The Neoliberal
Undead:
Essays on Contemporary Art and Politics
The Neoliberal
Undead:
Essays on Contemporary Art and Politics
Marc James Léger
Winchester, UK
Washington, USA
First published by Zero Books, 2013
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CONTENTS
Acknowledgements
Introduction by Marc Herbst
1.
Art World as Zombie Culture: Excellence, Exodus
and Ideology
vi
1
5
2.
Culture and the Communist Turn
17
3.
Alterglobal Allegory: Condé and Beveridge Against
the Commodification of Water
38
By Any Means Necessary: From the Revolutionary
Art of Emory Douglas to the Art Activism of
Jackie Sumell
50
Afterthoughts on Engaged Art Practice: ATSA and
the State of Emergency
67
The Non-Productive Role of the Artist: The Creative
Industries in Canada
86
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
Protesting Degree Zero: On Black Bloc Tactics,
Culture and Building the Movement
108
The Québec Maple Spring, the Red Square
and After
137
Globalization and the Politics of Culture:
An Interview with Imre Szeman
144
Notes
168
Acknowledgements
Most of the essays in this book were written between the years
2009 and 2011. I would especially like to thank those individuals
who created opportunities for me to present my work, or who
helped me sharpen some of the ideas and writing, in particular,
Izida Zorde, the Critical Social Research Collaborative at
Carleton University, Isabelle Lelarge, Richard Martel, Richard
Dyer and Yvie Andrews, Carole Condé and Karl Beveridge,
Jackie Sumell and Herman Wallace, Karen van Meenen and Lucia
Sommer, Pierre Allard and ATSA, Katy Siegel, Montreal’s
Convergence des luttes anti-capitalistes (CLAC), Stevphen
Shukaitis, Jeff Shantz, Imre Szeman, and Gerald Raunig. Rosika
Desnoyers’ readings of these essays and my frequent conversations with her helped me to better articulate many of my
concerns.
Thanks to all of the artists and cultural institutions that gave
me permissions to publish images of artwork and to reprint
versions of those essays that have appeared previously. “Art
World as Zombie Culture” was first presented in the context of
the panel “The Neoliberal Undead: First as Tragedy, Then as
Farce,” organized by Bruce Barber and myself for the Universities
Art Association of Canada Annual Conference, Guelph
University, October 2010. Parts of the latter were published in
“Whose Excellence? Our Excellence!” Fuse 33:3 (Summer 2010)
24-26. “Culture and the Communist Turn” was presented at the
Varieties of Socialism, Varieties of Approaches conference at Carleton
University, March 5, 2011. “Alterglobal Allegory: Condé and
Beveridge Against the Commodification of Water,” was
published in French in Inter #107 (Winter 2011) 46-50. “By Any
Means Necessary: From the Revolutionary Art of Emory Douglas
to the Art Activism of Jackie Sumell” was published in Afterimage
38:5 (March/April 2011) 8-14 (See www.vsw.org/ai.).
vi
Acknowledgements
“Afterthoughts on Engaged Art Practice: ATSA and the State of
Emergency,” was published in Art Journal 70:2 (Summer 2011) 5065. “The Non-Productive Role of the Artist: The Creative
Industries in Canada” was published in Third Text 24:5
(September 2010) 50-65. “Protesting Degree Zero: On Black Bloc
Tactics, Culture and Building the Movement,” was first
presented on the InterActivist Info Exchange website (November
16, 2010) and subsequently included in Jeff Shantz’s edited
anthology Protest and Punishment. “The Québec Maple Spring,
the Red Square and After” was presented on the website of the
European Institute for Progressive Cultural Policy in October
2012.
Some mention should be made also of the people who are
involved in the radical reshaping of contemporary art discourse
and with whom I have had the pleasure of working or
discussing. Among them are Brian Holmes, Gregory Sholette,
Jennifer Gradecki, Michael Blum and Barbara Clausen, Oliver
Ressler, David Tomas, Claude Lacroix as well as Jason Jones,
Beka Economopulos and Jodi Dean at Not An Alternative.
Special thanks go to Tariq Goddard and John Hunt at Zero
Books, and Marc Herbst at the Journal of Aesthetics and Protest. For
financial assistance I wish to acknowledge the Government of
Québec. Superlatives are reserved for Cayley Sorochan,
champion of ideology critique, and special dedications go to my
father, Thomas Léger, who taught me how to spot a zombie.
vii
Introduction
Marc Herbst
Institutional critique is conservative; its function is either as
house-cleaning or as rearguard action. Instead, Marc Léger’s
work appears energized by its continuing commitment to keep
central the potential to create change with art as one tool. Radical
writing is done at the point where criticized institutions meet
(facilitate and/or negate) the potentials for artwork. Marc Léger’s
work hangs out at this spot.
To many, revolution has a relationship to art and its
institutions. In that relationship, the institution is secondary and
appears as tertiary. Few culture-rads tune their dials to the music
of the non-profit board. Instead, they choose to vibe with the art
and music. But no matter, when the music fades and the art is
taken down, it is the institution that remains. That is what institutions do.
Much contemporary writing tends to ignore this. Instead, it is
often hung up on the singular artists. I like Marc James Léger’s
work because he understands this and suffers no delusions for
art.
Revolution year zero only exists within an exhibition. To
know this is important.
Many assume that each work of art is singular, an isolated
existential phenomenon. Many encounter political artwork as a
radical island that formed from the viewer’s discovery. But there
is no revolution year zero. Instead, waves of to-be-formed
revolutionaries wash through and encounter both ancient and
new archipelagos of institutions whose bedrock is formed from
sedimented compositions, common knowledges, and collective
procedures. Between palm trees, the islands’ bookshelves are
stuffed with new and old books, posters, images, culture,
landscapes, architectures, holidays, songs, sculptures, stories,
1
The Neoliberal Undead
laws. These bookshelves are open and their contents can be
carried away. It is for the young and newly radical to make
something of this detritus, however they find it. However, the
common knowledge, collective procedures, and compositions are
held more tightly.
Knowing this, some of Léger’s keenest critiques are held out
for relational aesthetics and social practice. He describes these
trends as being thin deep and a mile wide. Though the Journal of
Aesthetics & Protest (which I co-edit) has published several of his
critical essays on these topics, his work managed to make us
sweat under our colours.
At its inception, our magazine rallied against those who
would complicate our ideal of the artist as revolutionary by,
among other things, bringing boring questions about museum
and gallery art into the picture. For my part, as an editor, I built
my perspective on 90s counterculture. I dug through the trash at
the Kinkos on Houston Street to claim the discards from Seth
Tobacman and Eric Drooker’s zine-making forays. Based on such
discards, I assumed that there would be both a residue of
freedom-from-work and a how-to-manual for an artistic
revolution. I dug the 90s for what it could distinctly offer.
Imagine now that thin post-Cold War moment with digital
technology and counter-historic culture’s ungentrified neighborhoods: pirate radio, video freaks, tech hackers, community
gardens, and the anarchist bookstore – projects that a decade
later would be re-created as social practice and relational
aesthetics.
Staring down the rabbit hole of an ever-more structurally
precarious economy, art appeared to me in the 90s not as a
grouping of flawed institutions but rather as a container for
unified identity. Drooker and Tobacman were people, people
who danced, people who were committed to the community
gardens and the historic legacies of the Lower East Side through
the stories they told, the people they knew and the songs they
2
Introduction
sang. They were not employees of an art scene but individual
actors. Their art seemed to have permission and to be extra-institutional. They got things done, carried their own stuff. But upon
starting our Journal, my reference was wrong. I had assumed
that underground artwork was synonymous with fine art. It is
not.
The last decade has been a decade of intense neoliberalization. The art industry has deeply infiltrated culture.
Institutions stand. The museum has expanded and resists my
efforts to communalize society. Our Journal now wrestles with
this reality. With his consistently sharp talons, Marc Léger has
helped us do so.
Léger is the first art critic I’ve liked. The angry undercurrent
I’ve read in his pointed critiques led me to assume he was an
autodidact (his bio said “independent scholar”). I was wrong. He
has a PhD. I count him among the select group of PhDs smart
enough to have taken the time to learn how to intelligently
eviscerate the load of bullshit they encounter within the institutions we all must tangle with.
As abstract machines or as really brick-and-mortar we must
tangle with institutions. Affirmatively, as an activist, I’ve
witnessed how NGOs like Rainforest Action Network and the
Steelworkers Union can be an important component of a
movement much broader than themselves.
I often wonder what it would be like to encounter what I
know as a solidified landscape. I imagine a neighbourhood
somewhere that embodies my social, historical and critical
perspectives in its public holidays, school board, cultural center,
courts, clubs and street signs, lamp posts, litter boxes and stores.
I imagine this as a place in process and integrated within the
normal fabric of a much larger society (otherwise it’d be very
lame). I wonder what it would be to walk these streets as a
teenager, to move in and decide to call this place home. What
would it be like to be organically informed by this knowledge as
3
The Neoliberal Undead
physical structures? How would it go to launch a radical cultural
practice from here?
It would be lame for me to say that in this neighborhood, Marc
Léger’s critical insights would be reflected in the finest buildings’
facades (in this neighborhood, the finest buildings might be
reserved for the kindergarten, head shop and culture centre).
Instead, I’ll say that his thoughts would be scrawled (in
permanent chalk) near the gutters. Lost teens and twentysomethings would walk past these thoughts on their way to the
liberated cultural centre. While enjoying the show, they also
might hang out on the corner, appreciating how the whole thing
comes together, and grumble just a bit. They would grumble
about the fact that despite the brick and mortar there’s a
continued potential for something different, elsewhere and here.
The kids see what bullshit the whole thing is. It’s not a bad
attitude; instead it helps them understand what they aren’t
seeing and why.
4
Art World as Zombie Culture: Excellence,
Exodus and Ideology
It’s a modern folly to alter the corrupt ethical system, its
constitution and legislation, without changing the religion, to
have a revolution without a reformation.
– G.W.F. Hegel
What they do not recognize is that twenty-first century
capitalism as a whole is a zombie system, seemingly dead
when it comes to achieving human goals and responding to
human feelings, but capable of sudden spurts of activity that
cause chaos all around.
– Chris Harman
In March of 2010, a large number of artists, curators and cultural
workers from Canada and abroad added their names to an open
letter addressed to Marc Mayer, Director of the National Gallery
of Canada, for a series of comments he made during a CBC
report on diaspora art and the cultural politics of public institutions.1 Mayer’s comments to reporter Jelena Adzic can be
summarized with the following quote: “Our real mandate is
excellence. We do think about diversity, however... We put on
what we find in the Canadian art scene that is excellent and we’re
blind to colour or ethnic background, or even whether you were
born in Canada, we don’t care. (...) We’re looking for excellent
art. We don’t care who makes it.” Mayer’s words echo those of
John Lydon in the 2008 Country Life butter television
commercial: “Do I buy Country Life butter because it’s British?
No. I buy Country Life because I think it tastes the best.” All the
while Lydon is metaphorically wrapped in the British flag and is
surrounded by the trappings of the stereotypical British upper
class. In the Eighteenth Brumaire, Karl Marx famously stated that
5
The Neoliberal Undead
“the great events and characters of world history occur twice;
first as tragedy, then as farce.” In his reading of these lines in the
context of the global economic meltdown and trillion dollar
bailouts of 2008-2009, Slavoj Žižek remarks that Herbert Marcuse
added to this Marxist reading of Hegel the fact that in some ways,
the farce can be more terrifying than the original tragedy.2
If such a sequence applies in this case, it is not so much
Mayer’s cavalier posturing that is laughable, but the reactions to
it. Mayer’s statements solicited the organized response of people
who gathered first through email, then through the social
networking site Facebook, and then posted as an online blog
called excellenceatthenationalgallery.3 The open letter, penned by
curators Milena Placentile and Emily Falvey, and with the subsequent support of curator Ryan Rice, quickly became a catalyst for
scrutiny of the NGC’s mandate and policies. The letter takes
exception with Mayer’s comments, which seem to ignore recent
efforts on the part of the NGC to address its colonial legacy. It
states:
This begs the question: Whose excellence? This is what
women and ethnic minorities have been asking for centuries.
(...) Today you tell us that [the] NGC doesn’t show ethnic
minorities because they are not achieving ‘excellence.’ The
simplistic notion that connoisseurs know ‘good art’ was
thoroughly discredited by twentieth-century feminist and
post-colonial writers, artists and activists... Well, we know
‘excellence’ when we see it, and today we prefer to call it
hegemony.
The letter goes on to recommend to Mayer some essential reading
from feminist art historian Linda Nochlin, post-colonial theorist
Edward Said, African-American cultural theorist bell hooks and
some familiarity with Fuse Magazine.4
The intellectual background to the letter, as I interpreted it,
6
Art World as Zombie Culture: Excellence, Exodus and Ideology
amounts to something that approaches the radical democracy
that was proposed by Ernesto Laclau and Chantal Mouffe in
their 1985 book Hegemony and Socialist Strategy: Towards a Radical
Democratic Politics.5 Among the many arguments put forward in
this book is the concept of equivalence – a concept that presupposes an equivalence among different kinds of struggle against
oppression, be it based on race, class, gender or sexuality. On this
“multicultural” basis, the idea of a value-free notion of excellence does appear ridiculous, or at least quixotic. To take up
Žižek’s inquiry in First as Tragedy, Then as Farce, we could ask the
question: What is the link not only between the liberal
technocracy of major cultural institutions like the National
Gallery but between the identity politics proposed in the letter
and today’s dominant ideological view that communism is no
longer a pertinent tool of analysis, nor a viable political alternative, and that nothing should stand in the way of the
emergence of a new global class of superrich who accept as a
calculated risk the wild speculation that led from dotcom crash
in the early 2000s to investments in mortgage schemes that were
destined to fail? Further, what do we in the art world have to do
with the rise of populist conservatism and the avoidance of the
consequences of such liberal-democratic blackmail?6 Today’s
discursive “anti-essentialist” historicism, Žižek argues, “views
every social-ideological entity as the product of a contingent
struggle for hegemony”.7 The problem with today’s academic
social constructionism, he continues, is that
this universalized historicism has a strange ahistorical flavor:
once we accept and practice the radical contingency of our
identities, all authentic historical tension somehow evaporates in the endless performative games of an eternal present.
There is a nice self-referential irony at work here: there is
history only insofar as there persist remainders of
“ahistorical” essentialism. This is why radical anti-essen7
The Neoliberal Undead
tialists have to deploy all their hermeneutic-deconstructive
skills to detect hidden traces of “essentialism” in what
appears to be a postmodern “risk society” of contingencies –
were they to admit that we already live in an “anti-essentialist” society, they would have to confront the truly difficult
question of the historical character of today’s predominant
radical historicism itself, i.e., confront the topic of this
historicism as the ideological form of “postmodern” global
capitalism.8
We could say, then, to extend Žižek’s analysis, that for the
utopian form of the ideology of capitalism, counter-hegemonic
identity politics and post-structuralist social constructionism act
as the utopian ideology of the progressive art world.
In the work of some of the most sophisticated thinkers of our
day there is a critique of just such post-politics – the view that the
major political struggles and “meta discourses” of the nineteenth
and twentieth centuries are a thing of the past and that we must
now turn to the endless plurality of petites histoires, micropractices and the multitude of singularities. In today’s global
capitalism, Žižek argues, particular interests are not only universalized by hegemonic forces, but, more to the point, we become
universal for ourselves. The way that we come to relate to
ourselves in modernity and postmodernity is as people with
specific identities and stories to tell, in a way, hoping that these
narratives, instead of a grand displacement of the system of
cultural production, will become a means of cultural contestation. In liberal capitalist ideology, however, identity also
coincides with the ruthless measuring of value in terms of the
universal market forces of global capitalism. For these reasons,
we should not only consider our collective cultural wealth as
such, but should attempt to draw the links between this cultural
commons and the social commons by asserting the struggle
against capitalism.9 Here, a further demand imposes itself: the
8
Art World as Zombie Culture: Excellence, Exodus and Ideology
demand for artists and activist collectives to put forward social
solutions to the destructive effects of capitalism. Rather than
fight the ideology of capitalism head on, we are compelled, in the
absence of a strong welfare state, to fight its consequences. Those
eager to do well in the system, however, dedicate themselves
pointlessly to rebuilding the otiose and decrepit middle class. If
1989 represents the beginnings of the Fukuyaman dream of the
“end of ideology,” the response to 9/11 and the 2008 meltdown
are two good reasons why capitalism deserves a 1989 of its own.
The problem with the very possibility of reimagining class
struggle today, as the cultural theorist Brian Holmes argues, is
the “absence of any coordinated oppositional force.”10 Because of
this, what he proposes for radical cultural practice is an exodus
from the museum-magazine-gallery system.11 Exodus, he writes,
“is an expression of process politics. It points beyond the
distorting mediations and structural inequalities of capitalism
towards a strange sort of promised land for the profane, which is
the immediacy of the everyday, the direct experience of cooperation with others.”12 This concept of exodus is derived from the
struggles in the 1970s of the Italian autonomist movement in
which workers determined to escape both the control of factory
managers and communist party directives. In more recent times,
it has inspired the 1998 Days of Action in Europe, the Direct
Action Network’s coordination of protests in Seattle in 1999, and
the Euro Mayday protests organized around the struggles of
precarious workers such as the Milanese Chainworkers and the
French Intermittents du spectacle. One of its methods of
organizing, according to Holmes, and as indicated in the title of
his book, is the collective phantom. Collective phantoms include
multiple names like Monty Cantsin, Luther Blisset or Tute
Bianche, Reclaim the Streets, The Yes Men, Ya Basta!, No One Is
Illegal or even the Zapatistas. Multiple names like these, he
writes,
9
The Neoliberal Undead
bring the refusal of copyright and intellectual property to the
very center of ego-dominated subjectivity, in an attempt to
dissolve the proprietary function of the signature which has
always served as the barrier between contemplative, individualistic art and collective, interactive forms of expression.13
Through such methods as collective phantoms, new cartographies, tactical media and over-identification pranks, Holmes
argues that cultural producers can avoid the alienation of unique
signatures and the fetishization of art objects and art experiences
via the machinery of institutional art exhibitions.
Holmes’ reflections make one wonder what it is that artists
want or expect from institutions like the National Gallery. The
kinds of radical art practices that Holmes discusses have more in
common with 1960s and 70s strategies of anti-institutional
contestation than postmodern strategies of complicity and representation. The signatories of the letter would seem in comparison
to be rather like the zombies in George Romero’s 1978 horror film
Dawn of the Dead, a film that takes place in a Pittsburgh shopping
mall. What do the zombies want with a shopping mall, asks one
of the last remaining humans. Another answers: “This was an
important place in their lives.”
On this theme, I want to make a series of observations that
may or may not add up to a practical suggestion for those like
Holmes, Gerald Raunig and Paolo Virno who are willing to
follow Moses to the promised land. The Deleuzian presuppositions of Holmes’ use of the theme of exodus is decidedly antidialectical, refusing the ostensible return to the same via the clash
of opposites.14 The publisher of Holmes’ book, Unleashing the
Collective Phantoms, is Autonomedia, a press that is well-known
for its texts that are left of the left. The title of his book is inspired
in part by a website that is associated with the work of the
Association of Autonomous Astronauts – not a bad reference
point for the brave couple that flies away from the zombie mall at
10
Art World as Zombie Culture: Excellence, Exodus and Ideology
the end of Dawn of the Dead. “We are not interested in going into
space to be a vanguard of the coming revolution,” writes Ricardo
Balli. Rather, the AAA are involved in virtual class struggle via
collective phantoms.15
One such phantom, also cited by Holmes, is Boris Karloff,
author of the tract “Resisting Zombie Culture.” In this text,
Karloff attempts to hypnotize her readers by enumerating five
different anti-zombification techniques: (1) Collective Phantoms:
multiple names that discard individual identities and use
multiple imaginations to fabricate and disseminate cultural
projects; (2) Media Invasions: tactical projects that use the power
of the last remaining humans to reverse the zombification
function of the various media machines; (3) Speculative
Playgrounds: spaces that are created for the sake of epistemological games; (4) Psychogeographical Tours: wanderings that
reclaim the “free” time that is stolen from humans by the work
and consumer routines of Zombie Culture; (5) Funk Themes:
memes and the like that operate beyond verbal comprehension,
and therefore elude capture by the manipulation of Zombie
Culture.16 For the sake of definition, Karloff explains that
Zombie Culture is “an elaborate program of mind invasion
supervised by Vampire Management.” It “aims at implanting
specific forms of ideology into our minds ... to ensure that
zombies are sufficiently diverted from pursuing liberatory
projects.” If anti-zombie behaviour is an imminent force in
everyone, Karloff adds, why is it then that so many people want
to be zombies? Clearly, judging by the number of signatories of
the excellenceatthenationalgallery petition letter, they’re dying
to get in. This is indeed a frightening situation since these
zombies are not the slow-moving, funny zombies of the early
Romero films, but the quick, weapon-wielding, flying, and
severed-skull type Nazi zombies weaned on the blood and bile of
post-structuralism, discourse theory and difference politics.
In his account of German Idealism, with its fascination with
11
The Neoliberal Undead
vampires and the living dead, Žižek argues that the best account
of zombies is provided by Immanuel Kant, who, in his Critique of
Pure Reason, distinguishes between a negative judgement and an
infinite judgement.17 With a negative judgement, you are not
dead – therefore you are alive. No problem. With an infinite
judgement, you are undead; you are alive but as dead. Infinite
judgement opens up a third unforeseen domain of some obscene
word beyond life and death, an excess that culture attempts to
cope with. Žižek asserts this third domain against thinkers like
Gilles Deleuze who argue that dialectics impose a return to the
same through the non-differential “synthesis.” In a historical
framework, no such return is possible. This expels from Žižek’s
account both the dogmatism of historical materialism and
simplistic critiques of teleology. The truth of most zombie films is
that as fictions they attempt to cope with the denaturalizing
processes of late capitalism, and every new zombie film
addresses a different historical conjuncture. The problem then is
that once you admit that you are in a zombie movie, you retroactively de-naturalize nature, and in our case, we de-naturalize
cultural production to reveal the international art market and
global tourism. The choice between dying a death at the hands of
institutional autonomy and dying a death at the hands of the
global creative industries is thus a matter of surplus enjoyment, a
scenario that is encountered by the cultural worker as an element
of fantasy. In this sense, a collective phantom is designed to
accept the worst outcome, but in a way that alters the nature of
the fantasy and its real-world, symbolic outcomes.
We could, however, question some of Holmes’ assumptions
about activist art (“class struggle as artistic experience”) as an art
that is premised on non-economic values such as: a withdrawal
from salaried labour; a technological communications commons;
file sharing, free software, open-source technology, peer-to-peer
exchange and networked intelligence; general nomadism;
semiotic economy; pre-individual indistinction; networked
12
Art World as Zombie Culture: Excellence, Exodus and Ideology
collaboration as a high-tech gift economy. I would make the
Marxist observation that in a world that is dominated by
exchange values, in which people buy and sell commodities and
services, in which people have to sell their labour in order to
survive, and in which non-productive semiotic labour is
mediated by the productive labour of an increasingly
proletarianized Third World, use values are intrinsically
mediated by exchange values. Use value has no existence apart
from its commodity status. Despite this, I would insist also with
Marx that quality and the sensuous particularity of people and
things are independent of the cash nexus and the relations of
exchange. It is through the very quality of people and things,
however, that value is expressed in terms of quantities.
Calculation and cooperation are thus not merely the behavioural
presupposition of the flexible personality within neoliberal
societies of risk and control, but the essence of the capitalist
relations of production.
From here we could make an important observation
concerning cultural production and that is the fact that, as Janet
Wolff explains, art as we know it makes its appearance along
with the rise of industrial production and bourgeois ideology.18
The social and economic production of art values has thus
depended on various institutions, including educational institutions, universities, academies, and forms of patronage – from the
state to individual consumers, audiences, critics, publishers,
galleries, media companies, and so on. Anti-zombification
techniques do no so much change these aspects of the social
production of art, but provide a set of alternatives in a process of
differentiation. Today’s socially engaged art activism is in this
sense quite similar in its ideology and modus operandi to the
development of a sphere of bohemian cultural autonomy in the
nineteenth century. Of course in today’s activist art the development of a field of aesthetic autonomy as a bulwark against
bourgeois utilitarianism and gross materialism has been
13
The Neoliberal Undead
completely reversed and a good deal of art activism, much like
the institutionalized labour parties, is oriented towards reform
rather than revolution. To use the terminology developed by
Peter Bürger in Theory of the Avant-Garde, I would argue that the
political practices of today’s networked activists often correspond
to the habitus of a contemporary transnational bohemia that is
haunted by the successes and strategies of the revolutionary
“historical” avant-gardes.19
According to Žižek, the relation between necessity and contingency in Hegel is non-dialectical. Necessity realizes itself in
contingency, not in a foregone conclusion or in a behavioural
matrix. In this way, the present contains the past and the past
gains possibility, or virtuality, as influence. The past is constantly,
retroactively reconstructed. At every historical point, he argues,
we live in a totality that is necessary in a contingent way and that
is retroactively reconstructed. The epistemological limit is that
reality itself is incomplete. One problem that faces today’s
networked art activists is the way in which practice attempts to
quickly fill in the gap posed by this symbolic impossibility and
thereby conforms to the position of the hysteric who seeks to
positivize the place of the big Other. What we get with exodus, I
would argue in this Lacanian-Žižekian sense, is a politics that
does not want to pay the price for politics. Schizo-anarchists
would no doubt agree, referring to anti-zombification strategies
as post-political micro-politics. The quest of today’s countercultural activists would seem to be the effort to localize the antagonism of social difference in a distinction between us (humans)
and them (zombies) that falsely universalizes the social antagonism itself. What we get, at best, is not the ideal of socialism or
communism but the pragmatism of libertarianism and the
populist pluralism of social democracy. In a zombie world the
inside and the outside become indistinct, the cultural superstructure is collapsed into the post-Fordist base and the
mediating operations of ideology are presumed to have vanished
14
Art World as Zombie Culture: Excellence, Exodus and Ideology
into thin air.
In his 1996 publication, The University in Ruins, Bill Readings
argued that the kind of cultural nationalism that was once
characteristic of institutions like the National Gallery of Canada
has been replaced by the technocratic management of a transnational class of people who refuse identification with a specific
class status or cultural identity.20 The idea of universal cultural
standards that are the object of feminist and postcolonial critique
may not refer to the same markers of excellence that actually
form the basis of cultural administration in places like the NGC,
even if at times its executives rely on atavistic intellectual frameworks. Excellence, as Readings describes it, has less to do with
the formal criteria of evaluation – or even political criteria – than
with performance indicators that directly link intellectual and
creative production to a global marketplace within which
national institutions operate as cultural brokers. Excellence in
this regard is not only concerned with markers of identity; it
regulates and manages cultural differences in favour of marketbased notions of human and cultural capital that are themselves
tied to biopolitical state regulation.
Almost anyone who has been taught critical cultural theories
in undergraduate and graduate university programmes understands that as soon as you put forward a class analysis of culture
and relate culture to its socioeconomic conditions of production
you run the risk of being charged with “economism,” “reflectionism,” or “vulgar Marxism.” For some, this is enough to leave
behind all sociology and move on to more exciting cultural
analysis. Wolff argues that sociologists, in wanting to expose the
social bases of aesthetic judgement and taste, tend to discredit
aesthetics altogether. She argues against this kind of “sociological imperialism” as well as its flipside, “postmodern
relativism,” and holds that one cannot indefinitely remain an
“agnostic” and forever postpone aesthetic choices.21 In other
words, we all eventually make judgements concerning cultural
15
The Neoliberal Undead
excellence, even though we may not expect these judgements to
be universally valid.22
There is a supplement to Wolff’s argument against agnosticism, however, in Žižek’s theory of belief.23 Parents do not
believe in Santa Claus, he explains, but in their ritualistic actions,
and through their children, they effectively believe anyway. The
children relieve the parents of the burden of believing. In some
ways, this is the work that museum directors, curators and other
cultural administrators perform for national and international
publics. The NGC’s constituents, in this instance, are relieved of
the burden to believe in universal aesthetic criteria, or of having
to define some for themselves, as long as there are gatekeepers
within institutions who are willing to perform this task for them.
This at least goes some way in explaining the profoundly social
nature of all cultural meaning. Another word for belief in Žižek’s
writing is ideology. The NGC could very well do more in terms of
equity and yet nevertheless continue to operate as an institution
that serves the neoliberal “end of ideology” status quo. The same
is true of cultural production at all levels, from art schools to
artist-run centres. There is therefore some real validity to
Holmes’ critique of the museum-magazine-gallery system as
even alternative institutions show signs of acquiescence to the
fetishism of community and creativity.
This brings me to the faux pas made by Adzic in her news
report, wherein she conflated diaspora art and work by artists of
colour with “outsider art” – a category usually reserved for art
made by children, the insane, folk artists or sometimes by artists
who are unaware of modernist cultural frameworks. Perhaps the
real outsider art is art that through its manifest content represents an outside to capitalism. This art would have to be, within
the social totality, the art of those who resist the reduction of life
and all human culture to the workings of free market ideology.
16
Culture and the Communist Turn
The Arab Spring of 2011 and the ouster of authoritarian leaders
in Tunisia and Egypt have been hailed as instances of revolutionary uprising. No sooner had these brief victories been
celebrated, a host of setbacks have beset radical efforts in Yemen,
Saudi Arabia, Algeria, Morocco, Jordan, Syria and Libya. Even in
Egypt, as early as March of 2011, the interim government sought
to reimpose restrictions on the right to publicly demonstrate and
the international economic community sought to restabilize the
Egyptian economy so that it could better control it from abroad.
The contours of socialist uprising against unemployment and
austerity, echoed faintly in the United States in Wisconsin,
Michigan and Ohio, have been seen to be everywhere conditioned by technocratic political management. Some resist calling
these events revolutions, however. Theorists Michael Hardt and
Antonio Negri argue that these events resemble rather the antiglobalization movements that since Seattle, Genoa, Buenos Aires
and Cochabamba have operated as a leaderless multitude that
consolidates demands through a constituent process, a new form
of expression represented by network relations.1 The same
events have been received by socialist party organizations
worldwide as instances of worker solidarity and have been said
to underscore the long-term efforts of working-class trade
unions. According to Anne Alexander, the Egyptian revolts,
caused by global economic crisis, were preceded by the 2003
demonstrations, the 2006 strike wave and 2008 youth activism.
The Egyptian revolution, she argues, demonstrates the grassroots organizational power of the working class.2
At the 2011 conference organized by the Critical Social
Research Collaborative, titled “Varieties of Socialism, Varieties of
Approaches,” the question of multitude versus proletariat was
made problematic due to the relative absence of women partici17
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pants. Gulden Ozcan and Priscilla Lefebvre raised this issue in
the lunchtime plenary, “Radical Feminism, Anti-Racism &
Socialism: Challenges and Opportunities.”3 My own presentation, “The Political Implications of Contemporary Socially
Engaged Art,” raised this question of debates between “utopian”
and “scientific” socialism through a brief examination of the 2010
Creative Time Summit.4 In the following I offer a more detailed
presentation of the emerging potential for a shift from antiglobalization protest toward communist organization. I add to
this some thoughts concerning the contradictions of contemporary socially engaged art.
Globalization
It is generally agreed that the anti, alter or other-globalization
movement originated in the late 1990s in the context of protests
against the meetings of the World Trade Organization in Seattle
and at subsequent protests against G8 and G20 summits. The
World Trade Organization, the World Bank and the International
Monetary Fund are United Nations institutions that emerged
after World War II with an agenda of privatization directed
squarely against the nationalization of industry and political
sovereignty. The social and economic policies of these institutions
were designed to serve the interests of multinational and transnational corporations. In their efforts to protect capitalists, investors
and shareholders against social regulation, the function of these
institutions has resulted in the entrenchment of right wing
politics. The anti-globalization movement represents the
collective efforts of social democrats, socialists, anarchists and
communists to confront the resulting criminalization of left-wing
politics.
According to Maude Barlow and Tony Clark’s 2001 book,
Global Showdown, the WTO enforces international trade agreements that work to consolidate the power of wealthy corporations over and against poor countries.5 Agreements like GATT
18
Culture and the Communist Turn
(General Agreement on Trade and Tarifs), GATS (General
Agreement on Trade in Services), TRIPS (Trade Related
Intellectual Property Measures), TRIMS (Trade Related
Intellectual Property Measures), FSA (Financial Services
Agreement), AOA (Agreement on Agriculture), ASCM
(Agreement on Subsidies and Countervailing Measures),
Agreement on TBT (Technical Barriers to Trade), and AGP
(Agreement on Government Procurement) enforce international
fiscal, social and environmental rules, patents, copyrights and
trademarks that prevent poor countries from having cheap
access to various necessities, from food to medicines. Trade laws
force governments to give private corporations unregulated
access to markets, allowing the free movement of capital and
simultaneously imposing regressive measures affecting labour
laws, safety regulations and environmental protections.
As a legal entity with international status, the WTO allows
countries to legally challenge other countries on behalf of
corporate clients, bypassing the advice and expertise of local
agencies. WTO tribunals are able to strike down state laws,
thereby undermining the representative power of democratically
elected governments. These UN economic institutions represent
the interests of global capitalism over and against all claims
made by state governments to democratic law. While WTO
officials are in no way accountable to any state government, they
work to pass laws that require the assent of all WTO members,
with special authority given to the United States, Japan, Canada
and the European Union. Corporations have unique access to
WTO officials and are backed by well-funded think tanks and
corporate lobbyists. Despite that fact that most WTO, WB and
IMF decisions work against the UN Declaration of Human
Rights, by threatening the environment, food safety, social
security, international peace, public education and public health,
and despite the fact that they contribute to economic decline in
developing countries, they continue to operate internationally
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through the consent of the silent majority, the power of the state,
and the machinations of the powerful.
In the area of cultural production, globalization has worked
through free trade agreements to construe culture as a
commodity that is subject to forms of appropriation by private
capital. Whereas culture was once associated with national
identity, with local traditions, communities and forms of
solidarity, under neoliberalism culture begins to operate as an
adjunct of capitalism with a human, transnational face. In the
form of diversity in particular, culture is construed by development agencies as a means to obfuscate class difference and
income disparity. Defined in terms of market value and as intellectual property, art is treated in the same terms as seed varieties
or medicines, with patents and copyright protections obviating
collective rights. This favours the construal of culture in terms of
commercial entertainment or as tourism and heritage, which are
seen as means to develop economies through export and through
import substitution. According to George Yúdice, this view of
culture as a source of economic growth is accompanied and legitimized by a view of culture as simultaneously solving the
problems created by neoliberalization’s negative social effects.6
Culture becomes another means through which populations are
managed. People are in fact encouraged to assert their identities
in this context, which can be managed as a resource and which
can be used to promote corporate-oriented exchange.
Sociopolitical ameliorism thus corresponds to the immaterialization of labour as a new source of economic potential. The
contradiction is of course that the corporate promotion of multicultural tolerance and community services is almost a direct
outcome of the dramatic subjection of regions and neighbourhoods to commercial imperatives, with the resulting reduction of
employment and social services. In this context, artists and
activists unwittingly become the “willing executioners” of public
management and development experts whose main concern is
20
Culture and the Communist Turn
that culture produce a return on investment.
Proletarianization
A great deal of discussion in Western nations has been focused
on the precarization of labour that has accompanied globalization and the shift towards a post-industrial economy.
Beginning in the late 1970s and as part of the reaction of New
Right governments to welfarism, public institutions were
brutally restructured so that they could ostensibly “survive”
economically in the global marketplace. Increasing the power of
centralized authority, neoliberal governments oversaw a shift
from manufacturing to a service economy, creating an unstable
employment structure with growth in the consumption of
various kinds of services. As a result, a flexible, skilled and
educated workforce has become a permanent feature of the new
economy. Despite the fact that most of this workforce faces
unstable working conditions in part-time and low-skilled service
jobs, there has been a great deal of optimism with regard to its
class composition. This class of workers tends, like the salaried
petty bourgeois classes of old, to not think of itself in class terms,
but rather to emphasize identity markers. Variously described as
the multitude or the pracariat, and with its specialization in
immaterial, flexible and creative labour, the standard line is that
this is not the traditional, white, male, blue-collar industrial
proletariat, but rather the next generation to follow in the path of
the New Left, with its variety of single issues and lifestyle
concerns.
The background to this “postmodernization” of politics
cannot be limited to the appearance of civil rights, second wave
feminism, gay liberation, and consumer and environmental
politics, however. A more systematic factor is the global
recession that began at the end of 1973 and the shift in economic
policies away from welfare state interventions towards
monetarist policies. Around this time, unemployment began to
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be accepted as a natural constraint, even by labour parties, and
neoconservatives gave themselves the task of breaking trade
union monopolies. For more than one reason, the politically
correct 1980s were not a good time to be working-class (male or
female), and so conversion strategies became the means to make
politics culturally relevant. Multiculturalism, identity politics and
performative embodiment became the watchwords of “new
times” cultural studies. Postmodernist scholars declared the end
of Marx and Freud and along with them, anything remotely
approaching revolutionary left politics. The current success of
post-Fordist theory and the reign of the new communication
technologies should perhaps be cause enough to remind us of the
social, cultural and political contexts in which economic globalization became the dominant mode of production. In Zombie
Capitalism, the late Chris Harman argues that by the 1980s,
capitalism was coming up against the limits of both monetarism
and Keynesianism.7 With a forty percent reduction of industrial
production worldwide, global competition and the race to
produce resulted in the closing of plants and the firing of
workers. Deepening stagnation continued despite increased arms
expenditures and a competitive word system became the precondition for the new economic ideology of neoliberalism. The
“Washington Consensus,” as it came to be known, was marked
by the institutionalization of the IMF and the WB as keystones to
global structural adjustment programs that allowed fast capital to
be invested in foreign markets with increasingly few trade
restrictions. Gaps increased between the rulers and the ruled,
Harman says, with high levels of corruption becoming the norm
rather than the exception.8
Harman asks us to consider what forces are capable of
revolting against the current runaway system, with its economic
crises and wars. The working class, he argues, because of its place
in the mode of production, has the most potential to achieve
reforms. For this, however, it must overcome unevenness in the
22
Culture and the Communist Turn
workplace, geographically, and in terms of the divisions of skill
and pay. Harman argues that in contemporary theory the
dismissal of the working class as a revolutionary agency has
been widely accepted. The presupposition he discredits is the
one that assumes that the working class belongs to the past and
that the future will be overwhelmingly middle-class. The
fashionable sociology of Laclau and Mouffe’s Hegemony and
Socialist Strategy and Hardt and Negri’s Empire, he argues,
“departs from empirical reality.”9 Statistics for the 1990s indicate
that the middle class represents only ten percent of the 2.5 billion
wage workers of the world. Its function is by and large to help
control the mass of workers. “Anyone who believes we have said
‘fairwell’ to this [working] class,” he writes, “is not living in the
real world.”10 With a core of two billion people and a third of the
global population, the working class is the majority of the
population, he says, for the first time in history. In the U.S. alone,
the working class was twenty percent larger in the late 1990s
than it was in the early 1970s, and fifty percent larger than in the
1950s. Industrial production in the U.S. was eight percent higher
in 2007 than in 2000 and thirty percent higher than in 1996.
Negri’s Italy, Harman says, does not have the same class composition as the U.S. and Japan, where industry and manufacturing
continue to play a greater role than services. Moreover, jobs that
were once defined as blue-collar are today classified as whitecollar service jobs. Regardless of all of the hype about a postindustrial, post-Fordist economy, most service employees are
manual workers. In the U.S., service employees who do manual
work represent seventy-five percent of the country’s workforce.
Harman goes so far in Zombie Capitalism as to suggest that the
concept of precarity is in fact overemphasized by capitalists in
order to demoralize workers.11 István Mészáros echoes Harman
when he writes:
Just think of the once sharply stressed distinction between
23
The Neoliberal Undead
“white-collar” and “blue-collar” workers. As you know, the
propagandists of the capital system who dominate the
cultural and intellectual processes like to use the distinction
between the two as yet another refutation of Marx, arguing
that in our societies blue-collar manual work altogether disappears, and the white-collar workers, who are supposed to
enjoy a much greater job security (which happens to be a
complete fiction), are completely elevated into the middle
classes (another fiction). Well, I would say even about the
postulated disappearance of blue-collar work: hold on, not so
fast! For if you look around the world and focus on the crucial
category of the “totality of labor,” you find that the
overwhelming majority of labor still remains what you might
describe as blue-collar. In this respect it is enough to think of
the hundreds of millions of blue-collar workers in India, for
instance.12
The issue, according to Mészáros, is not whether the working
class is the sole agency of change, but rather that proletarianization names the process that occurs in the capitalist system.13
Under capitalism, he argues, the majority of people lose control
of the conditions that affect their lives. Control of social reproduction leads proletarians to have some limited autonomy but to
be mostly powerless. For Mészáros, as for most Marxists, the
issue is not reducible to that of multitude versus working class; it
is rather a matter of the organization of social relations and of
social wealth and resources.
The totality of capital affects all varieties of labour on a global
scale. In an article on global proletarianization, Karl Heinz Roth
argues that the proletarianization process occurs primarily
through the expropriation of land and the decline of public sector
protections for farmers worldwide.14 The U.S.-led invasion of
Iraq, for instance, left more than one million dead and also
caused three million peasants to migrate to cities. Peasant migra24
Culture and the Communist Turn
tions are also noticeable in China, the world’s second largest
economy. In China, after the passing of neoliberal economic
reforms, land expropriation transformed small farms into largescale farming. Civil wars and mass migrations caused similar
processes of increased urbanization in Malaysia, Sri Lanka,
Tunisia and Morocco. In Latin America, the Caribbean and
Southeast Asia, according to Roth, women workers who are
easier to control are typically used to replace male workers. This
would also be the case in Arab countries had religious practices
and oil revenues not kept women away from factory work.
Foreign Direct Investment participates in creating uneven development between developing and developed economies. 15
Regardless, declining wages and unemployment are serious
problems both in slum cities and in service economies. To make
matters worse, the working classes are increasingly drawn away
from consciousness of the causes of their poverty toward
religious zealotry, ethnic strife and mafia patronage. The consequence of this is the tendency to project fears onto those who
represent the interests of the working classes, to demonize
socialists and labour parties. The paradox of the anti-globalization movement, especially as it has taken shape in Western
countries, is that class consciousness is often a proscribed topic,
consigned to the dustbin of history along with Marx and the
dialectic. My sense, however, is that those concepts that have
emerged from out of the Italian autonomous movement –
multitude, precarity, exodus, general intellect, immaterial labour,
the primacy of resistance – will increasingly be made to account
for their limits and contradictions. In the short term, the fact of
proletarianization might not make revolutionary party initiatives any more appealing than they were in the 1950s and 70s,
but it gives us pause when we consider that in today’s postpolitical universe revolutionary theory and politics have become
almost unimaginable.
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The Communist Turn
One of the most insightful critics of the alter-globalization
movement is the cultural theorist Slavoj Žižek. In a 2002
interview Žižek plainly stated his skepticism about the anarchist
tendency within today’s left radicalism.16 While he agrees with
anarchism’s goals, Žižek’s main concern is that anarchism does
nor propose an adequate model of organization. Anarchism, he
argues, tends towards both secrecy and authoritarianism. Some
kind of authority, usually unaccountable, gets used to safeguard
the principle of non-hierarchy. Here Žižek echoes Lacan, who
said of the May ‘68 student protesters that “they’re looking for a
master, and they will find one.” In keeping with Lacanian ethics,
Žižek seems to suggest that the anti-capitalist movement does
not need to avoid power, but to “produce the master.” This is not
in order to impose authority, but so that it becomes possible to
move towards the “discourse of the analyst.” The working-class
party, in this case, acts as a mediation of the needs and wishes of
the grassroots. “I think if anything,” Žižek says, “we need more
organization. I think that the left should disrupt this equation
that more global organization means more totalitarian control.”
Further in the interview, Žižek addresses his interest in Lenin. He
says:
I am careful to speak about not repeating Lenin. I am not an
idiot. It wouldn’t mean anything to return to the Leninist
working-class party today. What interests me about Lenin is
precisely that after World War I broke out in 1914, he found
himself in a total deadlock. Everything went wrong. All of the
social democratic parties outside Russia supported the war,
and there was a mass outbreak of patriotism. After this, Lenin
had to reinvent a radical, revolutionary politics in this
situation of total breakdown. This is the Lenin I like. Lenin is
usually presented as a great follower of Marx, but it is
impressive how often you read in Lenin the ironic line that
26
Culture and the Communist Turn
“about this there isn’t anything in Marx.” It’s this purely
negative parallel. Just as Lenin was forced to reformulate the
entire socialist project, we are in a similar situation. What
Lenin did, we should do today, at an even more radical level.
For example, at the most elemental level, Marx’s concept of
exploitation presupposes a certain labour theory of value. If
you take this away from Marx, the whole edifice of his model
disintegrates. What do we do with this today, given the
importance of intellectual labour? Both standard solutions are
too easy – to claim that there is still real physical production
going on in the Third World, or that today’s programmers are
a new proletariat? Like Lenin, we’re deadlocked. What I like
in Lenin is precisely what scares people about him – the
ruthless will to discard all prejudices.17
Though it may seem paradoxical to some, one of the prejudices
that Žižek’s work has sought to complicate is that of liberal
multicultural tolerance. Multiculturalism tends to work against
the idea of universalism, which it associates with Eurocentrism.
The critique of universalism, however, tends to affirm identities
and particularist viewpoints, which, through agonism and
hegemonic struggle, it wishes to lend universal validity – a piece
of the universalist pie, or a seat at the table. This, however, tends
to affirm only a formal or abstract universality, in which all could
participate equally. The concrete universal, however, in which
we all effectively partake, in one way or another, is that of
capitalist exchange. Capital acts as the concrete universal that
mediates the various social differences that can be qualified by
ethnic particularity, religious difference, gender specificity or
even so-called queer indeterminacy. Žižek argues that this
postmodern critique of universalism has reached its obvious
limitations. As he puts it elsewhere:
in the postmodern ‘anti-essentialist’ discourse regarding the
27
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multitude of struggles, ‘socialist’ anti-capitalist struggle is
posited as just one in a series of struggles (‘class, sex and
gender, ethnic identity’), and what is happening today is not
merely that the anti-capitalist struggle is getting stronger, but
that it is once again assuming the central structuring role. The
old narrative of postmodern politics was: from class essentialism to the multitude of struggles for identity; today, the
trend is finally reversed.18
One of the problems with postmodern, post-political social
movements, according to Žižek, is that they are not only tolerated
by capitalism but encouraged, on the one hand, because they do
not pose a serious threat to the system of accumulation, and on
the other, because they can sometimes provide an effective
measure to be used against socialist politics. Whereas pluralism
is allowed, socialism is proscribed. Insofar as the politics of
identity cannot be universalized, they prevent radical politicization. What one gets instead is the culturalization of politics,
which introduces the modes, codes, markers and styles of victim
politics into macro-politics. Only Marxism, according to Žižek,
appeals to everyone to adopt the view of the proletariat as a
universal class and thereby excludes no one. Postcolonial theory,
queer theory, and cultural studies are, according to him,
compulsive rituals that talk about change but that oblige nothing
determinate to happen at the level of anti-capitalist struggle.
These reflections on post-politics have brought Žižek to ask
many times over whether in our political struggles we are anticapitalist or whether we consider that liberal capitalism with a
multicultural face is the least worst of social systems. In this
Žižek has the support of the philosopher Alain Badiou, who, in
his book Ethics, criticizes the ethics of difference, which, Badiou
argues, is defeated in advance by its fanaticism and identitarian
fixity. Such micro-political strategies, Badiou argues, tend to
impose models of behaviour and the promotion of a vulgar
28
Culture and the Communist Turn
sociology, a tourist’s fascination with diversity that is indifferent
to truth.19 Fanatics are those who are unable to accept that there
can be a truth – human rights for example – that would be the
same for everyone. The emphasis on contingency in today’s
social constructionism takes dialectics out of our understanding
of universality, reducing the particular to an element of formal
logic, a gesture that is entirely commensurate with the existing
world of inequality. In a struggle between class and gender
politics, for example, there are two contradictions that can be
seen to be effective in any given situation. There is a universal
contradiction, the fact that both struggles are determined by
conditions established by capitalist relations of production, and
a particular contradiction, the fact that the relations of
production are conditioned by social relations. In a particular,
concrete situation, the capitalist relations of production, the
universal dimension, resides literally in the particular contradiction, in the opposition between class struggle and gender
struggle.20 The key point for a materialist critique is that in order
for the capitalist relations of production to develop, they may
require changes to develop in the social relations of production
themselves. Gender struggle might, as a feature of the economic
base, further the interests of capital, or, as a feature of the superstructure, appear as a “subjective factor,” furthering the interests
of people, over and against the concrete, political struggle. We
are not surprised to find that the multiple forms of social
struggle are prominent on the left, whether in anarchist groups
or in social democratic labour unions. The problem here is that
this has somehow caused people to believe that subjective
interests and social relations are threatened by communist
thinking, leading to the view that left liberalism, or pragmatic
postmodernism is the political solution to social problems.
According to Badiou, the problem then is that we have come to
believe that the struggle against capitalism should take a democratic form that would respect the diversity of experiences.21
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However, if there is an economy of gender, just as there is a
economy based on exchange and speculation, our intervention
into it should be political, as Žižek says, and not economic. In the
following I wish to make some similar remarks with regard to the
economy of culture, which Pierre Bourdieu has shown to be
directly related to a social economy of power.22
Contemporary Art and Its Discontents
In 2010 the New York City-based public art foundation Creative
Time hosted the second Creative Time Summit, titled
“Revolutions in Public Practice.” The 2010 Summit was the
second in a series of conferences that included more than fifty
presenters – artists, art collectives, educators, critics and art historians – and was organized into six main clusters on the themes of
Markets, Food, Schools, Governments, Institutions, and Plausible
Art Worlds.23 As the title indicates, the conference was not only
concerned with definitions of contemporaneity in art, but with
the social and political aspects of today’s activist forms of art
practice. The 2010 Creative Time Summit gives a good indication,
I would say, of the manner in which art has begun to respond to
the crisis of neoliberal capitalism and has created alternative
models of art practice that renew with the belief in the social and
political potential of art.
The overall structure of today’s social practices, in contrast to
traditional studio practices, involves collectivism and reaches out
into broad social networks rather than toward gallery and
museum audiences. In this sense, they are a continuation of post60s practices of participatory art and of critical public art and
community art practices that developed in the 1980s and 90s.
What became apparent in the responses of conference audience
members, however, is that many of the artists’ projects were
based on somewhat naive political foundations, leading to the
impression that engaged art has in fact become the “state of the
art,” the “thing to do” for progressive actors, but without the
30
Culture and the Communist Turn
requisite theoretical analysis. This sometimes results, as Chto
Delat member Dmitry Vilensky pointed out, in an almost inarticulate, voluntarist, anarchist tendency based on anti-capitalist
moralism and pragmatism. While we may applaud community
activism, progressive art practices are often also smiled upon by
philanthropic foundations that look for ways to wash their
surplus capital. As neoliberal governments gradually withdraw
from welfare state provisions, art foundations, development
agencies, and even corporations, are increasingly interested in
the uses of art as an inexpensive way to manage the social
tensions that are a direct outcome of capitalist transformations.
On a more mundane level, engaged political art becomes a new
way for networked artists to mark their distinction from traditional studio practices.
The ultimate question raised by the Summit, as Vilensky
suggested, is whether or not today’s engaged artists believe in an
alternative to liberal capitalist, parliamentary democracy. The
conflicting political viewpoints were somewhat apparent in the
structures and themes of the various artworks: free art schools,
time-based micro-economies, community-based farming and
participatory residencies, ecofriendly farming, market environments within museums, experimental models of economic
production based on creative commons licensing, self-instituted
artist funding programs, self-instituted and community-based
micro-grants programs, critical data mapping projects,
ecological and social justice projects, art wage advocacy,
rhizomatic recycling projects, and self-instituted exhibition
spaces.
The general orientation of these works is an “art in the
expanded field” that is informed by the politicized materialist art
practices that have been developing since at least the pluralist
sixties. One question we might ask of them is the extent to which
they are concerned with socialism as opposed to democratic
contestation. For many art practitioners, the difference between
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art and politics has been made largely irrelevant by the development of cultural studies, communications studies, discourse
theory, and notions of culture as signifying practice. These
methods by and large dispense with old left macro-politics and
with ideology critique. In light of this, activist art acts as a new
mythic form that attempts to resolve conflicts and contradictions
within both the fields of art and politics. However, activist art
attempts this as it ceases to consider how culture operates within
a neoliberal social framework. In other words, where art ignores
the class distinctions on which its own form of effectivity relies,
it potentially constitutes a newly mythified form of social
practice.
If we are to hold on to the possibility of the social effectivity of art
practice today, we should consider
two essential problems: the
problem of totality and the
problem of teleology. When we
examine the forms of cultural
expression that are most immediately connected to socialist and
communist political organization,
we typically encounter work that is
not concerned with transformaThe Egyptian Revolution Will
tions that are specific to the field of
Continue Until Victory –
cultural production, which is
Forward to Victory, 2011.
considered to be elitist and serving
Poster. Source: Internet.
the self-legitimizing interests of the
class of people who manage
cultural institutions. A recent example of socialist art, if we agree
to call it that, is a poster that circulated on the Internet in
February of 2011, in the days before the ouster of the former
Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak. It depicts three arms making
the peace sign and the words “The Egyptian Revolution Will
32
Culture and the Communist Turn
Continue Until Victory – Forward to Victory.” The colours of the
poster are the typical colours of Soviet revolutionary imagery:
black, white and red. Revolutionary art like this has no need for
institutional legitimation. It is ephemeral and made anonymously to serve a cause. It corresponds to a social need and as
such strays from the purposelessness and disinterestedness
associated with bourgeois formal culture. One of the problems of
this model of activist art for critical practice is that it almost
completely leaves the space of institutionalized culture in the
hands of neoliberal technocrats who have no difficulty finding
artists who can easily insert their productions within the
trajectory of formally sanctioned postmodern art practices.
Regardless, as the social totality has undergone dramatic transformation and as leftist politics have regained credibility with
cultural producers and audiences, institutions have begun to
make room for art produced by politicized actors.
The second problem, that of teleology, is by far one of the
most interesting problems for art practice. Alfred H. Barr’s
famous Timeline of Modern Art of 1936 is the kind of model of
historical development that critics and theorists like to dismiss as
irrelevant. They can do so by showing the connections between
modernist art and the workings of the capitalist art market.
Related to this formalist modernist idea of avant-gardism,
Marxist dialectics is sometimes blamed by postmodernists for
not only assuming historical progress, as bourgeois philosophy
had done, but for pretending to know the direction that progress
will take in the future. This of course misses the point of the
theory of the communist transition, especially as it was lived in
the context of the Russian Revolution, but that fact has not
prevented contemporary theorists from looking for alternative
models of temporality and becoming. With regard to art practice,
perhaps the most incisive use of teleology was that put forward
by Peter Bürger in his Theory of the Avant-Garde.24 Bürger’s theory
of modernism in art distinguishes between the bohemian,
33
The Neoliberal Undead
historical and neo avant gardes. The first of these includes
Realism, Impressionism, Post-Impressionism and Fauvism.
Clement Greenberg, in his well-known theory of “avant garde
and kitsch,” favoured such a “bohemian” view, which understands art mostly in terms of the development of an autonomous
sphere of cultural production. Each transgression of the field, by
undermining its core principles, and by incorporating contents
that are found outside of the normative set of references, works
to renew the field. Through the conversion of the products of the
bohemian avant gardes into the raw materials of an innovative
capitalist cultural framework, Bürger argues, autonomous art
tended systematically towards institutionalization. The
“historical” avant gardes – Cubism, Futurism, Dada,
Constructivism, Surrealism, and Situationationism – sought to
challenge this institutionalization of art by making work that
reveals the workings of the art system as a feature of class society.
One of the means by which the historical avant gardes did this
was by radically interweaving their practice with the needs of
political movements. The Party artist, for instance, whether
described by Vladimir Lenin, Leon Trotsky or Walter Benjamin,
worked with an awareness of the limits of art’s redemptive
promise in a capitalist universe. The “neo” avant gardes, which
emerged after the Second World War and in the context of
consumer society, are said by Bürger to signal an abandonment of
class politics. Given the way that the capitalist culture industries
rather than radical politics have (falsely) integrated art into life,
art practices associated with New Realism, Fluxus, Minimalism,
Conceptualism, Performance, Site Specificity and Institutional
Critique, have by and large moved away from practices
associated with autonomy and dialectical realism and have
instead used the art frame to explore extra-disciplinary forms of
knowledge: systems theory, sociology, structuralism, psychoanalysis, feminism, race theory, natural science and ecology,
public history and counter-memory.
34
Culture and the Communist Turn
Post-neo-avant-garde art forms of art, which could not have
figured in Bürger’s account, could be said in some ways to be
post-postmodern, moving away from the concern with culture
and representation, and focusing instead on class politics and
other kinds of radical practice. In contrast to the historical avant
gardes, contemporary practices have developed in the absence of
mass social movements like those that once supported social
democratic and communist parties. In contrast to the postwar
neo-avant gardes, today’s art movements are not so much
“beyond Moscow and Washington,” “beyond left and right,” but
rather more simply beyond Washington and against the right.
One example from the Creative Time
summit could serve to represent the
communist tendency that I see emerging
among socially engaged art practices.
Guarana Power is a project organized by the
collective Superflex and was first presented
at the Venice Biennale in 2003. Guarana Power
is a softdrink produced with guarana beans
that were cultivated by a farmer’s cooperative in Maués, in the Brazilian Amazon.
Superflex helped farmers to organize against
multinational cartels like Nestlé that have
driven down the price of guarana beans by
eighty percent at the same time that they
have been charging higher prices for guarana
products. Companies like Nestlé are
destroying local communities and creating Superflex, Guarana
unemployment. While the farmers have been Power, 2003. Open
increasingly underpaid, multinationals have source softdrink.
increased their profits. The brand Guarana Courtesy of
Power, developed by Superflex in collabo- Superflex.
ration with the Maués farmers, is a glocal
brand designed to reclaim the use of guarana as a natural tonic
35
The Neoliberal Undead
and that serves as a forum around which to organize workshops
that help people resist the corporate monopoly on raw materials.
It is worth noting that in 1995 the artists Simon Grennan and
Christopher Sperandio produced a chocolate bar with the The
Bakery, Confectionery and Tobacco Workers’ International Union
of America Local No. 552. The chocolate bar, called We Got It! was
made by engaging with union members and nonart audiences in
Chicago, taking up the theme of the workers and their trade to
allow the workers a greater sense of ownership of their activity.
Supeflex’s project, made almost ten years later, is slightly
different insofar as they are especially interested in questioning
and removing the copyright restrictions that allow products to
operate in terms of capitalist accumulation. The relatively slow
turnover in artworld trends, if we compare this period of time to
that of the years 1870 to 1880 or 1910 to 1920, is instructive
inasmuch as it points to a stronger tie between the concerns of
today’s practitioners and the world around them. This leads us to
conclude that artists who are working in the expanded sphere of
the broader social context are much less concerned with changes
to the singularly aesthetic logic of cultural practice, in other
words, with trends and the kind of turnover that is demanded by
cultural and intellectual markets.
Superflex’s project is an example of what we could refer to as
post-neo-avant-garde art, though these artists might refuse that
appellation. Their work provides a good example of what
contemporary art might look like in the context of socialist
transition. The overarching difficulty of the new socially engaged
practices, as I see it, is that for the most part they dispense with
radical political analysis, on the one hand, and aesthetic analysis,
on the other. Instead, social relations are associated with the new
conditions of (cultural) production – networked sociality, the
Internet, affective commons and risk society – bypassing what in
older terminology was referred to as the ideological superstructures.25 In this manner, art reflects rather than challenges the
36
Culture and the Communist Turn
dominant social relations; politics mirrors rather than challenges
the predominant relations of production. While this is not
always case, what one tends to find today is a reformist biopolitics in which subjects are incited to move away from isolation
and individuality towards fairly innocuous forms of collectivity,
participation and collaboration. The social function of art within
class society is altogether eclipsed by the novelty of the forms of
art that proclaim art’s irrelevance. The result is that the new
practices are often based on the conviction that aesthetic forms
and political forms coincide. Art’s effectiveness no longer
depends on art just as politics is related to a free-floating idea of
power and the artist seems concerned with both and neither at
the same time. Although they share an ambient radicality,
today’s post-neo-avant-garde practices do not yet share a
common political language that would allow them to organize
effectively. The 2010 Creative Time Summit proved to be
instructive as it provided important glimpses of the new partisan
art forms of our times. Rather than shirk responsibility, the task
of today’s engaged cultural workers will be to consider how it is
that this art can be made more effective and more useful in the
struggle against the neoliberal onslaught.
37
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Alterglobal Allegory: Condé and Beveridge
Against the Commodification of Water
The final effect is of real figures moving in an unreal,
arbitrarily constructed space, the combination of real details
in an imaginary framework, the free manipulation of the
spatial coefficients purely according to the purpose of the
moment.
– Arnold Hauser on “The Concept of Mannerism”
In an essay on the perils and responsibilities of engaged
community art activism, the art theorist Declan McGonagle
reflects on the work of Toronto-based artists Carole Condé and
Karl Beveridge. McGonagle makes two very important assertions
about their work. First, he recognizes that Condé and Beveridge
“claim no historical allegiance to community art but draw on
Conceptual art methodologies that were politicized by Condé
and Beveridge, among others, from the mid-1970s on.”1 This is
important for McGonagle insofar as community art has been
instrumentalized by the art world since roughly the same time,
from the 1970s until recently in the guise of relational art.2 For
McGonagle, the limitation of the social significance of art through
its reduction to the needs of the art system and the latter’s search
for the “next big thing” promotes an outmoded modernist model
of the avant-garde artist as a tragic figure situated outside the
social world. This leads him to his next important point: the
rejection of individualism and the re-engagment with the sociopolitical space through a reflexive and politicized re-engagement
with the institutional space. As he puts it:
Condé and Beveridge (...) have worked consistently with an
understanding of the distribution zone as the site where value
is conferred and have worked to position their practice inside
38
Alterglobal Allegory: Condé and Beveridge Against the Commodification of Water
the distribution mechanisms of the “art world,” never
abandoning that world nor letting it abandon them!3
The bugbear of McGonagle’s essay, however, is universalism.
While McGonagle does not want to interpret Condé and
Beveridge’s work as part of an outdated modernist telos, he does
wish to signal the potential role of cultural institutions in
fostering progressive social change. Progress can exist on a social
level but not on a cultural level. Progress in cultural terms is
therefore associated by McGonagle with a culturalization or
socialization of politics as opposed to a politicization of culture.
The fact that Condé and Beveridge did in fact dedicate
themselves very early on to the politicization of culture was
recognized by Diana Nemiroff in her review of their exhibition
of Work in Progress (1981) and Standing Up (1981-1982) at the
Powerhouse gallery in Montreal. This exhibition, she argued,
with its basis in a newly unionized factory and in the history of
women workers in general, implied a critique of the art world’s
illusory view of itself as a collective community.4
The postmodern premises of McGonagle’s analysis misread
the most productive aspects of Condé and Beveridge’s work, I
would argue, despite the fact that they are there to be read: an
understanding of art’s imminent unfolding (which of course
does not presuppose foreknowledge of historical change but
represents the wager of an action that is not grounded in
symbolic demands and hegemonic investments) and a
thoroughly Hegelian-Marxist understanding that the social
relations and modes of production are mediated symbolically,
culturally and ideologically. It is in this sense that Condé and
Beveridge insist, and as McGonagle is correct to recognize, on
institutional determinations as part of the self-alienating yet
necessary mediation of art’s universal operations. And what is
this universal operation if not the workings of capital, the
concrete universal against which the universal exception – those
39
The Neoliberal Undead
among us who are needlessly marginalized, ruined, exploited
and killed – takes the form of the class of people in whose name
words like emancipation, democracy and justice must, through
social struggle, be made meangingful.
Indeed, universality is the principal deadlock of postmodern
art criticism, and its avoidance – philosophically, politically and
culturally – has done a great deal to prop up a liberal pluralist
version of the politics of representation and politics of difference.
While we should in no way ignore the forms of struggle that are
based on race, gender and sexuality, or those politics that are
informed by environmental consciousness and all manner of
socially-minded progressive change, it strikes me as odd that
much of the recent writing about two of the most leftist of
Canadian artists should avoid grappling with leftist political
theory. For this I consider an early essay/interview by Martha
Fleming to be rather discerning in its numerous references to
class analysis. In one matter-of-fact statement, Karl Beveridge
sums up much of what goes unrecognized by contemporary
artists and theorists:
That argument continues in terms of proletarianization of
professionals. As the various professions become industrialized, the control over not just the means of production but
also the production of meaning begins to fall more and more
outside the traditional definition of petit bourgeois control.
Professionals and artists become labourers of a kind; other
people determine the forms and content of that production of
meaning.5
Condé and Beveridge’s decision in the late 1970s to not merely
represent working people but to engage members of labour
unions in a collaborative process of meaning production and
political representation is directly informed by class analysis and
the Marxist labour theory of value. It is this site of struggle that
40
Alterglobal Allegory: Condé and Beveridge Against the Commodification of Water
best accounts for the content and real-world references of their
work: the life of a working-class family, the lives of working
women, the history of Local 222 of the Canadian Auto Workers,
the public service in Canada, nuclear power workers, fisheries
workers, health and hospital workers, migrant farmworkers, and
then some. That Condé and Beveridge have advanced class
politics through a process of surfacing “the ideology through the
image itself,” as Fleming argues, and through the techniques of
montage, photo-collage, the multiframe strategies of cartoons
and photo-romans, film stills, and advertising, and now, digital
compositing – not to mention posters and banners – should, I
would argue, be read not in terms of the “politicizing impulse of
postmodernism,” but in terms of a class politics that is and has
been sophisticated enough to fully appreciate the representative
alienation that takes the shape of capital, and this, against the
direct expressive embodiment of struggle in the form of engaged
art practice.6 For the latter, leading exemplars of the art world’s
concession to a utopian version of the Fukuyaman “end of
history,” of the numerous benefits of the “democratic invention”
with its endless plurality of public and counter-public spheres,
recent historical events – and at the time of this first writing, May
2010, after the killing of dozens of red shirts in the capital city of
Bangkok and ongoing repression of the Maoist rebels in the
Indian hills of Orissa, and later, in October of 2012, after the
massacre of more than 40 striking South African mineworkers –
have judged that “It’s Still Privileged Art.”
For critical class-conscious analysis of art and activism, there
are positions and pathways beyond the valley of postmodernism, and we could do worse than cite Condé and Beveridge
themselves:
The real context within which we work as artists is that of an
industrialized culture. The oppositions of fine art and mass
media, modernism and realism etc. no longer apply. Culture
41
The Neoliberal Undead
is divided between dominant and oppositional modes (which
in some cases parallel the traditional oppositions) in which
oppositional practice must account for both the content and
the forms of mass production.7
Oppositionality here relates clearly to a social antagonism and
the name that history has given to this opposition to the
dominant forms of mass culture is avant-garde, a term that is
philosophically and practically linked with the notions of critical
autonomy and political engagement. It is in this frame of
reference that it has been possible in recent decades to talk about
community art, relational art, dialogical aesthetics, and connective
aesthetics, for example. For each of these, however, a further
positing of the presupposition requires that the new forms of
cultural production be brought into critical relation with the
political contextualization of cultural production.
A readily acceptable articulation of critical autonomy as social
praxis can be noticed in Wolfgang Zinggl’s description of contemporary activist art’s social purpose:
Art should no longer be venerated in specially designated
spaces. Art should not form a parallel quasi-world. Art should
not act as if it could exist of itself and for itself. Art should deal
with reality, grapple with political circumstances, and work
out proposals for improving human coexistence.8
However, does this reification of “the social” not abandon the
institutionalized sites of mediation that could potentially help to
disarticulate the hegemonic links between social relations of
production and mode of production? Condé and Beveridge seem
to think so when they argue: “if you leave the space [of museums
and galleries] empty someone else will fill it, probably with
something less critical.”9 They also note that many of these
spaces are public institutions and, like other aspects of the
42
Alterglobal Allegory: Condé and Beveridge Against the Commodification of Water
collective commons, are worth defending.
While the museum and gallery nexus may very well be the
repository of formerly bourgeois and now petty bourgeois
technocratic marketing and management, the anarchist exodus
from such institutions may not be the best and certainly not the
only way to counter the neoliberal ideology of globalized
insecurity. Andrea Fraser, a cultural theorist and a practitioner of
feminist influenced performance and institutional critique,
argues that artists need to grapple not only with changes taking
place in society but also within art institutions, which have
become almost completely corporatized.10 Because of this, artists
today have taken up some of the theoretical and practical orientations of political activists and have to some degree abandoned
the notion that to provide an adequate critique of domination,
one must remain forever engaged with the subtleties of textual
deconstruction, fearful of a supplemental other that, like the
return of the repressed, shadows all totalizing gestures in the
name of that which has yet to be. Today’s activist artist is indeed
more a manipulator of signs than a maker of objects, but
meaning in this case is less performative than, as Slavoj Žižek
puts it, retroactive: the artist is a self-positing agent whose
conscious will to social transformation is not covered by the big
Other and no absolute synthesis of the social dialectic is possible.
Consequently, many artists today have proposed a renewal with
the language of avant-garde and revolutionary action. An
example of this can be noticed in the work of the Russian
collective Chto Delat, who propose the following:
Contemporary art that is produced as a commodity form or a
form of entertainment is not art. It is the conveyor-belt
manufacture of counterfeits and narcotics for the enjoyment
of a “creative class” sated with novelty. One of our most vital
tasks today is unmasking the current system of ideological
control and manipulation of people. (...) Because art is an
43
The Neoliberal Undead
activity open to everyone, neither power nor capital can have
a monopoly on the “ownership” of art. One answer to the
perennial debate on art’s autonomy is the possibility that it
can be produced independently of art institutions, whether
state or private. In the contemporary conjuncture, the selfnegation essential to art’s development happens outside institutional practices. As a public form of the unfolding of each
person’s creative potential, the place of art during moments of
revolutionary struggle has always been and will always be in
the thick of events, on the squares and in the communes. At
such moments, art takes the form of street theater, posters,
actions, graffiti, grassroots cinema, poetry, and music.
Renewing these forms at this stage in history is the task of the
genuine artist.11
While Chto Delat is fairly non-dogmatic in their approach to a
“common front” of anti-capitalist opposition, it should be said
that anarchist politics tend to predominate in the activist world of
collectives and alter-global anti-capitalism. Influenced by autonomist post-Marxism (also identified as post-operaism or
workerism) and the work of the French theorists Gilles Deleuze
and Félix Guattari, critic Brian Holmes argues that we have
reached a third phase of institutional critique that moves towards
what Gerald Raunig calls “transversal activism,” a cultural
practice that is made possible by new communications
technologies and new social spaces where subjectivity and affect
merge with the new forms of cognitive, creative and immaterial
labour. As Holmes puts it,
The notion of transversality, developed by the practitioners of
institutional analysis, helps to theorize the assemblages that
link actors and resources from the art circuit to projects and
experiments that don’t exhaust themselves inside it, but
rather, extend elsewhere. These projects can no longer be
44
Alterglobal Allegory: Condé and Beveridge Against the Commodification of Water
unambiguously defined as art. They are based instead on a
circulation between disciplines, often involving the real
critical reserve of marginal or counter-cultural positions –
social movements, political associations, squats, autonomous
universities – which can’t be reduced to an all-embracing
institution. The projects tend to be collective, even if they also
tend to flee the difficulties that collectivity involves, by
operating as networks. Their inventors, who came of age in
the universe of cognitive capitalism, are drawn toward
complex social functions, which they seize upon in all their
technical detail and in full awareness that the second nature
of the world is now shaped by technology and organizational
form.12
For interventionist artists working in the mode of tactical media,
the artist figures as part of the movement of what Marx referred
to as the capitalist organization of cooperative labour and the
social production of a “general intellect,” a shared commons of
skills and creativity that produces the conditions for the
potential overcoming of individualization and alienation. But as
Holmes’ work – and that of many other writers influenced by
anarchist theory – tends to move away from anything having to
do with representation, with social democratic labour unions
and political parties especially, it also tends to underestimate or
downplay ideology critique in favour of a direct socialization of
the modes of production, a subjectivation that takes place almost
miraculously without the alienating mediation of what Freud
referred to as castration and what Marx described as the
fetishism of the commodity. Yet Holmes does not necessarily
understand extradisciplinary investigations in the same way that
someone like Raunig understands transversal activism. He
defines the investigations of groups like Critical Art Ensemble,
for example, as an artistic critique of the many disciplines of
technology and management that works directly on the sites
45
The Neoliberal Undead
where ideology is articulated and justified as scientific “truth.”
There is therefore no consistent or universally agreed upon
anarchist line. To take a different example, Paolo Virno argues
that there is nothing about the current conditions of neoliberal
governmentality and capitalist globalization that dictates the
forms that art can and should take. He writes:
To me, engaged art is an integral part of political movements,
one of its components. Political movements use a lot of tools,
including means of communication like the Internet, and
politically engaged art is one of those tools. It is a component
of movements’ political capital. Yet I would once again like to
underline that the most important effect of art is set in the
formal sphere. In that sense, even art that is remote from
political engagement touches upon the social and political
reality. The two are not conflicting matters. They operate on
different levels. The formal investigation produces criteria,
units of measure, whereas the directly political engagement of
the artist is a specific form of political mobilization. (...) Even
artists who are remote from the political movement may,
through their search for new forms and expressions and in
spite of themselves, get in touch with the needs of such a
political movement, and may be used by it. Brecht as well as
poets much more remote from social realities, like Montale,
realized a similar relation. The Situationists were very
important when they became a political movement, but from
that moment on they were no longer avant-garde art: it’s about
two modes of existence. They clearly illustrate this double
take. Before 1960 they were an artistic movement rooted in
Dadaism and Surrealism, afterwards they participated in
social resistance, making the same mistakes or gaining the
same merits as other political activists. Another problem is
that when language becomes the main principle according to
which social reality is organized, social reality as a whole
46
Alterglobal Allegory: Condé and Beveridge Against the Commodification of Water
becomes aesthetic.13
It is this gap that separates art and politics that allows the two to
interact and transform each other’s economies and it has of
course been the error, historically speaking, of revolutionary
Marxists to constrain the exploration of aesthetic forms, and for
post-operaists in the present to propose a premature synthesis in
the name of machinic pragmatism.
Carole Condé and Karl Beveridge, The Fall of Water, 2006-2007. Lightjet,
121.9 x 168.8 cm. Courtesy of the artists.
With this review of some current orientations for politicized art
practice, I would like to highlight one of Condé and Beveridge’s
more recent projects, The Fall of Water (2006-2007), a large,
digitally-produced allegory of the global struggle against the
commodification of water. 14 The work was painstakingly
constructed over a period of one year with the artists
photographing each figure in separate sittings and compositing
the whole piece by piece. The overall effect reproduces the
47
The Neoliberal Undead
colours and composition of its historical referent, Pieter Bruegel’s
1562 painting The Fall of the Rebel Angels, in which St. Michael and
a host of angels are depicted crushing Lucifer’s legion of Boschlike creatures. The feeling of Breugel’s piece, in contrast to what
Walter Benjamin says of Baroque allegory, is one of moral
assuredness.15 In fact, Condé and Beveridge could be said to have
rendered this Counter-Reformation work somewhat comical,
with a Bolivian indigenous woman, a South Asian activist and a
Canadian protester leading the battle against the vile agents of
transnational corporations. The latter are appropriately
identified by their brand logos: Bechtel, Thames Water, American
Water, Vivendi, Dasani, Evian, Coca Cola, Pepsi, Nestlé. The
tattered flag of the World Bank is tied to a skeleton key held by a
figure wearing a riot cop helmet. The World Bank and other
similar institutions of global finance are in this way represented
as holding some sort of key to unravelling the balance of power
between good and evil.
Dot Tuer has made the argument that The Fall of Water represents the philosophico-political shift from proletarian blue-collar
struggle to the post-revolutionary multitude described by
thinkers like Paolo Virno, Antonio Negri and Michael Hardt.16
This in some ways does support the humourous manner in which
the evil demons do not so much look like the personification of
malevolence but more like petty bourgeois yuppies (maybe even
the proverbial kind who read Deleuze), mere functionaries of
global knowledge industries. It’s as though, as Hardt and Negri
argue in Empire, the advanced stage of digital capitalism requires
little more than a slight shift of perspective for the selfvalorization of labour to be actualized in our times. According to
Condé and Beveridge, the post-revolutionary idea of the
multitude might in some ways be somewhat utopian and its
proponents not always clear about just how it is that the
transition to global democracy can actually take place.17 What
can be stated, nevertheless, is that workers’ struggles have effec48
Alterglobal Allegory: Condé and Beveridge Against the Commodification of Water
tively joined up with indigenous struggles, with those of the
Palestinians, for instance, and those who oppose mega projects
like the damming of the Narmada River. As the various World
Social Forums and alter-globalization protests have created new
possibilities for workers to join their struggles and analyses and
offer new alternatives to the neoliberal ideology of free markets,
the global falling rates of profit and the environmental
catastrophes that are being caused by overproduction and global
warming keep the now interconnected international economies
and trading blocks in a tight embrace. Distant peoples that in the
sixteenth century were only known to Europeans as allegorical
figures are now not only nameless maquiladora workers but also
familiar leaders, activists, writers and journalists engaged in the
global struggle against neoliberal capitalism.
If the leaders of the 2010 World People’s Conference on
Climate Change have called for the recognition of the Universal
Declaration on the Rights of Mother Earth, then certainly there is
a cultural expression that can contribute, in its own way, by
heralding a proposed change in governance. Ten years before the
recent Conference in Cochabamba, Bolivian protesters and social
justice activists successfully prevented the privatization of the
city’s water supply by the multinational giant Bechtel. This event
is only one of many cases in which neoliberal economic policies
have met with organized resistance and without a doubt there is
increasing awareness of how state governments everywhere
have mortgaged the very survival of humanity to rotten speculators. It is fitting then that The Fall of Water was sold to a Bolivian
neurosurgeon while on view as part of the touring exhibition
organized by the Agnes Etherington Art Centre. This patron has
donated the work to the National School of Art in La Paz, Bolivia,
where it will serve as an example of contemporary art that is
based in the forms of Counter-Reformation art that have become
part of the popular artistic traditions of that country.
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By Any Means Necessary: From the
Revolutionary Art of Emory Douglas to the
Art Activism of Jackie Sumell
In a well-known debate with the cultural and political theorists
Judith Butler and Ernesto Laclau, Slavoj Žižek put forward one of
his most prescient criticisms of the postmodern cultural politics
of difference, that is, the view that because capital functions as
the concrete universal of our global situation, the categories of
race, class, gender and sexuality do not operate as equivalent
categories of difference and oppression.1 Žižek asks us to
consider how it is that class analysis allows us to distinguish a
universal emancipatory radical politics from the plurality of
struggles that are based on race, gender and sexuality, which
today functions as the basis of a neoliberal “post-politics” that
leads to what he refers to as the “culturalization of politics.”2 He
argues that in the chain of signifiers race, class and gender, class
is named but rarely theorized. In his book on Iraq, he makes the
following claim: “The first step is already accomplished: from the
multitude of struggles for recognition to anti-capitalism; what
lies ahead is the next, ‘Leninist’, step – towards politically
organized anti-capitalism.”3 While many in the art world are
prepared to concede that neoliberal capitalist politics are fundamentally anti-democratic, few are prepared to take this “next
step” and “make capitalism history.” Even Alain Badiou, who
argues that the “communist hypothesis” must be upheld against
today’s reactionary restoration of class power, believes that the
Leninist sequence of a vanguard party organization and a mass
mobilization of the proletariat is one that is no longer an option.4
In relation to this discussion, I wish to consider the exemplary
leadership of the Black Panther Party, which was particularly
active in the years 1966 (one year after the assassination of
Malcolm X) to 1982 (although it is still active today), and which
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By Any Means Necessary: From the Revolutionary Art of Emory Douglas ...
was the target of the most intense domestic counter-intelligence
effort in American history. I discuss this specifically in relation to
the cultural production of revolutionary art in the service of the
people and the Panthers’ Ten-Point Program for SelfDetermination, which demanded full employment, an end to the
oppression of black communities, decent housing, radical
education, health care, an end to police brutality, an end to wars
of aggression, and the end of the racist prison system.5 I do this
with an eye to situating revolutionary art in the context of
today’s socially engaged art activism and in particular, with
reference to Jackie Sumell’s collaboration with Herman Wallace
in the The House That Herman Built (2003, ongoing).
The Panthers and the Politics of Class Struggle
Mike Kelley once asserted that “It will be a cold day in hell when
you see a major museum mount a show of the cultural
production of the Weather Underground or Black Panthers.”6
That day turned out to be not too far off and its focus in the
visual arts has been the work of the Panthers’ Minister of
Culture, Emory Douglas, and the revolutionary art that he
produced for the Black Panther Newspaper, which was published
between the years 1967 and 1979 and which, at its peak in 1970,
had a circulation of over 400,000. Douglas’ reflections on his role
as Minister of Culture were published in an article titled
“Revolutionary Art/Black Liberation,” which appeared in The
Black Panther in the May 18, 1968 issue. The function of revolutionary art, he states, is to illuminate the party, which educates
the masses of black people, via pictures. Those who read the BP
newspaper are not readers, he asserts, but activists. Douglas’
work combined socialist realism with social realism and
caricature. The radical tone of his words in this piece, which
asserts the need to “draw deadly pictures of the enemy,” reflects
the Panther orientation towards self-defense and its dissatisfaction with the Civil Rights Movement’s principle of non51
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violence. This same year, however, and with the increasing
pressure placed on party leadership as well as infiltration by
agents provocateurs, the party shifted its focus on survival
programs, as they were called, such as free breakfasts for children
and health clinics, as well as running party members in local,
state and national electoral races.
In 2004 an exhibition titled “A Retrospective on the Black
Panther Party and The Art of Emory Douglas” was held at the
Sargent Johnson Gallery at the African American Art and Culture
Complex in San Francisco. In 2008, “Black Panther: The
Revolutionary Art of Emory Douglas” opened at LA MoCA’s
Pacific Design Center, and in 2009 “Emory Douglas: Black
Panther” was held at New York City’s New Museum. The last
two exhibitions were curated by artist and cultural historian Sam
Durant, who also edited an illustrated catalogue of Douglas’
work.7 Two of the essays in Durant’s catalogue allow us to
consider the basic opposition between a political struggle that
involves cultural production and a culturalized politics.
Emblematic of the latter is artist and theorist Colette Gaiter’s
“What Revolution Looks Like.” Although Gaiter has a deep
appreciation of Douglas’ illustrations of the harsh reality of the
life of the disenfranchised, she assumes that the revolutionary
ambitions of the Black Panthers have been accomplished, and
places black liberation in the context of other minority struggles
led by students, women, the disabled, gays, and lesbians. She
writes: “That fact that we now take these changes for granted is a
paradox. Activists and revolutionaries like the Black Panthers
worked to make ideas that were once believed to be extreme –
like equal opportunity for all Americans – seem like the natural
order of things.” 8 Gaiter’s use of the past tense and her
suggestion that the major struggles of the 1960s were over by
1970 assumes quite a great deal about the current state of world
politics, especially as the U.S. is involved in imperialist wars of
aggression in Iraq, Afghanistan and Pakistan, and as it condones
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By Any Means Necessary: From the Revolutionary Art of Emory Douglas ...
the right-wing politics of oligarchic and corporate control in
Asia, Latin America, Africa, the Middle East and at home.
Kathleen Cleaver’s contribution to the book, which recounts the
series of events from 1967 to 1969, somehow seems more actual
and pertinent, decrying the American military behemoth and
declaring solidarity with all of those involved in revolutionary
guerrilla battles and fighting imperialism.
The theme of revolutionary struggle is also taken up in
Durant’s book by Greg Jung Morozumi, curator of the Sargent
Johnson Gallery exhibition and former member of the radical
group I Wor Kuen. In his essay, “Emory Douglas and the Third
World Cultural Revolution,” Morozumi links the Panthers’ activities with those of other anti-racist organizations, specifically the
Young Lords, the Brown Berets and the Red Guard. Linking
Mao’s writings on mass organization with Fanon’s anti-colonial
“handbook of the cultural revolution,” The Wretched of the Earth
(1961), Morozumi emphasizes how the Panthers’ struggle
became international, with reissues of Emory’s art in Cuba,
Algeria, Vietnam and China, and with various struggles coming
together. For Morozumi, solidarity against Western colonialism,
the principle of self-defense and revolutionary violence against
oppressors are served by artists who solidify the revolutionary
consciousness of the people and, as such, take on a vanguard role
against dispossession. “Rather than reinforcing the cultural dead
end of ‘post-modern’ nostalgia,” he writes, “the inspiration of
[Douglas’] art raises the possibility of rebellion and the creation
of new revolutionary culture.”9
Here I wish to consider one of the obstacles to revolutionary
theory in contemporary cultural discourse, namely, the concept
of masculinism. A well-rehearsed charge against the Black
Panthers is that their politics were masculinist. A common
counter-argument is that sexism and patriarchy were found not
only in Panther praxis, but in society at large in the 60s and 70s.
However, masculinism can also be used as a critique of any
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politics that asserts itself as a universalizing discourse and thus,
ostensibly, presupposes a singular social consciousness. A good
example of the charge of Panther masculinism can be found in
Erika Doss’s essay, “‘Revolutionary Art Is a Tool for Liberation’:
Emory Douglas and Protest Aesthetics at the Black Panther,”
which argues that the Panthers’ effort to uphold black
masculinity in the face of liberal white racist society was fraught
with heterosexist and homophobic manifestations.10
According to post-colonial theorist Homi Bhabha,
masculinism is not simply about the social authority invested in
men, but describes the “sublation of social antagonisms” and the
“repression of social division” into an impersonal universal
discourse.11 Feminist psychoanalysis holds that such fantasies of
political unity presume a coherent social universe as well as a
stable subjective reference point that cannot be sustained, and
that therefore produces its notion of social reality through a
series of exclusions and occluded possibilities. Former Panther
and intellectual activist Angela Davis has asserted that the theory
of masculinism was nonexistent in the 1960s and is only now an
important concept within radical theory.12 The point of radical
politics, I would argue, is to assert a universal emancipatory
project against political pragmatism and with the full acknowledgement of the ungrounded basis of political choice. Kathleen
Cleaver is only one among many Panther leaders to assert that
gender issues in the Party were not as important as revolutionary
struggle. She writes:
It seemed to me that part of the genesis of the gender question,
and this is only an opinion, lies in the way it deflects attention
from confronting the revolutionary critique our organization
made of the larger society, and turns it inward to look at what
type of dynamics and social conflicts characterized the organization. (...) How do you empower an oppressed and impoverished people who are struggling against racism, militarism,
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By Any Means Necessary: From the Revolutionary Art of Emory Douglas ...
terrorism, and sexism too? That’s the real question.13
Two things can be said about the problems of contemporary
post-structural theory as it is commonly practiced. The first
relates to cultural theory and the problematic assumptions of
social constructionism; the second relates to the way that
difference politics leads to a form of ultra-politics that prevents
an adequate analysis of the status of the political. While social
constructionism makes the necessary assertion of the groundless
nature of social processes, it tends to operate in politically correct
cultural milieux as a kind of false consciousness thesis, against
which liberals assert their distance from meta-political class
politics. In his critique of social constructionism, sociologist
Michael Schudson argues that postmodern theorizing tends to
lead to an impoverished view of political action by collapsing
lived social experience with culture.14 The theoretical emphasis
on preconstituted social structures and the discursive situation
of “subjects” provides a seemingly sophisticated basis for social
criticism. However, in its common usage, it leaves little room for
the constitution of knowledge that is independent of ideology
and positionality. All knowledge is reduced to the calculus of
power. Rather than deny the world – as well as human agency –
Schudson argues for an understanding of the relationship
between knowledge and the world. For our purposes, the revolutionary art of the Black Panthers would thus require an adequate
grounding in an understanding of the “autonomy of culture in
human affairs.”15 This is not to argue that culture is neutral or
innocent, but it is a necassry gesture if the left wishes to leave no
political presuppositions free from critical examination. To
reduce culture to power and interestednesss, Schudson explains,
trivializes culture and fails to recognize politics. By simply invalidating everything with notions like undecidability, and by
seeking to blur boundaries and deconstruct the oppositions they
generate, cultural studies scholars tend to invalidate any critical
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social project.
When postmodernists make political assertions, they typically
take a pragmatic route that starts by denouncing any and all
claims to universality, behind which lie contingent, particularistic
interests that are codified most often as white male patriarchy.
The problem with particularistic politics that assert the personal
as political, Žižek argues, is that they cannot be universalized.
Žižek criticizes identity politics by contesting Jacques Rancière’s
distinction between the political (social agonism, dissensus) and
politics (police functions, the state) and by suggesting that only a
politics that can universalize its claims and enforce them with
official laws and police functions can claim to be a radical
politics. Postmodern post-politics that foreclose a radical universalization of struggle lead ultimately to a politics of liberal multicultural tolerance. They amount to something similar to what
Žižek defines as ultra-politics:
the attempt to depoliticize conflict by way of bringing it to
extremes. (...) In ultrapolitics, the repressed political returns in
the guise of the attempt to resolve the deadlock of political
conflict by its false radicalization – that is, by reformulating it
as [not a war of emancipation, but] a war between us and
them, our enemy, where there is no common ground of
symbolic conflict.16
In this, contemporary micro-politics, despite its theoretical
conceits, often operates a similar deradicalization of politics that
benefits the conservative right.
The exemplar of ultrapolitics is the Nazi legislator Carl
Schmitt. In Schmittean political struggle, political agents need
not hold to the letter and accountability of the law, but may act in
their narrow interests by attacking those that they suspect of
enemy status. The Schmittean agent acts according to the obscene
underside of the law and its unspoken rules, without taking
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By Any Means Necessary: From the Revolutionary Art of Emory Douglas ...
recourse to the law and its institutional mechanisms. Such postpolitics is in fact the basis of what Angela Davis and Bettina
Aptheker defined in 1971 as the “infirmities” of the bourgeois
democratic state and its repressive judicial system and prisons.17
According to Davis, the political prisoner is the person who
breaks a law for the sake of the collective welfare and survival of
a people, and thus violates the unwritten laws that prohibit
disobedience to a repressive system. When a political prisoner
breaks a law, it is not that particular law that forms the basis of
her prosecution, but the unwritten law. According to fascist legal
theory, the political prisoner is guilty a priori: “Anyone who seeks
to overthrow oppressive institutions, whether or not he has
engaged in an overt illegal act, is a priori a criminal who must be
buried away in one of America’s dungeons.”18 Needless to say,
the history of the repression of the Black Panther Party is one that
involves such anti-democratic and counter-revolutionary uses of
the judiciary and penal system.
The relative critical autonomy of art allows for a measure of
distance from politics. Because of this, art has often been the
target of political control. Today’s socially engaged artists share
no coherent set of principles even if, as socially minded activists,
they share similar ideals. Insofar as vanguard art and politics are
decried as masculinist universalism, a radical emancipatory
agenda for culture cannot be imagined, let alone put into
practice. The contemporaneity of Black Pather struggles is
therefore perhaps a good place to start for some idea of what can
be done to fight the neoliberal assault on working people.
Revolutionary Fame and Tobasco Sauce
Perhaps one of the most egregious cases of unmitigated injustice
is the prosecution of the Angola 3: Albert Woodfox, Herman
Wallace and Robert King Wilkerson. Although King was released
from the Louisiana State Penitentiary in 2001, his comrades
continue to serve life sentences in solitary confinement for the
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alleged 1972 murder of a prison guard. This conviction is largely
recognized as wrongful and designed to silence the three Black
Panther activists, who have struggled for prison reform, to end
prison rape, and to improve the inhumane conditions that prevail
in places like the Louisiana State Penitentiary.19 Formerly an
antebellum slave plantation, today the prison complex is a
180,000-acre work camp where three quarters of the inmates are
African-American. As the largest employer in the region, the
Louisiana State Penitentiary pays prisoners anywhere between
four and twenty cents per hour for their forced labour.
I learned about the Angola 3 through a remarkable video
project produced by the Brooklyn-born activist artist Jackie
Sumell. Sumell was moved by a lecture given by Robert King in
California and from there began a correspondence with Herman
Wallace, who has been living in a 6 x 9 foot cell for more than
forty years, a situation that she refers to as a “psychological mind
fuck.”20 Wallace is forced to remain in this cell for twenty-three
hours per day, seven days per week. In a 2003 letter, Sumell asked
Wallace, “What kind of house does a man who has lived in a 6 x
9 foot box for over thirty years dream of?” Wallace’s response
became the basis of The House That Herman Built, an ongoing
collaborative project between Sumell and Wallace.
Jackie Sumell, The House That Herman Built, 2006. CAD video with
sound recording. Stills from video. Courtesy of Jackie Sumell.
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By Any Means Necessary: From the Revolutionary Art of Emory Douglas ...
As part of this extensive collaboration, Sumell produced a
video featuring a CAD architectural drawing based on Wallace’s
written description of his ideal home, as narrated by King. The
video opens with an exterior view of the house, surrounded by
gardens and flowers. From a two-car garage, the viewer passes a
storage space with a pantry for dry goods. In his review of the
project, Wallace noticed that among the items represented in the
pantry, Sumell had forgotten the Tobasco sauce. The fact that
Wallace noticed such a tiny omission shows the extent to which
the project allows him to imagine himself in a wholly different
place, freed from confinement.
Among the many splendid aspects of the house, most striking
is Wallace’s commitment to revolutionary politics, as evidenced
in the dining and conference room with its wall of revolutionary
fame displaying framed pictures of the prominent abolitionists
John Brown, Gabriel Prosser, Harriet Tubman, Nat Turner, and
Denmark Vessey. The Black Panther Party emblem is painted at
the bottom of the swimming pool in the yard. Wallace’s experiences of militant struggle are reflected in the design of the house,
which allows for a quick escape. A fireplace in the second-floor
master bedroom leads to an underground bunker thirty-five feet
away from the house, equipped with military essentials,
foodstuffs, and first aid supplies. Wallace’s description vacillates
between details concerning construction materials, the size of
rooms and their furnishings, and uncanny reminders of life in
prison and yearnings for a just society. “I wonder,” Wallace
concludes, “how psychologists would evaluate me as a person.”
The House That Herman Built has been exhibited widely in
North America and Europe, and with the encouragement and
donations of architects, designers, builders, artists, an urbanist
and a documentary filmmaker, plans to build Herman’s House are
underway. I interviewed Jackie Sumell in person and by email in
February and March of 2010. I inquired about the relationship
between the activist organizing of the present and the revolu59
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tionary goals and aims of the Black Panther Party.
Marc James Léger: How are Herman Wallace and Albert
Woodfox doing? How do you think Herman’s House has so far
contributed to their cause?
Jackie Sumell: I would suggest that you write to Herman and
Albert and ask them these questions. They are truly remarkable
men who are visibly exhausted by four decades of injustice. They
maintain a strong sense of balance because they believe their case
will serve to correct the criminal justice system. Relative to the
second part of your question, it is an enormous compliment to
hear them say that The House That Herman Built has been the
greatest tool in raising awareness about their case. Obviously that
is my greatest motivation.
MJL: You’ve mentioned somewhere that you situate your
work between art and activism. Could you tell me some more
about that? How would you situate your work in relation to the
art of Emory Douglas?
JS: Well, I am an activist and an artist and a sister and a friend
and a godmother and many other things, so it’s less the case that
my work is situated between art and activism and it’s more a case
that these various aspects of my life are influences on my work.
As far as any comparisons with the work of Emory are
concerned, Emory is a Black Panther – he didn’t study it, he
doesn’t reflect on it based on the words of others, he lives it. It is
totally different. Emory’s work was critical to a radical movement
and the trajectory of radical thinking in the 1970s. His work could
have cost him his life. What I do is very different. Yes, there are
great risks involved but the priorities and risks are different
when compared to a black man in the 70s who was creating the
visual vocabulary for a radical campaign of self-determination.
MJL: In a meeting we had a few weeks ago, I noticed that you
took exception to the words “anger” and “militancy” when said
in relation to the Black Panthers. Recently I read this statement by
Emory Douglas about his frustration with the Civil Rights
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By Any Means Necessary: From the Revolutionary Art of Emory Douglas ...
Movement in the 60s: “The thing was that I hadn’t been able up
to that time to apply my anger to my drawing and painting.” An
essay by Erika Doss that I read goes out of its way to emphasize
the masculinism of the Panthers. I’m wondering if your hesitancy
about terms like “militancy” are part of a feminist response to
this history or if it’s part of the way people today look at revolutionary class politics in general. Another way to phrase this
question might be to ask you what you think about the relation
of revolutionary struggle to activism.
JS: This feels like two diverging questions. I understand
Emory’s anger completely. I don’t think that I took exception to
the word anger in relation to the BPP. I think it was in reference
to Robert King in particular, who transformed his anger into
constructive action and reaction. I am sure that Emory, as a
young black man living under the oppressive regimes of the 60s
had beaucoup of that anger – and rightfully and righteously so. I
think that today he might also say that he found a constructive
outlet for that anger, and it has been effective. We today can
share that experience. I can also reflect on anger as something
that is not constructive. I respect anger as an important emotion,
equal to love or sadness, but like the latter two it has to be
channeled or it can isolate itself and become destructive.
As for misogyny in the Panthers, I never read Erika Doss’s
work, nor do I know what you are referencing, but I would say
that a transformative moment came for me when I realized that
the Black Panther Platform was about equality and self-determination for all poor and oppressed people regardless of race,
gender, or sexual orientation. Associating the Panthers with
misogyny is consistent with the tactics of COINTELPRO [the
FBI’s Counter-Intelligence Program against the Panthers and
other revolutionary groups] and is used to slander the
movement. The Black Panther Party was comprised of humandoings and was fueled by people power and a need for change.
Sure, mistakes are implicit in redesigning the way an entire
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society functions. I am not suggesting that the Black Panther
Party was a flawless solution or that acts of perceived misogyny
or prejudice did not take place. They themselves were learning in
the process of acting, whatever their intentions. That was and is
progressive thinking, even if things are never as perfect as we
would like them to be. I wasn’t there but I do have relationships
with very strong and visible Panther ladies who would speak in
opposition to these kinds of characterizations.
MJL: What can you tell me about Herman Wallace’s
involvement in the Black Panther Party? Judging by his vision of
the House, the theory and practice of the Panthers is still very
much alive for him. Of course, in the context of forty years of
solitary confinement, this praxis is directly connected to prison
reform for himself and for other political prisoners.
JS: I can tell you that Herman Wallace is a Black Panther. It is
an ideology and a commitment that is independent of history or
the fact that the Party was targeted and subsequently dissolved
by the U.S. Government in 1974. The principles of the Black
Panther Party survive Herman. His marriage to the Party
provides him with a focus that allows him to survive because he
realizes that struggle is selfless. It is about change for the greater
good and for the people. He understands that he is a representative of some of the greatest miscarriages of justice in this
lifetime and that he has to survive in order to ensure that no one
else will have to endure what he has. Albert and Robert both
uphold these principles. It is where they meet, where they define
fraternity. The Black Panther Platform guides them.
After this correspondence with Sumell I wrote to Herman
Wallace and asked him a related series of questions. His response
letter came to me dated March 24, 2010. It was opened and
stamped: “Prison mail. Not censored. Not responsible for
contents. Elayn Hunt Correctional Center.” It reads:
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By Any Means Necessary: From the Revolutionary Art of Emory Douglas ...
Warm Greetings, Marc,
At this very moment I am swamped with legal work that
demands the utmost of my attention, but, putting something
aside that I consider equally important oftentimes becomes
my biggest negative distraction. So, I decided to put everything aside and get back with you. Thank you for taking an
interest in the work that Jackie and I are doing, as it is through
the process of this work that she seems to be defining herself.
On 3-4-10 she took a flight and left for Germany and will
be there for two months and I am going to miss our talks and
visits.
I find you have a vast resume in the field of art. Art is
indeed your specialty – mine is not. It is dangerous for Albert
and I to discuss Panther matters at this time. The government
is using every piece of evidence they can against us, no matter
how small, to win a third conviction against Albert. So, I’m
not sure how effective I will be in assisting you in your
request.
I’m convinced that your interest rests around how activist
art and revolutionary art can be connected – reconnected. In
connecting activist art with revolutionary art there must be a
recognition of a definite political lineage. We live in a class
society and each class has its own culture and the literature
that expresses it. Revolutionary culture creates an ideological
front prior to the revolution. To effectively bring on an end to
what we recognize as the prison-industrial complex, we must
make the connection with the present social order. It’s not
about calling for an end to the facilities of prisons, jails, or
penitentiaries – it’s about reflecting upon the laws, conditions
and many other social orders if we are to effectively transform
these facilities. The House That Herman Built is to certify that
the literature and the art connect with an understanding of
the ways of creating institutions, ideas, and strategies – as
Angela Davis points out – “strategies that will render prisons
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obsolete.”
How are we doing? Not good, Marc; not good at all. In
2008 federal judge James Brody overturned Albert’s
conviction and from that point the government has come out
with full force, attacking both Albert and I with lies. They
attacked Albert for defending himself against the Attorney
General’s lies, daring to challenge his power, and locked the
both of us back up in solitary. I’m presently in a worse place
than Closed Cell Restriction [the solitary confinement at
Angola where Albert is kept]. I’ve been here for five months
and eleven days.
You asked how do I think Herman’s House contributed to
our cause and the cause of other political prisoners. This
house and the ideas and ideals that embrace it could not have
been possible had it not been for the artist, Jackie Sumell. The
house is actually a people’s house. The building of this house
has so far brought hundreds of people together. It has brought
together artists, activists, designers, rich and poor. It is recognized by students around the world and recently, Occidental
College had forty of its students in New Orleans work on
rebuilding New Orleans and Angola 3 projects. These
students set up a tour of Angola Penitentiary and visited the
notorious Camp J and Angola’s Death House. This tour was
made possible as a result of the artistic criterion born out of
the unity of art and politics. This brings me back to a part of
your interest when you referred to a “reconnection.” There
was never a disconnection of activist and revolutionary art.
Within the class struggle, you will always find the political
criterion first and the artistic criterion following. In building
my House, Jackie connects it with 38 years of my being forced
to live here in a six-by-eight-foot cell. She recreates the cell – a
new cell for every exhibition worldwide. This house project
has been instrumental in connecting me with many people
internationally. I, in turn, connect them with each other, either
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By Any Means Necessary: From the Revolutionary Art of Emory Douglas ...
personally or through the unification of The House That
Herman Built website.
On the subject of Panther culture, such derives from the
nature of the Black Panther in general. First and foremost, it is
a defensive animal who will only attack when threatened. So
far as I can only tell you of my own social or caged experience
as a Panther, but even at this point it is legally advised of me
not to, but I will tell you that we all are guided by the
ideology of the Ten-Point Program.
I can relate to Mike Kelley’s statement. However, such
ideas will not display my form of force primarily because its
political viewpoint is incorrect. The House That Herman Built is
tightly connected with the movement of the Angola 3.
Consider the absolute fact of the American government
priding itself on being a democratic system – the land of the
free – a government that is known to chastise other nations on
human rights violations and the holding of political
prisoners. As a result, the Angola 3 are political prisoners and
have been kept in solitary confinement for the past 38 years.
Through the artistic skills of Jackie Sumell and other artistic
values such as “Life’s Morcel,” a play produced by Linda
Carmichael; “Angola 3,” a play produced by Parnell Herbert;
“3 Black Panthers,” a documentary narrated by Mumia AbuJamal and produced by Jimmy O’Halligan; and on March 26,
2010, “In the Land of the Free,” a Roddick Foundation Film
narrated by Samuel L. Jackson, we present to the world, art in
motion.
All Power to the People
Herman
Among the prohibitions that work against the radicalization of
culture and politics is the view that the avant-garde, both in
terms of political party organization and in terms of an
autonomous cultural resistance to art as an instrument of
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capitalist exchange, is thought to be part of an exhausted
ideology. According to Brian Holmes, the vanguard today is the
global process itself, the “second modernity” of today’s risk and
security regimes.21 In light of this, he argues, what remains to be
done is the construction of institutions that are able to transform
the destructive forces that prevail. As part of this reflection, the
legacy of the Black Panther Party and the ongoing struggle of the
Angola 3 remind us that much of what is called racism in the U.S.
and elsewhere is, as Noam Chomsky states, directly related to an
unpronounceable five-letter word, namely: class.22 As democratic
institutions become evacuated of content, Chomsky says, people
look for a political saviour or turn to religious fanaticism.
While it is true that the totality of neoliberal capital creates
resistance to it in the form of activism, the passage from the
abstract to the concrete universal allows us to understand the
radically contingent space that is opened up as art like that
produced by Herman Wallace and Jackie Sumell represents class
struggle by other means. While today’s activist art may seem less
revolutionary than the exemplary leadership of the Black
Panthers in the 60s and 70s, we should insist on the way that it
retroactively reconstructs the global situation in the contingency
of necessity, and allows us to consider what an effective form of
revolutionary art might look like today.
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Afterthoughts on Engaged Art Practice:
ATSA and the State of Emergency
The tradition of the oppressed teaches us that the “state of
emergency” in which we live is not the exception but the rule.
We must attain a conception of history that is in keeping with
this insight. Then we shall clearly realize that it is our task to
bring about a real state of emergency, and this will improve
our position in the struggle against Fascism.
– Walter Benjamin
It has been the purpose of twentieth-century avant-garde art, in
Clement Greenberg’s famous formulation, “to find a path along
which it would be possible to keep culture moving in the midst
of ideological confusion and violence.”1 Today, much contemporary activist art operates with strategies that have been
worked out in Situationist, actionist, site-specific, community,
and context art, and that has as its purpose the possibility of
keeping progressive politics moving. Contemporary engaged art
practices have been described in varying ways by the critics and
artists Mary Jane Jacob, Suzanne Lacy, Miwon Kwon, Claire
Bishop, Grant Kester, and Bruce Barber.2 Given the relative
insouciance of contemporary activists for artistic consecration, it
is fair to say, as Brian Holmes argues, that the radical art of the
2000s has undergone a phase change and that, for the most part,
it no longer looks to the field of art production for the validation
of meaning and effectivity.3 This I argue is an adequate starting
point for an analysis of the activist work of the Montreal art duo
Annie Roy and Pierre Allard, better known as the collective
ATSA (Action Terroriste Socialement Acceptable/Socially
Acceptable Terrorist Action). ATSA figures among the many
activist artist collectives that in the years following the
emergence of the alter-globalization movement in the late 1990s
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have joined the ranks of what, for lack of a unifying term, we
could call socially engaged artists.
Since 1998, ATSA has produced multifaceted activist interventions in public places. The 2009 instance of its yearly project on
the state of homelessness in Montreal, État d’Urgence (State of
Emergency), provides an opportunity to consider changes in the
field of critical public art that have occurred over the past decade.
ATSA’s work provides an occasion to reflect on what has been
gained inasmuch as critical community art has made its way into
and out of mainstream discourse, and also what has been lost,
insofar as certain strategies become the stock-in-trade of an
administered culture. In this we should recall Martha Rosler’s
influential 1981 essay “In, Around, and Afterthoughts (On
Documentary Photography),” which assails the liberal humanist
assumptions of traditional photojournalism.4 Community art has
for some time worked to provide solutions to a faltering welfare
state bent on environmental destruction, enormous military
expenditures, and an inability to come to terms with the failure
of neoliberal economics. For some activists, community action
becomes a way to bypass institutions of representative
democracy and to directly create non-capitalist forms of association. Such activism is clearly not based on a perception of
wrongs that, as Rosler says about liberal documentary
journalism, are unrelated to the social system that not only
tolerates them but creates them. For Greenberg’s idea of
ideological confusion, then, we should simply identify the
problem of ideology as such, and on this score ATSA’s issueoriented work reveals ideological and political struggles. The
strength of a work, Marxists have argued, does not rely on the
presentation of a correct ideological position but is mediated by
the relative autonomy of the field of cultural production. A
critical evaluation of today’s engaged art in the context of a phase
change thus requires an appreciation of what such a change
promises: the re-evaluation of community art inasmuch as it has
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Afterthoughts on Engaged Art Practice: ATSA and the State of Emergency
been guided by liberal pluralist politics.
One of the most succinct expressions of contemporary activist
art’s social purpose is Wolfgang Zinggl’s assertion:
Art should no longer be venerated in specially designated
spaces. Art should not form a parallel quasi-world. Art
should not act as if it could exist of itself and for itself. Art
should deal with reality, grapple with political circumstances,
and work out proposals for improving human coexistence.5
Art practices, however, do not emerge from nowhere but rely on
the modification of existing models. An engaged art practice is
more often than not decidedly leftist and maintains, as Barber
argues, the lessons learned from successful avant-garde models
from the past.6 Notwithstanding the “beyond left and right”
mantra of postmodern academics, the left is hardly a monolithic
bloc, and longstanding disputes continue to animate the
movement. We find, consequently, analogous differences within
the political left and the artistic left. As Nato Thompson puts it in
relation to tactical media,
There is no political consensus among interventionists.
Interventionism is not a political movement disguised as art.
Practices and ideologies among interventionists vary
greatly... They represent methods of protest and public
education integrally connected to larger social movements.
And while there are extraordinary differences of opinion
regarding how and what social changes should be brought
about, it is also true that many artists seem to agree that the
current political climate is dangerous.7
We could argue, then, that the minimum political programme of
engaged art practice is “diversity of tactics,” the same slogan that
anti-globalization activists have mobilized to overcome divisions
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The Neoliberal Undead
of political orientation. In this, it is not always possible to distinguish engaged, anti-capitalist art from contemporary, postpolitical vanguardism, as gender and race issues, for example, or
as anarchist and Marxist tendencies vie for political prominence.
The tendencies that I am concerned with here are influenced
by strategies that resemble those that are used in protest
aesthetics. Theoretical tensions within the movement often arise
around the concept of autonomy, which has, on the one hand, a
political sense related to notions of self-organization, collectivity,
and solidarity, and on the other, a theoretical sense that is both
philosophical and socio-historical. Diversity of tactics emphasizes a logic of affinity that binds networks of grassroots organizations whose decentralized structures reflect both a political
outlook and a means to resist state repression. These principles
are advocated by the collective Chto Delat, who state the importance of twentieth-century avant-garde thought for the renewal
of leftist organization, and for a nondogmatic approach to
Marxism based in the principles of internationalism, feminism,
and equality.8 Tactics aside, it is necessary to assert that particularisms of gender, race, and sexuality are equally mediated by
capital and that in neoliberal society, the struggle against capital
has made identity struggles a matter of political formality. David
Graeber makes the observation that the struggle against
oppression is complemented by the struggle against alienation
and that no amount of political correctness can quench the thirst
for a universal emancipation.9
Les pauvres vont pas voir de shows/Icitte, l’hiver, les
pauvres gèlent
In 2008, on the ten-year anniversary of ATSA’s first version of État
d’Urgence (EU), the group was awarded two major municipal
awards by the City of Montreal: Artistes pour la paix (Artists for
Peace) and Citoyen de la Culture (Cultural Citizen). The prizes
recognized the tenacity of the artists in sustaining their annual
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Afterthoughts on Engaged Art Practice: ATSA and the State of Emergency
urban refugee camp on the Place Émilie-Gamelin, a five-day
“manifestival” that offers the public artistic programming that
showcases problems related to homelessness and social
exclusion. EU’s focus on homelessness corresponds to ATSA’s
“terrorist” strategy of creating attention-grabbing urban
guerrilla art aimed at various ecosocial ills, including poverty,
consumerism and environmental degradation. For the 2009
version of État d’Urgence, I spent five days observing some of the
countless activities that were organized. In the following I
describe these wanderings with a view to placing ATSA’s État
d’Urgence in the context of homeless representation. The
program was titled Hygiène sociale (Social Hygiene), a means of
addressing the media-generated hysterics surrounding the
H1N1 flu virus, and redirecting attention towards the stigma
surrounding vagrancy. For the first time, ATSA partnered with
Amnesty International to bring attention to poverty and
homelessness as human rights issues.
Whereas the 1997 Banque à bas (which translates roughly into
Sock Bank or Down with Banks) started as a discrete sculptural
provocation, “plunked” on the doorstep of the Montreal Musée
d’art contemporain, its EU offshoot has grown exponentially.10 In
2009, it had numerous government partners, including Heritage
Canada, the Canada Council, the Government of Québec
(Conseil des arts et des lettres, Emploi Québec, Ministère des
affaires municipales), the City of Montreal, the Conseil des Arts
de Montréal, and the real estate consortium La Capitale. It had
over thirty business partners in the areas of communications,
advertising, cultural promotion, and transportation. In addition,
the EU website lists an impressive number of collaborators in
logistics, restaurants, promotion and graphic design, personal
care, food donation, clothing donation, fair trade, artistic
support, a hotel for visiting artists, and bingo volunteers.11 The
ATSA team included a general coordinator, production assistant,
coordination assistant, promotion agent, accountant,
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The Neoliberal Undead
webmasters, photographer, translator, video editor, four artistic
advisors, and six board governors. With all of this support,
ATSA’s Allard and Roy can very well be described as impresarios,
bridging activism and popular art.12 The success of the project as
a spectacular humanitarian effort has caused it to grow over the
years with volunteers now numbering over four hundred, the
number of meals doubling to approximately two hundred fifty
three times daily, and the number of participating artists over the
one hundred mark. Any polemical stance directed at ATSA’s
attention-grabbing strategies has therefore to address the
immense popularity of this annual event. The festival features
five days of continuous and free multidisciplinary artistic presentations, including circus, theater, visual arts, video, film, spoken
word, storytelling, comedy, music, and dance. EU provides warm
clothing, over thirty-five hundred meals, snacks, sleeping accommodations, and health and beauty services. For these five days,
the Place Émilie-Gamelin becomes a meeting place for street
people who mingle with spectators.
According to Louis Jacob, the key characteristic of ATSA’s
interventionist strategy is participation, a transformative
experience of dialogue and interaction.13 The openness of the
project is due not only to the fact it is oriented to the general
public and non-specialized, non-art audiences, but that people
are free to come and go, with the only restrictions being the cold
weather and occasional rain or snow. In this provisional space of
emergency rescue through communication and community, there
appear to be no exceptions. It is worth mentioning that the first
versions of EU were designed to provide the general public with
the experience of sleeping in a makeshift shelter and relying on
food rations rather than the comforts of home. The audience that
turned out for these first few projects, however, consisted mostly
of homeless people who needed the services that were intended
to be primarily symbolic. Since then, EU has both adopted its
core constituency and adapted its methods of organization in
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Afterthoughts on Engaged Art Practice: ATSA and the State of Emergency
order to spread its message as broadly as possible.
ATSA, État d’Urgence, 2009. Place Émilie-Gamelin, Montreal.
Photo: Marc James Léger.
November 25: On va l’avoir
On Friday, in the light rain of a cold fall evening, I went to see Le
Show Hygiénique, hosted by Sylvie Moreau and François
Papineau. Approximately one hundred people had gathered,
some sitting on benches that had been placed around metal
drums with lit fires. There were indications that this was a night
of some excitement, with the smell of pot in the air and people
huddled about, holding beer cans in brown paper bags. I met
two young men in the Amnesty International tent who were
working on a campaign for Paraguay that they linked to their
anti-poverty campaign for Québec. Then the show started. The
hosts wore white lab coats and the musicians wore blue hospital
gowns. Moreau and Papineau insisted ironically that the event
was not politically partisan and then proceeded to provide
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The Neoliberal Undead
statistics concerning the ten to fifteen thousand homeless people
living in Montréal and the three hundred thousand homeless in
Canada. Their banter was funny and twisted, garnering
favourable and sometimes disjointed heckles from the audience.
They sang Les Pauvres by the legendary Québec singer and
songwriter Plume Latraverse. Next, the local band Parlovr played
two synth-pop tunes, followed by Damien Robitaille’s folk music,
Mathieu Lippé’s slam lyrics, and some country music. People
danced by the stage and one man took the microphone, letting
out an assertive, existential scream. Before the show was over I
bought from the welcome tent a copy of ATSA’s self-published
book, ATSA: Quand l’art passe à l’action (ATSA: When Art Takes
Action). The title brings to mind the action art of the 1960s and
the development of performance art. One art action, you could
say, was enacted by a young woman named Julie who decided
during the show that I was going to share my umbrella with her.
“Il faut partager,” she said; “you have to share.”
November 26: I Heart Joseph Beuys
The following morning, on the way to the camp, I met a man on
Saint-Denis Street who was selling the homeless newsmagazine
L’Itinéraire. He said he likes to keep a low profile and thought
that EU is a bit too showy and spectacular, that people like him
need health services and beds, delivered in a calm and secure
environment. He spoke to me about having a bipolar disorder
and suffering from depression. I thought to myself, the entire
world today suffers from these same problems. Remembering
some things I learned from studying the work of Krzysztof
Wodiczko, I told him that I hoped the show on Saint-Catherine
would help all of us learn to live a little. He smiled and shook my
hand.
I strolled onto the plaza where the night before some one
hundred people had slept. People were now lined up at the food
tents. I spoke for a while to Marie-Pierre, a security volunteer
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Afterthoughts on Engaged Art Practice: ATSA and the State of Emergency
who said somewhat apologetically that things had gotten rowdy
last night. She then explained that Montreal shelters cannot
provide beds for all of the people in need. The overflow that
ATSA serves is a spectacular reminder that there aren’t enough
beds to meet the demand. She said that if I wanted to know more
I should mingle with the people. As I walked towards a nearby
café to read the articles on ATSA in the issue of L’Itinéraire that I
bought, I fell upon a silent performance by a group of young
people. These anonymous individuals held their various poses in
front of Jean-François Lemire’s outdoor photo installation, a
series of banners with portraits of people who may or may not be
homeless. During the performance a young street person named
Christian explained to me that the insurance costs from theft are
an unnecessary expense and that a free-market solution to
homelessness is readily at hand for entrepreneurs who could
receive subsidies by providing “private” housing. This he
believed could help cut down on crime and maybe drug abuse.
At the coffee shop, two steps away from the plaza, the tables
have signs glued to them that are printed by the Montreal police.
The signs remind customers to watch their things: “Theft doesn’t
take a break.” Obviously, Christian is aware that theft has causes
and is not an impersonal, timeless evil.14 The manager of the café
was unclear about what was going on across the street. When I
explained things to her she said she thought that perhaps the
money could be put to better use and that the festival might not
be for everybody.
Later, in the ATSA tent, Anne Ste-Marie from Amnesty
International gave a media conference on the First Nations
Winneway community in central Québec. She related the
contemporary conditions of this Algonquin group to the history
of European colonialism. Ten percent of itinerants in Canada, she
explained, are native people. Natives are poorer than the average
poor Canadian, have a lower life expectancy, and receive 28
percent less in terms of services. She explained how the Long
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The Neoliberal Undead
Point First Nation’s efforts to control its economic development,
territory, and ancestral lands, named Kakinwawigak, are
typically caught between provincial and federal legislation. Since
the government of Prime Minister Stephen Harper is closed to
discussion, Amnesty is focusing its energy on the provincial
administration of Jean Charest, premier of Québec. She passed
out postcards to the people in the tent, who were lined up for
coffee and Christmas cake and benefiting from services from
Médecins du monde, an anonymous barber, the used clothing
seller Value Village, and the Patchwork Workshop. While I was
sitting on the barber’s empty chair, a woman showed me the fur
coat she had claimed from Value Village. “It’s full of holes,” she
told me. “You can take it to the mending booth,” I suggested. She
just smiled and got along in the snack lineup. Later, after the
conference was over, I saw her wearing the coat.
My Thursday at EU was rounded off with an artist’s talk at the
Goethe Institut on Sherbrooke Street. ATSA had met Hans
Winkler at an event in Vancouver and invited him to participate
in this year’s programming. This international artist, who is now
based in New York City, makes interventionist works that create
occasions for social interactions in urban contexts. His piece for
EU is a projected handbook with tips and survival strategies
gathered while “in residence.” Not only is the handbook based
on the expertise of Montreal’s homeless people and drug addicts,
it carries the fearful prospect that it could become a handy
reference for anyone in today’s world of economic instability.
Some of the tips he has been given, he says, are little more than
“bullshit.” I asked Winkler who his influences were. He emphasized Dada, Futurism, and the Flux artists Wolf Vostell and
Joseph Beuys. The Futurism accounts for his occasional forays
into the realm of illegality. When I pressed him on the stakes of
contemporary criticism related to engaged art, he said with a
blasé attitude: “Yeah, people were talking a lot about avant-garde
ten years ago.”
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Afterthoughts on Engaged Art Practice: ATSA and the State of Emergency
November 27: Devenir itinérant
At lunch on Friday I attended the lecture given by Université du
Québec à Montréal professor Simon Harel at the Bibliothèque
Nationale on Berri Street, situated diagonally across from Place
Émilie-Gamelin. Harel is director of the University’s Centre
interuniversitaire d’étude sur les lettres, les arts et les traditions. He
spoke in particular of the Place Émilie-Gamelin as part of the
underground manifestations of Québec culture, bordering the
popular and commercial Quartier des Spectacles that is best
known for the annual summer jazz festival. The survival of
public places like the Place Émilie-Gamelin depends on the city
preventing such sites from becoming the kind of museological
zones that characterize Venice and Bilbao. It is an example of a
park that works for its users, a site of reappropriation of the city
by itinerants. Montreal’s future, he argued, lies in remaining an
alternative city in which such places are still a possibility. He said
that the city has to avoid what Michael Sorkin refers to as
“domestication by cappuccino.”15 Literature, Harel argued, is
another of the sites in which the marginal culture of Montreal is
valorized, and ATSA, he insisted, is Montreal.
Harel’s talk about an imaginary of rebellion amongst the city’s
“children of the streets,” about the language of wandering and
desperate nomadism, was lost on a local advocate of police and
municipal intervention to “clean up” the plaza from drug
dealers. This man thought that Harel was romanticizing the
street and rowdy users of the park. I also thought that Harel was
glorifying itinerance, but not in the same sense. Montreal underground is significant to Harel inasmuch as it serves Québécois
identity. Not a word was spoken about class struggle as an international project and the kinds of effort required to eliminate
poverty and unemployment.16 While the savoir-faire of survival
and solidarity strategies are undoubtedly local, Harel limits his
discourse to the kind of incremental reformism that ignores the
relative impossibility of capitalism with a human face within the
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The Neoliberal Undead
current political climate. He could have been reminded that the
politics of the 1960s, of which he spoke, was also a class politics.
No one in the room seemed to understand that Bilbaoization
serves mostly reified cultural projects. Harel did not articulate an
alternative global vision but an alternative neoliberalism.
November 28: L’amour fou
On Saturday I decided to see the play Ça va la santé mentale?
(How’s Your Mental Health?). I confused the stages, however,
and listened instead to the choral music of Les Voix Ferrées. By day
four, the crowd had grown a little irreverent. Although I took a
seat at the back of the scene, I was surrounded in a few minutes
by distracted participants, a man playing his guitar, photographers shooting by the minute, and a group of homeless men with
big dogs. Part of the spectacle sometimes provided by homeless
people is their disrespect for the conventions of civility. They
make noise during shows, spit on the ground, and talk back to
emcees in ways that redirect the show towards idiosyncratic
ends.
In the evening I saw Magnus Isaacson and Simon Bujold’s
recent documentary, L’Art en action: Un film sur ATSA (Canada,
2009, Isaacson and Bujold). This presentation at the Cinéma
Parallèle was not part of the official selection for the festival, but
the timing could not have been better. The film looks at the work
of Allard and Roy over ten years. Among one of the insights of
the film is the way that the artists mix political sophistication
with a forthrightness that is characteristic of Montrealers. Roy is
shown crying at least three times in the film, sometimes of fatigue
and other times of frustration concerning the dire circumstances
of the people she meets.
One of the scenes from the 2008 EU shows the two artists
greeting the mayor, Gerald Tremblay, on the big stage. Tremblay
is treated to the projected video image of an advocate for the
homeless who explains how in the past year, city police have
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Afterthoughts on Engaged Art Practice: ATSA and the State of Emergency
awarded more than four thousand fines to homeless people. The
mayor tells the assembled that he is aware of this criminalization
of poverty and says that his administration is looking into the
issue. Allard confronts him somewhat menacingly while Roy
puts her arm around him reassuringly. Allard is not always easy
to handle. More than anything, they tell their interviewer, ATSA
is about energy, the love of wild things, the unfinished. The film
culminates with the closing of EU 2008 wherein the children of
the Arc-en-ciel primary school, who have been serving meals all
night, finish their duties by singing John Lennon’s “Imagine.”17
After weeks of tireless organizing and days of intense interaction
with Montreal’s homeless, Roy is moved once again to tears.
November 29: L’Amour ça se fout
On Sunday, the last day of events, I attend the dance training
session presented by La 2e Porte à gauche (Second Door on the
Left), a group influenced by Michel Reilhac’s Bal Moderne and
whose members presented to the public Marie Chouinard’s
choreography for Orpheus and Euridice. About twenty people
from the crowd joined in to learn the dance steps. On each side
of the stage are huge illustrated banners by Donigan Cumming.
Called Kincora, the drawings were inspired by a scandalous
eviction that put out hundreds of people. The participants
learned the steps after about a dozen or so attempts and entertained everyone else in the process.
My penchant for cinema later brought me to another film
screening, this one presented at the National Film Board on
Saint-Denis Street. 50-10 Un toit, c’est un droit (Canada, 2008,
Vera-Villaneuva) is a documentary made by ATSA’s neighbour,
Henrique Vera-Villanueva. It depicts the 2008 EU in what the
filmmaker, who was in attendance at the screening, describes as
a photograph of the event. The film’s title marks the passage of
sixty years of the Human Rights Declaration and ten years of État
d’Urgence. One of the songs featured in the sound track intones:
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“L’amour ça se fout d’être amant” (Love doesn’t bother to be in
love). The song doubles ATSA’s art, which doesn’t bother being
aesthetic. Artists are depicted as well as political groups,
including representatives from the newly created provincial
party Québec Solidaire and the Ontario Coalition Against
Poverty. The same interlude with the mayor that was featured in
L’Art en action appears in this film. One man who was interviewed explained how a fine prevented him from getting off of
police parole and getting a desirable job. I met the director after
the screening. He let me know that a bill to reform the business
of fines awarded to the homeless had made it to a superior court.
From Universal Rights to Universal Exception
The month of November 2009 in which this edition of État
d’Urgence took place marked the anniversary of two major worldhistorical events: the “fall of the Berlin Wall” in 1989 and the
confrontation of anti-global activists against the World Trade
Organization summit in Seattle in 1999. Both events signaled a
new era, and both of them met immediate setbacks. The former
Soviet-bloc countries did not see a new era of freedoms and
opportunities arise, but the return of former Communists to
positions of power within a neoliberal “risk society” that does not
have any of the previous guarantees of social welfare. After
Seattle, the post-9/11 “criminalization of dissent” and the
repressive police force used against anti-globalization protesters
in Genoa brought with it a certain realization of the systemic
antagonisms of biocapitalist governmentality. If these anniversaries have been noteworthy, it is in allowing us to take stock of
the present conjuncture. As Slavoj Žižek argued,
November 1989 marked the beginning of the “happy 1990s,”
Francis Fukuyama’s utopian “end of history”: liberal
democracy, he announced, had effectively won, the advent of
a global, liberal world community lurked just around the
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corner, and the remaining obstacles to this happy ending
were merely contingent (pockets of resistance where the local
leaders hadn’t yet grasped that their day was done). In
contrast, 9/11 marked the symbolic end of the “happy 1990s”:
it signaled the beginning of our current era, in which new
walls are springing up everywhere, between Israel and the
West Bank, around the European Union, on the US-Mexico
border – but also within single states.18
Žižek argues that 9/11 and the 2008 economic meltdown
represent the collapse of the Fukuyaman utopia of liberaldemocratic politics. What do we have in its place? What can be
observed in Canada under Stephen Harper, in the United States
under Barack Obama, and in European countries under the EU is
the progressive disappearance of a leftist option, of anything that
resembles welfare-state social democracy. Instead, in the new
“post-political” situation, the option is between a mainstream,
politically correct liberal capitalism and a rightist, populist
reaction to it. Whatever remains of the left, he argues, is so
terrified of using the language of class struggle that most spend
their time convincing themselves that the left is the party of the
new postmodern, digital capitalism.19
Two points can be derived from Žižek’s argument that have
implications for how we view materialist art practices that
address social issues like homelessness. Both of these have to do
with the way we conceive postmodernism in relation to leftist
discourse. In her introductory essay to the book project that
accompanied her 1991 exhibition, If You Lived Here, Martha
Rosler made the following assertion: “The dead hand of ‘universalism’ has lain heavily on documentary’s shoulder, for a
documentary work alibied as revealing an underlying human
sameness becomes simply an excuse for spectacle.”20 Similar
anti-universalist views were the basis of writings like those of
Rosalyn Deutsche, who referred to Ernesto Laclau and Chantal
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Mouffe’s theory of radical democracy to account for the ways that
power is always in the process of being hegemonized but can
never be ideologically consistent. In the course of the last decade,
however, the postmodern politics of cultural difference have been
reevaluated according to anti-essentialist theories of struggle and
emancipation that have revised the postmodern critique of
universality.21 Taking universality into account, the poor and the
homeless are not so much an ontological, specifiable group of
people, but a figure of the inherent divisibility of the social, a
condition of capitalism’s self-relating as the concrete universal.
The homeless are not outside capitalism but represent the
“universal exception,” a limit case against which the general,
universal capitalist condition is understood. If the global proletariat cannot be directly invoked in the context of a global city
like Montreal, then the homeless are certainly part of that class as
the inherent split against which it is impossible to consider the
existing political order to be democratic.22 The conservative
formula, here as elsewhere, is to individualize social problems.
From this perspective, it is possible to rethink the “identificatory” practices of documentary photography and similar
“socially concerned” art practices – not from the point of view of
a critique of liberal humanism, however, but as part of a contemporary critique of neoliberal post-politics. Related to this is a
second point about postmodern theorizing. It is clear that some
segments of today’s anti-global or alter-global left identify with
the postmodern critique of meta-narratives and the view that
revolutionary struggle cannot overcome the contradictions of
capital. The concept of “multitude,” for instance, has for some
people replaced class analysis as the social basis of resistance to
post-Fordist forms of discipline.23
One outcome of the emergence of the movement of the
multitude is the articulation of a new set of politics around the
terms “precarity,” “precarization,” and “precariat.” According to
Hal Foster, no concept better comprehends the art of the 2000s
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than that which is termed “precarious.”24 Without a doubt, some
aspects of the Oxford English Dictionary definition of precarious
that Foster highlights can be said to correspond to ATSA’s État
d’Urgence: obtained by entreaty; depending on the favour of
another; social state of insecurity; mournful and desperate;
attesting to the violence done to basic principles of human
responsibility.25 Gerald Raunig, for his part, invokes the use of
the term by the Milanese precarity movement in contrast to the
etymological usage in its passive form, which implies victimization.26 Since 2001 and following the G8 summit in Genoa, the
Milanese and Barcelona Mayday parades have mobilized a
“generation of the precarious,” leading to meetings in cities
across Europe and to the development of “living wage” policy
concepts like “flexicurity,” a form of social insurance for the
precarious creative worker of the new post-Fordist economy.
Whereas one might argue that the precariat, digitariat, and
cognitariat represent privileged sectors of society, the notion of
multitude resists the logic of identity and classification that leads
to class competitiveness. The anti-identitary form of the
precariat, Raunig argues, is a matter of self-representation and
constituent power, emphasizing the intercourse of differences
more than unity.
The upshot of struggles between socialist and anarchist
tendencies on the left implies, minimally, that criticism of
engaged art practice has a basis in radical politics.27 Perhaps the
most radical critique of engaged cultural praxis has been put
forward by the collective BAVO, which argues that artists should
resist the demand made by neoliberal capitalism for artists in the
post-welfare state to take up the role of the “last of the
idealists.”28 The kinds of ameliorative critique that are allowed
by capitalism are the kinds that do not call into question the
functioning of the system itself. Engaged art practices have
become increasingly ineffective, the collective argues, inasmuch
as they conform to what is demanded of artists. BAVO states:
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This societal demand is, in fact, a bogus one, since art’s critical
or utopian mandate is simultaneously limited to the constant
warning that its activity should remain realistic and especially
constructive. Such constructive criticism is, of course, nothing
but a coded way of saying that it should not question or
undermine the win-win combination of representative
democracy and free market economy – the two “golden
calves” of this self-acclaimed age of the end of history. If
artists do get carried away by their iconoclastic or revolutionary enthusiasm, they are immediately accused of
regressing into backward, totalitarian forms of society,
preaching anarchy or even paving the way for terrorism.29
Of course, people in grassroots democracy movements accuse
governments of the same nostalgia for nineteenth-century
laissez-faire ideology as well as the totalitarian orchestration of
oligarchic politics. The chant “George Bush, Terrorist” was
commonly heard at social justice and antiwar protests during the
Bush years.30 At every stage, however, the activist logic of intervention is countered by the placid, self-assured interference of
neoliberals. In 1997, for example, Stephen Harper stated that
conservatives should “work to dismantle the remaining elements
of the interventionist state,” a view that is inherent to his administration’s efforts to privatize public services.31
As a very important first stage in the process of dissolving
identification with, on the one hand, the state institutions that
merely look for legitimization from activists and NGOs, and on
the other, the art institutions that have delivered us to the
postmodern no-man’s-land beyond left and right, ATSA’s État
d’Urgence points to the symptomatic aspects of socially ameliorative activism. In this, ATSA’s work has the merit of revealing
the repressed element in art’s reconciliation with its capitalist
functions, namely, art’s radical potential. État d’Urgence achieves
this “traversal” of the alienating activity of art by organizing an
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encounter of the precarious. Paradoxically, this encounter is
densely mediated by the work of numerous artists and
performers, artists who may or may not be thinking about the
ideology that structures so much of their activity.
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The Non-Productive Role of the Artist:
The Creative Industries in Canada
We say that creative industries are an enormous part of our
country’s future... I say we give them a fair shake and treat
them as the entrepreneurs and small business owners they
are.
– Jack Layton, former leader of the New Democratic Party
There’s an incredible economic trickle-down effect to the arts
in this country and you cannot dismiss it as being something
we watch in the glamorous events.
– Atom Egoyan, filmmaker
In October of 2008, on the corner of Laval Avenue and Duluth,
one of Montreal’s anonymous graffiti artists posted a wheatpaste
stencil of Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper. Harper is
depicted playing his piano, as was seen on television reports in
the days leading to the Fall elections. The image conjures a singer
songwriter blending political banter with finger play: “... I think
when ordinary working people come home... and they turn on
the TV and see a bunch of people at a rich gala... all subsidised by
taxpayers.... I’m not sure that’s something that r-e-s-o-n-a-t-e-s
with ordinary people...” For whatever reason, this wonderful
piece, a rare treat in a town of tiresome graffiti scribblings, was
destroyed in a matter of days.
For those artists and artists’ representation groups that came
together in September 2008 to protest the Canadian Conservative
government’s cuts to arts funding and the attacks on cultural
producers whose activities are deemed “outside the mainstream”
and therefore “the national interest,” Harper’s piano playing will
not soon be forgotten. His televised presentation of the private
pleasures of piano playing came at the time of the televised
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parliamentary leaders’ debates of October 1 and 2, 2008. His
effort to present himself as a liberal humanist was accompanied
by explanations that the cuts (to PromArt, the Canadian Memory
Fund, Canadian Culture Online, Audio Visual Trust, Film and
Video Fund, Trade Routes and Aboriginal Peoples’ TV Network)
were not motivated by political considerations, but by cost
accounting. “There’s no ideological agenda there,” he stated.
The cuts to arts funding were announced just before the
October 2008 federal election debates and we can assume from
this that the Harper conservatives expected their baiting of the
“elite” cultural sector to find a receptive audience among
ordinary Canadians. The policy options that were presented to
the electoral public at this time provide an indication of what
cultural policies are imaginable at the level of Canadian federal
politics, and as such, what Canadians and Québecois can expect in
the years ahead. While an idealistic argument might make a
claim for a reconsideration of the role of the artist, either in terms
of community leadership, or more naively, as leading Canadians
in the global challenge of creative competition, I think it is better
to try to understand the curious position artists find themselves
in now that government and business are interested in the
commercial potential of art and culture, and from there, think
through our roles in mediating the political economy of contemporary cultural production.
Economic growth is today associated with creativity. To take
a typical example, one of the current slogans of the Royal Bank
of Canada states: “What do you want to create?” Next to the
neoliberal fantasy that culture may someday help to make up for
declining rates of profit is a more fundamental question having
to do with the power of transnational corporations to impose
change on all aspects of human existence. For good and bad,
cultural production, associated with creative thinking and
innovation, has been conflated with new industries, mostly in
the area of communications technology, and deemed a catalyst
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The Neoliberal Undead
for economic growth. The name that neoliberal policy makers
have given to this new approach to cultural administration is the
creative industries. The last few years have witnessed a still
emergent, yet widespread critique of creative industries
discourse. While there is no official position on the creative
industries in the Canadian context, and certainly nothing like
that established by the Blair government in the U.K., I argue that
a creative industries mindset, without being named as such, is in
effect at the level of Canadian federal cultural policy.
In her 2008 essay on “Crude Culture,” Kirsty Robertson
argued in the pages of Fuse magazine that Canadians typically
respond with incredulity to the amalgamation of culture and the
economy.1 In this, the first serious treatment of creative industries
discourse as it relates to Canada, Robertson notes that this subject
was not even raised by the attendees of the 2007 Visual Arts
Summit in Ottawa, the first major gathering of visual arts professionals since the 1951 Massey Commission.2 She states that the
kind of boosterism that links culture and technology with the
global economy is largely absent in Canada and the reasons for
this have to do with the identity debates of the 1990s, which pit
federalists against Québec nationalists and First Nations peoples,
and which thus distinguish Canada from other G8 nations.
Seeking to make a properly cultural argument for the need to
think creatively about the creative industries, Robertson ignores
the dynamics that characterize Canadian economic growth.
Jim Stanford, a noted economist with the Canadian Auto
Workers union, argues that not only is Canada’s relatively small
economy largely dependent on resource extraction, but that its
small internal markets tend to undermine innovative activity and
rely on foreign ownership.3 While identity issues may very well
accompany the protectionism of prominent left nationalists like
Maude Barlow and Mel Watkins, as Robertson argues, my view is
that political autonomy is their chief motivating factor, and that
here, paradoxically, art and politics are only incidentally
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The Non-Productive Role of the Artist: The Creative Industries in Canada
conflated. What is missing in Robertson’s essay is a critical
analysis of the politics that mediate both culture and the
economy. In other words, what we need is not only a socially
progressive articulation of the links between culture, technology
and the global economy, but a critique of the political economy
of neoliberal cultural production that is able to politicize cultural
value and cultural meaning rather than culturalize politics.
Watkins and Barlow are more than correct to identify with
citizens’ movements across the globe who resist the neoliberal
agenda, and do so because they recognize that cultural
production, like other forms of industry, is not free from state
regulation, and as such, from ideological pressures. Rather than
ignore the state regulation of culture, a radical analysis of
cultural production should meet it head on. One preliminary
observation concerning the contradictions of liberal capitalism is
that economic growth does not necessarily entail social progress.
Industrial growth has been shown to lead in most cases to capital
accumulation, with increased economic disparity among classes
as well as a worsening of conditions for those most disadvantaged.
In his four-volume treatise on the “statist mode of
production,” Henri Lefebvre argued that the modern state
abandons the political concept of progress in favour of the
ideology of economic growth, which creates crises between the
relatively autonomous sphere of the economic and the sphere of
culture.4 Inasmuch as contemporary analysis of the creative
industries has placed a great deal of emphasis on creative or
immaterial labour and the knowledge production of the “general
intellect,” it becomes all the more difficult to think of social
relations and post-Fordist modes of production as directly
cultural. The near absence of any serious discussion of the
culture industries in Canada, let alone of any resistance to it, is
only apparent, however, since cultural identities are precisely the
vehicles through which Canadians have been taught and teach
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themselves to misperceive the link between culture and economic
domination. What else could creative industry policies represent
for Canadians than that which David Morley and Kevin Robins
described in the late 1980s as “Canadianization,” a term that was
once used internationally to define the transformation of national
cultures brought about by trade liberalization and communications technologies?5 More recently, Bill Readings asked us to
consider whether or not the institutions of Canadian art – even
when they are publicly funded – serve any purpose outside of
transnational globalization.6
The sustaining myths of this colonial dilemma, as I have called
it, have been apologetic narratives of a properly Canadian and/or
Québécois experience, supplemented with postmodern attention
to First Nations as part of a broader agenda of tolerance towards
cultural diversity.7 Since the identity politics of the 1980s, cultural
identity has also focused on issues related to feminist politics,
antiracism and queer practice. Our attention to the contradictions
of culture should nevertheless begin by recognizing Canada’s
privileged place among the G7 nations and within the Quad of
the World Trade Organization. In this conjuncture, the protection
and promotion of identities (through both high art and popular
culture) and the privatization agenda (culture and creativity as a
new area for investment) can be seen to work in tandem. The
radical philosopher Alain Badiou argues that identity should be
separated from the state.8 We should add to this art and culture.
Art should be separate from the state, not for the sake of
protecting creative expression, but because of the ways it reveals
of the incompleteness of politics.
Ordinary Citizens in an Ordinary Industry
A spectacular exposé of the state of federal policy in the area of
cultural production could be gleaned from the Canadian parliamentary leaders’ debates of October 2008.9 More significant than
the policies of any one political party, this gathering of party
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The Non-Productive Role of the Artist: The Creative Industries in Canada
leaders provided an indication of what cultural policies are
imaginable at the level of Canadian federal politics. The unstated
premise of the debate, the neoliberal engineering of culture, had
been surreptitiously “leaked” with the August announcement by
the Conservative government under Stephen Harper that $45M
in arts funding would be cut inasmuch as it supported economically ineffective programs, not to mention a number of small
grants to what the Conservatives considered to be “highly
ideological individuals exposing their agendas.”10 The Prime
Minister’s remarks were aimed at the recipients of grants from
the PromArt program which provided travel funds to artists. Of
the $4.7 million budget allocated to PromArt, Harper singled out
small grants that had gone to “radicals,” “left-wing and antiglobalization think tanks,” and “ideological activists or fringe
and alternative groups.”11
Paradoxically, this neoconservative excess, correctly
identified by Bloc Québécois leader Gilles Duceppe as a moral
position, and by Green Party leader Elizabeth May as a mean
spirited means to garner favour with the populist electorate,
allowed the Bloc, the Greens, the New Democratic Party and the
Liberal Party to counter Harper with different versions of free
market ideology. The opposition leaders unanimously underscored art’s contribution to investment and economic activity.
May supported her position by citing the research of Richard
Florida and his theory of the creative class. In addition, the
leaders put forward their particular party’s pluralist vision of
identity formation, either promising Québecers a meaningful
nationalism (Duceppe), or Canadians “more fun” expressing
themselves and distinguishing themselves from the United
States (former Liberal leader Stéphane Dion). Viewpoints similar
to these had been expressed in September when various artists’
groups rallied to condemn the cuts as economically shortsighted. Richard Hardacre, the National President of the
performers’ guild ACTRA, reminded the press that according to
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The Neoliberal Undead
the Conference Board of Canada, the more than one million
Canadians who work in the culture industries produce an annual
value of $86B (7.5%) in GDP. The conservative National Post later
reported anxiously on the elasticity of the term culture industry,
noting that the correct figure was $84.6B and that the largest
component of the direct gains from sales came from the advertising industry.12
The tipping point in the culture segment of the election debate
came with NDP leader Jack Layton’s rebuttal to the Conservatives
that most artists, making an average $10-12,000 per year, would
not have much use for their proposed $500 tax incentive for
children’s enrollments in art activities (like piano lessons) if these
same families cannot afford them. Beyond the promise of more
funding, since, as he said, “you get more leverage [with the arts]
than in any other sector of the economy,” and beyond the recommendation of serious tax breaks to artists instead of banks,
Layton added that the Harper cuts limit the freedom of those
who express controversial ideas. Just as Canada’s competitors are
eagerly finding ways to get “huge returns on investment in the
arts” (Layton), the opposition parties seemed to be saying, the
Conservative government makes use of both liberal elitism and
working-class populism to mystify cost-accounting and vice
versa.
The problem here of course is that the late NDP leader did
little more than emphasize the demands of global market
capitalism. How are we to understand the contradictions of these
demands if culture is meant to assert identity within a transnational process of symbolic production, and, alternately, if global
post-industrial processes make its producers “ordinary workers”
and small-time entrepreneurs, and not, as conservative discourse
would have it, a decadent elite, dependent on state subsidies?
What is clear from this debate is that it is virtually impossible for
any of Canada’s political party leaders to construct a view of art’s
social function as being anything other than a gauge of economic
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The Non-Productive Role of the Artist: The Creative Industries in Canada
productivity and competitiveness, on the one hand, or a cipher
for liberal pluralism. The emphasis that they like to place on
identity is more than a convenient alibi for economic restructuring, it is a direct indication of their inability or unwillingness
to address art’s contribution to the reproduction of capitalist
class relations. This failure indicates a further inability to
conceive of a global social movement able to confront market
logic with new models of social cooperation that link the conditions of work to social justice.
The manner in which Canadian cultural organizations have
responded to Finance Minister Jim Flaherty’s 2009 Conservative
budget might offer an occasion to table a provisional answer to
the question raised by Robertson: Why is there so little
discussion of the creative industries in Canada? Robertson
wonders if the Canadian penchant for public funding as a means
to protect Canadian identity and jobs can be mobilized as an
oppositional discourse against the neoliberal engineering of art
and culture through capital investment and marketization.
Identities, ostensibly the key feature of social struggle, seem to
be in good enough care since there were no major budget cuts in
the Spring of 2009 in what Alain Pineau, National Director of the
Canadian Conference of the Arts, has called a status quo budget.
(But then, when it comes to identities, isn’t this always the case?
Not so for jobs.) Although the arts, he says, have not been
factored in as a significant stimulus to the flagging economy,
there were no major cuts either and some significant infrastructure funding has gone to building a positive relationship
with the arts sector. Despite the knowledge that the culture
industries represent a significant portion of the national GDP,
individuals, organizations and institutions that are accustomed
to receiving a significant proportion of their budget from
government subsidies and grants find themselves in the
awkward position of having to account for their new role as
economic stimulants. After all, is the field of cultural production,
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as Pierre Bourdieu argued, not supposed to be characterized by
an inversion of the economic interests that motivate other sectors
of society? And does Harper’s assertion that “art is a part of my
soul” not play to idealist and romantic notions of aestheticism
better than talk of a creative class, which may sound to untrained
ears more like socialism and sociology than the liberal arts?
Notwithstanding the plethora of atavisms available to spin
doctors, art professionals are correct to pressure their governments to recognize and respect their political wishes. As actor Art
Hindle stated at the time of the September cuts, the art industry,
like other sectors of the economy, more than pays its way.
The kinds of changes that the creative industries model
adopted by the British government imposes on contemporary
artists involves an emphasis on heritage and the brokering of
identities as the main object of exchange in international tourism
and cultural consumption, the confusion of cultural and
academic knowledge production with the high-tech sector for the
sake of profit, and the conflation of culture with competitive
sport. According to the Glasgow-based online journal Variant, a
bill to transform the Scottish Arts Council and Scottish Screen
into a single, private company was defeated in 2003. The next
year, Scotland’s Labour Party launched a Cultural Commission to
further influence future cultural policy in the direction of
Creative Scotland. In February of 2008, a convention titled
“Scotland: Creative Nation, Cultural Summit,” was attended by
Charles Leadbeater, the architect of the British Creative
Industries model. The Summit further encouraged the
integration of cultural policy with the creation of economic
wealth. Reporting critically on these processes, Variant was
threatened with legal action by Culture and Sport Glasgow for
“defamatory statements.”13 In 2012, government cuts have effectively silenced the magazine. We have here the key ingredient to
what Robertson correctly identifies as the unspoken and unidentified possibility of a creative industry policy shift in Canada:
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intimidation. Along these lines – a privatization and vocationalization of culture similar to that imposed on higher education –
we can imagine a future wherein the Canada Council will
operate as a corporation, artists will be awarded loans instead of
grants, conservative bureaucrats will wait out and starve
dissenting voices, and statistics and market indicators will rule
the day as instruments to be used to determine the kind of work
that should be made, and indeed, who we are and what we are
to become. The effort to regulate the content of a progressive
culture and politics magazine like Variant should provide us with
a clue to what remains unspoken in much of the Canadian art
scene: the post-political view that neoliberalism and ever more
authoritarian forms of capitalism set the political agenda.
The contradictions of the capitalist emphasis on growth and
productivity affect progressive cultural workers through both
the recuperation of avant-garde cultural experimentation and the
disciplining of radical cultural expression. One of the most
egregious cases of the latter is the prosecution by the U.S.
Department of Justice of artist Steve Kurtz and scientist Robert
Ferrell for their work with Critical Art Ensemble on Free Range
Grain, a harmless do-it-yourself analysis of bioengineering.14
Another example is the 2007 arrest, interrogation and
detainment of sociology professor Andrej Holm by the German
federal police. Holm, who happened to be a participant in the
demonstrations against the World Economic Summit in
Heiligendamm, was detained because his publications contained
words like inequality, precarization and gentrification, words
that were deemed by police to be the kind of language used by
militant terrorist organizations.15 If the civil liberties of artists
and sociologists producing politically-motivated work can be so
easily revoked through repressive state action, it is partly
because political power is distributed anonymously across all
social institutions. One should be careful not to overstate the
function of disciplinary state security, however, since the
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purpose of neoliberal governments is largely to produce selfinterested individuals who can act autonomously within market
relations of inequality. The risks of exclusion and discipline are
part of the generalized management of critique and creativity
that drives today’s corporate sector mentality. Critical work now
comes under new kinds of institutional pressure. Not only must
artists continue to justify the relevance of theory to practice, they
must constantly justify the political salience of cultural work as
such, a fact that tends to deliver art over to capitalist social
engineering.16
Creative Confusion
The conditions of cultural production that prevail within
advanced capitalist countries like Canada require that contemporary artists think about the demands that are made by
neoliberal market capitalism for the creative production of new
symbols and new knowledges. The main problem that confronts
contemporary artists is the way that the creative industries are
based in an apparent distinction between production and the
capitalization of markets. We can easily link the question of
demand to the problem of cultural production as a form of
subjective destitution. The work of the vast majority of artists,
sustained by the desire for social mobility, economic reward and
cultural consecration, is alienated by the symbolic authority of
the demand. The realization of this means to treat oneself as an
object of technocratic administration, a condition in which the
supply of creative services, information, affect and experience
addresses producers as rational, self-regulating and entrepreneurial individuals who condition themselves according to
norms of production that minimize risk and maximize selfinterest.
The post-operaist thinker Maurizio Lazzarato explains the
new forms of biopolitical administration in terms of structural
changes to the labour market, introduced primarily by the state.
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Market capitalism transforms artists into “workers,” a hybrid of
employer and employee, and thus into “human capital” that
contributes to a new cultural market. Lazzarato argues that
neoliberalism does not merely indicate a shift away from public
sector funding and granting towards privatization, but a change
in the mode of governing behaviour that emphasizes competition among individuals in a context of inequality that must be
cultivated, regulated and maintained.17 The name given to this
type of cultural labour by post-operaists is immaterial labour.
According to Michael Hardt and Antonio Negri, immaterial
labour involves a contradictory “homogenization of labour
processes” along with an increasing abstraction of labour,
further estranging producers from what they produce.18 As part
of this contradictory process, they say, global capitalism creates
a system of “direct communication between the production and
consumption of commodities,” inverting the relation between
production planning and communication, and striving for
“continual interactivity.”19 Moving in this direction of affective
labour, often based on human contact and interaction, creating
feelings of well-being and excitement, the cooperative powers of
labour, they argue, “afford labour the possibility of valorizing
itself.”20 In this, the cultural worker can hope to become a power
not only “in itself” – i.e. the latest version of Canadian art as,
precisely, Canadian art, as opposed to art from Canada or by
Canadians – but “for itself.” One of the fundamental difficulties
within contemporary cultural theory is the adequate analysis of
how this “for itself” is to be mediated.
There is, however, an alternative to the assumption that
immaterial labour directly produces new communistic social
relations and we can look for this in the cast-off of Hardt and
Negri’s theory: the Marxist theory of non-productive labour and
the production of surplus value. Non-productive labour forms
the background of the current interest in the productive capacities of the “creative class” and the rise of the service industry. To
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make things simple, we could say that an artist who makes work
that is held to have intrinsic worth (aesthetic, cultural, social,
political) is non-productive, whereas an artist who makes an art
commodity that creates (economic) value for himself or a dealer
is productive. In Capital, Marx gave as an example of these two
possibilities the difference between a piano player and a piano
maker. Unproductive labour overlaps significantly with the
service sector of the economy, creating not only confusion for
analysis but the realization on the part of economists that, in
gross terms, something like sixty-five percent of the GDP and
almost half of all Canadian and American employees provide
services that could be characterized as unproductive.21 Cultural
production, inasmuch as it is supported by the public sector and
contributes to public life, is not simply a measure of a good
economy, adding to the diversification of human needs and
enjoyment, but equally a site of competition and struggle, least of
all because most cultural producers work for wages or are
dependent on government grants. This is not because artists do
not think about creating or finding audiences for their work, nor
because the production of cultural goods is an inherently
individual, creative act, but because art in a capitalist society has
distinct ideological characteristics.
Contemporary culture is a result of modern specialization,
reflexivity and an elaborate division of labour. Because of
culture’s function within the nexus of capitalist social relations,
which measures value in terms of surplus, it becomes increasingly difficult to measure the non-productive value of creative
labour. While non-productive labour can be associated with a
host of functions that are useful to capitalist relations – mostly
having to do with the maintenance of the institution of private
property (accounting, advertising, management, banking,
insurance, law, policing, security) – it can also be understood, in
non-capitalist terms, as socially useful, contributing to social
wealth, human development and well-being. The notion that
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labour in a capitalist economy is considered alienated labour
does not imply that workers are unhappy, but rather that the
value of productivity is only ever known “after the fact,” once it
has been measured in terms of profit.
The problem of productivity, the relation of productivity to
the creation of surplus value, affects all forms of labour,
including unproductive labour such as non-profit volunteer
services, educational services, domestic labour or musical
performance, for instance. Unproductive functions increase
relative to the surplus produced by productive labour
(production of tangible goods and services in the service of
profit). The increase of non-productive labour is therefore an
outcome of increased wealth, understood in terms of profit. It
constitutes, however, and in capitalist terms, a destruction of
wealth. Neoliberal policy therefore encourages the creation of
social relations that maintain the class function of both
productive and unproductive labour. We can therefore understand creative industries policies in relation to the current form
of contemporary neoliberal governance, which seeks to
maximize profits by making unproductive labour more
“productive,” minimizing the growth of unproductive labour
through privatization and marketization at the same time that it
continues to extract as much surplus as possible from
productive labour. Neoliberal sociologists, economists and
politicians, therefore, understand the intrinsic worth of cultural
products strictly in terms of their relation to profit.
One of the most perverse affirmations of this phenomenon,
perverse because it does not seek to explain the link between the
growth of non-productive labour and economic injustice, is
Richard Florida’s concept of the creative class, a theory of the
occupations and lifestyle choices of creative and cognitive
workers who work in large and mostly first world urban centres
and whose expectations, he argues, should be the focus of local
business and government.22 The irony of Florida’s research is
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that by economic definition, most artists would not qualify for
inclusion in his creative class category. According to Florida, the
creative sector, representing thirty percent of the workforce and
distinguished from services and manufacturing, includes those
employed in fields like science, engineering, architecture, design,
arts, music, entertainment, law, business, finance, health care and
related fields, especially those that can be linked to education and
technological innovation. Members of the creative class, he states,
earn an annual average above $55,000US. In contrast, the service
class that the creative economy relies upon, composed of janitors,
housecleaners, food-service workers, nurses and clerks, on
average receive less than $22,000US in wages per year. Based on
earnings, a good many members of the creative sector can
therefore be thought to be part of the broader service sector. This
also applies inasmuch as they are involved in service relations,
where values are consumed at the point they are produced.
The subtlety of Florida’s idea of a creative economy, which he
associates with the new conditions of global economic competitiveness, is its collapse of the notion of social class – once visible
in the institutional divide between trade schools and universities,
intellectual and manual labour – and the quality of “creativity,”
an innate capacity for innovation that he links with a quasiDarwinian notion of adaptation.23 The idea of adaptation not
only structures his model of individual creativity, but applies to
the whole of his research. It represents the ability of cities,
regions and nations to stimulate economic growth by attracting
and retaining creative talent, and thus, surviving in the economy
of the future. Florida’s use of the concept of creativity works
nominally, disappearing behind a plethora of statistics that are
used to buttress his political argument in favour of neoliberalism
with a human (bohemian-gay) face. The politics of adaptation, in
which the interests of the creative class are divided and mystified
by the quest for individual status and economic success, returns,
however, as political parties negotiate the future of the creative
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class in terms of tax breaks for the middle class and for corporations, debt reduction, privatization of services and economic
growth, on the one hand, and the protection of jobs through
government programs and social investment on the other.
It should be said that Florida is hardly the only scholar
promoting the virtues of creative innovation. He is perhaps one
of the more progressive-seeming speakers in the strange world
that combines motivational psychology with public policy. This
work is consistent with the neoconservative “attack on the
professions” which blames hierarchies in fields of knowledge as
barriers to economic stimulation. Beginning in the late 1970s, and
as part of the reaction of New Right governments to welfarism,
public institutions were brutally restructured, the argument
went, so they could “survive” economically in the marketplace.
Increasing the power of centralized authority, neoliberal governments also oversaw a shift from manufacturing (that is, in the
developed West, where labour standards increase production
costs) to a service economy, creating an unstable employment
structure with growth in the consumption of “immaterial” and
leisure services. As a result, a flexible, skilled and educated
workforce has become a permanent feature of the new service
economy. Neoliberal thinkers like Florida, Charles Leadbeater,
Daniel Pink and Sir Ken Robinson by and large disguise the
politics of their neoliberal policy research with humanistic
language of disinterested pleasure and free inquiry, arguably the
conditions that would produce the next Yo-Yo Ma or Bill Gates.
The kinds of cultural production that are encouraged by
recourse to concepts like creative class and creative cities are
nefarious if not undemocratic. One example of this is the recent
creation of The Canada Prize for the Arts and Creativity by two
Toronto businessmen, which was bankrolled by more than $35M
in provincial and federal tax dollars. The Prize, like the Luminato
Festival that was created by these same individuals, creates a
corporate friendly environment for large-scale spectacles that are
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out of the reach of most Canadian artists. It siphons funding from
the progressive arts sector and transforms it into an instrument of
marketing. It creates precarious work opportunities rather than
formal training and it leaves out in the cold those professionally
trained artists who are increasingly dependent on the grants
made available by university degree programs to remain
independent of economic motivation.
The popularity of Florida’s work within the Canadian bureaucratic class provides an important indication that a creative
industry model like the one established in the U.K. under New
Labour and through the creation of the Department for Culture,
Media and Sport has already been adopted by Canadian politicians and policy makers. According to Angela McRobbie, idealist
concepts like creativity, talent and success are popular with
today’s policy makers because they dispense with the untidy
business of critical sociology. Instead, creativity, channeled in the
direction of entrepreneurial activity and freelance work, provides
a framework for the model individual of the new economy, an
independent businessperson who can free themselves from social
welfare support and who can be left to their own devices in terms
of job creation.24 Placing emphasis on the creative entrepreneur
also allows politicians to shift attention away from big corporations, where most job losses occur. This model of the highly
educated and resourceful artist is also useful to today’s governments despite the fact that job creation by and large takes place
elsewhere, in particular, in the software industries and security
sector. It completely ignores the job insecurity, unemployment
and bankruptcies that characterize the working conditions of the
large mass of excluded practices that exist in the shadows of the
institutionalized art world.
Cultural Resistance Today
A cultural politics worthy of the name should be able to offer a
political analysis of creative labour. Such an analysis, directed
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The Non-Productive Role of the Artist: The Creative Industries in Canada
against the exploitative expropriation of labour runs up against
neoliberal policies that seek to regulate creative labour through
capital investment in creative industries. According to Aras
Ozgun, the business and government architects of the creative
industries discourse recognize that the individuals, collectives
and small businesses that constitute the creative class show a
high degree of creative innovation, an ability to assess trends, a
high level of education, skill in the area of digital technologies
and links to both the private and public sectors. Their goal,
however, is to change the small business structure and lack of
marketing orientation of creative work and orient production
towards economic growth and export. One major problem with
this shift towards industrial scale production is the introduction
of exploitative practices, market regulation and the forceful
disciplining of labour.25
Creative industries policies therefore fall in line with
neoliberal politics and its goal of capitalization through the
imposition of labour discipline. The maintenance of
unemployment, low wages, competition for jobs, de-unionization, outsourcing, work speed-up and innovation, the combination of flexibilization and neo-Taylorization in management,
and capital investment in the industrialization of culture, it is
hoped, will contribute to the management of falling rates of
profit. While some welcomed the news that the 2009 federal
budget included $60M for arts infrastructure (and millions more
for heritage, tourism, television, broadcasting, sports, parks and
the international cruise ship industry), we should keep in mind
that investment in new museums, libraries, cultural centers,
production facilities, studios and educational programs is
designed to increase the rate of surplus value. It does not in any
way take into consideration the fundamental basis of the creative
industries: namely, the expropriation of labour.
How then could we link the surplus value that the creative
industries are designed to generate with artistic practice? One
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would need to provide some insight into the ideological
workings of culture that are at the heart of today’s construction of
creativity as a motor of economic growth. What artists produce
under capitalist relations of production are commodities and
consumer services. Because of this, it becomes increasingly
difficult for artists to know themselves as producers.26 Whereas
the free creation of culture requires that we assume our own
enjoyment of activity without further mediation, capitalist
relations construe the artist as the consumer of his or her own
activity. The commodity is the means by which I, the artist, am
included my own production; it is that which bears witness to my
social existence, the Thing whose “metaphysical subtlety” lies
precisely in my social interactions with others but which nevertheless leads me to believe in its magical powers.
The point here is that the subject is not the absolute correlate
of the commodity. In the context of the depoliticization of cultural
production, the first task of the artist is to debunk the symbolic
innocence of a global culture industry and to reassert the state of
alienation. Such an act reveals the close connection between the
class of arts managers and policy makers with the creative class
and its reserve army of surplus labour. An example of this can be
noticed in the recent mobilization of a number of European
unions against the Lisbon strategy in higher education, a plan to
“modernize” the public educational system in the direction of
knowledge markets. The call to mobilize is directed against the
marketization of scientific and educational activities, against the
generalized competition of people and territories, and for an
emancipatory and democratic public service of higher education
and research.
Today’s talk of the creative class, the creative industries and
the artist as a business person construes the cultural worker as an
exception – according to Slavoj Žižek, “an element which,
although part of the system, does not have a proper place within
it” and cannot be accounted for in its terms.27 Perhaps one
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The Non-Productive Role of the Artist: The Creative Industries in Canada
indication of this, provided by Richard Hardacre, is the fact that
the Harper Conservatives can try to convince the electorate that
the creative industries receive handouts, whereas the automotive
and other industries receive investments. But this is only half the
story. What happens when the arts begin to receive investments
like the manufacturing sector and banks? What happens, as
Žižek asks, when the system no longer excludes this “part with
no part,” but directly posits it as a driving force? This is not only
the question of our day but also the basis for a radical approach
to cultural production.
Postscript
In October of 2009 Stephen Harper attended a fundraising event
for the National Youth and Education Trust at the National Arts
Centre in Ottawa. Once again the media celebrated Harper’s
piano playing as he sang the Beatles song With a Little Help from
My Friends to the accompaniment of the famous cellist Yo-Yo Ma.
The audience, along with members of the opposition, gave him a
standing ovation, almost as though they were surprised that a
person with so little charisma could show signs of life. Harper’s
charity of course goes hand in hand with his government’s privatization agenda. Only a few months later, Harper prorogued
parliament for a period of three months. This was the second
time his government did this in less than two years. The first
time, a coalition of opposition parties would have ousted him
from office had it not been for the Liberal Party’s cowering to
pressure from the big banks. The question that becomes
pertinent here is under what conditions does cultural productivity manage to win popular approbation. There is no sign of
cultural integrity or relevance in Harper’s performance, only a
clearing of the stage for the exchange of money.
Harper’s next foray into populist entertainment was in the
lead-up to the 2011 federal election. Shortly after the election was
announced in March the Conservative Party of Canada put out a
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mean-spirited advertisement that stated that opposition parties
were soft on immigration policy, a fact that ignores the immense
wealth and potential that this North American territory holds for
millions of immigrants and refugees that would like to make
their home in Canada. The ad depicted the MV Sun Sea, a ship
that brought 491 Tamil refugees to the shores of British Columbia
in August 2010, and accused the refugees of criminally abusing
the generosity of Canadians. Almost as if to make up for a bad
start to his election campaign, Stephen Harper arranged for him
and his spouse to meet with Maria Aragon, a ten-year old
Filipino-Canadian whose cover of Lady Gaga’s “Born This Way”
became something of a sensation on YouTube. In early April, a
YouTube video was posted of Harper accompanying Aragon on
the piano and singing with her John Lennon’s “Imagine.”
According to Stefan Christoff, the lyrics of John Lennon’s popular
song are the exact opposite of Harper’s “nationalist, war-driven
foreign policy.”28
Given that the Harper government’s single solution to everything is to privatize, this follow-up to his 2009 performance of
“With a Little Help From My Friends” merely indicated that his
plan for culture had not changed since the previous election. The
content and social value of a song like “Imagine,” which gives it
more than just a certain popularity, has apparently no bearing on
its manipulative appropriation. One might think so if Yoko Ono,
the widow of John Lennon and trustee of Lenono Music, had not
requested that YouTube remove the video for copyright
reasons.29 The fact that Lenono Music has not requested that
thousands of other covers be removed, including one rendered
by Bill Clinton, is a clear indication of a thumbs down for
Harper’s anti-democratic free market politics. All things
considered, Harper’s singing of “Imagine” fell flat with anyone
who knows what John and Yoko stood for. The misappropriation
didn’t work. No sooner had the Harper government been reelected with a minority vote, Brigette DePape, a parliamentary
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page, interrupted Harper’s inaugural throne speech by
occupying the floor of the Senate and pulling out a red stop sign
with the words Stop Harper. DePape told reporters that she
wished there would come a Canadian version of the Arab Spring.
That fall, on October 15, cities across Canada joined the #Occupy
Wall Street movement and in the spring of 2012 Québec students
led a remarkable and victorious struggle against austerity that
today links the symbol of the red square to the Strike Debt
campaign in the U.S. and to worldwide “Global Noise” antiausterity protests. These are two occasions in which new forms
of collective cultural production are enacted that go beyond the
cash nexus and refuse the biocapitalist engineering of life.
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Protesting Degree Zero: On Black Bloc
Tactics, Culture and Building the Movement
Among some of the images of good citizenship generated by the
mainstream media following the demonstrations against the
meeting of G8 and G20 leaders in Toronto from June 25 to 27,
2010, two particular cases come to mind.1 The first, broadcast
repeatedly on the morning of June 27 by the local Toronto
television news station CP24, was an interview with a private
security expert who had spotted two demonstrators emerge from
an underground sewer. The middle-aged man described them as
though they were unwanted vermin that he took pleasure in
rooting out.2 Although there was not much to this story, it aired
repeatedly like a mantra for the weekend. A second similar image
was of a local banker on his time off, tackling a Black Bloc demonstrator as he fled from a Bell mobile phone retailer with a stolen
package of some sort in his hands. Given a prominent photo
spread by the National Post, the man could also be seen in action
on YouTube taking a BlackBerry package out of the scrambling
protester’s hands and exclaiming “Don’t steal.”3 The attitudes of
these two men were far from what we might expect from people
who are violently opposed to anarchistic rioting or who are
hardcore right-wingers. Instead, their opposition to the
movement seemed rather like the attitude of many of the demonstrators themselves during the protests: somewhat bemused and
enthused by the excitement generated by the conflict. If the
confrontation of police and demonstrators reflects the opposition
of the forces of social justice versus those of obscene exploitation,
state power and social inequality, then perhaps the face-off
between merry-making protesters and bemused mainstream
onlookers gives an indication of the more subtle and pervasive
structures of ideology that structure the social space as a whole.
In his book on violence, Slavoj Žižek suggests that there are
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Protesting Degree Zero: On Black Bloc Tactics, Culture and Building the Movement
three kinds of violence: subjective acting out, the symbolic
violence embodied in language and social norms, and the
systemic violence that comes about as a result of the smooth
functioning of economic and political systems.4 His argument is
that subjective and systemic violence cannot be perceived from
the same standpoint, and so, to extrapolate, what in some ways
occurs in protest situations is an effort to subjectively embody or
instantiate the background “zero degree,” the normal state of
things that is sustained by objective violence. What counts as
violence, what enters the space of our ideological consciousness
and what is able to affect social change, depends upon
ideologico-political considerations. The problem of violence,
Žižek argues, is that it is almost impossible to confront directly
because it eludes symbolic mediation. The left-liberal humanitarian call to stop this objective, systemic violence, he further
suggests, has an anti-theoretical edge, and we find a similar antitheoreticism in the presuppositions of non-mediation and nonrepresentativity that colour anarchist thought. The pseudourgency of radical calls to action, Žižek argues, are premised on
a notion of immediacy that is a symptomatic aspect of the liberal
focus on subjective violence.
This essay considers the use of Black Bloc tactics at anticapitalist demonstrations with a particular focus on the 2010
Toronto protest marches. My thesis is that the calculated use of
“violence,” usually the smashing of windows of retail chain
stores, can be cautiously approached through an aesthetic appreciation of political action – politics interpreted through the lens
of culture. I relate Black Bloc tactics to three works of contemporary art that examine contemporary conflicts in terms of
training and role-playing. While anarchist politics typically
refuse the logic of representation, mediation could be said to
return in the symbolic performance of conflict. The fact that
capital feeds on subjective violence, and the fact that systemic
violence cannot be attributed to individuals, as Žižek argues,
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allows us to perceive both the merits of anarchist practice and
some of its theoretical limitations. On the one hand, due to the
basic anarchist principle of non-hierarchy, Black Blocers refuse to
do harm to individuals during demonstrations. In fact, most
anarchists do not consider the destruction of things to be acts of
violence. At the same time, anarchist politics are typically libertarian, asserting not so much class conflict as the autonomy of
each and every one of us, either bypassing the socially mediated
nature of subjectivity in capitalist society or fetishizing it through
a politics of anti-racism, anti-patriarchy, anti-normativity, etc.
Through Black Bloc actions, I argue in this paper, ideology
reappears in the anarchist politics of unmediated transparency as
a condition for the explosion of subjective violence.
Wild in the Streets
The following provides a cursory look at anti-summit organizing
in the days leading up to and following the G8 and G20 summits
in Huntsville and Toronto.5 I rely for the most part on articles
published online on the rabble.ca website, a progressive left media
source that is supported by individual subscribers, foundations
and labour unions. In particular, the journalist Krystalline Kraus
maintained a “G8/G20 Communique” with the heading: “This
blog is about the anti-G8/G20 lead up events and protests in June
2010. She believes in Diversity of Tactics because that’s how the
natural world works. Hooray for Diversity!” I myself participated in the demonstrations on June 25 and 26 and traveled to
Toronto in the company of some 500 Montrealers who took buses
organized by the CLAC, the Convergence des luttes anti-capitalistes/Convergence of anti-capitalist struggles.
In the days leading up to the events, Kraus provided reports
on what to do if police come knocking at your door, asking
questions about your political activities. Since the Fall of 2009, the
Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) and the Canadian
Security and Intelligence Service (CSIS) had been paying visits to
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Protesting Degree Zero: On Black Bloc Tactics, Culture and Building the Movement
social justice organizers and activists in order to create divisions
between activists, to catalog psychological profiles, to plant
misinformation and to intimidate people more generally. A
People’s Commission Network was established before June by
lawyers who gave the recommendation to not talk to police, from
then until the weekend of the 26th, when 10,000 police and 5,000
private security personnel would be patrolling the downtown
area. A temporary jail was prepared by the police in an old movie
studio just five kilometres away from the where the summit was
to take place. A security perimeter with a three kilometre long
and three metre high fence was built around the summit site and
was to be guarded by the Integrated Security Unit, comprised of
the RCMP, the Ontario Provincial Police, the Toronto Police
Service, the Canadian Armed Forces, and the Peel Regional
Police. Some seventy-seven CCTV cameras had been added to
the downtown area and costs for security were reported to have
added up to one billion dollars. LRAD sound cannons and water
cannons had been purchased as well as other crowd dispersal
weapons. The police would not rule out the use of agents provocateurs and in fact admitted that they would use crowd infiltrators at the G20 summit to take the pulse of the crowd. Richard
Fadden, director of CSIS, told the CBC that terrorist attacks were
unlikely and that the real threat would come from “anarchist
groups” and “multi-issue extremists” who seek media attention.
In the days leading up to the protests, various social
movement groups organized events to voice their issues: global
justice groups, peace activists, environment and climate change
activists (with a People’s Assembly on Climate), human rights
activists, civil liberties organizers, first nations representatives,
women’s groups (responding to abortion issues in particular)
and queer activists (focusing on the Toronto pride parade and
the pro-Palestine issue in particular as well as AIDS activism).
Kraus lamented in her June 4 communiqué that not enough had
been done to meet the Toronto Community Mobilization
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Network’s “Accessibility Guidelines” and to include persons with
disabilities in meetings.
On June 21 a taste of possible police repression made it into
the news as three individuals were charged by Ottawa police for
firebombing a branch of the Royal Bank of Canada. The charges
of “domestic terrorism” against the three relatively unknown and
self-described anarchists cast a chill on activists who almost
unanimously dismissed the action as irresponsible. This event
prompted a shift in reporting away from the various social
movement issues to the business of protesting. Kraus subsequently gave her first report on Black Bloc tactics:
The Black Bloc: I say “might” because that person might just
be anti-social but you should note that dressing in all black
demarks a member of the Black Bloc or anarchist movement.
And yes, I’ve heard the scary claims and hysteria about how
the Black Bloc eats babies but I’ve also personally seen
members of the Black Bloc go out of their way to help other
activists in trouble by providing cover and tactical know-how
since they are usually well trained, committed and know what
to do at a demo.6
On June 25, the day of a peaceful march organized by the Toronto
Community Mobilization Network (an ad-hoc group of activist
organizers), David Coles, President of the Communications,
Energy and Paperworks Union (CEP), provided the usual labour
union position on anarchist direct action, denouncing in advance
any possible use of violence by demonstrators. With this, Coles
indicated that protesters should not be blamed by public opinion
for the exorbitant cost of security since social democrats at least
condemn such uses of violence. As it turned out, and as expected,
the first demonstration by about 5000 protesters was peaceful,
with marchers returning to Allan Gardens Park and making
plans for the evening.
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Protesting Degree Zero: On Black Bloc Tactics, Culture and Building the Movement
On Saturday June 26, the march from Queen’s Park (the
provincial parliament building) towards the downtown and back
was divided in advance into two tactical sections: the People
First March (the so-called “green zone” march overseen by
labour unions and NGOs) and the Get Off the Fence March (the
so-called “red zone” in which demonstrators would seek to
make it to the fence in acts of both civil disobedience and direct
action involving Black Bloc tactics). In anticipation of the latter,
some twenty or so activists and organizers had been arrested
overnight. The well-known feminist activist Judy Rebick
advocated for the green Labour/NGO/Peace March while at the
same time denouncing the massive police presence designed to
vilify those who stand for justice. The demonstration, as things
unfolded, marched West on Queen Street and turned Northward
up Spadina back towards Queen’s Park. At this point, red zone
demonstrators held back and a Black Bloc was formed that
traveled East on Queen and North on Yonge. Whether actual
protesters or agents provocateurs, they destroyed a number of
police vehicles, a CBC van, and dozens of chain store windows.
Such actions were anticipated. For instance, the Southern
Ontario Anarchist Resistance declared in the days preceding:
“This action will be militant and confrontational, seeking to
humiliate the security apparatus and make Toronto’s elites regret
letting the dang G20 in here.” As the smashing took place, police
practically ignored the destruction, allowing it to happen.
Instead, the police turned on demonstrators who had assembled
at Queen’s Park and began a wave of brutal arrests that lasted
into the night, adding up over the weekend to approximately one
thousand arrests.
In the evening of June 26, the morning of the 27th and for days
after that, the media was awash with images and descriptions of
Black Bloc demonstrators. While Toronto Police Chief Bill Blair
correctly informed the media public that the Black Bloc was not
a group but a tactic, Toronto Mayor David Miller accused Blocers
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of not being legitimate protesters and being mere criminals. A
spokesperson for the Prime Minister described them as thugs that
do not represent the Canadian way of life. In contrast, a report in
the Toronto Star provided this more glamorous account:
As suddenly as they burst onto the streets, they vanished into
the crowd. The men and women, clad in black clothes, their
faces obscured with bandanas, ski goggles and gas masks, had
spent the last hour storming through city streets, hurling
rocks and debris through the windows of banks and big-chain
stores.7
The reporter goes on to explain the Black Bloc tactic, the use of
black clothes to hide individual identities, and the causes its
participants support. On Sunday, residents of Toronto assessed
the damage and tourists walked around like in a dream, directed
to and fro by police officers. Everyone was a possible suspect.
Activists like Rebick were pressed in the days following the
demonstrations to emphasize that the 25,000 protesters had been
“overwhelmingly peaceful” and that labour organizers had tried
in vain to keep the march from getting rowdy. She denounced the
police for letting “the mob” in black clothes destory banks and
trash Yonge Street:
Like David [Coles] I believe the cops could have arrested the
Black Bloc right at the beginning of the action but they
abandoned their police cars and allowed them to burn, not
even calling the fire department until the media had lots of
time to photograph them. They had a water cannon but they
didn’t even use a fire extinguisher. Why?8
Rebick and noted journalist Naomi Klein accused the police of
playing politics.9 In her report Rebick added:
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Protesting Degree Zero: On Black Bloc Tactics, Culture and Building the Movement
I disagree with torching police cars and breaking windows
and I have been debating these tactics for decades with
people who think they accomplish something. But the bigger
question here is why the police let it happen and make no
mistake the police did let it happen. Why did the police let the
city get out of control? And they did let it get out of control.
The police knew exactly what would happen and how. (...) It
was a perfect storm. A massive police presence [that was]
primed for “dangerous anarchists” after a week of peaceful
protests. No more than one hundred, probably fewer young
men who think violent confrontations with the police will
create a radicalization and expose the violence of the state.10
This article garnered many comments, some of them mentioning
the fact that women also participated in the Bloc. One young
woman could be seen on YouTube twirling an umbrella so that
cameras could not capture the image of her mates. Another
comment stated that it was ironic that the “left” had been
reduced to complaining about the lack of policing.
Fred Wilson, Assistant to the President of the CEP and
member of the Board of Directors of the Council of Canadians,
asserted that lapdog reporters first responded to police chiefs
and conservative ministers without consulting with the
organizers of the march, namely, the Canadian Labour Congress,
the Council of Canadians, Greenpeace, Oxfam and the Canadian
Federation of Students. He stated:
I don’t buy for a moment the argument that media will always
take the most dramatic image and that the lack of focus on
what actually happened is the fault of a few violent anarchists
who discredited the many. Nonsense. A far more compelling
image was the sight of many hundreds of young Greenpeace
members wearing green hardhats with labels calling for good
green jobs. It was a truly stunning image, more interesting
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than the one we saw over an over again of a lone person
smashing a window. No, this is about a hierarchy of images.
Choices are made.11
Wilson makes the interesting claim that vandalism crosses a line
that labour and social movements should deal with but the actual
“dealing with” is usually limited to denunciations, comparing
Black Blocers, as Wilson did, to sports fans that maraud through
streets after a sports series victory. Wilson adds that trade
unionists had come to Toronto from fifty different countries to
debate the crisis of economic sustainability and that none of this
was reported in the news media. The fact that the largest demonstration since the Québec City Free Trade Area of the Americas
actions in 2001 could be reduced to Black Bloc violence, however,
should indeed be reason to deal with it in such a way as to
overcome the usual split between support for diversity of tactics
and social democratic denunciations. I would add, however, and
before doing so, that the security costs for the Pittsburgh and
London summits had been closer to $100 million than $1 billion.
The then French President, Nicolas Sarkozy, took the opportunity
to upstage the Canadian Prime Minister, Stephen Harper, saying
that he could do as well as the U.S. in such matters.
As the days passed, the commentary turned somewhat
paranoid. According to a senior editor at rabble, Murray Dobbin,
the decision to allow the Black Bloc to do its destructive
reactionary work was part of a strategic operation to entrench
conservative politics. In this, he argued, the Black Blocers should
have to answer for themselves. Activists should perhaps try to
stop them, he wrote: “They are the enemies of social change – we
should treat all of them as agents provocateurs and plan to deal
with them accordingly.” 12 Dobbin here reverses the usual
argument that since the Black Bloc is likely comprised of undercover police, and there are no limits to police repression, we
should simply strategically accept the diversity of tactics so as to
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Protesting Degree Zero: On Black Bloc Tactics, Culture and Building the Movement
not exclude comrades and break ranks. Dobbin says instead that
by stopping Blocers we might catch more police in the act of
deceiving the public. One cannot build a radical movement,
however, by catching police but rather by outnumbering them,
and hopefully, eventually, by winning them over to our side –
making them in name and in fact “our cops.”13 To conclude, our
erstwhile dispatcher, Krystalline Kraus, reported that as of July
3, polls indicated that the vast majority of Canadians believed
that police violence against G20 protesters was justified, that the
demonstrations were shameful, disgusting and maddening. The
only thing we can know for sure is that a majority of
Torontonians had watched the protests closely through the
mediation of television news.14
Twice Around the Bloc
One of the issues that is not addressed by social movement
denunciations of Black Bloc tactics is the specific political
philosophy that animates anarchist politics. Social democratic
unions misinform the public and their own members when they
ignore the fact that most anarchists who attack summit meetings
are producing a direct instantiation of their politics, without the
political mediation of elected state officials. Against the
Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE) representative
who stated that Black Bloc demonstrators felt powerless to
“change the direction of their elected leaders,” a minimum of
political sophistication requires that we recognize the anti-statist
politics of most anarchists. In contrast to civil disobedience,
which, as David Graeber explains, is designed to sway public
opinion, direct action, such as Black Bloc property destruction, is
based on the principles of non-representative self-organization
and voluntary association. Black Bloc tactics are opposed to
coercive authority and are undertaken with the knowledge that
collective action can be met with hostile intervention on the part
of state police.15
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In a useful summary of what to say or do about Black Bloc
tactics, Graeber considers whether it is legitimate to condemn
such principled acts of violence. What strikes many of us in the
movement is the serial nature of the media commentary on
broken windows at anti-capitalist protests. As Graeber puts it:
Some will argue that confrontational tactics or property
destruction only make activists look bad in the eyes of the
public. Others will argue the corporate media wouldn’t make
us look good whatever we do. Some will argue that if you
smash a Starbucks window, that will be the only story on the
news, effectively freezing out any consideration of issues;
others will reply that if there’s no property destruction, there
won’t be any story at all. Some will claim confrontational
tactics deprive activists of the moral high ground; others will
accuse those people of being elitist, and insist that the violence
of the system is so overwhelming that unless one creates some
sort of peace police to physically threaten anyone who spray
paints or breaks a window, some will probably do so, and if
so, coordinating with the militants rather than isolating them
is much safer for all concerned. In the end, it almost always
invariably ends up with the same resolution: that as long as no
one is actually attacking another human being, the important
thing is to maintain solidarity.16
Graeber adds that the last thing anyone wants is for pacifists to
have to resort to physically attacking their comrades, as
happened in Seattle.
The 1999 anti-globalization protest in Seattle is an important
event in the spread of Black Bloc tactics in North America. It
should be said that there are many “bloc” formations, representing different attitudes and outlooks, including the Silver and
Pink Bloc, Green Bloc, Critical Mass Bike Bloc, White Bloc (i.e.
Tute Bianche and Ya Basta!), Clown Bloc, Book Bloc, Medieval
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Bloc, Naked Bloc, Raging Grannies, Radical Cheerleaders and
Samba Blocs, to name a few, and to not forget the terrifying
Zombie Bloc that I witnessed at the Toronto G20. The Black Bloc
is therefore only one type of collective action and there is nothing
that prevents someone from participating in more than one form
of Bloc activity. The idea of a bloc is to provide security for
participants as it carries out an action in the midst of a demonstration. It represents the convergence of many affinity groups
and is unlike traditional militant formations in terms of its small
scale, which allows actors to negotiate amongst themselves the
course of action. Given that Black Blocers will often carry out the
destruction of symbols of corporate and state violence, the black
clothing and masks that they wear allows them to avoid police
identification. By shedding their dark clothes after an action,
they can disappear into the crowd of demonstrators and
onlookers.
According to social scientist François Dupuis-Déri, the Black
Bloc tactic originated with “autonomous” squatters in Germany
in the 1980s.17 Neither inherently anarchist, nor associated with
mainstream left labour organizations, autonomous groups
spread throughout Germany to Holland and Denmark, refusing
rent payments, organizing university occupations and squats,
and fighting neo-Nazi skinheads. When the city of Berlin
decided to crack down on squatters, the police named them
“schwarzer Bloc” for the black clothing that they wore. The Black
Bloc tactic was used on several occasions in Europe throughout
the 1980s and is considered an effective tactic that is useful in the
contestation of state power.18 It was used in 1991 in the U.S. to
protest the war against Iraq, to protest Columbus Day, and again
in April of 1999, to protest the emprisonment of Mumia AbuJamal. Largely owing to the notoriety of the Seattle protests
against the World Trade Organization, it was used throughout
the 2000s in numerous anti-summit and anti-globalization
demonstrations.
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In the aftermath of Seattle, Michael Albert wrote a now
popular anti-Black Bloc tract called “On Trashing and Movement
Building.”19 In this text, Albert begins with the assertion that “as
far as violence is concerned,” the greatest share of blame and
condemnation should be reserved for the state and global
capitalist forces. While window smashing fights injustice, he
claims, oligarchic forces contribute to it. The issue of tactics
within social movements, however, of property damage and civil
disobedience, nevertheless requires some kind of mediation
since, he argues, such tactics endanger people, dilute the message
of the activists, and provide a pretext for police to provoke hostilities. For Albert, breaking windows goes against most protesters’
norms and can turn adventurist. Consequently, there can be no
unyielding principle of direct action since what is warranted in
any given situation is variable. Here, theory and practice seem to
confront one another without Albert providing an adequate
theory of practice. Activists of the trashing mindset, he asserts,
don’t care to calculate the social outcomes of their actions, but
value them in themselves. The only issue then, he says, is what
target to hit. The difficulty, as he sees it, is that violent tactics
impose an unfair burden on the rest of the demonstrators and
usurp those who show a supportive mix of militant creativity and
organizational intelligence. He writes:
Changing society isn’t a matter of breaking windows, it is a
process of developing consciousness and vehicles of organization and movement, and of then applying these to win gains
that benefit deserving constituencies and create conditions for
still further victories, leading to permanent institutional
change.
Trashing, he concludes, can have no positive effects since it does
not win visibility or enlarge democracy but causes onlookers to
feel that dissent in general is aberrant. Albert concludes that the
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emotional turmoil of anticipation, rage and paranoia are useless
as agents of change.
As defenders of anti-capitalist anarchist politics, Graeber and
Dupuis-Déri argue for a deeper appreciation of the small-scale,
decentred and autonomous organizing of anarchist cells.
Moreover, the anarchist philosophy of anti-hierarchy allows us
to perceive Black Blocers as an important political force rather
than as juvenile delinquents. One indication of the strength of
Black Bloc tactics, according to Dupuis-Déri, is the fact that since
Seattle and the successful cancellation of the WTO meetings,
global capitalist police forces have resorted to systematic arrests,
lies and humiliation directed against the global justice
movement. The routine of infiltrations and arrests sends a clear
message for those who want to hear it that many are actively
opposing state violence. To not know what all the fuss is about,
he says, is to really not want to know much about anything.20 In
this the Bloc is also directed at the social movement itself and
those within it – most notably social democratic labour unions
and non-governmental organizations – who are not prepared to
consider a radical critique of the economic and political system.21
Black Blocers therefore actively invite and may very well scoff at
the criticism of reformists. The crisis they wish to point to is the
crisis of representative democracy.
Within the anarchist movement there is a will to a different
form of political participation that is informed by the Paris
Commune, utopian socialism, workers’ councils and Soviets, the
May ‘68 student movement and the new social movements of
feminists, ecologists and queer collectives. Respect for the
diversity of tactics, the refusal to tell someone else that violence,
in any given form, is unwarranted and prohibited, derives from
the granting of respect and autonomy to all of those involved.
Political elites, in contrast, encourage social democrats to discipline those among the protesters who are likely to cause trouble,
leading to a routine, Dupuis-Déri says, wherein union elites,
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official political elites and the police make demands and
negotiate permits that allow protest organizers to discipline their
troops so that the police do not have to intervene.22 In contrast,
Black Blocers do not seek to include representatives at meetings
or become media spokespeople, but rather look to local participation where deliberative politics are possible. For Graeber, the
recent thrust of anarchist organizing is largely an outcome of the
ecology movement of the 1970s and principles of organizing that
were developed in Quaker communities. The movement has of
course a broader history, however, from early twentieth-century
anarchism and the Wobblies to the New Left and the Zapatistas.
Aside from the sometimes offensive hygiene, the hippie-punk
style and the vegetarian diet (some of it gleaned from
dumpsters!), Graeber lists a number of features that can be said
to describe both anarchists and Black Blocers: acting for oneself
without the mediation of authorities, a readiness to fight and to
take power for oneself, self-reliance, mutual aid, voluntary
association, collectivity and courage. The goal of anarchist
politics is to create change from the ground up, from small
temporary communities to permanent, free societies.
Graeber makes the usual claim that while anarchists and
Marxists have a potential complementarity (despite bitter and
violent disagreements), anarchism is not an ideology, nor a
theory of history. Typically, anarchists decry class inequality but
do not provide a class analysis. Moreover, anarchists tend to
dispense with ideology critique, positing an unmediated relation
between the means of production and the social relations of
production, as witnessed in the work of Gilles Deleuze and Félix
Guattari and in the autonomous Marxist line of theorizing.
Contemporary anarchism has to a large extent become a
progressive politics that suits the lifestyle concerns of North
Americans’ “classless” view of themselves and is compatible with
the identity politics of feminists, queers and racial minorities. The
recent wave of interest in anarchism thus has two main historical
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Protesting Degree Zero: On Black Bloc Tactics, Culture and Building the Movement
causes: the resurgence of anti-capitalist politics since the 1990s,
on the one hand, and postmodern anti-foundationalism on the
other. The latter, with its academic post-structuralism, seeks to
dispense with, deconstruct, and reject every Master-Signifier,
allowing for no rules, no social norms, no binding decisions, and
facilitating the commodification of everything. On this issue, I
am in agreement with Žižek who argues that leftists need to
rethink tactical alliances and compromises with liberals who
generate politics around culture wars.23
Graeber addresses this question of culture wars and identity
politics versus political orthodoxy through an examination of
Murray Bookchin’s essay on “social anarchism versus lifestyle
anarchism,” which he reads as an attempt to keep artists and
bohemians distinct from revolutionaries. Graeber argues that
such an attempt is futile since people have the need to rebel
against alienation as well as oppression.24 Interestingly, he
expresses the rebellion against alienation in terms of culture and
creativity, alluding to the DIY ethos of punks, the craftsperson
orientation of hippie culture, and forms of lifestyling that
balance the two kinds of revolt. In the section on
“Representation” in his book Direct Action, Graeber argues that
anarchists are typically less interested in post-68 thought, in
Deleuze, Foucault and Baudrillard, than in the militant 60s
writings of thinkers like Frantz Fanon, Guy Debord and Raoul
Vaneigem. The fascination with power/knowledge in academia
began in the 70s and 80s. Consequently, academics found
themselves increasingly isolated from social movements as they
abdicated critique in favour of theory.
Debord and the Situationists, in contrast to postmodernists,
advocated revolutionary struggle and, in keeping with the work
of Henri Lefebvre, the critique of everyday life (as opposed to its
celebration). In his Revolution of Everyday Life, Vaneigem
excoriated left liberals:
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Look at peace marchers, aside from an active minority of
radicals, most of them are nothing but penitents trying to
exorcise their desire to disappear with all the rest of humanity.
They would deny it, of course, but their miserable faces give
them away. The only real joy is revolutionary.25
Vaneigem opposed the pleasure of subversion and contempt for
the future to the general state of survival and the consolations of
consumerism. He sought in particular to rescue subjectivity
through the pleasure of destruction: “Better to die on our feet
than live on our knees.”26 He opposed issue politics in particular,
with its piecemeal demands and its reformist acceptance of
successive sacrifices. Against socialist ennui, he advocated a
propaganda of the deed. The despairing tactics of the anarchist
terrorist should be altered into modern strategy and come to
resemble the childishness of teenage gangs who aspire to poetry
by wanting more, by wanting to understand revolutionary
consciousness. Tactics, he surmised, “are the polemical stage of
play. They provide the necessary continuity between poetry in
statu nascendi (play) and the organisation of spontaneity (poetry).
Essentially technical in nature, they prevent spontaneity burning
itself out in the general confusion.”27 The goal of the Situationist
International, he concluded after pages that link play with discipline and coherence, is to “kindle the fire of working-class
guerilla warfare.”28 While many of Graeber’s colleagues, a “poststudent” core of activists as he calls them, have in some ways lost
the thread of revolutionary thought, he is not far from the truth
when he argues that Black Blocers appear as the latest avatar of
the artistic/revolutionary tradition that stretches back to the
Dadaists and the Situationists, a tradition that “plays off the
contradictions of capitalism by turning its own destructive,
leveling forces against it.”29 It is on this Saint-Simonian ideal of
the artist as political leader that I turn to some considerations of
contemporary art that explores protest space, police tactics and
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Protesting Degree Zero: On Black Bloc Tactics, Culture and Building the Movement
role-playing in contemporary societies of control.
Aesthetics, Politics, History
In June of 1984 the National Union of Mineworkers organized a
mass picket of 6000 union members from across the U.K. Their
grievance was against the British Steel coking plant in Orgreave,
South Yorkshire, which was allowing scab labour to maintain
production levels higher than the union considered sustainable.
The NUM, wishing to prevent pit closures and save working
communities, saw itself confronting not only one employer, but
also the government of Margaret Thatcher, which was working
to break union power and impose market forces. The “Battle of
Orgreave,” which took place on June 18, had been preceded by
bitter strikes in Toxteth and Brixton. On this occasion, the NUM
tried to blockade the Orgreave plant and force a temporary
closure. The police, making use of colonial riot tactics, infiltrator
moles, shields, foot soldiers, attack dogs and cavalry, deployed
some 8000 troops from ten countries. While the battle lasted for
up to one year, the events of June 18 are remembered for the scale
of the conflict. Ninety-three arrests were made, fifty-one pickets
and seventy-two police were injured, and ninety-five pickets
Jeremy Deller, The Battle of Orgreave, 2001. Photos Martin Jenkinson.
Courtesy of Artangel.
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were charged with riot and unlawful assembly. In 1987 lawsuits
were brought against the police, leading in 1991 to the police
having to pay half of one million pounds in damages.
In 2001, the artist Jeremy Deller was awarded a large
commission by the art agency Artangel Media to organize a
reenactment of the miners’ strike. Deller hired Howard Giles, a
leading battle re-creator, to research court testimonies, oral
accounts and newspaper reports and to prepare a production of
the re-enactment through the Historical Films Services. Giles
worked with filmmaker Mike Figgis to direct 800 people,
including 200 local people in Orgreave, some of them ex-miners
and some of them former policemen. The hour-long re-enactment
was aired on BBC Channel 4 in October of 2002. It depicted the
confrontation between the pickets and the police outside the
coking plant, the lines of police confronting miners, the police
charges and the advance into the heart of the village. In the mélée
rocks are hurled, cars are burned, and confrontations take place
in front of some 3000 local witnesses.30
Deller’s work is perhaps the most well-known re-enactment
project and has been the object of some dismissive criticism. The
proponent of dialogical aesthetics, Grant Kester, implied in a
critique of Claire Bishop’s writings on relational aesthetics that
works that have a direct impact on people’s lives are more significant that Deller’s agonistic effort. Bishop was not so favourable
to the project as she herself wrote: “Deller’s event was both politically legible and utterly pointless: It summoned the experimental potency of political demonstrations but only to expose a
wrong seventeen years too late.”31 In an online essay, Katie
Kitamura argues for a more favourable view of Deller’s
“relational” work, seeing it as a worthy exercise in collective
memory that contains in it not only the possibility of opening old
wounds, but an unpredictability that offers the possibility of new
outcomes. The recreation thus acts as a possible “uncontainment”
of the original events.32 Whereas historical societies emphasize
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Protesting Degree Zero: On Black Bloc Tactics, Culture and Building the Movement
the permanent closedness of the original events, Deller’s
collective project emphasizes the language of historicity and a
loose melancholia.
What if, in contrast to Deller’s project, a work emphasized the
openness of outcomes by reducing the historical specificity of the
work, and by substituting a cultural materialism for historicity?
This is perhaps one way to think of the difference between The
Battle of Orgreave and Dutch artist Aernout Mik’s contribution to
the 2007 Venice Biennial, the video installation Training Ground.
For this work, Mik enlisted nonprofessional actors to play out
the roles of contemporary “biopolice” in the process of arresting
illegal immigrants. It is described by Mik as an imaginary rather
than a symbolic training for how to deal with sans-papiers – a
staging of the political imaginary. Emphasizing the Foucauldian
idea of biopower and Agamben’s writings on Homo Sacer, the
cutator, Maria Hlavajova, places Mik’s work in the context of a
veritable civil war that she considers to be constitutive of the
contemporary conditions of (bare) life in the West. Mik is
somewhat less exacting.33 “You cannot reduce art to its idea,” he
says.
This work is not about immigration, it is not about fear,
violence or national security, nor is it about staged fictional
scenarios versus documentary footage from real situations.
(...) If the work contains all these references ... it is with the
intention of over-saturating it with unbearably weighty
comments on how we can conceive the world.34
In contrast to Deller and his team, Mik did not do any research
into how police are trained, nor did he provide any training for
the actors. “I try to create dialectical images,” he says, that
“overcome the artificial division between people.”35 Actors can
exchange roles and can act out the process as they imagine it – as
dramatic, humourous, confusing or terrifying. There is no script
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for the piece, no rehearsal, and so the artificiality of the action
emphasizes relations of mimicry and alterity. Each is interested in
knowing how the other will act and react.
Aernout Mik, Training Ground, 2006. Video installation. Courtesy of
World Class Boxing, Debra and Dennis Scholl Collection.
While Mik’s work and notions about art have the benefit of a kind
of non-deterministic openness, Training Ground becomes more
curious and interesting than pertinent and challenging. In
contrast, The Fittest Survive (2006), a video produced by the
Austrian artist Oliver Ressler, combines both the real world
gravity of a concrete social situation with the openness and nondeterminacy that characterize human action and social processes.
According to the statement issued by the artist, the work depicts
the training services provided by a privately-owned security
enterprise, a “civilian training program” for people preparing to
do business in Iraq and similar crisis regions. The video follows
participants while on a five-day “Surviving Hostile Regions”
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Protesting Degree Zero: On Black Bloc Tactics, Culture and Building the Movement
course that simulates conflict situations. It has much of the same
unscriptedness as Mik’s piece, yet, as Ressler explains in an
interview:
The film flirts with the fact that the eight participants are
obviously aware that the training scenarios represent
simulated realities. However, they take them very seriously
and try to behave as if it was reality. There are a few sections
in the film that show the different scenarios the participants
went through: unexpected shell bombardments, kidnapping
by a paramilitary unit, a car accident and crossing a
minefield. The course was structured in such a way that the
participants never knew exactly what to expect in the next
hour. They were just told to walk in a particular direction and
to meet a person there, and then something would happen
and they had to react to it. Volkmar and I did not have any
more information than the participants, so the cameraman
had to react very fast and spontaneously to whatever
happened, staying as close as possible to the participants,
which influenced the visual appearance of the film.36
Ressler is unambigous, however, about the work’s intent: “The
crisis regions’ growth markets make particularly clear that the
law of market economics requires hardness and ruthlessness.
This warlike character of market economics transforms life into a
fight in which specific individuals face ever-higher demands for
better performance.”37 The dishonest discourse of democracy
and human rights, he adds, legitimizes the security ideology and
the recklessly unsustainable expansion of global markets.
Abstract notions like affect, mimicry and alterity, while
certainly real aspects of human interaction, have no privilege as
ontological categories and should instead be provided with an
epistemological status that is specific to the content and context
of the work. What the three projects have in common is the
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Oliver Ressler, The Fittest Survive, 2006. Video. Courtesy of the artist.
mixture of serious subject matter combined with the potential of
fun and enjoyment. Regardless of the intentions of any of the
individual works, there is always, as Theodor Adorno said of the
film, a gap between intention and actual effect, especially
inasmuch as the distance of autonomy is abolished. In the
products of the culture industry, he argued, obscene, unofficial
models of behaviour overlap with the official ones. In order to
capture the consumer, the libido, “repressed by a variety of
taboos,” responds all the more promptly and allows the communication of whatever ideological content to pass.38 What this
means, minimally, is that affective labour or the libidinal
economy, as Žižek says, “can be co-opted by different political
orientations.”39 Underlying the playful or perverse role-playing
that one finds in these artworks, Žižek might argue, is a fundamental prohibition: what is impossible is an actual takeover of
state power in the name of revolution. Everything else is
permitted. Because Black Bloc actions literally break laws, they
perhaps better than most artworks allow us to consider what
Žižek describes as the split law, the fact that our reality and its
rules are based partly in fiction, sutured by myths and fantasies.
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Consequently, what we need to assess is whether Black Bloc
protesting can be effective in transforming social laws. As
Adorno said about vanguard film, we should guard against
taking our optimism too far. After all, the smashing of the police
car on Queen Street, as everyone understood, was the perfect
opportunity for everyone involved – the police who wanted to
discredit the demonstrators, the onlookers hoping to catch some
action, the agents provocateurs that some say had instigated the
destruction, the media who were at the ready with their cameras,
and even those who, after the passage of the Blocers, sat on the
crushed roof of the cruiser and placed a copy of the Canadian
Charter of Rights on its debris-strewn dashboard. Black Bloc
actions, like the products of the culture industry, may only be
promises of something they cannot deliver.
A Black Hole in Reality
As a final means of representing Black Bloc actions, and to
pursue a line of questioning that addresses the relationship
between anarchist culture and anarchist politics, I would like to
consider the subject of culture in relation to ideology. There is no
question that for many anarchists the level of ideology is
distinctly that of the capitalist state. The question of ideology
does not exist as a theoretical concept as such but is always
already instantiated in some way in “the system.” This provides
anarchists with the conceit of being able to directly address what
is wrong with the state of things and to always presume that
their actions have immediate practical efficiency, even if they are
not necessarily able to bring about the change that is desired.
Instead of a theory of the logic of practice, as in the form of a
critical dialectical realism, anarchists often resort to the
pragmatics of common sense combined with a high-spirited
moralism. Such customary sensibilities should not be dismissed,
however, as we cannot do without them. They are inadequate,
however, to the task of effective critique.
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Marxists, in contrast, have emphasized ideology as an aspect
of consciousness, as a system of ideas that creates norms of
behaviour and constitutes material social processes that are later
taken to be natural. The subjective aspect of ideological struggle
is reflected, for instance, in Mao’s view that “ideological struggle
is not like other forms of struggle. The only method to be used in
this struggle is that of painstaking reasoning and not crude
coercion.”40 What this implies is that change can also take place
at the level of cognition, or in what anarchists often rebuke as
theory. It is perhaps worth remembering that after the failure of
the 1848 revolutions, Marx and Engels were considered by
frustrated socialists to be nothing more than counter-revolutionary and impractical literati.
On the subject of praxis, I take issue with much contemporary
cultural activism that is obsessed with practice, with microsolutions through social interaction, with every imaginable effort
to replace “normal science” with the “weird,” and with new
models of collectivity that are deemed in every instance to be
superior to work made by individual artists. I take, as a case in
point, the proceedings of the roundtable conference that was
published as Critical Strategies: Perspectives on New Cultural
Practices. 41 The discussion among the participants of this
conference was premised on a dissatisfaction with the state of art
and activism and a sharing of ideas on how to move past what
Konrad Becker referred to as bourgeois-bohemian “boutique
activism.” “Are we in a historical moment,” asked Jim Fleming,
“where art projects with social agency are really inconsequential?”42 The fact that these questions have already been
analyzed by leftists in the early twentieth century and by the
sociology of culture in the postwar years does not prevent them
from being posed anew in a context in which capitalist forces find
new ways to manage and incite radical cultural production.
Perhaps the best response to the concerns of the conference came
from Critical Art Ensemble member Steve Kurtz, who made the
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rather commonplace assertion that the superstructural elements
of society, like art, actually do matter and have a causal impact
on society. Kurtz argued that in a globally developed technosphere culture becomes increasingly significant as a form of
struggle and that this is reason enough to carry on with new
projects. Most interestingly for us, he added that resistant
cultural practices parallel direct action against the corporatemilitary state.43 Certainly, in the world of media and communications, of semio-capitalism, the gap between culture and
politics is attenuated. Although culture is in no way separable
from the economy, it does, as a source of inherent social value,
provide a place from which to offer alternatives to the mere
objective of economic growth. Culture offers us, in Alain
Badiou’s phraseology, the possibility of living in a world in
which there is concern not only for the quality of life but simply
to live and to not be at the mercy of money and signs.
Wanting to live and to live better is at the core of libertarian
and socialist politics. It is at the source of the expression of
discontent, of actions against exploitation, of strikes, walk-outs
and sit-ins. Whereas reformist unions accept endless restrictions
and regulations, anarchist direct action outlines, according to
Gerald Raunig, the poetry of a fictive sovereignty.44 In Raunig’s
account, Black Bloc tactics are an instance of a Deleuzian swarm
machine or war machine. Such a machine is opposed to structuralization and is more oriented towards non-identitarian
communication, fleeing identity and state-apparatization
through creative lines of flight and invention. Although it leaves
unresolved the problem of a lasting revolutionary organization,
he argues, the war machines seek to escape the violence of the
state and the order of representation.45 He writes:
In the appropriation of the war machine by the state
apparatus, flight and invention ultimately do become war; the
war machine becomes a (quasi) military apparatus. Perhaps
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the development of the phenomenon of the Black Bloc from
Seattle 1999 to Rostock 2007 could be interpreted as this kind
of process of appropriation.46
As Raunig is aware, the first mentions of the Black Bloc began
with the mediatization and police criminalization of autonomous
activists in Germany. The Bloc as such is a media construction but
no less powerful because of this.
Mainstream media images can be affirmed by factions on the
left, as was the case with the photographic representation of
communards in the nineteenth century. According to British art
historian Gen Doy, images of women and men who were active in
the Paris Commune were perceived as not being in the interest of
the French state. Rejecting theories of disciplinary
power/knowledge, Doy argues for the idea that images embody
social relations in a dialectical manner. She writes: “The
consciousness of being an active subject participating in historical
and social change is something that theories positing ‘regimes of
truth’ and ‘discourses’ of subjectivity do little to elucidate, and
much to obscure.”47 Consciousness of one’s place in history and
in social relations can allow people to intervene in the material
conditions they live in. As material traces of the events, portrait
photographs of communards were prohibited by the French state
and removed from sight. Although those images were taken by
photographers with commercial motives, and although they
could be purchased for different reasons, communard prisoners
cooperated in their manufacture in exchange for photos they
could keep for themselves and interpreted them in terms of their
political, social and cultural knowledge.
Doy makes the assertion that not only is structural Marxism
not enough to ground images in concrete social relations, neither
are the psychoanalytic theories of castration and fetishism that
inform the act of looking. We could remap this onto Raunig’s idea
that the anarchical quality of the war machine supports capital as
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well as the fantasy of escape from capital. What then of psychoanalytic notions of subjectivity? If the smashed Starbucks
window in some ways represents the Lacanian “name of the
father,” is a Black Bloc action organized around the desire for an
iced cappucino its rejection?48 Consciousness, according to
psychoanalysis, is constructed out of unconscious formations
and desires. Does this mean there can be no conscious resistance
that is not in some way a capitulation to the laws of languagestructured-like-the-unconscious? Can consciousness proceed
through symbolization and the transformation of signifiers that
are then put into correspondence with objective movements and
necessity?49
According to Žižek, the subject is not only subject to external
desires that are caused by various objects, signs and things that
s/he comes into contact with, but in the shift from desire to drive,
the subject also cathects desire, produces it in an intersubjective
exchange. While the subject may have a goal – like smashing a
window – the way that they go about doing this, their aim, is the
actual purpose of the drive. Enjoyment revolves around a partial
drive, that is, the social, symbolic and political process of
creating actions that can enter the circuit of the subject’s
biological reproduction.50 The libidinal impact of an object
increases as one attempts to destroy it, as in the case of censored
cultural works that gain notoriety and visibility due to their
prohibition. The prohibited object thus embodies a surplus
enjoyment – the Lacanian plus de jouir, the no-more-enjoyment
that is beyond the pleasure principle and is a constituent of the
reality principle.
The paradox of Black Bloc protest is its impossible relation to
private property. Direct action can therefore be thought of as the
impossible equivalent of exchange relations and capitalist
surplus. Our deliberations in determining the effectivity of Black
Bloc tactics should thus be focused on the “real of the drive” of
direct action. Such actions are not premised in their immediate
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fulfillment but in the communication that the desire to smash
capitalism can never be satisfied with such limited gestures. The
desire is deeper and spreads from one symbol to another, reproducing itself towards infinity. Still, as the broken window affirms,
the transgression of the symbolic Law also brings on anxiety. The
only way to negotiate with this anxiety is through fantasmatic
projection, which can perhaps mitigate the desire for unmediated
representation. What movement activists should do is look
indirectly at the smashed windows, aesthetically perhaps, with
an attitude that is supported by the desire for a reality that is
possible and as though the smashed window does not exist in
itself but only as the materialization of capitalist distortion.
Direct action, we could say, and to paraphrase Žižek once again,
gives positive existence to the unreality of the world, to its incompleteness. The disproportionate irrationality of tactics and play
allows for a surplus of subjective dreaming that alters the coordinates of the situation. Social democrats and news media are thus
not enemies of the movement but rather only some of the
mediators of the symbolic universe and the guardians of our
sleep.
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and After
In August of 2012 the Québec Liberal Party under Jean Charest
announced a provincial election that would take place just after
Labour Day and before the resumption of fall classes. The
premier had presented the election as a sort of referendum in
which the province was asked to vote on the student strike,
which at its peak had mobilized nearly 300,000 students and
which since the passing of the unconstitutional anti-strike and
anti-demonstration ‘Law 78’ had brought into the struggle broad
swathes of civil society. Student groups insisted that even if
Charest lost the election, the struggle for a social strike and for
free university access would continue. As it turns out the
Liberals lost to the Parti Québécois, whose leader Pauline Marois
announced on September 7 that she would abolish the special
law and would put off tuition fee hikes for at least two years –
time enough to review the matter at a future summit on postsecondary education.1 Beginning in the month of March, students
had held mass demonstrations on the 22nd of each month.
Among many other forms of direct action, they also held nightly
marches that began at 8:00 pm at Place Émilie-Gamelin and
continued late into the evening. After the passing of the special
law, the nightly marches intensified, leading to the 8:00 pm
cazarolas that saw neighbours and neighbourhoods coming out
to raise the stakes of the strike. On September 22nd, however, at
the first major march planned for after the election, the turnout
was minimal. After less than one hour, Montreal city police
dispersed the few thousand people assembled. The social strike,
it would seem, was only a shadow of the more tangible struggle
for affordable tuition fees. While now is the time to draw some
immediate lessons, it is possible to also look to past lessons as we
think ahead and also as we quite rightfully celebrate a real
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victory.
Writing in the late 1960s and early 70s, the Italian poet,
theorist and filmmaker Pier Paolo Pasolini warned the students
of the New Left that their – our – insistent indignation was, in the
context of a “homologizing” consumer culture, not a form of
engagement, but a means to live with a clear conscience. Its
features, he thought, were best expressed by the civil rights and
student resistance movements that had developed in the United
States. Its “negative characteristic,” he argued, was its lack of
class consciousness.2 In the country of democratic radicalism,
vindication of the exploited needed the mediation of idealism; it
filled the vacuum of communism with moralism rather than
realism, with spiritualism rather than revolt. Yet, for all that, the
“anti-community” of Students for a Democratic Society and of
the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee reminded
Pasolini of the wartime Resistance movement.
Today, as the crises of capitalism are once again generating
indignation, the amorphous forms of a faceless global biopower
continue to blur the distinctions between the intelligentsia, the
technocratic class, the ruling class and the working majority.3 The
symptom of such “democratic materialism,” as Alain Badiou
refers to it, is not only democracy, but more pragmatically,
empowerment.4 The radical struggle against neoliberal capitalism
today no longer calls for class conscious political organization,
but for forms of empowerment that are often not a threat to the
productive goals of global capitalism. In his interpretation of
Badiou, Bruno Bosteels writes:
Politics as a procedure of truth, however, cannot be reduced to
the typically youthtful protest against the eternally oppressive
and corrupt nature of the state apparatus. (…) A militant
subject emerges only when the particular terms of the various
memberships that define society are put down and abolished
in favor of a generic concept of truth as universally the same
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for all. Politics, in other words, has nothing to do with respect
for difference or for the other, not even the absolute other, and
everything to do with equality and sameness. (…) By
traversing and deposing the different representations of
identity with which the excess of state power maintains itself
in its very errancy, a political procedure gradually begins to
revolve around the notion of a generic set, that is, a set
without determining attributes or qualities.5
A democratic empowerment is certainly the vision that one
draws from the July manifesto of the CLASSE (La Coalition large
de l’Association pour une solidarité syndicale étudiante), the student
coalition that along with the FECQ (Fédération étudiante collégiale
du Québec) and FEUQ (Fédération étudiante universitaire du Québec)
spearheaded the printemps érable, the québécois version of the
popular demonstrations, assemblies and occupations that have
given expression to recent leftist struggles, from the revolutions
of the Arab Spring, to the Greek and Spanish encampments, to
the Wisconsin uprising and the Occupy movements that first
erupted in New York City.6 To refer to only this one tract by what
is considered to be the most radical of the student groups is
perhaps not at all representative of a situation that brings
together anarchists, social democrats, left liberals, socialists and
communists alike. A more pragmatic description of “associated
institutions,” and certainly one that would come closer to the
CLASSE’s general “social movements” outlook, could correspond instead to David Harvey’s list of non-governmental
organizations, anarchist and autonomous grassroots organizations, traditional left political parties and unions, social
movements guided by the pragmatic need to resist displacement
and dispossession, and lastly, minority and identitarian
movements. He considers communist anyone who understands
and struggles against the destructive tendencies of capitalism.7
Given all of this one wonders why it is that the students have
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chosen the red square as their symbol. Having first emerged as a
symbol of Québec student politics in 2005 (previously associated
with struggles against poverty within the Québec National
Assembly), the red square could be compared to the cardboard
signs of Occupy Wall Street, promissory notes that Gregory
Sholette has described as “an obligation to a future reader from a
place already dislocated in time.”8 However, if the cardboard
signs, the wired downtown encampments and the general assemblies somehow seem novel, the symbolism of the red square
makes it such that it is we today who are this “future reader”
whose obligation, it seems to me, refers to a distinctly communist
trajectory. The red square and the manifesto: are these dehistoricized postmodern signs, avatars of a collective amnesia, or
something more like the objects of a Situationist détournement,
richer in constructive possibilities than presumed by the myth of
progress? If the latter is closer to the truth, this usage of the red
square nevertheless considers the Situationist moment as one
that is to be repeated, since, in no way is it possible to confirm
that today’s revolutionaries have effectively condemned “all the
ado of the lecture halls and classrooms as mere noise, verbal
pollution.”9
Amidst all of this academic noise is certainly the belief that we
have not finished with postmodernism and its hasty obituary on
the end of ideological meta-narratives. The denial that postmodernism has been eclipsed by neoliberal globalization affects both
the realms of culture and politics. If it makes little sense for us
today to ponder the forms of culture that correspond to globalization, it would make equally little sense for us to be overly
concerned with the forms of culture that are specific to anticapitalist protest movements. The point, as the saying goes, is to
change the world. When one talks about the disappearance of
art’s reified status in terms of bourgeois autonomy, however,
about the sublation of art and life, one usually thinks of the
Russian avant-gardes. In particular, one thinks of Kazimir
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The Québec Maple Spring, the Red Square and After
Malevich’s Black Square of 1913, hung like an icon in his Last
Futurist Exhibition and defined by him as the “zero of form,” a
transitional image whose shift from white ground to black figure
represented the passage from the individual bourgeois self to
that of a new collectivity. When Malevich was invited by Chagall
to the Art Institute in Vitebsk, his lessons in Suprematist radical
abstraction were quickly adopted by a group of communist
artists who assembled under the name of UNOVIS. The leader of
the group, El Lissitzky, adopted Malevich’s use of geometric
shapes and incorporated these into his designs for posters,
books, buildings and exhibitions. Unlike Malevich, Lissitzky’s
“Prouns” were shapes that led from 2D to 3D, with multiple
perspectives and shifting axes. The Proun work by Lissitzky that
most dramatically incorporates the red square is his 1920-21 New
Man, a graphic design for a remake of the Futurist play Victory
Over the Sun. The ideal of UNOVIS was to organize and collectivize work, rather than embellish art. While working as a
cultural ambassador to the Republic of Weimar, Lissitzky made
use of the new printing techniques of a Hanover firm. The colour
palette for his New Man was red and black, the same colours that
are emblazoned in his well-known pieces Beat the Whites with the
Red Wedge (1919) and Monument to Rosa Luxemburg (1919-21).
El Lissitzky’s work lent symbolic support to the communist
“reds” during a protracted civil war against the monarchists,
conservatives, liberals and socialists alike. This association of
communism with violence is prevalent today as one of the most
heightened ideological features of liberal political blackmail. As
Bosteels recently put it, “from all sides we are bombarded with
calls to live up to our duty to remember the past disasters of
humanity, lest history repeat itself.” More often than not, he
adds, “this inflation of memory comes at the cost of postponing
a genuinely critical history of ourselves from the point of view of
the present.”10 Consider as an example of such a postponement
Grant Kester’s essays on the similarities between vanguard intel141
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lectuals and avant-garde artists.11 In both cases, Kester argues,
the radical seeks to reveal “the ‘true’ nature of domination”
through its “exemplary consciousness.” It does this, he says, by
exaggerating the suffering of the working class or multitude and
provoking the repressive apparatus of the bourgeois state. The
ensuing conflict and further suffering of the working class is
justified, he says, by the utopian belief that this will lead to “total
emancipation.” The upshot for Kester, who writes this in relation
to contemporary collaborative art practices, is that the vanguard
conforms to a “dyadic structure” in which it is supposed to bring
unenlightened viewers (both the bourgeois and the working
class) to a higher level of consciousness. Notwithstanding the fact
that Kester considers class to be a matter of identity, an understanding that dismisses Marx’s theory of contradiction, does his
description not perfectly describe the situation that has erupted
in relation to the student strike? Did the mass demonstrations,
the nightly demonstrations, the bridge obstructions, metro smoke
bomb scares, the office raids and broken bank windows not lead
to the imposition of the draconian Law 78? Did the Québec
Liberal Party not repeatedly denounce the student movement,
and was the students’ chosen symbol, the red square, not
associated with “violence and intimidation.”12 The fact that
Kester proposes no radical solutions to the effects of capitalism
should give us some pause as to the political consequences of the
fear that is evoked by the repressive power of the state.13 Today’s
radicalism has indeed been conditioned by a hegemonic shift of
power. If, as Pasolini asserts, the working class once knew itself
to be different from and opposed to the bourgeois class, today’s
leftists know themselves as mostly different from communists –
which is to suggest that to a great extent they do not know
themselves.
Bosteels tells us that in today’s context in which everything is
fodder for historicization and in which capitalist ideology
emphasizes difference, multiplicity and perpetual change, we
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The Québec Maple Spring, the Red Square and After
should refuse to mourn communism. Communism remains
untimely, he says, dialectically historical and nonhistorical.
Bosteels’ idea of the actuality of communism fits nicely with
Slavoj Žižek’s four reasons to preserve the idea of communism:
because this tradition remains the tradition of authentic popular
struggles for emancipation; because today’s problems are
problems of the commons; because other terms, like democracy,
socialism and justice are easily appropriated by the right; and
lastly, because we are approaching dangerous times in which we
may have to do things on a mass scale, perhaps even violent
things, while avoiding both principled opportunism and the
totalitarian temptation.14 The red square, unlike the cardboard
signs, has so far had the advantage of being associated with the
power of organized structures. Here is a social form that is not
about empowerment based on identity, but based on universal,
emancipatory organization. Against the abstract background of
debt and the threat of crippling fines for those who dared to
pursue the strike, the red square has not only had a symbolic but
an iconic value, one that promised and will continue to promise
a revolutionary transformation of society.
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Globalization and the Politics of Culture:
An Interview with Imre Szeman
What is the role of culture in an era of globalization? This is one
of the questions that animates the work of Imre Szeman, founder
of the Canadian Association of Cultural Studies and Canada
Research Chair in Cultural Studies at the University of Alberta.
Szeman’s thinking combines a strong appreciation of the critical
potential of cultural studies work with an understanding of the
importance of Marxist theory, especially at this critical moment in
human history. With the end of national culture as a framework
for progress in the arts, culture becomes increasingly tied to the
new master narrative, he says, of the traumas of globalization. As
culture’s agenda is increasingly set by the operations of global
capital, it becomes imperative, he argues, to create an imaginative
vocabulary that can challenge biocapitalism’s fantasy of endless
accumulation. While globalization democratizes the imagination,
creating new identities and new public spheres, for Szeman, it
simultaneously shifts our focus away from culture – the predominant aesthetic and representational condition of postmodernism
– towards macro-political issues. In this context, he says, class
struggle reasserts itself, political economy returns with a
vengeance, and even the immanent aesthetic of workerist theory
seems to pale in comparison with the transcendent mediation of
radical contestation.
Whereas the theorists of empire, Michael Hardt and Antonio
Negri, argue that desire must become practical, that joyful
communitarianism must of necessity replace the “fanatical
ethical purity” of revolutionary theory, Szeman emphasizes the
fact that this immediacy of desire is largely a result of biopolitical
cultural production, which, while it causes a mutation of
capitalism, is nevertheless fueled by older, basic processes of
resource extraction and the industrial exploitation of wage
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Globalization and the Politics of Culture: An Interview with Imre Szeman
labour. If globalization implies that culture’s relative autonomy
is unsustainable, Szeman proposes that we should fight to win
spaces of autonomy, that revolution holds more promise for us
than the evolutionary anti-art of exodus. Against the
fetishization of theoretical novelty, Szeman therefore suggests
that the imaginative resources of cultural resistance are readily
at hand and all it takes for us to imagine an after to globalization
is the return to a strategic realism that is willing to confront the
limitations and arbitrariness of neoliberal economics.
After a lecture he gave in Montreal in March 2011, I asked
Szeman for an interview, the outcome of which produced more
questions and more topics than we could reasonably manage in
one text. Over several months we corresponded by email and he
kindly endeavoured to provide responses to a few questions.
Marc James Léger: In your essay “Imagining the Future:
Globalization, Postmodernism and Criticism,” you argue that the
idea of the artist as a vanguard is definitely over and that this is
a good thing.1 Art and politics proceed today with uncertainty,
you say. I was particularly interested in this essay with the
simple way that you contrast postmodernism with globalization.
Globalization is less about aesthetics and cultural representation
and has more to do with an agenda set for culture by global
capital. Could you tell us how it is that you came up with this
solution to post-postmodernism? Also, could you say more
about this predominance of capitalist globalization and how you
might respond to a thinker like Nicolas Bourriaud who is eager
to understand the mode of aesthetics that corresponds to this
new era.2 I wonder if you think there is any space for an avantgarde articulation of culture in this context.
Imre Szeman: The relationship between art and politics is
indeed uncertain – or so it seems to me. The gestures of many of
those art works (and artists) explicitly committed to political
engagement and change are towards little more than simply
difference from the present rather than some (aesthetically or
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politically) well-articulated interrogation of system and
structure. In art as in other areas of our social life, we exist at a
moment in which political ideas adequate to the present are in
short supply. Despite all manner of social inequality and political
obscenities done in the name of democracy, a broad swathe of the
planet’s population has come to accept that the primary function
of the state is to run itself out of business. After 2008, neoliberalism exists less as ideology than as habit – an increasingly
common ready-to-hand vocabulary of quotidian complaint about
public waste that supposedly can only be cured by private
pragmatism, whatever the consequences to public life. The inadequacies of the state as a result of the reduction of its services only
confirms the veracity of this social narrative – a closed spiral of
cause and effect that has proven to be enormously difficult to
challenge or unsettle.
I don’t need to rehearse the now long and persistent attacks
that have been carried out on the idea or ideal of the avant garde
that lent to the practice of art a revolutionary potential. The
collapse of the autonomy of art as a result of the expansion of
mass culture – a process described authoritatively by Peter
Bürger – is viewed by some critics as cause for alarm and by
others as no big deal.3 The alarm? Only through its relative
autonomy from capitalism could art offer a challenge to it.
However, this very possibility tended to occlude the fact that its
autonomy left it always already separate from the quotidian in a
manner that meant it could not truly intervene in capitalist
culture. There is still another response to this configuration of the
power of art, which is to view the original formulae by which art
is assigned its potentially powerful autonomy as something like
a category mistake, which is why its eclipse is seen as no big deal.
This is certainly true of the work of Pierre Bourdieu, for whom
aesthetic judgement acts as a euphemism that underwrites and
enables social distinctions, and little more.4 It is true, too, of
Jacques Rancière’s intervention into the relationship between
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Globalization and the Politics of Culture: An Interview with Imre Szeman
aesthetics and politics, which reconfigures it in yet another way:
art as a specific form of work on the “distribution of the
sensible,” a field in which politics proper acts as well. The
rupture or break once associated with vanguardist imaginings of
the aesthetic are in this schema muted, to say the least. In The
Politics of Aesthetics, for instance, Rancière writes,
the arts only ever lend to projects of domination or emancipation what they are able to lend them, that is to say, quite
simply, what they have in common with them: bodily
positions and movements, functions of speech, parceling out
of the visible and the invisible. Furthermore, the autonomy
they can enjoy or the subversion they can claim credit for rest
on the same foundation.5
To me this view is not so far removed from the “relational
aesthetics” championed by Nicolas Bourriaud, though he lacks
anything like the politico-aesthetic structure Rancière has elaborated around visibility/sensibility and equality.6 I’m inclined to
agree with Hal Foster’s critique that Bourriaud’s aesthetics
amounts to little more than a “shaky analogy between an open
work and an inclusive society, as if a desultory form might evoke
a democratic community, or a non-hierarchical installation
predict an egalitarian world.”7
I have a slightly different take on the eclipse of artist as a
vanguard. If Bourdieu sees the politics hitherto associated with
the aesthetic as bad sociology and Rancière views it as something
akin to sloppy political philosophy, what strikes me with
especial force are the impacts of historical shifts in dominant
discourses on the social significance of art and aesthetics. In
“Imagining the Future,” several things emerge from a
comparison of postmodernism and globalization as dominant
narratives. The postmodern was an aesthetic category before it
became a larger descriptor of an epistemic or ontological
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condition. Globalization, on the other hand, seems to have little
to do with culture or aesthetics per se. When one says ‘global
culture’ it is to affirm the realities that postmodernism only
hinted at rather than to name a specific artistic or architectural
mode or style. With globalization, the emphasis is directly on the
restructuring of relations of politics and power, on the rescaling
of economic production from the national to the transnational, on
the light speed operations of finance capital, and on the societal
impacts of the explosive spread of information technologies – no
need for any complex symptomatology! Finally, globalization is a
dominant discourse with a much stronger public presence than
postmodernism. Social and political struggles occur over the
ideologies and imperatives of globalization in a way that they
never did in postmodernism – more is at stake, and more directly
so. One of things that I argue for in “Imagining the Future” and
elsewhere is that this shift in dominant social narratives away
from culture to a blunter, cruder argument about the nature of
power is a sign of an evacuation of the power of art and culture.
Dominance once required an investment in the practices and
discourses of art and culture, including the humanities in universities; now power seems less anxious about having a purchase on
this terrain – it’s no longer where power is lived and consolidated. This has to do, of course, with social and technological
developments that have led to a commodification of images,
which is, in the words of Fredric Jameson, “why it is vain to
expect a negation of the logic of the commodity production from
it,” as well as the different relationship to culture generated by
mass culture – a development narrated by many thinkers, from
Guy Debord to Jameson himself.8
Does this mean that art and cultural production once had a
power that has completely evaporated in the context of globalization? This is how many critics seem to read the situation. But
isn’t this to fix art at a specific moment in time – an avant-garde
moment whose politics are already in question in any case?
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Globalization and the Politics of Culture: An Interview with Imre Szeman
Doesn’t art, too, change in conjunction with broader social developments? Mikkel Bolt Rasmussen has recently suggested that
while much art practice remains complicit with established
powers, “at the same time it is important to point out that the
space of art is still characterized by the presence of various representations of the political and attempts to use the field of art as a
starting point for the visualization of conflicts that have been
marginalized in the broader mainstream public sphere.”9 It’s a
mistake to write off the political possibilities of art; it’s a mistake,
too, to imagine it to be more than a sideshow in the ebb and flow
of global capital – that is, as a site at which one might expect
wholesale political change. It might seem a banal point, but it has
to be made: it’s 2011, not 1911.
MJL: Indeed, it’s not 1911 and by all accounts we’re in a world
of biopolitical governance. However, I completely agree with
Alain Badiou when he argues that certain sequences and events
cannot be limited to specific dates – for example, the idea of that
communism died a very certain death in 1989.10 A specific
sequence has come to a close but this does not condemn us to a
post-traumatic complicity either. We can have anxieties about
affirmative culture or about recuperation but that’s not all there
is. One can look at this in very pragmatic terms to say that
socialism is not something that exists only in China and Cuba,
but that many social programs, environmental and labour
regulations that we benefit from here in Canada are the products
of socialist ideas and endeavours. By the same token, if
autonomous art has been falsely sublated into culture industry,
as Bürger says, we can nevertheless find avant-garde forms of
resistance to capitalist domination that are not on the same order
as the postmodern politics of representation. I wouldn’t say
“good riddance” to the idea of the avant-garde anymore than I
would say it to the idea of communism. And if there is to be an
after to capitalist globalization, I can’t personally imagine how
Marx wouldn’t have something to do with getting there.
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In terms of what I wanted to bring up with regard to
Bourriaud’s idea of the “altermodern,” what I meant to ask you
about is the eagerness with which cultural theorists may want to
wish away the problems associated with economic globalization,
least of all its implications for neoliberal policy, and bring the
focus back to culture. The particular form that this takes today is
that of variations on the idea of pluralism: difference, hybridity,
transnationalism, multiculturalism, diaspora, cosmopolitanism.
In the same essay, “Imagining the Future,” you argue that the
agenda that is set for culture is informed by the operations of
global capital and that this has become a new master narrative. Is
the culturalization of politics that one finds in postmodern
discourse in any way challenged by the return to political
economy and class analysis? By the way, I don’t think that
Bourdieu thought that politics associated with aesthetic ideology
was bad sociology, but rather the outcome of a particular class
habitus, which had to do with his appreciation of the concept of
totality. As I see things what we have today is an ascendance of
petty bourgeois allodoxia in which the lifestyle concerns of an
international class refuses all determinations in matters of
identity and so we have a clear shift from national culture to
global petty bourgeois culture.
IS: I don’t think that anything I suggested above means “good
riddance”! Questioning the specific politico-aesthetic configuration associated with the historical avant garde is intended to
get us past a (still, it must be said) widely held feeling that the
connection between art and politics is over and done with – over
and done with because it is thought to be able to operate in a
certain way (now gone) and no other. I agree: this doesn’t mean
we have to wallow in the certitudes of affirmative culture. It does
mean, however, that we have to address new circumstances head
on.
With respect to the focus on culture in contemporary thought,
there are two related but importantly different claims being made
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Globalization and the Politics of Culture: An Interview with Imre Szeman
here. The first has to do with a focus on culture as opposed to
analyses of political economy or class; the second asks a question
about the nature of that focus – what you here describe correctly
as variations on ideas about the importance of pluralism. I don’t
think one can avoid assessments and analyses of everything that
constitutes ‘culture.’ The social world is legible only through the
discourses and narratives that constitute it. Capitalism is one of
these, as is, say, the varied discourses of governmentality that
comprise the ‘rational’ and efficient organization of populations
at the present time. This is not to say that all cultural or social
discourses operate with equal force or importance, or that some
cluster of them shouldn’t be taken as a politico-social axiomatic
that offers a key to what is happening to us now. But nor is it to
say that those elements determined to be axiomatic are plainly
and clearly the dominant site of power ‘in the last instance’ – the
kind of idea that legitimates reductive or vulgar analyses of all
kinds. We sometimes forget why there was a cultural turn in the
first place, which has to do with the reshaping of everyday life in
the context of mass culture and new technologies of communication and information, and the consequent impact of this turn
on epistemologies and ontologies of the social and political.
Nothing social or political is given immediately to sensation; we
have to comprehend it through the web of desires, beliefs, information and affect that constitutes ‘culture’ today. If this is the
case, we can’t possibly avoid thinking about culture.
My objection is that as important as culture is, there is also a
tendency of cultural theorists to overvalue it – to not even be
tempted to vulgarly assert the significance of economics or
political structure, since they don’t recognize the importance of
these factors for culture to begin with, and because their concern
begins and starts with cultural objects whose significance for
analyses is framed not by a problem to be solved, but by traditions of analysis within institutions of higher education. The
pressures and politics of the latter also tend to generate analyses
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that have to place novelty or innovation at the heart of critical
writing – the discernment in this or that piece of fiction or work
of art of, for instance, the secret to the entire system of capitalism,
or just as frequently, of a model of political engagement one
doesn’t find in the world at large. The impact of culture on social
epistemologies doesn’t mean that one should wallow in culture,
or that knowledge as such is now impossible (as one variant of
postmodernism suggests), but that our sense of the world and its
operations have of necessity to be complex and multi-layered.
As to the second point: insofar as hybridity, transnationalism,
multiculturalism, diaspora, etc., draw attention to the operations
of power vis-à-vis the management of difference, the shaping of
populations through movement in space (or the prevention of
such movement), impediments to social possibility and mobility
due to cultural, social and racial differences, etc., these are
valuable concepts with which to understand globalization. My
anxiety is that often enough such concepts are deployed in the
absence of an analysis of the operations of identity and difference
within capitalism; such a politics as does exist is often unreflexively liberal, connected mainly to the dynamics of political and
social tolerance and the extension of rights but without a larger
consideration of the imperatives of global capital. As long as it
can extract surplus, difference isn’t a problem for capital (though
it obviously is for the older formations of nation and nationalism). Indeed, as many critics have pointed out, pluralism and
difference are today powerful ideas guiding and organizing the
practices of consumption and consumerism.
I wouldn’t bundle ‘cosmopolitanism’ into these pluralistic
terms. The criticisms of cosmopolitanism tend to be that it isn’t
particularistic or pluralistic, but that in its presumed universalism it is far too limiting a concept. There are liberal cosmopolitanisms (such as Daniele Archibugi’s) that see the concept as little
more than the name for international political schemes that
would address problems that are global rather than national in
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scale.11 Tim Brennan’s suggestion that we can already take
“contemporary neoliberal orthodoxy as a form of unofficial
party organization across national frontiers” is pretty much all
one has to say in response to Archibugi’s “cosmopolitical
democracy project.”12
But it is possible to use cosmopolitanism as a powerful
regulative and political ideal – as something akin to how
equality works in Rancière’s thought. This is, it seems to me, how
it first appears in Immanuel Kant’s “Perpetual Peace.” The first
two of the three definitive articles of perpetual peace echo
Archibugi’s aims by laying the groundwork for a formally instituted international body that would be the managing political
organ of a federation of independent nation states, each established on the basis of a republican constitution (think today of
the UN or IMF). The third and final definitive article
(“Cosmopolitan Right Shall Be Limited to Conditions of
Universal Hospitality”) attempts to identify a right that all
people should have everywhere – a universal right. Universal
hospitality means that a stranger who arrives on someone else’s
territory must be treated peaceably if they themselves are not
hostile. The reason for this? Kant writes:
All men are entitled to present themselves in the society of
others by virtue of their right to communal possession of the
earth’s surface. Since the earth is a globe, they cannot disperse
over an infinite area, but must necessarily tolerate one
another’s company. And no one originally has any greater
right than anyone else to occupy any particular portion of the
earth. The community of man is divided by uninhabitable
parts of the earth’s surface such as oceans and deserts, but
even then, the ship or the camel (the ship of the desert) make it
possible for them to approach their fellows over these
ownerless tracts, and to utilize as a means of social intercourse that right to the earth’s surface which the human race
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shares in common.13
This strikes me as an important and radical claim, and it is one
that seems to go against almost everything else that Kant writes
in “Perpetual Peace.” The right to the earth’s surface – a right that
necessitates universal hospitality for those crossing borders –
does not supersede the fact that claims have been made to this or
that patch of the earth, and that hospitality has to be granted by
owner to visitor, by citizen to foreigner. However much in Kant’s
view nations might in the future be held together in an increasingly powerful international federation, underwritten by increasingly universal laws that apply to everyone, the borders between
nation states appear to remain fixed. At times, Kant simply
presumes the inevitable existence of nations; at other times, he
argues for their necessity: nations can’t or shouldn’t intermingle
due to linguistic and religious differences produced by nature
(through a kind of geographic determinism); or nations shouldn’t
be brought under a single power, because “laws progressively
lose their impact as government increases its range.”14 Nature
separates humanity into nations, and does so, according to Kant,
“wisely” because the leader of a single earthly nation could only
ever be a despot. As a root universal principle, all of humanity
can claim the right to all of the globe; the reality of the situation
– which is seen by Kant less as something unfortunate than as a
productive and valuable state of affairs – is that borders create
strangers, and to strangers we owe little more than hospitality. If
we take cosmopolitanism to be the right to universal access,
however, it places a demand that a justification be made in every
situation where such access doesn’t exist, a demand we can turn
on Kant himself. The articulation of a right to the earth’s surface
in the same passage in which the universality of this right is
undercut by the assertion of a need to tolerate visitors goes to the
heart of the problems and limits of the liberal rights regimes that
manage our legal and political affairs today.
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Can we not say that political art makes a similar demand,
engaging in a conceptual and political game that asks why this
and not that? It might not be a demand that is answered by
society at large; it is important, however, that such demands
which pierce to the heart of the organization of power are made,
and, to bring it back around to where your question started, this
of necessity goes beyond the limits that still adhere to how we
tend to understand ‘culture.’
MJL: The problem with affirmative culture is not that one
might wallow in it, it’s rather, as I understand Adorno and
Marcuse, that it allows us to forget suffering and at the same
time it might also, as is evident in some forms of progressive
culture, seek to satiate audiences with moral indignity and sentimentality without imparting any useful sense of how a situation
could be subjectivized. In other words, the criticism of affirmative culture is not what it allows in terms of pleasure, it’s what
it doesn’t allow in terms of equality, truth, justice. I tend to agree
with your description of cosmopolitanism, though I am
concerned to distinguish class politics from cosmopolitics, which
promotes legal notions of human rights that act in tandem with
the developmentalist aspects of economic globalization and
military incursion. I think that it could be useful to propose a
triangulation of culture, politics and economy, and avoid what
anarchist thought and media studies often do, which is, when
speaking about culture and politics, to collapse social relations
with means of production, or to assume that culture, even social
practice, is directly political. This is to say that we should allow
culture a certain measure of effectivity and even of autonomy
with regard to both politics and economics.
What you say about hospitality relates in some ways to what
I alluded to in terms of petty bourgeois allodoxia and biocapitalism. Progressives are enthralled at the moment with models of
culture that propose various ways that social subjects should
change their structures of feeling through affective bonding,
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stranger intimacy, tolerance towards the other and towards the
stranger within ourselves, etc., with variations on ideas borrowed
from Bergsonian models of creative evolution or Levinasian
ethics which are then linked to various political agendas. Most
often these anti-revolutionary reformist models make use of very
naive or idealist notions of social engineering that are not unlike
counter-cultural models from past decades and which typically
exclude class analysis. This to me is an indication of the ascendance of petty bourgeois culture, as it’s understood for example
by Giorgio Agamben in his book The Coming Community.15 The
problem here is that in this cultural context left militancy is made
to stand in for everything that is universalizing, masculinist,
totalizing, and so on. This attitude tends to avoid complex uses of
the notions of totality, rationality, subjectivity, and universality
that are in fact necessary if we are to pursue a politics of universal
emancipation.
Christoph Schlingensief, Bitte liebt Österreich! (Please Love Austria), 2000.
Performance event. Photo © David Baltzer/bildbuehne.de.
With reference to what you discussed, an interesting example of
critical public art is that of Christoph Schlingensief’s Bitte liebt
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Österreich! (Please Love Austria!) of 2000. The artist organized an
outdoor “Big Brother” type reality show in which the Austrian
public was asked to vote for which asylum seeker should be
allowed to stay in the country and which should be deported.
The participants were kept in a container camp that was marked
Ausländer Raus (foreigners out!), which was meant to stage the
popularity of extreme right-wing ideas in Austria and the state’s
recognition of the right populist FPÖ party of Jörg Haider. In
many ways Schlingensief’s work anticipated the violent acts of
Anders Behring Breivik in Norway and the communication of
sympathy for his ideas on behalf of neo-fascist groups in France
and Italy, not to mention the exploitation by the mainstream
media of anti-Muslim rhetoric. In less drastic terms, this also
reflects immigration policies in Canada and the U.S. that are
meant to detract from scrutiny of labour policy, industrial
relations, and the like.
My next question then relates specifically to your essay
“Marxist Literary Criticism, Then and Now,” which was
published in the journal Mediations in 2009.16 In this piece you
state that there are three basic modes of Marxist art criticism: (1)
reminders to historicize and to focus on class and political
economy, (2) critiques of the institutions of cultural production
and analysis, and (3) anxieties about affirmative culture and
critique of the cultural studies tendency to find moments of
resistance in almost anything. I’m wondering, with reference to
your recent collaboration with Eric Cadzyn, After Globalization, if
there is still some room within critical theory for the analysis of
the transition to communism and also if there is anything left of
the Marxist-Leninist-Maoist experiment with political organization.17 In other words, it seems to me that if class struggle is to
reassert itself and if “political economy is back in style,” which
indeed it is, art criticism should have something to say about
political organization. I ask this question knowing very well that
in the contemporary visual arts at least there is enormous energy
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being dedicated to organization in relation to new class compositions. Most of this, however, tends to be devised in terms of
utopian and small-scale anarchist models, which the international class of capitalists, the state bureaucracies and their
military-police apparatuses are hardly worried about. How then
can (2) spend less time worrying about (3) and do more to be
useful to (1) and what do you think the role of cultural studies is
in this age of post-politics, austerity capitalism and the corporatization of the university?
IS: These are good points to make. Certain concepts come
loaded with meanings that, as a result of their histories, cannot be
easily shaken off. And so cosmopolitanism does speak to human
rights regimes and developmental schema, even if at its core it
names a possibility of affiliations and connections that go beyond
national sentiment or the prohibitions of a lifeworld organized
around property. As those theorists who draw attention to
negative cosmopolitanisms make clear, all too often discourses of
cosmopolitanism legitimate imperialistic and hegemonic intrusions by the powerful into spaces they want to manage and
control. Narratives of human rights, of economic and social
development, and (more lately) of globalization appeal to universalistic measures of the human as such, against which the state of
this or that part of the world can be assessed. Given the imperatives and desires of the forces that are creating and promoting
these measures, it comes as little surprise that the universalism
they promote is suspect.
As for the effectivity and autonomy of culture: this, too, is a
good point to make. If I tend to err in the other direction it is
because culture is more often than not viewed as fully
autonomous (in both critical thought and in society at large), and
so reminders of limits, blocks and conditions of possibility can’t
help but introduce important considerations into the discussions
of the ‘what’ and ‘why’ of culture. And I take your point about the
fear of notions such as totality and universality. As I said above,
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Globalization and the Politics of Culture: An Interview with Imre Szeman
there’s no question that appeals to universality made by some
thinkers (for example, liberals such as Kwame Anthony Appiah
or Martha Nussbaum) have to be read with a critical eye. At the
same time, a complete rejection of universality – as something
akin to a category mistake when it comes to the rich diversity of
human Being – is in fact a perverse affirmation of that universality which already exists: the universality of capitalist subjectivity. In an era that has been described as one in which the
hitherto formal subsumption of labour under capital has become
real, we already have a universal subject – an exploited subject,
lacking in rights, who endures, as David Harvey puts it, “the
meaningless and alienating qualities of so many jobs and so
much of daily life in the midst of immense but unevenly
distributed potentiality for human flourishing.”18
Is there room for an analysis of a transition to communism?
One hopes so. Is there anything left of experiments with political
organization? There are. I think immediately of Erik Olin
Wright’s Envisioning Real Utopias (2010) as an example of a recent
book that unapologetically devotes itself to framing emancipatory social possibilities, or of the 2006 documentary The Power
of Community: How Cuba Survived Peak Oil, which examines the
country’s imaginative, collective response to the loss of more
than half of its oil imports.19 Though it is perhaps too easy to be
cynical about the significance of contemporary visual arts in its
explorations of political organization, I agree with you that the
visual arts are a site in which this issue of organizational possibility is being posed and examined. However the arts might be
greeted by the capitalist class, however they might be contained
and consigned to spaces of relative predictability, the conceptual
experimentations of the visual arts remain a genuine resource –
especially as so many artists and art collectives move beyond
lingering modernist interrogations of the nature and subject of
art, and simply enact scenarios and carry out social investigations to see what these might reveal or produce. I like Hal
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Foster’s recent reading of the work of Thomas Hirschhorn, for
instance. Foster sees Hirschhorn’s work as consisting of explorations of precarity, expenditure, and of the conceptual difficulty
of reading the present (the mode of the bête in Hirschhorn’s work,
who operates within the social circumstances of emergency); the
resources Hirschhorn draws upon in doing so are those “that lie
dormant in the ‘general intellect’ of the multitude, a multitude
that, to different degrees, faces a state of emergency today.”20
Here we have an artist engaged in an exploration of the fundamental problems of organization today: a socioeconomic system
governed by fear and insecurity, as well as a helplessness in the
face of everything from the scale of existing infrastructure (from
the military-security apparatus to our sheer dependence on
technology) to looming ecological crises; a world premised on
narratives and fantasies of growth that will have to re-build itself
around perpetual lack; and finally, a historical moment of
confused epistemologies which are hurt rather than helped by
the enormous amounts of data we are so adept at generating.
Foster describes Hirschhorn’s use of everyday materials and
techniques as the “search for a nonexclusive public, a public after
the apparent dissolution of the public sphere.”21 That seems to be
a good description of where many of us find ourselves at the
moment when it comes to confronting the problem of political
organization.
The question you end with about cultural studies is a big one.
I refuse to write off the university, despite its many problems and
limits. It remains a central site of knowledge production and
legitimation; it is a space in which a large part of the population
in Western countries (and an increasingly large part in the rest of
the world: non-Western students now make up more than half of
the globe’s university population) spends a key point in their
lives, a place in which the passage to (an imagined) full
citizenship takes place alongside an immersion in social and
political codes and beliefs. There are numerous other sites at
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which such social pedagogy takes place – everywhere from the
communications media to spaces of religion. Still, the university
matters, even if different parts of it might matter to different
degrees, and even if it is not the sole political-social-cultural
arbiter.
And so, in this context, is it not important to have an
approach to culture that is (ideally) self-reflective about its
practice as a mode of knowledge production (and indeed, clear
about the need to consider the status and function of an institution such as the university within this practice), that looks at
the full range of sites and spaces in which meaning is communicated (and the subject and social are produced), that explores
with students the kinds of questions we’ve been raising in our
own discussion, and finally, that might take as its subject postpolitics, austerity capitalism and the corporatization of the
university (and so what it can to provide students with the
concepts to understand these developments)?
On the other hand I can’t help but worry that the embrace of
cultural studies within universities – to the limited degree that
this has happened – is evidence of some of the pressures faced by
the contemporary university. Raymond Williams famously
identified three elements of culture: dominant, residual and
emergent.22 The arts and humanities within universities reflect
the dominant values of society, though they are also importantly
residual insofar as their configuration represents a different
social formation than that of the present. Within the relative
autonomy that exists for many of those operating within universities, should we not instead try to occupy the position of the
emergent? At their very best, cultural studies are driven by the
imperative to do just this.
MJL: I agree with you about the need to affirm the mediating
role of institutions. Universities definitely contribute to the
creation of social values and creative industry advocates
typically ignore this educational contribution that the welfare
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state makes to the general economy. If I could ask you one last
question, I would be interested in knowing what kinds of policy
issues are foremost in your mind at this moment in both the
national situation and in terms of globalization. With the reelection of the Harper conservatives in 2011 and the arrival of Sun
News, many in the various arts sectors in Canada are expecting
the state to push culture further in the direction of a commercial
and free market orientation – the kind of policy offensive that
we’ve seen recently with the memorandum put out by the Dutch
State Secretary for Culture. George Yúdice makes the observation
that in the context of globalization, and even if the neoliberal
state maintains public funding for culture, “culture-as-resource”
acts as an expedient, both in terms of economic stimulus and with
regard to the management of social conflicts.23 The exemption of
culture from free trade deals like NAFTA has proven to be
something of a myth, however, and this is borne out in some
respects as culture wars replace notions of national culture, or
dovetail with it. Yúdice argues that trade liberalization has made
culture more of a protagonist than it ever was. Beyond what
you’ve already said about cosmopolitanism and universal access,
what do you think of this special place of culture in the midst
global class polarization and proletarianization? Are the free
traders correct? Is culture the ultimate commodity? I ask you this
in part because our first meeting was in Montreal in March on the
occasion of a lecture you gave at the Sauvé Scholars Foundation
that was provocatively titled “Why We Don’t Need Creativity.”
IS: Let me talk first about why I don’t think we need creativity.
The ‘we’ is not just the left, or cultural producers, but everyone.
And it isn’t that we don’t need novelty, or innovation, or change,
or radical insights or interventions: it’s creativity specifically that
I think we don’t need. I argue that creativity has become not just
an empty honorific (the kind of thing that one says in praise of
one’s children) but also a dangerous one. It is a concept that is
imagined as lying at the heart of artistic and cultural activity.
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Over the course of the twentieth century, but with special force
during the past two decades of globalization discourse,
creativity has also come to be associated with any and all kinds
of innovation in the business community. What I find significant
about (for instance) Richard Florida’s The Rise of the Creative Class
is the manner in which he tries to connect the (supposed)
autonomy of artists and cultural workers to the work of those
involved in the high tech industry.24 Florida’s argument is that
more and more workers are becoming freer and freer (and also
generating more money) because they are engaged in creative
work in a manner that is similar to artists. In his eyes, artists have
the maximum creativity, spending their days engaged in selfexpression and self-definition. We’re lucky then to live at a
moment when all work becomes akin to being an artist, as we can
thus express our creativity at work as well as at play.
What Florida and other champions of creativity overlook is, first,
that many artists and cultural workers continue to receive far
from living wages, and second, that those who are being creative
in the tech industries are also receiving salaries that are less than
they otherwise might. The (supposed) joys of being able to be
creative seems to blind these workers to the fact that their
employers are still making a surplus off of their labour. But even
beyond this, I can’t help but be suspicious of the very idea of
creativity. It seems to do little real analytic work in comparison
to its ideological function, which can range from expressions of
pleasure or approval, to covering up the exploitation and the
extraction of surplus through the narrative that we are all artists
now, and so have reached whatever self-fulfillment we might
expect from society. Creativity is far from a coherent concept,
though we often enough take it to be so. In my reading of
Florida’s work, creativity has multiple, often contradictory definitions.25 It is at times an innate quality of the human everyone
possesses; at other times, this quality is shared unequally, such
that only some will ever be creative (and this is determined
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genetically); sometimes it is a cultural characteristic (some
cultures being more creative than others), other times it is
associated with certain kinds of work; frequently it is tied simply
to innovation, and even more specifically, to innovations in
technology.
For artists and cultural producers, the sudden importance of
creative labour – and associated concepts, such as creative cities
– might make it seem as if it their own work has finally assumed
the social importance they always imagined for it. To whatever
degree, in an effort to develop the immaterial and affective
aspects of their economies in the new century, cities, regions and
countries around the world have created programs to support
and encourage culture. Instead of being a drain on economies, the
arts and culture sector is now seen as a having a positive fiscal
impact on the economy. So one might think: even if creativity is a
specious concept, what could be wrong with taking advantage of
creative discourses that help generate more money for museums,
increase grants for artists, expand government sponsorship of
festivals, and so on?
I don’t see it this way. The use of the concept of creativity to
render non-cultural activities as having the same freedom as
artists’ work functions to transform a romantic fiction of the latter
into a way of affirming the permanence of labour under
capitalism – which now becomes okay because it is creative, and
so unalienated, too! It also undermines the relative autonomy of
arts and culture – an autonomy (however questionable, however
problematic at a theoretical level) that enabled and supported a
critical vantage point on the social and political. Yúdice writes
that “the role of culture has expanded in an unprecedented way
into the political and economic at the same time that conventional
notions of culture largely have been emptied out.”26 If culture has
become a protagonist, it is only through an emptying out of any
critical notion of the arts and culture. It may well be that culture
is the ultimate commodity. The profit margins on cultural goods
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can be huge, and it seems to be as necessary to our daily lives as
food and water. But this of course is a further problem of our
moment as opposed to anything like a solution – a collapse of art
and life that is perverse in ways well beyond the trauma of the
rise of mass culture that concerned Peter Bürger in his meditations on the fate of the avant garde. And though one element of
capital might champion creative culture and creative cities, I
suspect that even so it is funding for arts and culture that will be
most deeply impacted by austerity measures around the globe.
As the Dutch example you point to makes evident, when money
is in short supply, whether due to a lack in taxes coming in (in
the case of states) or a drop in consumer spending, there is a
quick turn to ‘vulgar’ analyses of what is most socially significant or important. Culture and the arts usually don’t cut it – and
I should add, this vulgar analysis doesn’t always need fiscal
shortfalls to animate states or companies to reduce their support.
We’re in an interregnum. We continue to operate with older
ideas of the critical capacities of art and culture. We’ve
challenged from multiple perspectives some of the problems and
limits of a critical autonomy that comes only through a
separation from life. Yet given the examples of an art integrated
with life, whether this is Bourriaud’s aesthetics or the world of
immaterial labour named in Florida’s use of creativity, we can’t
help but want to return to an older configuration of the politics
of the aesthetic, unless we decide to abandon the equation of art
and politics entirely. This is something that, for instance, Gerald
Raunig seems to do in Art and Revolution, where he re-narrates
the avant garde as a series of “transitions, overlaps and concatenations of art and revolution [that] become possible for a limited
time, but without synthesis and identification.”27 But to say
we’re in an interregnum is far from saying that things are
hopeless, or that art is compromised and can generate no
political insight or action.
Surveying the landscape of contemporary art, Rasmussen
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offers the following account of where aesthetics stands in relation
to politics at the present time:
traditional forms of intellectual and aesthetic opposition no
longer seem to be at all available. Visual images as well as
words and music appear to lack their former alienating effect
and are rarely antagonistic towards the prevailing order.
Wherever we direct our gaze, it is the complicity of the art
institution with the established power that is most
conspicuous. The speculation economy of neoliberal
capitalism pumped huge sums of money into the art market
after 1989, with the result that art today is closely tied to the
transnational circulation of capital. At the same time national
governments, provinces and cities use art as a marketing
instrument in the febrile competition for manpower, investments and tourists. These developments towards an evercloser link between art and capital, and between art and the
ruling order, are undoubtedly the predominant tendency
when it comes to contemporary art.28
This passage can be read as listing a series of failures – as the
ever-greater deterioration of the critical capacities of art and
culture. But it can also be read as a blunt, non-moralizing
description of where we are, whether we like it or not; that is, as
an outline of the challenging circumstances in which we find
ourselves. Is it a complete list? No. However, by not naming
those critical capacities and possibilities that do exist it is
pessimistic and one-sided in the extreme. And there is a developmental narrative suggested that is often present when we paint
pictures of where we find ourselves, one that suggests that an
open door that once existed is not only being closed but written
out of the picture. Better instead to understand that every
moment has its crises and problems. Our challenge as scholars is
to understand these so that we might do our part in making sure
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that what appears on the other side of the interregnum is a
reality we would want to live in rather than merely endure.
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Notes
Art World as Zombie Culture: Excellence, Exodus and Ideology
1.
Marc Mayer interviewed by Jelena Adzic, “Diaspora Art,”
The National, CBC television, February 2, 2010.
2.
Slavoj Žižek, First as Tragedy, Then as Farce (London: Verso,
2009) 5.
3. The website www.excellenceatthenationalgallery.blogspot
.com/ is headed with the statement: “We are a growing
collective of cultural producers from Canada and abroad
concerned with the outrageous and blatantly anachronistic
policy of exclusion recently asserted by the Director of the
National Gallery of Canada, Marc Mayer, during an
interview aired as part of a segment on diaspora art on
CBC’s ‘The National’ on February 2, 2010.” The website
begins with the document “An Open Letter to Marc Mayer,
Director, National Gallery of Canada” and is followed by a
list of signatories and some of the letters to the editor that
subsequently appeared in the Ottawa Citizen.
4.
See http://www.excellenceatthenationalgallery.blogspot.
com/.
5.
Ernesto Laclau and Chantal Mouffe, Hegemony and Socialist
Strategy: Towards a Radical Democratic Politics (London:
Verso, 1985).
6.
On this see Slavoj Žižek, “Tolerance as an Ideological
Category,” Critical Inquiry #34 (Summer 2008) 660-82.
7.
Žižek, First as Tragedy, Then as Farce, 22.
8.
Žižek, First as Tragedy, Then as Farce, 22.
9.
See Jacques Rancière, On the Shores of Politics (London:
Verso, [1992] 2007) 31.
10. Brian Holmes, “Transparency and Exodus: Political Process
in the Mediated Democracies,” in Unleashing the Collective
Phantoms: Essays in Reverse Imagineering (Brooklyn:
168
Notes
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
Autonomedia, 2008) 181.
On this theme, see Gerald Raunig, “On the Breach,”
Artforum (May 2008) 341-343, and Raunig, “Modifying the
Grammar: Paolo Virno’s Works on Virtuosity and Exodus,”
Artforum (January 2008) 245-250.
Holmes, “Transparency and Exodus: Political Process in the
Mediated Democracies,” 186.
Holmes, “Transparency and Exodus: Political Process in the
Mediated Democracies,” 178.
“At a larger scale we can see that the tremendous ambivalence of the 1990s – by which I mean the violent deterritorialization of the capitalist globalization process, paralleled
by the extraordinary freedom of communicational experimentation, the emergence all over the world of new social
movements in the wake of the Zapatistas, and the first
attempts at coordinated global struggles – has now given
rise to exactly what the philosophical generation of the
1970s taught us to recognize and to flee: the ‘dialectical’
return of the same, through the clash of seeming opposites.”
Holmes, “Emancipation,” in Unleashing the Collective
Phantoms, 152.
Ricrado Balli of the Association of Autonomous Astronauts
cited in Holmes, “Unleashing the Collective Phantoms,” in
Unleashing the Collective Phantoms, 23. See also Ewen
Chardronnet, Quitter la gravité (Nîmes: L’éclat, 2001).
Boris Karloff, “Resisting Zombie Culture,” talk delivered at
Public Netbase, Vienna, available at http://www.uncar
ved.org/turb/articles/karloff.html.
Slavoj Žižek, “The Return to Hegel,” lecture delivered at the
European Graduate School, March 1, 2010, available at
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aR3vfHuOW38.
Janet Wolff, “The Ideology of Autonomous Art,” in Richard
Leppert and Susan McClary, eds. Music and Society: The
Politics of Composition, Performance and Reception
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19.
20.
21.
22.
23.
(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1987) 1-12.
See for instance, Gerald Raunig, Art and Revolution:
Transversal Activism in the Long Twentieth Century, trans.
Aileen Derieg (Los Angeles: Semiotext(e), 2007) and Gavin
Grindon, “Surrealism, Dada, and the Refusal of Work:
Autonomy, Activism, and Social Participation in the Radical
Avant-Garde,” Oxford Art Journal 34:1 (2011) 79-96. See also
Peter Bürger, Theory of the Avant-Garde, trans. Michael Shaw
(Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, [1974], 1984).
Bill Readings, The University in Ruins (Cambridge: Harvard
University Press, 1996).
See Janet Wolff, “Against Sociological Imperialism: The
Limits of Sociology in the Aesthetic Sphere,” in Ronald W.
Neperud, ed. Context, Content, and Community in Art
Education (New York: The Teachers College Press, 1995) 128140.
A similar argument is put forward from a postcolonial
perspective by Arif Dirlik in “Our Ways of Knowing:
Globalization – The End of Universalism?” in Petra
Rethmann, Imre Szeman, and William D. Coleman, eds.
Cultural Autonomy: Frictions and Connections (Vancouver:
UBC Press, 2010) 28-48.
See Slavoj Žižek, On Belief (London: Routledge, 2001).
Culture and the Communist Turn
1.
Michael Hardt and Antonio Negri, “Arabs Are Democracy’s
New Pioneers,” Interactivist Info Exchange (February 25,
2011), available at http://interactivist.autonomedia.org
/node/14284.
2.
See for instance, Anne Alexander, “The Gravedigger of
Dictatorship,” Socialist Review (March 2011), available at
http://www.socialistreview.org.uk/article.php?articlenumbe
r=11580.
3.
The third annual conference of the Critical Social Research
170
Notes
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
Collaborative, “Varieties of Socialism, Varieties of
Approaches,” was held at Carleton University, Ottawa, on
Saturday March 5, 2011.
Presentations from the 2010 Creative Time Summit, titled
“Revolutions in Public Practice,” can be viewed online at:
http://creativetime.org/programs/archive/2010/summit/swf.
html.
Maude Barlow and Tony Clark, Global Showdown: How the
New Activists Are Fighting Global Corporate Rule (Toronto:
Stoddart, 2001).
George Yúdice, The Expediency of Culture: Uses of Culture in
the Global Era (Durham: Duke University Press, 2003).
Chris Harman, Zombie Capitalism: Global Resistance and the
Relevance of Marx (London: Bookmarks Publications, 2009)
201.
Harman, Zombie Capitalism, 223.
Harman, Zombie Capitalism, 331. See Ernesto Laclau and
Chantal Mouffe, Hegemony and Socialist Strategy: Towards a
Radical Democratic Politics (London: Verso, 1985); Michael
Hardt and Antonio Negri, Empire (Cambridge: Harvard
University Press, 2000).
Harman, Zombie Capitalism, 332.
Harman, Zombie Capitalism, 336.
István Mészáros, The Challenge and Burden of Historical Time:
Socialism in the Twenty-First Century (New York: Monthly
Review Press, 2008) 78.
István Mészáros, The Challenge and Burden of Historical Time,
77.
Karl Heinz Roth, “Global Crisis – Global Proletarianization
– Counter-perspectives,” Wildcat (December 2008), available
at http://www.wildcat-www.de/en/actual/e068roth_crisis.
html.
We should of course question this idea of developed and
undeveloped. As Eduardo Galeano so aptly put it about
171
The Neoliberal Undead
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21.
22.
23.
Latin America: “In these lands we are not experiencing the
primitive infancy of capitalism but its vicious senility.
Underdevelopment isn’t a stage of development, but its
consequence.” Eduardo Galeano, Open Veins: Latin America:
Five Centuries of the Pillage of a Continent (New York: Monthly
Review Press, 1973) 307.
Doug Henwood, “I am a Fighting Atheist: Interview with
Slavoj Žižek,” Bad Subjects #59 (February 2002), available at
http://criticaltheory-download-ebooks.blogspot.com/2011
/02/i-am-fighting-atheist-interview-with.html.
Žižek in Henwood, “I am a Fighting Atheist: Interview with
Slavoj Žižek.”
Slavoj Žižek, Iraq: The Borrowed Kettle (London: Verso, 2004)
98.
Alain Badiou, Ethics: An Essay on the Understanding of Human
Evil, trans. Peter Hallward (London: Verso, 1993).
See Slavoj Žižek, In Defense of Lost Causes (London: Verso,
2008) 182.
Žižek, In Defense of Lost Causes, 183.
Pierre Bourdieu, Distinction: A Social Critique of the Judgement
of Taste, trans. Richard Nice (Cambridge: Harvard
University Press, [1979] 1984).
The discussion group Markets included Anton Vidokle, J.
Morgan Puett, Surasi Kusolwong, Superflex, and Julia
Bryan-Wilson. Food included Amy Franceschini, Agnes
Denes, InCUBATE, F.E.A.S.T and Claire Pentecost; Schools
involved Jakob Jakobsen, The Bruce High Quality
Foundation, Learning Site, and Saskia Bos; Governments
included Laura Kurgan, Chen Chien-Jen, Oliver Ressler,
PLATFORM and Aaron Levy; Institutions was comprised of
Thomas Keenan, Danielle Abrams, Otabenga Jones &
Associates, W.A.G.E. and Andrea Fraser; Plausible Art
Worlds included Chto Delat, Eating in Public, The
International Errorist, Scott Rigby and Stephen Wright. This
172
Notes
conference also included presentations by Anne Pasternak,
Gridthiya Gaweewong, Sofia Hernández Chong Cuy, Rick
Lowe, Trevor Paglen, Shaun Gladwell, Dinh Q. Lê, Regina
Tosé Galindo, Phil Collins, Eyal Weizman, Laurie Jo
Reynolds, Chris Martinez, Claire Doherty, Bisi Silva,
Kickstarter, Basekamp, Stephen Wright, Tidad Zolghadr,
and keynote speaker Wendell Pierce.
24. Peter Bürger, Theory of the Avant-Garde, trans. Michael Shaw
(Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, [1974] 1984).
25. This could be said of three recent contributions to the literature on social practice: Grant H. Kester, The One and the
Many: Contemporary Collaborative Art in a Global Context
(Durham: Duke University Press, 2011), Claire Bishop,
Artificial Hells: Participatory Art and the Politics of
Spectatorship (London: Verso, 2012), and Nato Thompson,
ed. Living as Form: Socially Engaged Art from 1991-2011
(Cambridge: The MIT Press, 2012).
Alterglobal Allegory: Condé and Beveridge Against the
Commodification of Water
1.
Declan McGonagle, “Reflections on the Politics of Practice
and the Art of Condé and Beveridge,” in Bruce Barber, ed.
Condé and Beveridge: Class Works (Halifax/Kingston: The
Press of the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design/Agnes
Etherington Art Centre, 2008) 32.
2.
See for example Nicolas Bourriaud, Relational Aesthetics,
trans. Simon Pleasance et al. (Paris: Les presses du réel,
[1998] 2002).
3.
McGonagle, “Reflections on the Politics of Practice and the
Art of Condé and Beveridge,” 32.
4.
Diana Nemiroff, “Maybe It’s Only Politics: Carole Condé
and Karl Beveridge,” Vanguard 11:8-9 (October/November
1982) 8, 11.
5.
Martha Fleming, “The Production of Meaning: Karl
173
The Neoliberal Undead
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
Beveridge and Carole Condé,” Special Issue of Open Letter
edited by Bruce Barber, Open Letter #5-6 (Summer-Fall
1983)147-8.
See, respectively, Linda Hutcheon, Splitting Images (Toronto:
Oxford University Press, 1991); Suzanne Lacy, ed. Mapping
the Terrain: New Genre Public Art (Seattle: Bay Press, 1995);
Grant Kester, Conversation Pieces: Community +
Communication in Modern Art (Berkeley: University of
California Press, 2004). For an example of the innocuous
ascription of Condé and Beveridge’s work to a progressive
liberal “new genre public art,” see Martha Langford,
“Workers in Progress: The Art of Condé and Beveridge,”
Border Crossings (2006) 98-103.
Fleming, “The Production of Meaning,” 140.
Wolfgang Zinggl, “From the Object to the Concrete
Intervention,” in Zinggl, ed. WochenKlausur: Sociopolitical
Activism in Art (Vienna: Springer, 2001) 11.
Fleming, “The Production of Meaning,” 145.
Andrea Fraser, “How Has Art Changed?” Frieze #94
(October 2005), available at http://www.frieze.com
/issue/article/how_has_art_changed/.
Chto Delat, “A Declaration on Politics, Knowledge and Art,”
available at http://www.chtodelat.org/index.php?option=
com_content&task=view&id=494&Item.
Brian Holmes, “Extradisciplinary Investigations: For a New
Critique of Institutions,” in Escape the Overcode: Activist Art
in the Control Society (Eindhoven: Van Abbemuseum, 2010)
105-6. See also Gerald Raunig, Art and Revolution: Transversal
Activism in the Long Twentieth Century, trans. Aileen Derieg
(Los Angeles: Semiotext(e), 2007).
Pascal Gielen and Sonja Lavaert, “The Dismeasure of Art:
An Interview with Paolo Virno,” Open #17 (2009), available
at http://www.skor.nl/article-4178-en.html.
On this subject, see Maude Barlow and Tony Clark, Blue
174
Notes
Gold: The Battle Against Corporate Theft of the World’s Water
(London: Earthscan Publications, 2002).
15. Benjamin writes that in German baroque drama, or plays of
sorrow, the content deals with historical life interpreted
through the vicissitudes of court life. The Prince is the
representative of history and his ultimate authority compels
either fear or pity. No real satisfaction, Benjamin argues, can
be had in the tyrant’s fall, for his fate is held to be
synonymous with that of the people. Rather like Christ,
royalty suffers in the name of mankind. An allegory fitting
of Benjamin’s Trauerspiel would be the underwater
conference held on October 17 of 2009 – only a few weeks
before the climate summit in Copenhagen – by Mohamed
Nasheed, the President of the Island nations of the
Maldives. If Copenhagen fails, the President said, “we are
all going to die.” For more on the Maldives case in relation
to global warming and rising sea levels, see Mark Lynas,
High Tide: News from a Warming World (London:
HarperCollins, 2004). See also Walter Benjamin, The Origin
of German Tragic Drama, trans. John Osborne (London:
Verso, [1977] 1990) 65.
16. Tuer writes, for example, that The Fall of Water is about class
struggle “after the end of revolution,” with the “disappearance of the proletariat from an image economy,” and
becoming “the mythic expression of the multitude’s
struggle for its very existence.” Dot Tuer, “The Politics of
Recognition,” in Condé and Beveridge: Class Works, 51-57. See
also Michael Hardt and Antonio Negri, Empire (Cambridge:
Harvard University Press, 2000) and Paolo Virno, A
Grammar of the Multitude: For an Analysis of Contemporary
Forms of Life (New York: Semiotext(e), 2004).
17. Email correspondence with Carole Condé and Karl
Beveridge, May 24, 2010.
175
The Neoliberal Undead
By Any Means Necessary: From the Revolutionary Art of
Emory Douglas to the Art Activism of Jackie Sumell
1.
Slavoj Žižek, “Class Struggle or Postmodernism? Yes,
Please!” in Judith Butler, Ernesto Laclau and Slavoj Žižek,
Contingency, Hegemony, Universality: Contemporary Dialogues
on the Left (London: Verso, 2000) 90-135.
2.
Slavoj Žižek, “Tolerance as an Ideological Category,” Critical
Inquiry #34 (Summer 2008) 660-82.
3.
Slavoj Žižek, Iraq: The Borrowed Kettle (London: Verso, 2004)
98.
4.
Alain Badiou, The Meaning of Sarkozy, trans. David Fernbach
(London: Verso, [2007] 2008) 113.
5.
This platform was written by Party co-founders Bobby Seale
and Huey Newton on October 22, 1966. What distinguished
the Panthers from other black civil rights groups was its
emphasis on the right to self-defense, and, following
Malcolm X’s break with the Nation of Islam, its position
against the xenophobia of black nationalists. Making use of
a California law that allowed citizens to carry unloaded
rifles in public, Seale and Newton created one of the key
elements in the original Panther image, which included
black leather jackets, black slacks, shiny shoes and berets – a
uniform inspired by a viewing of a film about the French
resistance. The first government action against the Panthers
was a repeal of the gun law. See Stephen Shames, The Black
Panthers: Photographs by Stephen Shames (New York:
Aperture, 2006).
6.
Mike Kelley cited in Sylvère Lotringer, “Consumed by
Myths,” in Premises: Invested Spaces in Visual Arts,
Architecture & Design from France: 1958-1998 (New York:
Guggenheim Museum, 1998) 33.
7.
Sam Durant, ed. Black Panther: The Revolutionary Art of Emory
Douglas (New York: Rizzoli, 2007).
8.
Colette Gaiter, “What Revolution Looks Like: The Work of
176
Notes
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
Black Panther Artist Emory Douglas,” in Durant, ed. Black
Panther, 95.
Greg Jung Morozumi, “Emory Douglas and the Third
World Cultural Revolution,” in Durant, ed. Black Panther,
136.
See Erika Doss, “‘Revolutionary Art Is a Tool for
Liberation’: Emory Douglas and Protest Aesthetics at the
Black Panther,” in Kathleen Cleaver and George Katsiaficas,
eds. Liberation, Imagination, and the Black Panther Party: A
New Look at the Panthers and their Legacy (New York:
Routledge, 2001) 175-87. For a more even treatment of the
subject of masculinism in the BPP, see Matthew W. Hughey,
“Black Aesthetics and Panther Rhetoric: A Critical Decoding
of Black Masculinity in The Black Panther,” Critical Inquiry
35:1 (2009) 29-56.
Homi K. Bhabha cited in Rosalyn Deutsche, “Surprising
Geography,” Annals of the Association of American
Geographers 85:1 (1995) 172.
See Angela Davis, “How Does Change Happen?” lecture
delivered at the University of California at Davis, October
10, 2006, available at http://www.youtube.com/watch
?v=Pc6RHtEbi0A.
Kathleen Cleaver, “Women, Power and Revolution,” in
Cleaver and Katsiaficas, eds. Liberation, Imagination, and the
Black Panther Party, 124.
Michael Schudson, “Cultural Studies and the Social
Construction of ‘Social Construction’: Notes on ‘Teddy Bear
Patriarchy’,” in Elizabeth Long, ed. From Sociology to
Cultural Studies: New Perspectives (Oxford: Blackwell, 1997)
380.
Schudson, “Cultural Studies and the Social Construction of
‘Social Construction’,” 389.
Slavoj Žižek, “A Plea for ‘Eurocentrism’,” in Žižek, The
Universal Exception: Selected Writings, Volume Two, eds. Rex
177
The Neoliberal Undead
17.
18.
19.
20.
21.
22.
Butler and Scott Stephens (London: Continuum, 2006) 187.
Angela Davis and Bettina Aptheker in Angela Davis and
other political prisoners, If They Come in the Morning (New
York: Signet, 1971) xiii.
Davis, “Political Prisoners, Prisons and Black Liberation,” in
Davis, If They Come in the Morning, 30-1.
For a detailed analysis of this case, see Scott Fleming,
“Lockdown at Angola: The Case of the Angola 3,” in Cleaver
and Katsiaficas, eds. Liberation, Imagination, and the Black
Panther Party, 229-36. See also www.angola3.org.
I first saw Sumell’s CAD video at the 2008 Dissident Art
exhibition organized by the Montreal Art + Anarchie
collective. See www.artdissidentart.com. The website for
Sumell’s series of projects is www.hermanshouse.org. I
interviewed Sumell in Montreal on February 10, 2010, after
a lecture she gave that was sponsored by the Leonard & Bina
Ellen Gallery, Concordia University, and the Goethe
Institute, Montreal.
Brian Holmes, “Risk of the New Vanguards,” contribution
to issue number 17 of Chto Delat, What Is to Be Done? Debates
on the Avant-Garde (2009), available at http://www.chtod
elat.org/images/pdfs/17_vanguard.pdf.
Noam Chomsky, Class Warfare: Noam Chomsky Interviewed by
David Barsamian (Vancouver: New Star Books, 1997) 31.
Afterthoughts on Engaged Art Practice: ATSA and the State of
Emergency
1.
Clement Greenberg, “Avant-Garde and Kitsch,” in Art and
Culture: Critical Essays (Boston: Beacon Press, 1961) 5.
2.
See Mary Jane Jacob, Michael Brenson, and Eva M. Olson,
Culture in Action: A Public Art Program of Sculpture Chicago
(Seattle: Bay Press, 1995); Suzanne Lacy, ed. Mapping the
Terrain: New Genre Public Art (Seattle: Bay Press, 1995);
Miwon Kwon, One Place after Another: Site-Specific Art and
178
Notes
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
Locational Identity (Cambridge: MIT Press, 2002); Claire
Bishop, “Antagonism and Relational Aesthetics,” October
#110 (Fall 2004) 51-79; Grant H. Kester, Conversation Pieces:
Community and Communication in Modern Art (Berkeley:
University of California Press, 2004); Bruce Barber,
Performance, [Performance] and Performers, Volume 2, ed. Marc
James Léger (Toronto: YYZBOOKS, 2007).
See Brian Holmes, “Extradisciplinary Investigations:
Towards a New Critique of Institutions,” in Escape the
Overcode: Activist Art in the Control Society (Eindhoven: Van
Abbemuseum, 2009) 98-123. Similar assertions are made by
Gene Ray and Gregory Sholette in “Introduction: Whither
Tactical Media?” Third Text 22:5 (September 2008) 519–24.
Martha Rosler, “In, Around, and Afterthoughts (On
Documentary Photography),” in Martha Rosler: 3 Works
(Halifax: Press of the Nova Scotia College of Art and
Design, 1981) 59-87.
Wolfgang Zinggl, “From the Object to the Concrete
Intervention,” in WochenKlausur: Sociopolitical Activism in
Art, ed. Zinggl (Vienna: Springer, 2001) 11.
Sentence number eighteen in Barber’s 1998 “Sentences on
Littoral Art” reads: “Littoralist artists acknowledge their
debt to history and respond positively to successful models
presented by the historical avant-gardes and neo-avantgardes of the more recent past.” See http://www.brucebarber.ca/novelsquat/index2.html.
Nato Thompson, “Trespassing Relevance,” in The
Interventionists: Users’ Manual for the Creative Disruption of
Everyday Life, ed. Thompson and Gregory Sholette
(Cambridge: MIT Press, 2004) 21-2.
Chto Delat, “A Declaration on Politics, Knowledge and Art,”
available at http://www.chtodelat.org/index.php?option=
com_content&task=view&id=494&Item.
See David Graeber, “Some Notes on ‘Activist Culture’,” in
179
The Neoliberal Undead
Direct Action: An Ethnography (Oakland: AK Press, 2009) 23962. The dilemma in the antinomy of alienation and
oppression, as Graeber states it, are the discrepancies in the
moral weight of struggle. On this I agree with Slavoj Žižek
that identity struggles often transform politico-economic
struggles into pseudo-psychoanalytic dramas of the subject
who is intolerant of the Other and unable to confront the
stranger within. Capitalism no longer stands in the way of
counter-cultural practices, especially since no individual
disposition can be made the object of a universal exemplariness. On the other hand, capitalism does actively thwart
socialist and revolutionary organization, especially where it
is effective. Here, the more utopian strains in the movement
have been somewhat complacent to the extent that people
have come to believe that community gardens and alternative lifestyles are in some way a threat to the status quo.
On this, see Marc James Léger, “Welcome to the Cultural
Goodwill Revolution: On Class Composition in the Age of
Classless Struggle,” Journal of Aesthetics and Protest #7 (2009),
available oat http://joaap.org/7/leger.html.
10. ATSA’s first project was a response to the 1997 headline that
Canadian banks had made more than seven billion dollars in
record profits, whereas the local shelter and service
provider, La Maison du Père, needed more than one hundred
pairs of socks for its homeless clients. A sculptural installation of ovens containing warm socks was set up by the
newly formed and unknown ATSA on the Place des Arts
esplanade in front of the Musée d’art contemporain de
Montréal. The former director of the museum, Marcel
Brisebois, allowed the sculpture to be brought inside the
museum’s lobby, giving ATSA an unexpected “foot in the
door” of the art world. Two years later, the City of Montreal
declined to allow the event to take place on Place ÉmilieGamelin, often frequented by junkies, and so ATSA collabo180
Notes
11.
12.
13.
14.
rated with a nearby private partner. In 2000 EU was refused
by both the Canadian Armed Forces and the City of
Montreal, and an impromptu event was organized on the
corner of Clark Street and Sainte-Catherine. Since 2002, the
Tremblay administration became a long-term partner,
allowing EU to take on the dimensions it is now known for
with its three white army-size tents and stage. By 2006 it
garnered routine media coverage and the group has been
approached by the cities of Calgary, Vancouver, and
Toronto to set up similar events in their jurisdictions.
See the 2009 EU page on ATSA’s web site: http://atsa.
qc.ca/projs/eu09/uk/motatsa.html.
See Sonia Pelletier, “An Encounter with ATSA,” in ATSA:
Quand l’art passe à l’action (When Art Takes Action) (Montreal:
Action Terroriste Socialement Acceptable, 2008) 11.
See Louis Jacob, “On Art and Wandering: État d’Urgence at
Place Émilie-Gamelin,” in ATSA: Quand l’art passe à l’action,
59.
Homelessness is also often thought of as a timeless
condition in relation to which there should be room in
society for people to simply fall out of normal sociality.
These kinds of arguments support neoliberal policies that
seek to disinvest in public services. Homelessness,
minimally, can be attributed not only to individual circumstances like drug addiction and mental illness, but to
economic processes, state planning, and social conflict. The
urban, in this regard, becomes a site for the reproduction of
capitalist social relations, transforming space into the
private ownership of real estate, understood as a
commodity that is traded for the purposes of profiteering.
State planning facilitates this process by regulating the
conflicts that arise and legitimizing capitalist exchange as
democratic. Under neoliberal policy, public resources are
used to subsidize urban development, for example, through
181
The Neoliberal Undead
15.
16.
17.
18.
private-public partnerships and by withdrawing social
services. The symptom of this privatization of land use,
according to Rosalyn Deutsche, is the creation of pseudopublic spaces and pseudo-historic districts, and the eviction
of residents who can no longer afford to live in gentrified
neighborhoods. As public resources are privatized and
manufacturing is moved offshore, employment becomes
scarce, leading to a new, precarious economy based on
nonproductive, service-sector employment. See Deutsche,
“Alternative Space,” in Brian Wallis, ed. If You Lived Here: The
City in Art, Theory, and Social Space (Seattle: Bay Press, 1991)
44-65.
See Michael Sorkin, ed. Variations on a Theme Park: The New
American City and the End of Public Space (New York: Hill and
Wang, 1992).
Although I did not manage to see it, the works on show
included a miniature cardboard favela by the Brazilian artist
Sérgio Cezar. Annie Roy told reporters that Cezar, whom
she met at the Havana Bienal, had been invited “to remind
people that [homelessness] is not just a local issue but a
global one.” Michael-Oliver Harding, “Favela Modeling,”
Montreal Mirror (November 26-December 2, 2009) 10.
The involvement of children in the serving of Le Banquet
cochon, a spectacular five-course meal, is appropriate,
especially considering that children in Canada account for
roughly 40 percent of food bank users. Despite government
promises to eliminate child poverty, it actually increased in
the mid-1990s and 2000s. The use of food banks in Canada
has increased by roughly 20 percent over the last two years.
See Ashifa Kassan, “Still Below the Poverty Line, 20 Years
Later,” rabble.ca (December 7, 2009), available at
http://www.rabble.ca/columnists/2009/12/still-below-thepoverty-line.
Slavoj Žižek, “Post-Wall,” London Review of Books (November
182
Notes
19.
20.
21.
22.
23.
24.
25.
26.
27.
28.
19, 2009), available at http://www.lrb.co.uk/v31/n22/slavojzizek/post-wall.
See Slavoj Žižek, “First as Tragedy, Then as Farce,” lecture
delivered at Cooper Union, October 14, 2009, available at
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tW1NIB9MmSo.
Martha Rosler, “Fragments of a Metropolitan Viewpoint,”
in Wallis, ed. If You Lived Here, 34.
See especially, Judith Butler, Ernesto Laclau, and Slavoj
Žižek, Contingency, Hegemony, Universality: Contemporary
Dialogues on the Left (London: Verso, 2000).
See Slavoj Žižek, The Universal Exception: Selected Writings,
Volume 2, ed. Rex Butler and Scott Stephens (London:
Continuum, 2006).
See for example, Paolo Virno, A Grammar of the Multitude:
For an Analysis of Contemporary Forms of Life (New York:
Semiotext(e), 2004).
Hal Foster, “Precarious,” Artforum (December 2009),
available
at
http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0268/is_4_48/ai_n563
88185/.
Hal Foster, “Precarious.”
Gerald Raunig, “The Monster Precariat,” Translate (2007),
available at http://translate.eipcp.net/strands/02/raunigstrands02en#redir.
Guy Sioui Durand addresses such conflicts when he
suggests that ATSA’s work combines a macro-political
aesthetic that complements alter-protesting along with
micro-political “citizen” interventions. See Durand, “The
Aesthetic of Outrage: Action Terroriste Socialement
Acceptable (ATSA) 1997–2007,” in ATSA: Quand l’art passe à
l’action, 21.
BAVO, “Introduction: Cultural Activism Today. The Art of
Over-Identification,” in BAVO, ed. Cultural Activism Today:
The Art of Over-Identification (Rotterdam: Episode, 2007) 7.
183
The Neoliberal Undead
29. BAVO, “Introduction: Cultural Activism Today. The Art of
Over-Identification,” 7. See also BAVO, “The Spectre of the
Avant-Garde: Contemporary Reassertions of the
Programme of Subversion in Cultural Production,” Andere
Sinema #176 (2006) 24-41.
30. The last time I heard this was on the occasion of former US
President George W. Bush’s visit to Montreal on October 22,
2009, to deliver a talk to the local Chamber of Commerce.
Among the companies represented at the talk was SNC
Lavalin, the corporate sponsor of the 1999 État d’Urgence.
The company allowed ATSA to organize the EU on its
privately owned plaza after the Bourque administration had
turned down the requested Place Émilie-Gamelin.
31. See Murray Dobbin, “Harper Pledges to Sabotage Climate
Change Agenda at G20,” rabble.ca (December 9, 2009),
available at http://www.rabble.ca/blogs/bloggers/murraydobbin/2009/12/harper-pledges-sabotage-climate-changeagenda-g20.
The Non-Productive Role of the Artist: The Creative Industries
in Canada
1.
Kirsty Robertson, “Crude Culture: The Creative Industries
in Canada,” Fuse Magazine (April 2008) 12-21.
2.
Robertson, “Crude Culture,” 21. I agree with Robertson that
this is odd since the primary purpose of the Summit was
clearly oriented toward the commercial promotion of
Canadian visual art.
3.
Jim Stanford, “Corporate Canada’s Enemy Lurks Within,”
rabble.ca (June 8, 2009), available at http://www.rabble.
ca/columnists/2009/06/corporate-canada-enemy-workwithin. As a point of fact, according to Maude Barlow and
Tony Clark, Canadians own a smaller portion of their
productive wealth than any other industrialized country.
See Barlow and Clark, Global Showdown: How the New
184
Notes
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
Activists are Fighting Global Corporate Rule (Toronto:
Stoddart, 2001) and Jim Stanford, Economics for Everyone: A
Short Guide to the Economics of Capitalism (Halifax: Fernwood
Publishing, 2008).
Henri Lefebvre, De L’État, Volume I: L’État dans le monde
moderne (Paris: 10/18 - Union Générale d’Éditions, 1976).
David Morley and Kevin Robins, “Spaces of Identity:
Communications Technologies and the Reconfiguration of
Europe,” Screen #30 (1989) 10-34.
Bill Readings, The University in Ruins (Cambridge: Harvard
University Press, 1996). See also Slavoj Žižek,
“Multiculturalism, or, the Cultural Logic of Multinational
Capitalism,” in Žižek, The Universal Exception: Selected
Writings, Volume Two, eds. Rex Butler and Scott Stephens
(London: Continuum, 2006) 151-82.
Marc James Léger, “The Colonial Copy,” paper presented at
the Universities Art Association of Canada Annual
Conference, 2005, available at http://legermj.type
pad.com/blog/2010/12/the-colonial-copy-ends-of-canadianart-history.html.
Alain Badiou interviewed in Libération (January 26, 2009),
available at http://www.lacan.com/article/?page_id=125.
“Leaders’ Debate: The Arts,” National Post (October 2, 2008),
available at http://www.nationalpost.com/news/globalvideo/index.html.
Stephen Harper cited in the Montreal Mirror (August 14-20,
2008) 5.
David Akin, “Conservatives cancel $4.7M arts travel
program,” The Ottawa Citizen (August 8, 2008), available at
http://www.canada.com/ottawacitizen/news/story.html.
National Post Editorial Board, “What Counts as ‘Culture’?”
National Post (October 06, 2008).
Variant Affinity Group, “Comment,” Variant (Winter 2008),
available
at
185
The Neoliberal Undead
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21.
22.
23.
24.
http://www.variant.randomstate.org/33texts/1_v33comment
33.html
Gregory Sholette, “Disciplining the Avant-Garde: The
United States versus The Critical Art Ensemble,” Circa
(Summer 2005) 52.
See Richard Sennett and Saskia Sassen, “Guantánamo in
Germany,” The Guardian (August 21, 2007), available at
http://www.education/guardian.co.uk/higher/comment/stor
y/.
See for example, BAVO, “From the Post-Socialist Dutch City
to the Retro-Socialist City...and Back! Or, how to subvert
today’s imperative to re-stage non-capitalist social relations
in this so-called post-utopian age?” (2008), available at
http://www.bavo.biz/texts/view/15.
Maurizio Lazzarato, “Construction of Cultural Labour
Market,” Framework (January 2007), available at
http://www.framework.fi/6_2007/locating/artikkelit/lazzarat
o.html.
Michael Hardt and Antonio Negri, Empire (Cambridge:
Harvard University Press, 2000) 292.
Hardt and Negri, Empire, 289-90.
Hardt and Negri, Empire, 294.
These estimates are based on the work of Fred Moseley and
Jim Stanford.
Richard Florida, The Rise of the Creative Class: And How It’s
Transforming Work, Leisure, Community and Everyday Life
(New York: Basic Books, 2002).
See Richard Florida, The Flight of the Creative Class: The New
Global Competition for Talent (New York: HarperCollins,
2005).
Angela McRobbie, “‘Everyone is Creative’: Artists as
Pioneers of the New Economy?” in Marc James Léger, ed.
Culture and Contestation in the New Century (London:
Intellect, 2011) 79-92.
186
Notes
25. Aras Ozgun, “Creative Industries: Neo-Liberalism as Mass
Deception,” in Léger, ed. Culture and Contestation in the New
Century, 107-23.
26. On this see Slavoj Žižek, The Puppet and the Dwarf: The
Perverse Core of Christianity (Cambridge: The MIT Press,
2003).
27. Slavoj Žižek, The Parallax View (Cambridge: The MIT Press,
2006) 318.
28. Stefan Christoff, “Imagine that, Yoko Ono nails Stephen
Harper on Copyright Infringement,” rabble.ca (April 7,
2011), available at http://www.rabble.ca/news/2011/04
/imagine-yoko-ono-nails-stephen-harper-copyrightinfringement.
29. “You Tube Pulls Harper Imagine Clip,” CBC News (April 6,
2011), available at http://www.cbc.ca/news/politics
/canadavotes2011/story/2011/04/06/cv-harper-imagineyoutube.html.
Protesting Degree Zero: On Black Bloc Tactics, Culture and
Building the Movement
1.
The G8, or Group of Eight, is a forum for the member
nations of eight of the world’s major industrialized
economies: France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the U.K., the U.S.,
the E.U. and Canada. Alterglobalization critics of the G8
and the larger G20 argue that the member states of the two
groups are responsible for major global problems that
derive from their promotion of neoliberal market ideology.
According to the Marxist social scientist David Harvey,
neoliberal institutions like the G8 propose that human wellbeing must be advanced through property rights, free
markets and free trade. State interventions must be kept at
a minimum and markets should be allowed to bring into
effect the benefits of “creative destruction” and of exchange
values regardless of attachments to the land or habits of the
187
The Neoliberal Undead
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
heart. Neoliberalism seeks to bring, he writes, “all human
interaction into the domain of the market.” Harvey adds
that unlike the previous welfare state, neoliberal policies
have not resulted in higher rates of economic growth but
have instead contributed to greater social and class hierarchization. Increasing social inequality, he argues, is structural to the role of neoliberalization. See David Harvey, A
Brief History of Neoliberalism (Oxford: Oxford University
Press, 2005) 2-13.
See Canadian Press, “Suspects arrested after emerging from
manhole cover,” CP24 (June 27, 2010), available at
http://www.cp24.com/servlet/an/local/CTVNews/20100627/
100627_manhole/20100627/?hub=CP24Home.
See Natalie Alcoba, “Banker vs. looter draws a million hits,”
The National Post (July 3, 2010), available at
http://www.nationalpost.com/2010/07/03/banker-vs-looterdraws-a-million-hits.
Slavoj Žižek, Violence: Six Sideways Glances (New York:
Picador, 2008) 1-2.
The “Toronto weekend” involved overlapping meetings of
the G8 in Huntsville, Ontario on June 25 and 26, and the G20
in downtown Toronto, June 26 and 27.
Krystalline Kraus, “G8/G20 Communiqué: An activist’s
guide to the G20 protests, part one,” rabble.ca (June 22, 2010).
Jesse McLean, “Behind the Black Bloc,” Toronto Star
(Saturday, June 26, 2010).
Judy Rebick, “Toronto Is Burning! Or Is It?” rabble.ca (June
27, 2010).
In contrast to Rebick, Klein refused to denounce the “kids in
black who smashed windows and burned cop cars,” and
instead focused on denouncing heads of state. See Naomi
Klein, “My City Feels Like a Crime Scene,” rabble.ca (June 28,
2010). See also Klein, “Naomi Klein to Police: ‘Don’t play
public relations, do your goddamned job!’” rabble.ca (June
188
Notes
10.
11.
12.
13.
29, 2010).
Rebick, “Toronto Is Burning.” In a later statement, Rebick
writes: “In the week leading up to the summit, Conservative
Cabinet Minister Stockwell Day signaled a particular focus
on ‘anarchists’ for this security crackdown. This simplistic
targeting of a long-standing political tradition was further
used by police to justify assaults on all demonstrators as
well as the round-up of activists by claiming they were
hunting for the ‘Black Bloc.’ This criminalization of activists
aimed to silence attempts to address the real issues
presented by the G20.” See Rebick, “Toronto Call: No more
police state tactics,” rabble.ca (July 1, 2010).
Fred Wilson, “Toronto and the G20: Two Worlds, Two
Realities,” rabble.ca (June 28, 2010). A similar denunciation
of Black Bloc tactics came from a representative of the
Canadian Union of Public Employees (Ontario): “What we
have witnessed is nothing short of the abandonment of the
rule of law, both by a small group who took part in the
protests, and by a massive and heavily armed police force
who were charged with overseeing them. (...) And it’s a sad
day when some of those, who feel powerless to change the
direction of their elected leaders, find in that feeling of
powerlessness an excuse to break the law and vandalize the
property of their fellow citizens and who, in doing so,
silence the legitimate voices of so many others whose
commitment to protest and dissent is matched by their
rejection of violence and vandalism.” Cited in Jeff Shantz,
“Their Laws – Our Loss,” rabble.ca (July 15, 2010).
Murray Dobbin, “Is this what a police state looks like?”
rabble.ca (June 30, 2010).
On the subject of police provocation and the distinction
between bourgeois and proletarian law, see the classic text
by Victor Serge, What Every Radical Should Know About State
Repression (Melbourne: Ocean Press, [1926] 2005).
189
The Neoliberal Undead
14. Krystalline Kraus, “G8/G20 Communiqué: Media coverage
and public opinion polls,” rabble.ca (July 3, 2010).
15. See David Graeber, Direct Action: An Ethnography (Oakland,
CA: AK Press, 2009).
16. Graeber, Direct Action, 224.
17. François Dupuis-Déri, Les Black Blocs: La liberté et l’égalité se
manifestent (Montreal: Lux, 2003) 10.
18. Dupuis-Déri, Les Black Blocs, 12.
19. Michael Albert, “On Trashing and Movement Building,”
(December 1999), available at http://www.3communications.org/on-trashing-and-movement-organizing-bymichael-albert.
20. François Dupuis-Déri, “G20: N’attendez plus les barbares,
ils sont là!” Le Devoir (June 29, 2010).
21. François Dupuis-Déri, “Penser l’action directe des Black
Blocs,” Politix 17:68 (2004) 80.
22. Dupuis-Déri, “Penser l’action directe des Black Blocs,” 94.
23. Žižek, Violence, 36.
24. Graeber, Direct Action, 254.
25. Raoul Vaneigem, The Revolution of Everyday Life, trans.
Donald Nicholson-Smith (London: Rebel Press, 2001) 47.
26. Vaneigem, The Revolution of Everyday Life, 110.
27. Vaneigem, The Revolution of Everyday Life, 260.
28. Vaneigem, The Revolution of Everyday Life, 278.
29. Graeber, Direct Action, 502.
30. See Historical Film Services, “The Battle of Orgreave:
Recreating the Climactic Clash of the 1984 Miners’ Strike,”
available at http://www.historicalfilmservices.com/orgreave
.htm.
31. Claire Bishop, “The Social Turn,” Artforum (February 2006)
182. Kester’s exact statement, in response to Bishop’s article,
is as follows: “As delightful as it is to hear yet another
disquisition on the glories of The Battle of Orgreave, 2001, or
Dogville (2003), a more complete account of collaborative art
190
Notes
32.
33.
34.
35.
36.
37.
38.
39.
40.
41.
must begin with some measured reflection on the diversity
of practices encompassed by that term.” Grant Kester,
“Another Turn,” Artforum (May 2006) 22. It should also be
mentioned that Bishop has more recently been more appreciative of Deller’s project. See Claire Bishop, Artificial Hells:
Participatory Art and the Politics of Spectatorship (London:
Verso, 2012) 30-7.
Katie Kitamura, “‘Recreating Chaos’: Jeremy Deller’s The
Battle of Orgreave,” available at http://www.anu.edu.au/hrc
/research_platforms/RE-Enactment/Papers/kitamurakatie.pdf.
Maria Hlavajova, “Of Training, Imitation and Fiction: A
Conversation with Aernout Mik,” in Rosi Braidotti, Charles
Esche and Maria Hlavajova, eds. Citizens and Subjects: The
Netherlands, for Example (Zürich: JRP Ringier, 2007) 33.
Mik cited in Hlavajova, “Of Training, Imitation and
Fiction,” 43.
Mik cited in Hlavajova, “Of Training, Imitation and
Fiction,” 36.
Oliver Ressler cited in “How Do the Fittest Survive?
Interview by Elena Sorokina,” Untitled #43 (2007), available
at http://www.ressler.at/how-do-the-fittest-survive/.
Oliver Ressler, statement for The Fittest Survive (2006),
video, 23 minutes, available at http://www.ressler.at/
the_fittest_survive/.
Theodor Adorno, “Transparencies on Film,” New German
Critique #24/25 (Fall/Winter 1981-82) 199-205.
Slavoj Žižek, “Lenin’s Choice,” in Revolution at the Gates: A
Selection of Writings by V.I. Lenin from February to October
1917 (London: Verso, 2002) 227.
Mao Zedong cited in John Ellis, “Ideology and Subjectivity,”
in Stuart Hall et al., eds. Culture, Media, Language (London:
Hutchinson Education, 1980) 188.
See Konrad Becker and Jim Fleming, eds. Critical Strategies:
191
The Neoliberal Undead
42.
43.
44.
45.
46.
47.
48.
49.
50.
Perspectives on New Cultural Practices (Brooklyn:
Autonomedia, 2010).
Jim Fleming in Critical Strategies, 59.
Steve Kurtz in Critical Strategies, 25-26.
Graeber, Direct Action, 299. Gerald Raunig, A Thousand
Machines: A Concise Philosophy of the Machine as Social
Movement (Los Angeles: Semiotext(e), 2010) 16.
Raunig, A Thousand Machines, 34, 57-8.
Raunig, A Thousand Machines, 60.
Gen Doy, “Women, Class and Photography: The Paris
Commune of 1871,” in Seeing and Consciousness: Women,
Class and Representation (Oxford: Berg, 1995) 104.
It is perhaps worth mentioning that the leader of our bus to
Toronto gave instructions while drinking a Coke brand cola.
Similar ironies were played out on the June 25 march by a
leftist group that was chanting, “Down with Capitalism!
Long Live Socialism!” Every now and then they would
reverse the terms: “Down with Socialism! Long Live
Capitalism!”
Ellis, “Ideology and Subjectivity,” 190.
See Slavoj Žižek, Looking Awry: An Introduction to Jacques
Lacan through Popular Culture (Cambridge: The MIT Press,
1991).
The Québec Maple Spring, The Red Square and After
1.
See “Droits de scolarité: Marois annule la hausse et une
partie de la loi 78,” Le Devoir (September 20, 2012), available
online at http://www.ledevoir.com/politique/quebec/35962
4/droits-de-scolarite-marois-annule-la-hause-maismaintient-la-bonification-des-prets-et-bourses.
2.
Pier Paolo Pasolini, “Civil War,” in Jack Hirschman, ed. In
Danger: A Pasolini Anthology (San Francisco: City Lights
Books, 2010) 21.
3.
See most notably, Stéphane Hessel’s Time for Outrage! (New
192
Notes
York and Boston: Twelve, [2010] 2011).
4.
For a comparison of democratic versus dialectical materialism, see Bruno Bosteels, Badiou and Politics (Durham and
London: Duke University Press, 2011).
5.
Bosteels, Badiou and Politics, 30-1.
6.
See “Nous sommes avenir: Manifeste de la CLASSE,” July
2012, available at http://issuu.com/asse.solidarite/docs/man
ifeste_classe/3. Also available in English as “The CLASSE
Manifesto: Share our future,” rabble.ca (July 12, 2012)
http://rabble.ca/blogs/bloggers/campus-notes/2012/07
/classe-manifesto-share-our-future. That the struggle
against neoliberal capitalism is understood by the CLASSE
in liberal democratic terms, involving a diversity of
struggles is confirmed by the press conferences given by
spokespersons Gabriel Nadeau-Dubois and Jeanne
Reynolds. See for instance “La CLASSE veut se débarasser
des néolibéraux,” Le Devoir (July 13, 2012), available at
http://www.ledevoir.com/societe/actualites-en-societe
/354508/la-classe-veut-se-debarrasser-des-neoliberaux.
7.
See David Harvey, The Enigma of Capital (Oxford: Oxford
University Press, 2010) 253-9.
8.
Gregory Sholette, “Occupology, Swarmology, Whateverology: The city of (dis)order versus the people’s archive,”
Art Journal web-only (Winter 2011), available at http://
artjournal.collegeart.org/?p=2395.
9.
Situationist International and students of Strasbourg, “On
the Poverty of Student Life (1966),” in Ken Knabb, ed.
Situationist International Anthology (Berkeley: Bureau of
Public Secrets, 1981) 321.
10. Bruno Bosteels, The Actuality of Communism (London and
New York : Verso, 2011) 5-6.
11. Grant Kester, “The Sound of Breaking Glass, Part I:
Spontaneity and Consciousness in Revolutionary Theory,”
Journal #30 (December 2011), available at http://www.e193
The Neoliberal Undead
flux.com/journal/the-sound-of-breaking-glass-part-ispontaneity-and-consciousness-in-revolutionary-theory/,
and “The Sound of Breaking Glass, Part II: Agonism and the
Taming of Dissent,” Journal #31 (January 2012), available at
http://www.e-flux.com/journal/the-sound-of-breakingglass-part-ii-agonism-and-the-taming-of-dissent/.
12. See “Violence et carré rouge: Christine St-Pierre s’excuse,”
Radio-Canada.ca (June 13, 2012), available at http://www.
radio-canada.ca/nouvelles/Politique
/2012/06/13/002-stpierre-excuse-carre-violence.shtml.
13. On this subject see Alain Badiou, The Meaning of Sarkozy,
trans. David Fernbach (London and New York: Verso [2007]
2008).
14. Slavoj Žižek, “Less Than Nothing: Slavoj Žižek in
Conversation with Jonathan Derbyshire,” lecture at Central
Saint Martin’s, King’s Cross, June 12, 2012, available at
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hvWkWYHmMxg.
Globalization and the Politics of Culture: An Interview with
Imre Szeman
1.
Imre Szeman, “Imagining the Future: Globalization,
Postmodernism and Criticism,” Frame: Tijdschrift voor
Literatuurwetenschap 19:2 (2006) 16-30; available at
http://individual.utoronto.ca/nishashah/Drafts/Szeman.pdf.
2.
See Nicolas Bourriaud, The Radicant (New York: Lukas &
Sternberg, 2009).
3.
Peter Bürger, Theory of the Avant-Garde, trans. Michael Shaw
(Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, [1974] 1984).
4.
Pierre Bourdieu, Distinction: A Social Critique of the Judgement
of Taste, trans. Richard Nice (Cambridge: Harvard
University Press, [1979] 1984).
5.
Jacques Rancière, The Politics of Aesthetics, trans. Gabriel
Rockhill (London: Continuum, 2004) 19.
6.
Nicolas Bourriaud, Relational Aesthetics, trans. Simon
194
Notes
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
Pleasance et al. (Paris: Les presses du réel, [1998] 2002).
Hal Foster, “Chat Rooms,” in Claire Bishop, ed. Participation
(Cambridge: The MIT Press, 2006) 193.
Fredric Jameson, “Transformations of the Image in
Postmodernity,” in The Cultural Turn: Selected Writings on the
Postmodern, 1983-1998 (New York: Verso, 1998) 135.
Mikkel Bolt Rasmussen, “Scattered (Western Marxist-Style)
Remarks about Contemporary Art, Its Contradictions and
Difficulties,” Third Text 25:2 (2011) 199.
See Alain Badiou, The Communist Hypothesis, trans. David
Macey and Steve Corcoran (London: Verso, [2008] 2010).
Daniele Archibugi, “Cosmopolitical Democracy,” in
Archibugi, ed. Debating Cosmopolitics (New York: Verso,
2003) 1-15.
Timothy
Brennan,
“Cosmopolitanism
and
Internationalism,” in Daniele Archibugi, ed. Debating
Cosmopolitics, 42.
Immanuel Kant, “Perpetual Peace: A Philosophical Sketch,”
in An Answer to the Question: What is Enlightenment?, trans.
H.B. Nisbet (New York: Penguin Books, 2009) 29.
Immanuel Kant, “Perpetual Peace,” 38.
Giorgio Agamben, The Coming Community, trans. Michael
Hardt (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, [1990]
1993).
Imre Szeman, “Marxist Literary Criticism, Then and Now,”
Mediations 24:2 (Spring 2009), available at http://www.
mediationsjournal.org/articles/marxist-literary-criticismthen-and-now.
Eric Cazdyn and Imre Szeman. After Globalization (Oxford:
Wiley-Blackwell, 2011).
David Harvey, “Feral Capitalism Hits The Streets,” The
Bullet (August 12, 2011).
Erik Olin Wright, Envisioning Real Utopias (New York: Verso,
2010). The Power of Community: How Cuba Survived Peak Oil
195
The Neoliberal Undead
20.
21.
22.
23.
24.
25.
26.
27.
28.
(USA, 2006, Faith Morgan).
Hal Foster, “Towards a Grammar of Emergency,” New Left
Review #68 (2011) 105.
Hal Foster, “Towards a Grammar of Emergency,” 114.
Raymond Williams, Marxism and Literature (Oxford: Oxford
University Press, 1977).
George Yúdice, The Expediency of Culture: Uses of Culture in
the Global Era, Durham: Duke University Press, 2003.
Florida, Richard. The Rise of the Creative Class: And How It’s
Transforming Work, Leisure, Community and Everyday Life
(New York: Basic Books, 2002).
Imre Szeman, “Neoliberals Dressed in Black; or, the Traffic
in Creativity,” English Studies in Canada 36:1 (2010) 15-38.
Yúdice, The Expediency of Culture, 9.
Gerald Raunig, Art and Revolution: Transversal Activism in the
Long Twentieth Century, trans. Aileen Derieg (Los Angeles:
Semiotext(e), 2007) 17-8.
Rasmussen, “Scattered (Western Marxist-Style) Remarks
about Contemporary Art, Its Contradictions and
Difficulties,” 199.
196
Contemporary culture has eliminated both the concept of the
public and the figure of the intellectual. Former public spaces –
both physical and cultural – are now either derelict or colonized
by advertising. A cretinous anti-intellectualism presides,
cheerled by expensively educated hacks in the pay of
multinational corporations who reassure their bored readers
that there is no need to rouse themselves from their interpassive
stupor. The informal censorship internalized and propagated by
the cultural workers of late capitalism generates a banal
conformity that the propaganda chiefs of Stalinism could only
ever have dreamt of imposing. Zer0 Books knows that another
kind of discourse – intellectual without being academic, popular
without being populist – is not only possible: it is already
flourishing, in the regions beyond the striplit malls of so-called
mass media and the neurotically bureaucratic halls of the
academy. Zer0 is committed to the idea of publishing as a
making public of the intellectual. It is convinced that in
the unthinking, blandly consensual culture in which we live,
critical and engaged theoretical reflection is more important
than ever before.