.
On the other hand, we are ready to take into account the bitterness of
specialists imprisoned in roles that are constricted, absurd or
ignominious.
We must confess, however, that our indulgence has its limits. If' in
spite
of all our efforts, they persist in putting their guilty conscience and
their bitterness in the service of power by fabricating the
conditioning
that colonizes their own everyday lives; if they prefer an illusory
representation
in the hierarchy to true realization; if they persist in ostentatiously
brandishing their specializations (their painting, their novels, their
equations, their sociometry, their psychoanalysis, their ballistics);
finally,
if, knowing perfectly well-and soon ignorance of this fact will be no
excuse--that
only power and the SI hold the key to using their specialization, they
nevertheless still choose to serve power because power, battening on
their
inertia, has chosen them to serve it, then fuck them! No one could be
more
generous. They should understand all this and above all the fact that
henceforth
the revolt of nonruling actors is linked to the revolt against the
spectacle
(see below the thesis on the SI and power).
21
The generalized
anathematization of the lumpenproletariat stems from the use to which
it
was put by the bourgeoisie, which it served both as a regulating
mechanism
for power and as a source of recruits for the more dubious forces of
order:
cops, informers, hired thugs, artists... Nevertheless, the
lumpenproletariat
embodies a remarkably radical implicit critique of the society of work.
Its open contempt for both lackeys and bosses contains a good critique
of work as alienation, a critique that has not been taken into
consideration
until now because the lumpenproletariat was the sector of ambiguities,
but also because during the nineteenth century and the beginning of the
twentieth the struggle against natural alienation and the production of
well-being still appeared as valid justifications for work.
Once it
became known that the abundance of consumer goods was nothing but the
flip
side of alienation in production, the lumpenproletariat acquired a new
dimension: it liberated a contempt for organized work which, in the age
of the Welfare State, is gradually taking on the proportions of a
demand
that only the rulers still refuse to acknowledge. In spite of the
constant
attempts of power to recuperate it, every experiment carried out on
everyday
life, that is, every attempt to construct it (an illegal activity since
the destruction of feudal power where it was limited and restricted to
a minority), is concretized today' through the critique of alienating
work
and the refusal to submit to forced labor. So much so that the new
proletariat
tends to define itself negatively as a "Front Against Forced Labor"
bringing
together all those who resist recuperation by power. This defines our
field
of action; it is here that we are gambling on the ruse of history
against
the ruse of power; it is here that we back the worker (whether
steelworker
or artist) who--consciously or not-rejects organized work and life,
against
the worker who--consciously or not--accepts working at the dictates of
power. In this perspective, it is not unreasonable to foresee a
transitional
period during which automation and the will of the new proletariat
leave
work solely to specialists, reducing managers and bureaucrats to the
rank
of temporary slaves. In a generalized automation the "workers," instead
of supervising machines, could devote their attention to watching over
the cybernetic specialists, whose sole task would be to increase a
production
which, through a reversal of perspective, will have ceased to be the
priority
sector, in order to serve the priority of life over survival.
22
Unitary
power strove to dissolve individual existence in a collective
consciousness
so that each social unit subjectively defined itself as a particle with
a clearly determined weight suspended as though in oil. Everyone had to
feel overwhelmed by the omnipresent evidence that everything was merely
raw material in the hands of God, who used it for his own purposes,
which
were naturally beyond individual human comprehension. All phenomena
were
seen as emanations of a supreme will; any abnormal divergence signified
some hidden meaning (any perturbation was merely an ascending or
descending
path toward harmony: the Four Reigns, the Wheel of Fortune, trials sent
by the gods). One can speak of a collective consciousness in the sense
that it was simultaneously for each individual and for everyone:
consciousness
of myth and consciousness of particular-existence-within-myth. The
power
of the illusion was such that authentically lived life drew its meaning
from what was not authentically lived; from this stems that priestly
condemnation
of life, the reduction of life to pure contingency, to sordid
materiality,
to vain appearance and to the lowest state of a transcendence that
became
increasingly degraded as it escaped mythical organization.
God was
the guarantor of space and time, whose coordinates defined unitary
society.
He was the common reference point for all men; space and time came
together
in him just as in him all beings becam'e one with their destiny. In the
era of fragmentation, man is torn between a time and a space that no
transcendence
can unify through the mediation of any centralized power. We are living
in a space and time that are out of joint, deprived of any reference
point
or coordinate, as though we were never going to be able to come into
contact
with ourselves, although everything invites us to.
There is
a place where you create yourself and a time in which you play
yourself.
The space of everyday life, that of one's true realization, is
encircled
by every form of conditioning. The narrow space of our true realization
defines us, yet we define ourselves in the time of the spectacle. Or
put
another way: our consciousness is no longer consciousness of myth and
of
particular-being-in-myth, but rather consciousness of the spectacle and
of particular-role-in-the-spectacle. (I pointed out above the
relationship
between all ontology and unitary power; it should be recalled here that
the crisis of ontology appears with the movement toward fragmentation.)
Or to put it still another way: in the space-time relation in which
everyone
and everything is situated, time has become the imaginary (the field of
identifications); space defines us, although we define ourselves in the
imaginary and although the imaginary defines us qua subjectivities.
Our freedom
is that of an abstract temporality in which we are named in the
language
of power (these names are the roles assigned to us), with a choice left
to us to find officially recognized synonyms for ourselves. In
contrast,
the space of our authentic realization (the space of our everyday life)
is under the dominion of silence. There is no name to name the space of
lived experience except in poetry, in language liberating itself from
the
domination of power.
23
By desacralizing
and fragmenting myth, the bourgeoisie was led to demand first of all
independence
of consciousness (demands for freedom of thought, freedom of the press,
freedom of research, rejection of dogma). Consciousness thus ceased
being
more or less consciousness- reflecting-myth. It became consciousness of
successive roles played within the spectacle. What the bourgeoisie
demanded
above all was the freedom of actors and extras in a spectacle no longer
organized by God, his cops and his priests, but by natural and economic
laws, "capricious and inexorable laws" defended by a new team of cops
and
specialists.
God has
been torn off like a useless bandage and the wound has stayed raw. The
bandage may have prevented the wound from healing, but it justified
suffering,
it gave it a meaning well worth a few shots of morphine. Now suffering
has no justification whatsoever and morphine is far from cheap.
Separation
has become concrete. Anyone at all can put their finger on it, and the
only answer cybernetic society has to offer us is to become spectators
of the gangrene and decay, spectators of survival.
The drama
of consciousness to which Hegel referred is actually the consciousness
of drama. Romanticism resounds like the cry of the soul torn from the
body,
a suffering all the more acute as each of us finds himself alone in
facing
the fall of the sacred totality and of all the Houses of Usher.
24
The totality
is objective reality, in the movement of which subjectivity can
participate
only in the form of realization. Anything separate from the realization
of everyday life rejoins the spectacle where survival is frozen
(hibernation)
and served out in slices. There can be no authentic realization except
in objective reality, in the totality. All the rest is caricature. The
objective realization that functions in the mechanism of the spectacle
is nothing but the success of power-manipulated objects (the "objective
realization in subjectivity" of famous artists stars celebrities of
Who's
Who). On the level of the organization of appearance, every success --
and every failure -- is inflated until it becomes a stereotype, and is
broadcast as though it were the only possible success or failure. So
far
power has been the only judge, though its judgment has been subjected
to
various pressures. Its criteria are the only valid ones for those who
accept
the spectacle and are satisfied to play a role in it. But there are no
more artists on that stage, there are only extras.
25
The space-time
of private life was harmonized in the space-time of myth. Fourier's
harmony
responds to this perverted harmony. As soon as myth no longer
encompasses
the individual and the partial in a totality dominated by the sacred,
each
fragment sets itself up as a totality. The fragment set up as a
totality
is, in fact, the totalitarian. In the dissociated space-time that
constitutes
private life, time -- made absolute in the form of abstract freedom,
the
freedom of the spectacle -- consolidates by its very dissociation the
spatial
absolute of private life its isolation and constriction. The mechanism
of the alienating spec-' tacle wields such force that private life
reaches
the point of being defined as that which is deprived of spectacle; the
fact that one escapes roles and spectacular categories is experienced
as
an additional privation, as a malaise which power uses as a pretext to
reduce everyday life to insignificant gestures (sitting down, washing,
opening a door).
26
The spectacle
that imposes its norms on lived experience itself arises out of lived
experience.
The time of the spectacle, lived in the form of successive roles, makes
the space of authentic experience the area of objective impotence,
while
at the same time the objective impotence that stems from the
conditioning
of privative appropriation makes the spectacle the ultimate of
potential
freedom.
Elements
born of lived experience are acknowledged only on the level of the
spectacle,
where they are expressed in the form of stereotypes, although such
expression
is constantly contested and refuted in and by lived experience. The
composite
portrait of the survivors -- whom Nietzsche referred to as the "little
people" or the "last men" -- can be conceived only in terms of the
following
dialectic of possibilityl impossibility:
- possibility
on the level of the spectacle (variety of abstract roles) reinforces
impossibility
on the level of authentic experience;
- impossibility
(that is, limits imposed on real experience by privative appropriation)
determines the field of abstract possibilities.
Survival is
two-dimensional. Against such a reduction, what forces can bring out
what
constitutes the daily problem of all human beings: the dialectic of
survival
and life? Either the specific forces the SI has counted on will make
possible
the supersession of these contraries, reuniting space and time in the
construction
of everyday life; or life and survival will become locked in an
antagonism
growing weaker and weaker until the point of ultimate confusion and
ultimate
poverty is reached.
27
Lived reality
is spectacularly fragmented and labeled in biological, sociological or
other categories which, while being related to the communicable, never
communicate anything but facts emptied of their authentically lived
content.
It is in this sense that hierarchical power, imprisoning everyone in
the
objective mechanism of privative appropriation (admission/exclusion,
see
section #3), is also a dictatorship over subjectivity. It is as a
dictator
over subjectivity that it strives, with limited chances of success, to
force each individual subjectivity to become objectivized, that is, to
become an object it can manipulate. This extremely interesting
dialectic
should be analyzed in greater detail (objective realization in
subjectivity
-- the realization of power -- and objective realization in objectivity
-- which enters into the praxis of constructing everyday life and
destroying
power).
Facts are
deprived of content in the name of the communicable, in the name of an
abstract universality, in the name of a perverted harmony in which
everyone
realizes himself in an inverted perspective. In this context the SI is
in the line of contestation that runs through Sade, Fourier, Lewis
Carroll,
Lautréamont, surrealism, lettrism-at least in its least known
currents,
which were the most extreme.
Within a
fragment set up as a totality, each further fragment is itself
totalitarian.
Sensitivity, desire, will, intelligence, good taste, the subconscious
and
all the categories of the ego were treated as absolutes by
individualism.
Today sociology is enriching the categories of psychology, but the
introduction
of variety into the roles merely accentuates the monotony of the
identification
reflex. The freedom of the "survivor" will be to assume the abstract
constituent
to which he has "chosen" to reduce himself. Once any real realization
has
been put out of the picture, all that remains is a psychosociological
dramaturgy
in which interiority functions as a safety-valve, as an overflow to
drain
off the effects one has worn for the daily exhibition. Survival becomes
the ultimate stage of life organized as the mechanical reproduction of
memory.
28
Until now
the approach to the totality has been falsified. Power has
parasitically
interposed itself as an indispensable mediation between man and nature.
But the relation between man and nature is based only on praxis. It is
praxis which constantly breaks through the coherent veneer of lies that
myth and its substitutes try to maintain. It is praxis, even alienated
praxis, which maintains contact with the totality. By revealing its own
fragmentary character, praxis at the same time reveals the real
totality
(reality): it is the totality being realized by way of its opposite,
the
fragment.
In the perspective
of praxis, every fragment is totality. In the perspective of power,
which
alienates praxis, every fragment is totalitarian. This should be enough
to wreck the attempts cybernetic power will make to envelop praxis in a
mystique, although the seriousness of these attempts should not be
underestimated.
All praxis
enters into our project; it enters with its share of alienation, with
the
impurities of power: but we are capable of filtering them out. We will
elucidate the force and purity of acts of refusal as well as the
manipulative
maneuvers of power, not in a Manichean perspective, but as a means of
developing,
through our own strategy, this combat in which everywhere, at every
moment,
the adversaries are seeking one another but only clashing accidentally,
lost in irremediable darkness and uncertainty.
29
Everyday
life has always been drained to the advantage of apparent life, but
appearance,
in its mythical cohesion, was powerful enough to repress any mention of
everyday life. The poverty and emptiness of the spectacle, revealed by
all the varieties of capitalism and all the varieties of bourgeoisie,
has
revealed both the existence of everyday life (a shelter life, but a
shelter
for what and from what?) and the poverty of everyday life. As
reification
and bureaucratization grow stronger, the debility of the spectacle and
of everyday life is the only thing that remains clear. The confiict
between
the human and the inhuman has also been transferred to the plane of
appearance.
As soon as Marxism became an ideology, Marx's struggle against ideology
in the name of the richness of life was transformed into an ideological
anti-ideology, an antispectacle spectacle (just as in avant-garde
culture
the antispectacular spectacle is restricted to actors alone,
antiartistic
art being created and understood only by artists, so the relationship
between
this ideological anti-ideology and the function of the professional
revolutionary
in Leninism should be examined). Thus Manicheanism has found itself
momentarily
revived. Why did St. Augustine attack the Manicheans so relentlessly?
It
was because he recognized the danger of a myth offering only one
solution,
the victory of good over evil; he saw that this impossibility
threatened
to provoke the collapse of all mythical structures and bring into the
open
the contradiction between mythical and authentic life. Christianity
offered
the third way, the way of sacred confusion. What Christianity
accomplished
through the force of myth is accomplished today through the force of
things.
There can no longer be any antagonism between Soviet workers and
capitalist
workers or between the bomb of the Stalinist bureaucrats and the bomb
of
the non-Stalinist bureaucrats; there is no longer anything but unity in
the chaos of reified beings.
Who is responsible?
Who should be shot? We are dominated by a system, by an abstract form.
Degrees of humanity and inhumanity are measured by purely quantitative
variations of passivity. The quality is the same everywhere: we are all
proletarianized or well on the way to becoming so. What are the
traditional
"revolutionaries" doing? They are eliminating certain distinctions,
making
sure that no proletarians are any more proletarian than all the others.
But what party is working for the end of the proletariat?
The perspective
of survival has become intolerable. What is weighing us down is the
weight
of things in a vacuum. That's what reification is: everyone and
everything
falling at an equal speed, everyone and everything stigmatized with
their
equal value. The reign of equal values has realized the Christian
project,
but it has realized it outside Christianity (as Pascal had supposed)
and,
above all, it has realized it over God's dead body, contrary to
Pascal's
expectations.
The spectacle
and everyday life coexist in the reign of equal values. People and
things
are interchangeable. The world of reification is a world without a
center,
like the new prefabricated cities that are its decor. The present fades
away before the promise of an eternal future that is nothing but a
mechanical
extension of the past. Time itself is deprived of a center. In this
concentration-camp
world, victims and torturers wear the same mask and only the torture is
real. No new ideology can soothe the pain, neither the ideology of the
totality (Logos) nor that of nihilism -- which will be the two crutches
of the cybernetic society. The tortures condemn all hierarchical power,
however organized or dissimulated it may be. The antagonism the SI is
going
to revive is the oldest of all, it is radical antagonism and that is
why
it is taking up again and assimilating all that has been left by the
insurrectionary
movements and great individuals in the course of history.
30
So many
other banalities could be taken up and reversed. The best things never
come to an end. Before rereading the above -- which even the most
mediocre
intelligence will be able to understand by the third attempt -- the
reader
would be well-advised to concentrate carefully on the following text,
for
these notes, as fragmentary as the preceding ones, must be discussed in
detail and implemented. It concerns a central question: the SI and
revolutionary
power.
Being aware
of the crises of both mass parties and "elites," the SI must embody the
supersession of both the Bolshevik Central Committee (supersession of
the
mass party) and of the Nietzschean project (supersession of the
intelligentsia).
- Every
time
a power has presented itself as directing a revolutionary upsurge, it
has
automatically undermined the power of the revolution. The Bolshevik
C.C.
defined itself simultaneously as concentration and as representation.
Concentration
of a power antagonistic to bourgeois power and representation of the
will
of the masses. This duality led it rapidly to become no more than an
empty
power, a power of empty representation, and consequently to rejoin, in
a common form (bureaucracy), a bourgeois power that was being forced
(in
response to the very existence of the Bolshevik power) to follow a
similar
evolution. The conditions for a concentrated power and mass
representation
exist potentially in the SI when it states that it holds the
qualitative
and that its ideas are in everyone's mind. Nevertheless we refuse both
concentrated power and the right of representation, conscious that we
are
now taking the only public attitude (for we cannot avoid being known to
some extent in a spectacular manner) enabling those who find that they
share our theoretical and practical positions to accede to
revolutionary
power: power without mediation, power entailing the direct action of
everyone.
Our guiding image could be the Durruti Column, moving from town to
village,
liquidating the bourgeois elements and leaving the workers to see to
their
own self-organization.
- The
intelligentsia
is power's hall of mirrors. Contesting power, it never offers anything
but passive cathartic identification to those whose every gesture
gropingly
expresses real contestation. The radicalism -- not of theory,
obviously,
but of gesture -- that could be glimpsed in the "Declaration of the
121,"
however, suggests some different possibilities. We are capable of
precipitating
this crisis, but we can do so only by entering the intelligentsia as a
power against the intelligentsia. This phase--which must precede and be
contained within the phase described in point a)-will put us in the
perspective
of the Nietzschean project. We will form a small, almost alchemical,
experimental
group within which the realization of the total man can be started.
Nietzsche
could conceive of such an undertaking only within the framework of the
hierarchical principle. It is, in fact, within such a framework that we
find ourselves. It is therefore of the utmost importance that we
present
ourselves without the slightest ambiguity (on the level of the group,
the
purification of the nucleus and the elimination of residues now seems
to
be completed). We accept the hierarchical framework in which we are
placed
only while impatiently working to abolish our domination over those
whom
we cannot avoid dominating on the basis of our criteria for mutual
recognition.
- Tactically
our communication should be a diffusion emanating from a more or less
hidden
center. We will establish nonmaterialized networks (direct
relationships,
episodic ones, contacts without ties, development of embryonic
relations
based on sympathy and understanding, in the manner of the red agitators
before the arrival of the revolutionary armies). We will claim radical
gestures (actions, writings, political attitudes, works) as our own by
analyzing them, and we will consider that our own acts and analyses are
supported by the majority of people.
Just as God
constituted the reference point of past unitary society, we are
preparing
to create the central reference point for a unitary society now
possible.
But this point cannot be fixed. As opposed to the ever-renewed
confusion
that cybernetic power draws from the past of inhumanity, it stands for
the game that everyone will play, "the moving order of the future."