Baudrillard K
Baudrillard K
Baudrillard K
The current consolidation of American Power has relegated war to the status of
a non-event. Single tracked globalization has monopolized all the channels of
international conflict and protest in order to maintain the normal operations of
U.S Intervention, which precludes the occurrence of any event that disrupts the
smooth functioning of the western order. Even as the 1AC claims to reduce
military presence, it should be read as another triumph narrative wherein, like
Vietnam, America loses the war but wins the movie. The 1AC is nothing other
than the latest, greatest iteration of Coppola’s Apocalypse Now. This strategy of
global policing, of the reconciliation of all forms of violent antagonism through
the rhetoric of alliances and cooperation, is an attempt to install an
international order that is decked out in the signs of Western Identity and all
societies falling outside of the re-assured order utilitarian societies, all pre-
capitalist, symbolic spaces, must be annihilated on a global scale. The AFF’s
politics is nothing short of demilitarization in the name of total liquidation of all
difference.
---China link – the 1AC completes the project of rendering China a Western subject rather than a
radically other Eastern culture – they are recruited as America’s great apprentice in the global
play of power, a strategy operative since the Nixon Administration
Baudrillard 95. Jean Baudrillard, Simulacra and Simulation: The Precession of Simulacra, pg.
37-40xxx
The simultaneity of two events in the month of July 1975 illustrated this in a striking manner:
the linkup in space of the two American and Soviet supersatellites, apotheosis of peaceful
coexistence - the suppression by the Chinese of ideogrammatic writing and conversion to the
the "orbital" instantiation of an abstract and
Roman alphabet. The latter signifies
modelized system of signs, into whose orbit all the once unique forms of
style and writing will be reabsorbed. The satellization of language: the
means for the Chinese to enter the system of peaceful coexistence, which
is inscribed in their heavens at precisely the same time by the linkup of
the two satellites. Orbital flight of the Big Two, neutralization and
homogenization of everyone else on earth. Yet, despite this deterrence by
the orbital power - the nuclear or molecular code - events continue at
ground level, misfortunes are even more numerous, given the global
process of the contiguity and simultaneity of data. But, subtly, they no
longer have any meaning, they are no longer anything but the duplex
effect of simulation at the summit. The best example can only be that of the
war in Vietnam, because it took place at the intersection of a maximum
historical and "revolutionary" stake, and of the installation of this
deterrent authority. What meaning did this war have, and wasn't its unfolding a means of
sealing the end of history in the decisive and culminating historic event of our era? Why did this
Why did
war, so hard, so long, so ferocious, vanish from one day to the next as if by magic?
this American defeat (the largest reversal in the history of the USA) have
no internal repercussions in America? If it had really signified the failure
of the planetary strategy of the United States, it would necessarily have
completely disrupted its internal balance and the American political
system. Nothing of the sort occurred. Something else, then, took place.
This war, at bottom, was nothing but a crucial episode of peaceful
coexistence. It marked the arrival of China to peaceful coexistence. The
nonintervention of China obtained and secured after many years, Chinas
apprenticeship to a global modus vivendi, the shift from a global strategy
of revolution to one of shared forces and empires, the transition from a
radical alternative to political alternation in a system now essentially
regulated (the normalization of Peking - Washington relations): this was
what was at stake in the war in Vietnam, and in this sense, the USA pulled
out of Vietnam but won the war. And the war ended "spontaneously"
when this objective was achieved. That is why it was deescalated,
demobilized so easily. This same reduction of forces can be seen on the
field. The war lasted as long as elements irreducible to a healthy politics
and discipline of power, even a Communist one, remained unliquidated.
When at last the war had passed into the hands of regular troops in the North and escaped that
of the resistance, the war could stop: it had attained its objective. The stake is thus that of a
political relay. As soon as the Vietnamese had proved that they were no
longer the carriers of an unpredictable subversion, one could let them
take over. That theirs is a Communist order is not serious in the end: it had proved itself, it
could be trusted. It is even more effective than capitalism in the liquidation of "savage" and
archaic precapitalist structures. Same scenario in the Algerian war. The other
aspect of this war and of all wars today: behind the armed violence, the
murderous antagonism of the adversaries - which seems a matter of life
and death, which is played out as such (or else one could never send
people to get themselves killed in this kind of thing), behind this
simulacrum of fighting to the death and of ruthless global stakes the two
adversaries are fundamentally in solidarity against something else,
unnamed, never spoken, but whose objective outcome in war, with the
equal complicity of the two adversaries, is total liquidation. Tribal,
communitarian, precapitalist structures, every form of exchange, of
language, of symbolic organization, that is what must be abolished, that is
the object of murder in war - and war itself, in its immense, spectacular
death apparatus, is nothing but the medium of this process of the
terrorist rationalization of the social - the murder on which sociality will
be founded, whatever its allegiance, Communist or capitalist. Total
complicity, or division of labor between two adversaries (who may even
consent to enormous sacrifices for it) for the very end of reshaping and
domesticating social relations. "The North Vietnamese were advised to countenance a
scenario for liquidating the American presence in the course of which, of course, one must save
face." This scenario: the extremely harsh bombardments of Hanoi. Their untenable character
must not conceal the fact that they were nothing but a simulacrum to enable the Vietnamese to
seem to countenance a compromise and for Nixon to make the Americans swallow the
withdrawal of their troops. The game was already won, nothing was objectively
at stake but the verisimilitude of the final montage. The moralists of war,
the holders of high wartime values should not be too discouraged: the
war is no less atrocious for being only a simulacrum - the flesh suffers just
the same, and the dead and former combatants are worth the same as in
other wars. This objective is always fulfilled, just like that of the charting
of territories and of disciplinary sociality. What no longer exists is the
adversity of the adversaries, the reality of antagonistic causes, the
ideological seriousness of war. And also the reality of victory or defeat,
war being a process that triumphs well beyond these appearances.
In any case, the pacification (or the deterrence) that dominates
us today is
beyond war and peace, it is that at every moment war and peace are
equivalent. "War is peace," said Orwell. There also, the two differential poles
implode into each other, or recycle one another - a simultaneity of
contradictions that is at once the parody and the end of every dialectic .
Thus one can completely miss the truth of a war: namely, that it was
finished well before it started, that there was an end to war at the heart
of the war itself, and that perhaps it never started. Many other events
(the oil crisis, etc.) never started, never existed, except as artificial
occurrences - abstract, ersatz, and as artifacts of history, catastrophes and
crises destined to maintain a historical investment under hypnosis. The
media and the official news service are only there to maintain the illusion
of an actuality, of the reality of the stakes, of the objectivity of facts . All
the events are to be read backward, or one becomes aware (as with the
Communists "in power" in Italy the retro, posthumous rediscovery of the gulags and Soviet
dissidents like the almost contemporary discovery, by a moribund ethnology, of the lost
"difference" of Savages) that all these things
arrived too late, with a history of
delay, a spiral of delay, that they long ago exhausted their meaning and
only live from an artificial effervescence of signs, that all these events
succeed each other without logic, in the most contradictory, complete
equivalence, in a profound indifference to their consequences (but this is
because there are none: they exhaust themselves in their spectacular
promotion) - all "newsreel" footage thus gives the sinister impression of
kitsch, of retro and porno at the same time - doubtless everyone knows
this, and no one really accepts it. The reality of simulation is unbearable -
crueler than Artaud's Theater of Cruelty, which was still an attempt to
create a dramaturgy of life, the last gasp of an ideality of the body, of
blood, of violence in a system that was already taking it away, toward a
reabsorption of all the stakes without a trace of blood. For us the trick has
been played. All dramaturgy, and even all real writing of cruelty has
disappeared. Simulation is the master, and we only have a right to the
retro, to the phantom, parodic rehabilitation of all lost referentials.
Everything still unfolds around us, in the cold light of deterrence
(including Artaud, who has the right like everything else to his revival, to a
second existence as the referential of cruelty).
This is why nuclear proliferation does not increase the risk of either an
atomic clash or an accident - save in the interval when the "young"
powers could be tempted to make a nondeterrent, "real" use of it (as the
Americans did in Hiroshima - but precisely only they had a right to this
"use value" of the bomb, all of those who have acquired it since will be
deterred from using it by the very fact of possessing it). Entry into the
atomic club, so prettily named, very quickly effaces (as unionization does
in the working world) any inclination toward violent intervention.
Responsibility, control, censure, self-deterrence always grow more rapidly
than the forces or the weapons at our disposal: this is the secret of the
social order. Thus the very possibility of paralyzing a whole country by
flicking a switch makes it so that the electrical engineers will never use
this weapon: the whole myth of the total and revolutionary strike
crumbles at the very moment when the means are available - but alas
precisely because those means are available. Therein lies the whole
process of deterrence.
It is thus perfectly probable that one day we will see nuclear powers
export atomic reactors, weapons, and bombs to every latitude. Control by
threat will be replaced by the more effective strategy of pacification
through the bomb and through the possession of the bomb. The "little"
powers, believing that they are buying their independent striking force,
will buy the virus of deterrence, of their own deterrence. The same goes for the
atomic reactors that we have already sent them: so many neutron bombs knocking
out all historical virulence, all risk of explosion. In this sense, the nuclear
everywhere inaugurates an accelerated process of implosion, it freezes
everything around it, it absorbs all living energy.
The nuclear is at once the culminating point of available energy and the maximization of energy
control systems. Lockdown and control increase in direct proportion to (and undoubtedly even
faster than) liberating potentialities. This was already the aporia of the modern
revolution. It is still the absolute paradox of the nuclear. Energies freeze
in their own fire, they deter themselves. One can no longer imagine what
project, what power, what strategy, what subject could exist behind this
enclosure, this vast saturation of a system by its own forces, now
neutralized, unusable, unintelligible, nonexplosive - except for the
possibility of an explosion toward the center, of an implosion where all
these energies would be abolished in a catastrophic process (in the literal
sense, that is to say in the sense of a reversion of the whole cycle toward
a minimal point, of a reversion of energies toward a minimal threshold ).
In a world of total American dominance, the world order finds itself
everywhere opposed by hostile forces; the Chinese state has allied itself with
the American leadership in the fourth world war: an attempt to reinstate the
hegemony of the global via the War on Terror.
Nordin 14 (Dr. Astrid Nordin, Lecturer in the Department of Politics, Philosophy and
Religion at Lancaster University, “Radical Exoticism: Baudrillard and Others’ Wars,” International
Journal of Baudrillard Studies, Volume 11, Number 2, Special Issue: Baudrillard and War, May,
2014, http://www2.ubishops.ca/baudrillardstudies/vol-11_2/v11-2-norden.html)//AG
III. Chinese approaches to war Before I venture into some discussion of contemporary Chinese modes of war, I shall state the obvious: what I discuss
here is merely a small selection of what one could write of as Chinese wars. There is a large and varied literature engaging the varied traditions of
Chinese strategic culture, the numerous cultural expressions that deal with the theme of war, not to mention the Chinese military in foreign policy. In
what follows I outline three dimensions of contemporary Chinese ‘war’ in order to bring out a number of contrast and themes that have some bearing
on Baudrillard’s discussion of war. I turn, first, to the People’s Republic of China’s participation in the war on terror. I thereafter contrast this allegedly
modern and Western-led war with contemporary rhetoric in Chinese academic and policy discourse, which draws on Ancient Chinese philosophy. This
discourse has focused on the pre-emption of war in conjunction with the language of harmony, innate peacefulness and soft power, portraying such
attitudes in opposition to the West. Having outlined a number of areas where I think Baudrillard’s discussions of war can shed some light on this
allegedly Chinese ontology of war, I thereafter turn to Chinese actors or discourses that act out war in other modes, including in popular culture and
propaganda. How should we understand these simultaneous approaches to war, in relation to the disappearance of war that Baudrillard and others
have described in modern Western practices? (i). Chinese participation in the war on terror As described above, there are aspects of Baudrillard’s
writing where all alternatives to American achieved utopia appear to be erased for
Baudrillard (Beck 2009: 110). In the final parts of America, for example, simulation is portrayed as a means of
the Sino-Afghan border and beyond. In Baudrillard’s view, the 9/11 attacks
represented “the clash of triumphant globalization at war with itself” and
unfolded a “fourth world war”: The first put an end to European supremacy and to the era of colonialism; the second
put an end to Nazism; and the third to Communism. Each one brought us progressively closer to the
single world order of today, which is now nearing its end, everywhere
opposed, everywhere grappling with hostile forces (Baudrillard, 2003b). In this new
fractal state of war and hostility, the Chinese state has joined forces with
the American leadership to reinstate the hegemony of the global (of
which they have surely dreamt, just like the rest of us). To the American
unilateral war on terror in Afghanistan and George W. Bush’s call “you are either with us or against us”, the
Chinese government responded with a (perhaps reluctant) “we are with you!” This wish to
be part of the global American self has not meant, however, the full contribution to the war effort that some American representatives may have
hoped. China has, since around the time of 9/11 shifted from being extremely
reluctant to condone or participate in any form of “peacekeeping”
missions, including under United Nations (UN) flag, to being the UN Security Council member
that contributes most to UN peacekeeping missions. Much of this participation has taken the
form of non-combatant personal. Nonetheless, China has been an actively involved party in
‘Operation Enduring Freedom’. It has provided police training for
Afghanistan’s security forces, as well as mine-clearance. Though it was
opposed to the US invasion of Iraq without UN mandate, China has
emerged as one of the biggest beneficiaries of the occupation, as it is one
of the biggest winners of oil contracts in Iraq. In both Afghanistan and Iraq, China has been accused of
‘free-riding’ on American efforts, but China has nonetheless been clearly positioned as part of the
participating and benefiting ‘we’. The Chinese state has benefited from participation in the war on terror in more
ways than one. The war has increased Chinese influence in Central Asia. It has
China’s participation in the war on terror has been used to demonstrate to the world
that China is now a ‘responsible great power’, as measured by the standard of ‘international society’
(see Yeophantong 2013 for a discussion of this ‘responsibility’ rhetoric). Again, this rhetoric of ‘responsibility’ has been
deployed by both American and Chinese leaders to tie China more tightly
to the purported American-led ‘we’. More recently, Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi has stressed the
importance of continued Sino-US co-operation over Afghanistan post-2014 troop withdrawal. Wang has publicly stressed the common goals of China
and the US with regards to Afghanistan: ‘We both hope Afghanistan will continue to maintain stability … We both hope to see the reconstruction of
jointly engaged in what is termed advisory and capacity-building for Afghans, for
example in training Afghan diplomats, and their co-operation continues
around shared goals in the region. Much could be said here about China’s participation in the American-led
globalization project and war on terror. My point here is simply to note that whatever we read America as doing
central role in the emergence of capitalism. Baudrillard sees a change happening over time. Regimes
based on symbolic exchange (differences are exchangeable and related) are replaced by regimes
based on equivalence (everything is, or means, the same). Ceremony gives way to spectacle, immanence to transcendence. Baudrillard’s view of
capitalism is derived from Marx’s analysis of value. Baudrillard accepts Marx’s view that capitalism is based on a general equivalent. Money is the general equivalent because it
can be exchanged for any commodity. In turn, it expresses the value of abstract labour-time. Abstract labour-time is itself an effect of the regimenting of processes of life, so that
different kinds of labour can be compared. Capitalism is derived from the autonomisation or separation of economics from the rest of life. It turns economics
into the ‘reality-principle’. It is a kind of sorcery, connected in some way to the disavowed symbolic
level. It subtly shifts the social world from an exchange of death with the
Other to an eternal return of the Same. Capitalism functions by reducing everything to a regime based on value and the
production of value. To be accepted by capital, something must contribute value. This creates an immense regime of social exchange. However, this social exchange has little in
common with symbolic exchange. It ultimately depends on the mark of value itself being unexchangeable. Capital must be endlessly
accumulated. States must not collapse. Capitalism thus introduces the irreversible into social life, by means of accumulation. According to
Baudrillard, capitalism rests on an obsession with the abolition of death.
Capitalism tries to abolish death through accumulation. It tries to ward off
ambivalence (associated with death) through value (associated with life. But
this is bound to fail. General equivalence – the basis of capitalism – is itself the ever-
presence of death. The more the system runs from death, the more it
places everyone in solitude, facing their own death. Life itself is
fundamentally ambivalent. The attempt to abolish death through fixed
value is itself deathly. Accumulation also spreads to other fields. The idea of progress, and linear
time, comes from the accumulation of time, and of stockpiles of the past. The idea of truth comes from the
accumulation of scientific knowledge. Biology rests on the separation of living and non-living. According to Baudrillard, such
accumulations are now in crisis. For instance, the accumulation of the past is undermined, because historical objects now have to be concealed
dominating or killing) cannot be returned by the other. It is also this regime which produces scarcity – Baudrillard
Capitalism produces the Freudian “death drive”, which is
here endorses Sahlins’ argument.
actually an effect of the capitalist culture of death. For Baudrillard, the limit to both Marx and
Freud is that they fail to theorise the separation of the domains they study – the economy and
the unconscious. It is the separation which grounds their functioning, which therefore only occurs under the regime of the code. Baudrillard also criticises
theories of desire, including those of Deleuze, Foucault, Freud and Lacan. He believes desire comes into existence based on repression. It is an effect of the denial of the
symbolic. Liberated energies always leave a new remainder; they do not escape the basis of the unconscious in the remainder. Baudrillard argues that indigenous groups do not
claim to live naturally or by their desires – they simply claim to live in societies. This social life is an effect of the symbolic. Baudrillard therefore criticises the view that human
liberation can come about through the liberation of desire. He thinks that such a liberation will keep certain elements of the repression of desire active. Baudrillard argues that
the processes which operate collectively in indigenous groups are repressed into the unconscious in metropolitan societies. This leads to the autonomy of the psyche as a
separate sphere. It is only after this repression has occurred that a politics of desire becomes conceivable. He professes broad agreement with the Deleuzian project of
unbinding energies from fixed categories and encouraging flows and intensities. However, he is concerned that capitalism can recuperate such releases of energy, disconnecting
them so they can eventually reconnect to it. Unbinding and drifting are not fatal to capitalism, because capitalism itself unbinds things, and re-binds things which are unbound.
What is fatal to it is, rather, reversibility. Capitalism continues to be haunted by the forces it has repressed. Separation does not destroy the remainder. Quite the opposite. The
remainder continues to exist, and gains power from its repression. This turns the double or shadow into something unquiet, vampiric, and threatening. It becomes an image of
the forgotten dead. Anything which reminds us of the repressed aspects excluded from the subject is experienced as uncanny and threatening. It becomes the ‘obscene’, which
is present in excess over the ‘scene’ of what is imagined. This is different from theories of lack, such as the Lacanian Real. Baudrillard’s remainder is an excess rather than a lack.
It is the carrier of the force of symbolic exchange. Modern culture dreams of radical difference. The reason for this is that it exterminated radical difference by simulating it. The
energy of production, the unconscious, and signification all in fact come from the repressed remainder. Our culture is dead from having broken the pact with monstrosity, with
sociality’ to that of the dominant system. According to Baudrillard, the mediations of capitalism exist so that nobody has the opportunity to offer a symbolic
challenge or an irreversible gift. They exist to keep the symbolic at bay. The affective charge of death remains
present among the oppressed, but not with the ‘properly symbolic rhythm’ of immediate retaliation. The Church and State also exist
based on the elimination of symbolic exchange. Baudrillard is highly critical of Christianity for what he takes to be a cult of suffering, solitude and death. He sees the Church as
central to the destruction of earlier forms of community based on symbolic exchange. Baudrillard seems to think that earlier forms of the state and capitalism retained some
degree of symbolic exchange, but in an alienated, partially repressed form. For instance, the imaginary of the ‘social contract’ was based on the idea of a sacrifice – this time of
liberty for the common good. In psychoanalysis, symbolic exchange is displaced onto the relationship to the master-signifier. I haven’t seen Baudrillard say it directly, but the
impression he gives is that this is a distorted, authoritarian imitation of the original symbolic exchange. Nonetheless, it retains some of its intensity and energy. Art, theatre and
language have worked to maintain a minimum of ceremonial power. It is the reason older orders did not suffer the particular malaise of the present. It is easy to read certain
passages in Baudrillard as if he is bemoaning the loss of these kinds of strong significations. This is initially how I read Baudrillard’s work. But on closer inspection, this seems to
be a misreading. Baudrillard is nostalgic for repression only to the extent that the repressed continued to carry symbolic force as a referential. He is nostalgic for the return of
symbolic exchange, as an aspect of diffuse, autonomous, dis-alienated social groups. Death: Death plays a central role in Baudrillard’s theory, and is closely related to symbolic
society is the ability to engage in exchanges with death. Death should not be seen here in purely
literal terms. Baudrillard specifies early on that he does not mean an event affecting a body, but rather, a form which
of the ‘normal human’ has been narrowed over time. Today, nearly everyone belongs to one or another marked or deviant category. The original exclusion was of the dead – it
is defined as abnormal to be dead. “You livies hate us deadies”. This first split and
exclusion forms the basis, or archetype, for all the other splits and
exclusions – along lines of gender, disability, species, class, and so on. This
discrimination against the dead brings into being the modern experience of death. Baudrillard suggests that death as we know it does not exist outside of this separation
between living and dead. The modern view of death is constructed on the model of the
machine and the function. A machine either functions or it does not. The human body is treated as a machine which similarly, either
functions or does not. For Baudrillard, this misunderstands the nature of life and death. The modern view of
death is also necessitated by the rise of subjectivity. The subject needs a beginning and an end, so as to be
reducible to the story it tells. This requires an idea of death as an end. It is counterposed to the immortality of social
institutions. In relation to individuals, ideas of religious immortality is simply an ideological cover for the real exclusion of the dead. But institutions try to remain truly immortal.
destroying their actual connections to others. The symbolic haunts the code as the threat of its own death. The
society of the code works constantly to ward off the danger of irruptions of the symbolic. The mortal body is actually an effect of the split introduced by the foreclosure of death.
through our own deaths and our anxiety about death. We no longer have living, mortal relationships
with objects either. They are reduced to the instrumental. It is as if we have a transparent veil between us. Symbolic exchange is based on a game, with game-like rules. When
illusory. For Baudrillard, any such marking or barring of the other brings the other to the core of society. “We all” become dead, or
mad, or prisoners, and so on, through their exclusion. The goal of
‘survival’ is fundamental to the birth of power. Social control emerges
when the union of the living and the dead is shattered, and the dead
become prohibited. The social repression of death grounds the repressive socialisation of life. People are compelled
to survive so as to become useful. For Baudrillard, capitalism’s original relationship to death has historically been concealed by
the system of production, and its ends. It only becomes fully visible now this system is collapsing, and production is reduced to operation. In modern
societies, death is made invisible, denied, and placed outside society. For
example, elderly people are excluded from society. People no longer expect their own death. As a result, it becomes unintelligible. It keeps returning as ‘nature which will not
‘his’ life or death serves the reproduction of domination. A fatal ontology?: In Fatal Strategies,
Baudrillard suggests an ontology which backs up his analysis of death. The world itself is committed to extremes and to radical antagonism. It is bored of meaning. There is an
‘evil genie’, a principle of Evil which constantly returns in the form of seduction. Historical processes are really pushed forward by this principle. All energy comes from fission
and rupture. These cannot be replaced by production or mechanical processes. There is no possibility of a collective project or a coherent society, only the operation of such
to a necessity of irony, which is to say, the slippage of meaning. Historically, the symbolic was confined to the
metaphysical. It did not affect the physical world. But with the rise of models , with the physical world derived increasingly from the code,
the physical world is brought within the symbolic. It becomes reversible. The
rational principle of linear causality collapses. The world is, and always remains, enigmatic. People
will give for seduction or for simulation what they would never give for
quality of life. Advertising, fashion, gambling and so on liberate ‘immoral energies’ which hark back to the magical or archaic gamble on the power of thought
against the power of reality. Neoliberalism is in some ways an ultimate release of such diabolical forces. People will look for an ecstatic excess of anything – even boredom or
object and its seduction, its ‘principle of evil’. The object at once submits
to law and breaks it in practice, mocking it. Its own “game” cannot be discerned. It is a poor conductor of the symbolic order but a
good conductor of signs. The drive towards spectacles, illusions and scenes is stronger
butthey do not see that odiousness of this type of execution stems from its
contemplative attitude in which the death of the other is savoured as a
spectacle at a distance. This is not sacrificial violence, which not only
demands the presence of the whole community, but is one of the forms of
its self-presence [présence à ellemème]. We rediscover something of this contagious festivity in an
episode in England in 1807, when the 40,000 people who came to attend
an execution were seized by delirium upon seeing a hundred dead bodies
lying on the ground. This collective act has nothing in common with the
spectacle of extermination. By confusing the two in the same abstract
reprobation of violence and death, one merges with the thought of the
State, that is, the pacification of life. Now, if the right prefers to use
repressive blackmail, the left, for its part, is distinguished by imagining
and setting up future models of pacified socialisation. A civilisation's progress is thus
measured only by its respect for life as absolute value. What a difference from public, celebrated death by torture (the Black from
the Upper Volta laughing in the face of the guns that hit him, cannibalism in the Tupinamba), and even murder and vengeance,
scientific paranoia, unrelated to any human objective. Is profit the aim? No: society swallows huge amounts of profit. This
'therapeutic heroism' is characterised by soaring costs and 'decreasing
benefits': they manufacture unproductive survivors. Even if social security can still be
analysed as 'compensation for the labour force in the interests of capital', this argument has no purchase here. Nevertheless, the
system is facing the same contradiction here as with the death penalty: it
overspends on the prolongation of life because this system of values is
essential to the strategic equilibrium of the whole; economically, however, this overspending
unbalances the whole. What is to be done? An economic choice becomes necessary, where we can see the outline of euthanasia as
a semi-official doctrine or practice. We choose to keep 30 per cent of the uraemics in France alive (36 per cent in the USA!).
Euthanasia is already everywhere, and the ambiguity of making a humanist demand for it (as with the 'freedom' to abortion) is
striking: it is inscribed in the middle to long term logic of the system. All this tends in the direction of an increase in social control.
and their death are never freely theirs, but that they live or die according
to a social visa. It is even intolerable that their life and death remain open to biological chance, since this is still a type of
freedom. Just as morality commanded: 'You shall not kill', today it commands: 'You shall not die', not in any old way, anyhow, and
death proper
only if the law and medicine permit. And if your death is conceded you, it will still be by order. In short,
has been abolished to make room for death control and euthanasia: strictly
speaking, it is no longer even death, but something completely neutralised that comes to be inscribed in the rules and calculations of
social service, integrate it like health and disease under the sign of the
Plan and Social Security. This is the story of 'motel-suicides' in the USA ,
where, for a comfortable sum, one can purchase one's death under the most agreeable
conditions (like any other consumer good); perfect service, everything has
been foreseen, even trainers who give you back your appetite for life, after which they kindly and conscientiously send
the gas into your room, without torment and without meeting any opposition. A service operates these motel-suicides, quite rightly
paid (eventually reimbursed?). Why did death not become a social service when, like everything else, it is functionalised as individual
and computable consumption in social input and output? In order that the system consents to such
economic sacrifices in the artificial resurrection of its living losses, it must have a fundamental
interest in withdrawing even the biological chance of death from people.
'You die, we'll do the rest' is already just an old advertising slogan used for funeral homes. Today, dying is already
part of the rest, and the Thanatos centres charge for death just as the
Eros centres charge for sex. The witch hunt continues. A transcendent, 'objective'
agency requires a delegation of justice, death and vengeance. Death and
expiation must be wrested from the circuit, monopolised at the summit
and redistributed. A bureaucracy of death and punishment is necessary,
in the same way as there must be an abstraction of economic, political
and sexual exchanges: if not, the entire structure of social control
collapses.
The 1AC is founded on vampirism of the suffering to nourish the psyche of the
West – their politics necessarily forefronts theories, methods, and explanations
mired in the suffering of others by way of unconscious prefabricated politics of
charity cannibalism. They advance projects of understanding which reproduce
and feed off fantasies of the suffering other resulting in inevitable exploitation
and decimation. All of this plays out like a market: their depictions of suffering
exchange for your ballot and a symbolic economy is reproduced in the moment
of decision which ultimately creates a DEMAND for more suffering, turns the
case.
Baudrillard 94. Jean Baudrillard, dead French philosopher, former professor emeritus at the University de Paris
X, The Illusion of The End, pg. 66-70
We have long denounced the capitalistic, economic exploitation of the poverty of the 'other half of the world' ['autre monde]. We
must today denounce the moral and sentimental exploitation of that
poverty - charity cannibalism being worse than oppressive violence. The
extraction and humanitarian reprocessing of a destitution which has
become the equivalent of oil deposits and gold mines. The extortion of
the spectacle of poverty and, at the same time, of our charitable
condescension: a worldwide appreciated surplus of fine sentiments and
bad conscience. We should, in fact, see this not as the extraction of raw materials, but as a waste-reprocessing
enterprise. Their destitution and our bad conscience are, in effect, all part of the waste-products of history- the main thing is to
recycle them to produce a new energy source. We have here an escalation in the psychological balance of terror. World capitalist
oppression is now merely the vehicle and alibi for this other, much more ferocious, form of moral predation. One might almost say,
material exploitation is only there to extract that
contrary to the Marxist analysis, that
world as waste and residue. And the white world repents and seeks
absolution - it, too, the waste-product of its own history. The South is a
natural producer of raw materials, the latest of which is catastrophe. The
North, for its part, specializes in the reprocessing of raw materials and
hence also in the reprocessing of catastrophe. Bloodsucking protection, humanitarian
interference, Medecins sans frontieres, international solidarity, etc. The last phase of colonialism: the New Sentimental Order is
merely the latest form of the New World Order. Other people's destitution becomes our adventure
playground. Thus, the humanitarian offensive aimed at the Kurds - a show of repentance on the part of the Western
powers after allowing Saddam Hussein to crush them - is in reality merely the second phase of the war, a phase in which charitable
intervention finishes off the work of extermination. We are the consumers of the ever delightful spectacle of poverty and
our own efforts to alleviate it (which, in fact,
catastrophe, and of the moving spectacle of
from elsewhere or when they can no longer be traded like coffee or other commodities, the West will be
forced to produce its own catastrophe for itself, in order to meet its need
for spectacle and that voracious appetite for symbols which characterizes
it even more than its voracious appetite for food. It will reach the point where it devours itself. When we have finished sucking out
the destiny of others, we shall have to invent one for ourselves. The Great Crash, the symbolic crash, will come in the end from us
Westerners, but only when we are no longer able to feed on the hallucinogenic misery which comes to us from the other half of the
Latin America
world. Yet they do not seem keen to give up their monopoly. The Middle East, Bangladesh, black Africa and
are really going flat out in the distress and catastrophe stakes, and thus in
providing symbolic nourishment for the rich world. They might be said to
be overdoing it: heaping earthquakes, floods, famines and ecological
disasters one upon another, and finding the means to massacre each
other most of the time. The 'disaster show' goes on without any let-up and
our sacrificial debt to them far exceeds their economic debt. The misery with which they generously overwhelm us is something we
shall never be able to repay. The sacrifices we offer in return are laughable (a tornado or two, a few tiny holocausts on the roads, the
odd financial sacrifice) and, moreover, by some infernal logic, these work out as much greater gains for us, whereas our kindnesses
have merely added to the natural catastrophes another one immeasurably worse: the demographic catastrophe, a veritable
epidemic which we deplore each day in pictures. In short, there is such distortion between North and South, to the symbolic
advantage of the South (a hundred thousand Iraqi dead against casualties numbered in tens on our side: in every case we are the
losers), that one day everything will break down. One day, the West will break down if we are not soon washed clean of this shame,
if an international congress of the poor countries does not very quickly decide to share out this symbolic privilege of misery and
catastrophe. It is of course normal, since we refuse to allow the spread of nuclear weapons, that they should refuse to allow the
, the
spread of the catastrophe weapon. But it is not right that they should exert that monopoly indefinitely. In any case
Death’s unpredictability and the strive to make it predictable drives the logic of
the Cold War and the War on Terror as simulated death scenarios become a
necromantic means of controlling death. This leads to a zombified existence in
which we frantically and brainlessly consume these images of death. To
understand Death as immanent within the system and without it resists this
simulation of Death—such is the salvation of theory in death, or the salvation
that is death.
Bishop 09. Ryan Bishop, Professor of Global Arts and Politics, Co-Director of the Winchester
Centre for Global Futures in Art Design & Media, Director of Research and Doctoral Research
within Winchester School of Art at the University of Southampton, Baudrillard Now: Current
Perspectives in Baudrillard Studies Edited by Ryan Bishop Polity Press 2009, pg. 64-70
with little chance of intense connections. Chance, and also statistical causality,
remove both responsibility and seduction (or destiny). The dual rule of chance and necessity
expresses a human desire for control over the metamorphosis of things. This control destroys
the initiatory or ceremonial field. It thus paradoxically destroys any sense of mastery over our
destiny. The order of production exists to make the order of metamorphosis
impossible – to control flow and becoming. Simulation is also associated
with a process Baudrillard terms deterrence. This term is a play on nuclear deterrence
between the superpowers (before 1991), which Baudrillard saw as a telling case of
deterrence in general, a simulated conflict which exists to preclude a real
clash, a form of manipulation rather than destruction. Deterrence is not
so much a power relation as a mindset. It holds people in check by making
them feel powerless, disappointed, neutralised – deterred. When it is
strong enough, it no longer needs violent repression or war – it precludes
conflict in advance. In nuclear deterrence for instance, life is reduced to survival
and conflicts become pointless, as they can’t reach the ultimate stakes.
Simulation feigns reality and thereby deters or prevents reality. But this
feigned reality is not entirely unreal, because it produces effects of reality – it is like a
faked illness which produces real symptoms. Think for instance of punishments
applied in response to acts: they’re neither an objectively real consequence, since they’re
invented, nor an imagined consequence, since they actually happen. They’re a simulated
consequence, an artificially created hyper-reality. According to Baudrillard,
there is no true reality against which simulation can be compared. It is
therefore more subversive of reality than a simple appearance or
falsehood. It controls people in a different way – through persuasion or
modelling. Instead of demanding that people submit to a prior model or norm, it interpellates people as already being the
model or the majority. It thereby destroys the distance between the self and the norm, making transgression more difficult. It
creates a doubled self from which it is hard to extract oneself. The question “from where do you speak, how do you know?” is
silenced by the response, “but it is from your position that I speak”. Everything appears to come from and return to the people. The
doubled self is portrayed and displayed in forms such as CCTV images, without a gap between representation and what is
represented. This same doubling happens across different spheres – the model is truer than the true, fashion is more beautiful than
the beautiful, hyperreality is more real than the real, and so on. The effect of excess comes from the lack of depth (of the imaginary,
but also perhaps of relations and of context). Doubles are inherently fascinating. They’re very different from the seduction of
The double
effective images and illusions, such as trompe l’oeil (a type of art which can be mistaken for a real object).
The attempt to make the world transparent through information and research
is self-defeating. More knowledge fails to change reality. Facts and evidence are
uniquely dissuasive.
Baudrillard, 81 [Jean, “Simulacra and Simulations,” pg. 79-81]
We live in a world where there is more and more information, and less and less meaning. Consider three hypotheses. Either information produces meaning (a negentropic factor), but cannot make up for the
is lost and devoured faster than it can be reinjected . In this case, one must appeal to a base productivity to replace
failing media. This is the whole ideology of free speech, of media broken down into innumerable individual cells of transmission, that is, into "antimedia" (pirate radio, etc.). Or information has nothing to do with
signification. It is something else, an operational model of another order, outside meaning and of the circulation of meaning strictly speaking. This is Shannon's hypothesis: a sphere of information that is purely
functional, a technical medium that does not imply any finality of meaning, and thus should also not be implicated in a value judgment. A kind of code, like the genetic code: it is what it is, it functions as it does,
meaning is something else that in a sense comes after the fact, as it does for Monod in Chance and Necessity. In this case, there would simply be no significant relation between the inflation of information and the
deflation of meaning. Or, very much on the contrary, there is a rigorous and necessary correlation between the two, to the extent that information is directly destructive of meaning and signification, or that it
action of information, the media, and the mass media . The third hypothesis is the most interesting but flies in
and omega of our modernity, without which the credibility of our social
organization would collapse. Well, the fact is that it is collapsing, and for
this very reason: because where we think that information produces
meaning, the opposite occurs. Information devours its own content. It
devours communication and the social . Rather than creating . And for two reasons. 1
it is a
first for dissuasive ends, to short-circuit in advance any possibility of communication (precession of the model that calls an end to the real). Useless to ask which is the first term, there is none,
meaning. More real than the real, that is how the real is abolished Thus .
This implosion
the opposite, of the implosion of the social in the masses. And this is only the macroscopic extension of the implosion of meaning at the microscopic level of the sign.
should be analyzed according to the medium is the message McLuhan's formula, , the consequences
dominant form of the medium. Only the medium can make an event whatever the
counterinformation, pirate radios, antimedia , etc. But there is something even more serious, which McLuhan himself did not
see. Because beyond this neutralization of all content, one could still expect to manipulate the medium in its form and to transform the real by using the impact of the medium as form. If all the content is wiped
out, there is perhaps still a subversive, revolutionary use value of the medium as such. That is and this is where McLuhan's formula leads, pushed to its limit there is not only an implosion of the message in the
medium, there is, in the same movement, the implosion of the medium itself in the real, the implosion of the medium and of the real in a sort of hyperreal nebula, in which even the definition and distinct action of
the medium can no longer be determined. Even the "traditional" status of the media themselves, characteristic of modernity, is put in question. McLuhan's formula, the medium is the message, which is the key
formula of the era of simulation (the medium is the message the sender is the receiver the circularity of all poles the end of panoptic and perspectival space such is the alpha and omega of our modernity), this
very formula must be imagined at its limit where, after all the contents and messages have been volatilized in the medium, it is the medium itself that is volatilized as such. Fundamentally, it is still the message
that lends credibility to the medium, that gives the medium its determined, distinct status as the intermediary of communication. Without a message, the medium also falls into the indefinite state characteristic of
the medium is
all our great systems of judgment and value. A single model, whose efficacy is immediate, simultaneously generates the message, the medium, and the "real." Finally,
the message not only signifies the end of the message, but also the end of
the medium. There are no more media in the literal sense of the word (I'm
speaking particularly of electronic mass media) that is, of a mediating power between one reality and another, between one state of the real and another. Neither in content, nor in form. Strictly, this is what
implosion signifies. The absorption of one pole into another, the short-circuiting between poles of every differential system of meaning, the erasure of distinct terms and oppositions, including that of the medium
and of the real thus the impossibility of any mediation, of any dialectical intervention between the two or from one to the other. Circularity of all media effects. Hence the impossibility of meaning in the literal
It is useless to
sense of a unilateral vector that goes from one pole to another. One must envisage this critical but original situation at its very limit: it is the only one left us.
manipulate in all directions at once, nothing can control this process, they are the
vehicle for the simulation internal to the system and the simulation that destroys the system, according to an absolutely Mobian and circular logic and it is exactly like this. There is no alternative to this, no logical
resolution. Only a logical exacerbation and a catastrophic resolution. With one caution. We are face to face with this system in a double situation and insoluble double bind exactly like children faced with the
demands of the adult world. Children are simultaneously required to constitute themselves as autonomous subjects, responsible, free and conscious, and to constitute themselves as submissive, inert, obedient,
conforming objects. The child resists on all levels, and to a contradictory demand he responds with a double strategy. To the demand of being an object, he opposes all the practices of disobedience, of revolt, of
emancipation; in short, a total claim to subjecthood. To the demand of being a subject he opposes, just as obstinately and efficaciously, an object's resistance, that is to say, exactly the opposite: childishness,
in the
hyperconformism, total dependence, passivity, idiocy. Neither strategy has more objective value than the other. The subject-resistance is today unilaterally valorized and viewed as positive just as
do not see that they are going in the direction of the system,
and of the masses,
The story that needs to be told is thus not about the undoubtedly deplorable “truth” or fact of
explosive and warlike violence, but about a violence of another sort. In the radical digital
transparency of the global scene, we (members of the demos) often have
full or direct exposure to explosivity, as we saw above with the image of
terror. But what still needs to be thought and problematized is implosivityor
what may be called implosive violence. Implosive violence is a violence for which
we do not, and perhaps will never, have much of a language (Rancière, 2007:
123). Although, not having a language for it or, rather, as we saw above, seeking to find a
language to talk about it and, perhaps, to make sense of it is still sought
after. This is, perhaps, what digital pictures of war/terror violence seek to
capture or want to force through. Implosive violence, often digitally rendered
these days, is in close contact with media technologies and representational
devices and techniques because it seeks representation and meaning. This is
why implosive violence insists on calling in wars (against terror, for example)
and on mobilizing war machines (against terrorist others, against vague
enemy figures), but wars and war machines that no longer have—to the
extent that they ever had—a clearly identifiable object and subject, or a clear
mission/purpose. As such, this implosive violence and its wars (the new
Western/global way of war, perhaps) must remain uncertain, unclear, foggy,
inwardly driven, representational, and indeed virulent. They must remain
uncertain and confused even as they are digitally operative and desperately
capture events/images to give the impression that meanings/significations
can and will be found. Yet, as we saw above, it is not meanings exactly that must
be found, but information and the endless guarantee of its immediate
circulation. As information occupies the empty place of meaning,
certainty, or truth, images must be instantaneously turned into appearances that
search for meanings that will never be discovered because, instead, a proliferation
of information-worthy facts and beliefs will take over (perhaps this is what US fake
pundit and comedian Stephen Colbert famously referred to as “truthiness”). Or, as
Baudrillard puts it, “free from its former enemies, humanity now has to create enemies from
within, which in fact produces a wide variety of inhuman metastases” (Baudrillard, 2003).
Thus, this implosive violence is destined to be a global violence since it "is the
product of a system that tracks down any form of negativity and singularity, including
of course death as the ultimate form of singularity. […] It is a violence that, in
a sense, puts an end to violence itself and strives to establish a world where
anything related to the natural must disappear […] Better than a global violence,
we should call it a global virulence. This form of violence is indeed viral. It moves
by contagion, produces by chain reaction, and little by little it destroys our
immune systems and our capacities to resist" (2003; our italics).
Say: This is real, the world is real, the real exists (I have met it) -- no one
laughs. Say: This is a simulacrum, you are merely a simulacrum, this war is
a simulacrum -- everyone bursts out laughing. With forced, condescending
laughter, or uncontrollable mirth, as though at a childish joke or an
obscene proposition. Everything to do with the simulacrum is taboo or obscene, as is
everything relating to sex or death. Yet it is much rather reality and obviousness
which are obscene. It is the truth we should laugh at. You can imagine a
culture where everyone laughs spontaneously when someone says: `This
is true', `This is real'.
All this defines the irresolvable relationship between thought and reality.
A certain form of thought is bound to the real. It starts out from the
hypothesis that ideas have referents and that there is a possible ideation
of reality. A comforting polarity, which is that of tailor-made dialectical
and philosophical solutions. The other form of thought is eccentric to the
real, a stranger to dialectics, a stranger even to critical thought. It is not
even a disavowal of the concept of reality. It is illusion, power of illusion,
or, in other words, a playing with reality, as seduction is a playing with desire,
as metaphor is a playing with truth. This radical thought does not stem from a
philosophical doubt, a utopian transference, or an ideal transcendence. It is the material
illusion, immanent in this so-called `real' world. And thus it seems to come
from elsewhere. It seems to be the extrapolation of this world into
another world.
At all events, there is incompatibility between thought and the real. There is
no sort of necessary or natural transition from the one to the other. Neither alternation,
nor alternative: only otherness and distance keep them charged up. This is
what ensures the singularity of thought, the singularity by which it
constitutes an event, just like the singularity of the world, the singularity
by which it too constitutes an event.
It has doubtless not always been so. One may dream of a happy conjunction of idea and reality,
cradled by the Enlightenment and modernity, in the heroic age of critical thought. Yet critical
thought, the butt of which was a certain illusion -- superstitious, religious or ideological -- is
in substance ended. Even if it had survived its catastrophic secularization
in all the political movements of the twentieth century, this ideal and
seemingly necessary relationship between the concept and reality would,
at all events, be destroyed today. It has broken down under pressure from
a gigantic technical and mental simulation, to be replaced by an
autonomy of the virtual, henceforth liberated from the real, and a
simultaneous autonomy of the real which we see functioning on its own
account in a demented -- that is, infinitely self-referential -- perspective .
Having been expelled, so to speak, from its own principle, extraneized, the
real has itself become an extreme phenomenon . In other words, one can no
longer think it as real, but as exorbitated, as though seen from another
world -- in short, as illusion. Imagine the stupefying experience which the discovery of a
real world other than our own would represent. The objectivity of our world is a
discovery we made, like America -- and at almost the same time. Now
what one has discovered, one can never then invent. And so we
discovered reality, which remains to be invented (or: so we invented
reality, which remains to be discovered).
Why might there not be as many real worlds as imaginary ones? Why a single real world? Why
such an exception? Truth to tell, the real world, among all the other
possible
ones, is unthinkable, except as dangerous superstition. We must break
with it as critical thought once broke (in the name of the real!) with
religious superstition. Thinkers, one more effort! 1
In any case, the two orders of thought are irreconcilable. They each follow
their course without merging; at best they slide over each other like
tectonic plates, and occasionally their collision or subduction creates fault
lines into which reality rushes. Fate is always at the intersection of these
two lines of force. Similarly, radical thought is at the violent intersection of
meaning and non-meaning, of truth and non-truth, of the continuity of
the world and the continuity of the nothing.
Unlike the discourse of the real, which gambles on the fact of there being
something rather than nothing, and aspires to being founded on the
guarantee of an objective and decipherable world, radical thought, for its
part, wagers on the illusion of the world. It aspires to the status of illusion,
restoring the non-veracity of facts, the non-signification of the world,
proposing the opposite hypothesis that there is nothing rather than
something, and going in pursuit of that nothing which runs beneath the
apparent continuity of meaning.
The radical prediction is always the prediction of the non-reality of facts, of the illusoriness of
the state of fact. It begins
only with the presentiment of that illusoriness, and
is never confused with the objective state of things. Every confusion of
that kind is of the order of the confusion of the messenger and the
message, which leads to the elimination of the messenger bearing bad
news (for example, the news of the uncertainty of the real, of the non-
occurrence of certain events, of the nullity of our values).
Every confusion of thought with the order of the real -- that alleged
`faithfulness' to the real of a thought which has cooked it up out of
nothing -- is hallucinatory. It arises, moreover, from a total misunderstanding
about language, which is illusion in its very movement, since it is the
bearer of that continuity of the void, that continuity of the nothing at the
very heart of what it says, since it is, in its very materiality, deconstruction
of what it signifies. Just as photography connotes the effacing, the death of
what it represents -- which lends it its intensity -- so what lends writing,
fictional or theoretical, its intensity is the void, the nothingness running
beneath the surface, the illusion of meaning, the ironic dimension of
language, correlative with that of the facts themselves, which are never anything but what
they are [ne sont jamais que ce qu'ils sont]. That is to say, they are never more than what they
are and they are, literally, never only what they are [jamais que ce qu'ils sont]. The irony of
the facts, in their wretched reality, is precisely that they are only what they
are but that, by that very fact, they are necessarily beyond. For de facto
existence is impossible -- nothing is wholly obvious without becoming
enigmatic. Reality itself is too obvious to be true.
It is this ironic transfiguration which constitutes the event of language. And
it is to restoring this fundamental illusion of the world and language that
thought must apply itself, if it is not stupidly to take concepts in their
literalness -- messenger confused with the message, language confused
with its meaning and therefore sacrificed in advance.
There is a twofold, contradictory exigency in thought. It is not to analyse the world in order to extract from it an improbable truth,
not to adapt to the facts in order to abstract some logical construction from them, but to set in place a form, a matrix of illusion and
disillusion, which seduced reality will spontaneously feed and which will, consequently, be verified remorselessly (the only need is to
shift the camera angle from time to time). For reality asks nothing other than to submit itself to hypotheses. And it confirms them
all. That, indeed, is its ruse and its vengeance.
The theoretical ideal would be to set in place propositions in such a way that they could be disconfirmed by reality, in such a way
thought must seek first of all to unmask it. To do that, it must itself advance
behind a mask and constitute itself as a decoy, without regard for its own
truth. It must pride itself on not being an instrument of analysis, not being
a critical tool. For it is the world which must analyse itself. It is the world
itself which must reveal itself not as truth, but as illusion . The
derealization of the world will be the work of the world itself. 2
Reality must be caught in the trap, we must move quicker than reality .
Ideas, too, have to move faster than their shadows. But if they go too
quickly, they lose even their shadows. No longer having even the shadow
of an idea. ... Words move quicker than meaning, but if they go too
quickly, we have madness: the ellipsis of meaning can make us lose even
the taste for the sign. What are we to exchange this portion of shadow and labour against
-- this saving of intellectual activity and patience? What can we sell it to the devil for? It is very
difficult to say. We are, in fact, the orphans of a reality come too late, a reality which is itself, like
truth, something registered only after the event.
Alas, only the fanatical supporters of reality react; reality, for its part, does not seem to wish to prove you wrong. Quite to the
contrary, every kind of simulacrum parades around in it. And reality, filching the idea, henceforth adorns itself with all the rhetoric of
simulation. It is the simulacrum which ensures the continuity of the real today, the simulacrum which now conceals not the truth,
but the fact that there isn't any -- that is to say, the continuity of the nothing.
Such is the paradox of all thought which disputes the validity of the real:
when it sees itself robbed of its own concept. Events, bereft of meaning in
themselves, steal meaning from us. They adapt to the most fantastical hypotheses,
just as natural species and viruses adapt to the most hostile environments. They have an
extraordinary mimetic capacity: no longer is it theories which adapt to
events, but the reverse. And, in so doing, they mystify us, for a theory which is
verified is no longer a theory. It's terrifying to see the idea coincide with the reality.
These are the death-throes of the concept. The epiphany of the real is the twilight of its
concept.
We have lost that lead which ideas had over the world, that distance which meant that an idea
remained an idea. Thought has to be exceptional, anticipatory and at the
margin -- has to be the projected shadow of future events. Today, we are
lagging behind events. They may sometimes give the impression of receding; in fact,
they passed us long ago. The simulated disorder of things has moved faster than we
have. The reality effect has succumbed to acceleration -- anamorphosis of speed. Events, in
their being, are never behind themselves, are always out ahead of their
meaning. Hence the delay of interpretation, which is now merely the
retrospective form of the unforeseeable event.
What are we to do, then? What becomes of the heterogeneity of thought
in a world won over to the craziest hypotheses? When everything
conforms, beyond even our wildest hopes, to the ironic, critical,
alternative, catastrophic model?
Well, that is paradise: we are beyond the Last Judgement, in immortality .
The only problem is to survive there. For there the irony, the challenging,
the anticipation, the maleficence come to an end, as inexorably as hope dies at
the gates of hell. And it is indeed there that hell begins , the hell of the unconditional
realization of all ideas, the hell of the real. You can see why, as Adorno says, concepts prefer to
scupper themselves rather than reach that point.
Something else has been stolen from us: indifference. The power of
indifference, which is the quality of the mind, as opposed to the play of
differences, which is the characteristic of the world. Now, this has been
stolen from us by a world grown indifferent, as the extravagance of thought has
been stolen from us by an extravagant world. When things, events, refer one to another and to
their undifferentiated concept, then the equivalence of the world meets and cancels out the
indifference of thought -- and we have boredom. No more altercations; nothing at
stake. It is the parting of the dead sea.
How fine indifference was in a world that was not indifferent -- in a different, convulsive,
contradictory world, a world with issues and passions! That being the case, indifference
immediately became an issue and a passion itself. It could preempt the indifference of the
world, and turn that pre-emption into an event. Today, it is difficult to be more indifferent to
their reality than the facts themselves, more indifferent to their meaning than images. Our
operational world is an apathetic world. Now, what good is it being passionless in a
world without passion, or detached in a world without desire?
It is not a question of defending radical thought. Every idea one defends is
presumed guilty, and every idea that cannot defend itself deserves to
disappear. On the other hand, one must fight all charges of irresponsibility, nihilism or
despair. Radical thought is never depressive. On this point, there is total
misunderstanding. Ideological and moralistic critique, obsessed with
meaning and content, obsessed with the political finality of discourse,
never takes into account writing, the act of writing, the poetic, ironic,
allusive force of language, of the juggling with meaning. It does not see that the
resolution of meaning is to be found there -- in the form itself, the formal materiality of
expression.
Cipher, do not decipher. Work over the illusion. Create illusion to create
an event. Make enigmatic what is clear, render unintelligible what is only
too intelligible, make the event itself unreadable. Accentuate the false
transparency of the world to spread a terroristic confusion about it, or the
germs or viruses of a radical illusion -- in other words, a radical disillusioning
of the real. Viral, pernicious thought, corrosive of meaning, generative of
an erotic perception of reality's turmoil.
1NC Alternative – Seduction
We affirm a process of seduction, rather than imposing a specific value criteria
by which we understand bodies, we affirm the affective unknowability present
in all object. We are a refusal of the affirmative’s/negative’s static value
judgments that destroy singularity
Baudrillard 77. Jean Baudrillard, dead French philosopher, former professor emeritus at the University de
Paris X, Forget Foucault, MIT Press, pg. 37-41
The production channel leads from work to sex, but only by switching
tracks; as we move from political to "libidinal" economy (the last acquisition of
'68), we change from a violent and archaic model of socialization (work) to a
more subtle and fluid model which is at once more "psychic" and more in
touch with the body (the sexual and the libidinal). There is a metamorphosis and
a veering away from labor power to drive (pulsion) , a veering away from a model
founded on a system of representations (the famous "ideology") to a model operating on a
system of affect (sex being only a kind of anamorphosis of the categorical social imperative) .
From one discourse to the other-since it really is a question of discourse-there runs
the same ultimatum of production in the literal sense of the word. The
original sense of "production" is not in fact that of material manufacture; rather, it
means to render visible, to cause to appear and be made to appear: pro-
ducere. Sex is produced as one produces a document, or as an actor is said to appear (se
produire) on stage. To produce is to force what belongs to another order (that
of secrecy and seduction) to materialize. Seduction is that which is
everywhere and always opposed to pro-duction; seduction withdraws
something from the visible order and so runs counter to production,
whose project is to set everything up in clear view, whether it be an
object, a number, or a concept. Let everything be produced, be read,
become real, visible, and marked with the sign of effectiveness; let
everything be transcribed into force relations, into conceptual systems or
into calculable energy; let everything be said, gathered, indexed and
registered: this is how sex appears in pornography, but this is more
generally the project of our whole culture, whose natural condition is
“obscenity.” Ours is a culture of "monstration" and demonstration, of
"productive" monstrosity (the "confession" so well analyzed by Foucault is one of
its forms) . We never find any seduction there-nor in pornography with its
immediate production of sexual acts in a frenzied activation of pleasure;
we find no seduction in those bodies penetrated by a gaze literally
absorbed by the suction of the transparent void. Not a shadow of
seduction can be detected in the universe of production, ruled by the
transparency principle governing all forces in the order of visible and
calculable phenomena: objects, machines, sexual acts, or gross national
product.5 Pornography is only the paradoxical limit of the sexual, a realistic exacerbation and
a mad obsession with the real-this is the "obscene," etymologically speaking and in all senses.
But isn't the sexual itself a forced materialization, and isn't the coming of
sexuality already part of the Western notion of what is real-the obsession
peculiar to our culture with "instancing" and instrumentalizing all things ?
Just as it is absurd to separate in other cultures the religious, the economic, the political, the
juridical, and even the social and other phantasmagorical categories, for the reason that they do
not occur there, and because these concepts are like so many venereal diseases with which we
infect them in order to "understand" them better, so it is also absurd to give autonomy to the
sexual as "instance" and as an irreducible given to which all other "givens" can be reduced. We
need to do a critique of sexual Reason, or rather a genealogy of sexual Reason, as Nietzsche has
done a genealogy of Morals-because this is our new moral system. One could say of sexuality as
of death: "It is a habit to which consciousness has not long been accustomed." We do not
understand, or we vaguely sympathize with, those cultures for which the
sexual act has no finality in itself and for which sexuality does not have
the deadly seriousness of an energy to be freed, a forced ejaculation, a
production at all cost, or of a hygienic reckoning of the body. These are
cultures which maintain long processes of seduction and sensuousness in
which sexuality is one service among others, a long procedure of gifts and
counter-gifts; lovemaking is only the eventual outcome of this reciprocity measured to the
rhythm of an ineluctable ritual. For us, this no longer has any meaning: for us, the sexual has
become strictly the actualization of a desire in a moment of pleasure—all
the rest is "literature." What an extraordinary crystallization of the orgastic
function, which is itself the materialization of an energetic substance.
Ours is a culture of premature ejaculation. More and more, all seduction,
all manner of seduction (which is itself a highly ritualized process), disappears
behind the naturalized sexual imperative calling for the immediate
realization of a desire. Our center of gravity has in fact shifted toward an unconscious and
libidinal economy which only leaves room for the total naturalization of a desire bound either to
fateful drives or to pure and simple mechanical operation, but above all to the imaginary order
of repression and liberation. Nowadays, one no longer says: "You've got a soul
and you must save it," but: "You've got a sexual nature, and you must find
out how to use it well." "You've got an unconscious, and you must learn
how to liberate it." "You've got a body, and you must know how to enjoy
it." "You've got a libido, and you must know how to spend it," etc. , etc. This
compulsion toward liquidity, flow, and an accelerated circulation of what
is psychic, sexual, or pertaining to the body is the exact replica of the
force which rules market value: capital must circulate; gravity and any
fixed point must disappear; the chain of investments and reinvestments
must never stop; value must radiate endlessly and in every direction . This
is the form itself which the current realization of value takes. It is the
form of capital, and sexuality as a catchword and a model is the way it
appears at the level of bodies. Besides, the body to which we constantly refer has no
other reality than that of the sexual and productive model. It is capital which gives birth
in the same movement to the energetic of labor power and to the body
we dream of today as the locus of desire and the unconscious. This is the
body which serves as a sanctuary for psychic energy and drives and which, dominated by these
drives and haunted by primary processes, has itself become primary process-and thus an anti-
body, the ultimate revolutionary referent. Both are simultaneously conceived in repression, and
their apparent antagonism is yet another effect of repression. Thus, to rediscover in the
secret of bodies an unbound "libidinal" energy which would be opposed
to the bound energy of productive bodies, and to rediscover a phantasmal
and instinctual truth of the body in desire, is still only to unearth the
psychic metaphor of capital. This is the nature of desire and of the
unconscious: the trash heap of political economy and the psychic
metaphor of capital. And sexual jurisdiction is the ideal means, in a
fantastic extension of the jurisdiction governing private property, for
assigning to each individual the management of a certain capital: psychic
capital, libidinal capital, sexual capital, unconscious capital. And each
individual will be accountable to himself for his capital, under the sign of
his own liberation. This is what Foucault tells us (in spite of himself) : nothing
functions with repression (repression), everything functions with production;
nothing functions with repression (refoulement) , everything functions with
liberation. But it is the same thing. Any form of liberation is fomented by
repression: the liberation of productive forces is like that of desire; the
liberation of bodies is like that of women's liberation, etc. There is no exception to the
logic of liberation: any force or any liberated form of speech constitutes
one more turn in the spiral of power. This is how "sexual liberation" accomplishes a
miracle by uniting in the same revolutionary ideal the two major effects of repression, liberation
and sexuality.
1NC Alternative – Word-Play
This overproliferation of harmony has created an immune system of dissent
suppression in the Chinese government– protest was not censored, it simply
had been harmonized; traitorous officials did not die, they simply had been
suicided
In response to this endless analysis of the World Fair, the globe’s simulation of
harmony, the 1AC is act of 恶搞 (Ègǎo), an effusive playing with language – the
rendering of 和谐 (héxié) into 河蟹 (héxiè), of harmony into river crab, of
debate into the bait for the trap of its own making –an act onco-operativity
giving rise to a cancerous metastases that the system has no choice but to
destroy, yet cannot destroy without destroying itself – the great firewall has
paradoxically been great firewalled
Nordin 12
(Astrid H.M. Nordin [Lecturer in the Department of Politics, Philosophy and Religion at Lancaster
University], “Time, Space and Multiplicity in China’s Harmonious World”, 2012, The University of
Manchester Library, https://www.escholar.manchester.ac.uk/uk-ac-man-scw:186417, pages
174-213)
state
unlimited freedom of expression and provide a tool to hold government accountable, more empirical studies soon resulted in more sober analyses (Chase and Mulvenon, 2002; Kurlantzick, 2004; Lagerkvist, 2005). On the one hand, the
has been active in trying to include the public through e- governance and
“guidance” (导向), and by shaping opinion through overt or covert
propaganda online Officials have portrayed the implementation of
(Lagerkvist, 2005: 206).
participation in online fora by what netizens call the “50 cent party”,
individuals paid to tow the party line and steer online discussion so as to
be favourable to the party. Another example is the increasing amount of
what Johan Lagerkvist has called “ideotainment”. This term denotes “the
juxtaposition of images, symbolic representations, and sounds of popular
Web and mobile phone culture together with both subtle and overt
ideological constructs and nationalistic propaganda”, which may be
exemplified by the Online Expo examined in the previous chapter (Lagerkvist, 2008: 121). The
desired outcome of such e-governance, according to Lagerkvist, is “installing a machine” that can provide “‘scientific and correct’ knowledge among citizens and state officials” (2005: 197). The success of the state in achieving the goals of its inclusionary “thought
exclude the public, through deleting posts and blocking the Internet . Border regions like
In response to the
entailed in terms of access, see Summers (2009) - 176 - cleanse “pollution” and “unhealthy” elements in favour of “health” and “hygiene” (Lagerkvist, 2008: 123, 134).
subversive indicates that one has been coercively made to (appear to)
” (Kuhn, 2010),
do something. The term gained such popularity that the “passive tense
era” made the top of the list
(beishidai4 被时代) of Southern4Metropolis4Weekly’s 2009 list of most popular neologisms (Southern Metropolis Weekly, 2009), and bei4was made quasi-official
when an arm of the Education Ministry elected it the Chinese character of the year in 2009. Lei Yi, one judge of the event and a historian of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, said the term won by a landslide by popular Internet vote: “[w]e felt we should
recognize this result … so we named ‘bei’ as the character most representative of China’s situation last year” (in Kuhn, 2010). Doubleleaf, a Beijing-based blogger who had his blog “harmonised”, meaning shut down, emphasised in an interview the subversive nature
[f]or centuries we’ve been told that the emperor represented the
of bei:
directed against the “official” or “established” order (Meng Bingchun, 2011: 46) (Li Hongmei, 2011: 71) . Tang Lijun and Syamantak
in such online
Bhattacharya, despite reading egao as carnivalesque, take it to reveal a “widespread feeling of powerlessness, rather than offering the general public any political power” (2011). Nonetheless, they see
direct threat against the Party-state” This (Lagerkvist, 2010: 159). In this chapter I take Lagerkvist’s point that irony is not by4definition radical or revolutionary.
claim in itself, however, says little about what it does do (or undo), but
simply leaves the question open. In previous analyses of egao, the focus is
clearly on potential for changing politics, but none of the authors sustain
any discussion about what they mean by this “politics”. In order to understand their disagreement, we can benefit from
returning to the distinction made at the outset of this thesis between politics in the narrow sense, or politics,4and politics in the wider sense, or the4 political. I have taken the latter to be concerned with “the establishment of that very social order which sets out a
depoliticization” is equal to “a
particular, historically specific account of what counts as politics and defines other areas of social life as not politics” (Edkins, 1999: 2). On such a reading, “
These
politics in the narrow sense, rather than the political. Tang and Bhattacharya’s judgment of egao4with reference to its potential to “create a satire movement” seems to be concerned with the same narrow politics.
accounts, then, dismiss egao as not political unless it can achieve some
movement or influence with regards to politics (in the narrow sense). This
makes the scholars’ readings of egao themselves depoliticizing. My concern, by contrast, is rather with
the question of the political, and I will comment on this in more detail at the end of this chapter.118 It is in this realm of discourse and the political that I ground an understanding of resistance. The previous chapter pointed to the problems of conceptualizing
resistance as revealing “realities”, “the facts”, when what we are dealing with is a hyperreal system. Rather, I argued, we need to think about theory and resistance as a challenge. What does this mean- Roland Bleiker has written about the type of resistance that
occurs in this realm of the discursive, a resistance that revolves around interactions between different types of speech. To him: 118 My discussion of the literatures on egao in relation to politics and the political here draws on Nordin and Richaud (2012), where we
Aesthetic
discuss the distinction as perceived by the young netizens who produce and consume it, based on ethnographic fieldwork and interviews. [o]vertly committed art forms often do no more than promote a particular position….
By re-citing official
netizens are “being harmonised” by the government, but also how they are negotiating such “harmonisation” through language and grammar. This is what I mean when I write that tifa are iterative.
one fixed meaning, but we can play with it, graft it into other chains of
signification that can reveal meanings that were always already there in
harmony in the first place. This possibility is exploited by netizens. We can read deconstruction taking place in the term “harmony” in many places. What dissident use does is precisely shake it loose
from its intended meaning in Hu’s policy documents, reversing and displacing its meaning, without therefore separating it from that policy discourse. Below I illustrate how this takes place in various tactics of resisting harmonisation in China. The point is to not
simply accept “harmony” as having one straightforward meaning, to obey, avoid or bin the term. Instead, we can, as Baudrillard would have it, “recycle” it in potentially subversive ways. Recycling4harmony4(和
谐)41:4Close4reading4of4the4radicals4that4make4up4a4character4 - 182 - Figure 9: Close reading the radicals of “harmony” (Source: Danwei.org) Derrida’s way of reading a text is often termed “close reading”, which involves paying attention to the details of
structure, grammar and etymology of a term or text. This is a tactic we often use in academia when we discuss the meaning of Chinese terms through a close reading of the radicals that make up a character. This is also a common practice among netizens, in online
discussions and in other media, like the above logo from the Economic4Observer for its feature section on the 2006 NPC and CPPCC Sessions (Martinsen, 2006). The English term “harmony” comes from Greek harmos or harmonía, meaning “joint, agreement,
concord”.119 和谐 is usually translated as “harmonious” or “concordant”, the individual characters carrying the same meaning. 谐 is composed of radicals 讠(言) “words” and 皆 “all”.120 With the 口 “mouth” radical the 和 character, pronounced hé, can signify
singing in harmony, or talking together.121 If what we see in China’s current “harmonising” of dissidents is a harmonious society or harmonious world, harmony here retains only its meaning of “singing in harmony” (as we saw through the example of Expo avatars
singing the Expo song in harmony), its “talking together” is only in “agreement” or “concord”. 119 According to dictionary definition (Hoad, 1993; Oxford Dictionaries, 2011c: 6.3996.3910). 120 According to dictionary definition (Karlgren, 1974 [1923]: 364;
Hanyu4da4zidian4weiyuanhui, 1995). 121 According to dictionary definition (Wieger, 1965 [1915]: Lesson 121a; Karlgren, 1974 [1923]: 70; Lindqvist, 1991: 187; Hanyu4da4zidian4weiyuanhui, 1995: 1.602.601). - 183 - Recycling4harmony4(和
谐)42:4Differently4pronounced4Chinese4character4gives4alternative4 meaning4 Figure 10: 和 pronounced hú1is the battle cry when winning a game of mah\jong (Source: Zhang Facai, 2008) This, however, takes us to another tactic of bringing out and playing with
the differently pronounced alternative meanings that Chinese characters often have. 和 can also be pronounced hú, a battle cry of victory when completing a game of mah- jong. Through this battle cry competition or conflict returns to visibility in harmony, as the
excluded term on which it relies. This disruption acknowledges the antagonism involved in play, unsettling the notion of permanent harmonious “win-win” purported by the party-state. It reminds us of the violence we have traced in previous chapters of a dominant
China’s turning other into self. What goes on in this reading is in a sense the first of the two moves of Derrida’s deconstructive double gesture. We have read Hu’s harmony in a way that is faithful to its purported meaning, where the end-state of “harmony” rests on
the exclusion of violence, discord and conflict. His harmonious world, as we saw in chapter 1, is one that has done away with misgivings and estrangement, where everyone wins and no one loses. The “inevitable choice” (or what if we were nasty we could call “the
single prescribed future without responsibility of choosing”) is a future harmonious world order where China will always stand for “fairness and justice”. Anyone who disagrees with this sense of justice is simply wrong and irrational, euphemised as “unscientific”. -
184 - What the pronunciation hú does is acknowledge the excluded other of Hu’s “harmony”, namely discord and competition. Hú can only be achieved after vanquishing the opponent, there is no win-win here.122 The hú of mah-jong, just like the harmonious
Tianxia utopia, is premised on the superiority of the self to the other. Only this hierarchy can establish order, harmony or hú. Acknowledging that competition is always already there in harmony, implied in the alternative pronunciation hú, I propose that we can
acknowledge a third tactic of resistance, the play with homonymous characters. Recycling4harmony44(和谐)43:4“Rivercrab”4(héxiè)4as4a4nearWhomonym4for4“harmony”4 (héxié)4 Derrida’s first deconstructive move is reversal, identifying an operational binary –
such as harmony/discord – and showing how the exclusion of the second term from the first is artificial and that in fact the first is reliant on the second. An equally important move is displacement, the creation of a term that is not fully contained within the old
order. We can get at such a displacement through paying attention to “rivercrabs” (héxiè4 河蟹), a near homonym for “harmony” (héxié4 和谐). Before I go on to discuss these rivercrabs in more detail, I should point out that these two deconstructive moves are not
separate, chronologically or otherwise. My discussion of them here in turn is for the benefit of my reader, in order to illustrate more clearly what this dissident language play can do for us. Similar sounding characters are often used to replace sensitive words as a
way to get through the keyword searches of censorship software that has been bolstered as a way to simultaneously avoid and criticise “being harmonised”. When netizens are blocked by harmonising government software from writing “harmony” (héxié 和谐), they
as a signifier of resistance. In 122 Indeed, the very game of mah-jong is itself involved in contestation as a battle ground for politics, where popular practice has been shown to resist official
campaigns to regulate and “sanitize” a “popular mah-jong” (民间麻将) and promote “healthy mahjong” (健康麻将 4or 卫生麻将, meaning no gambling) as “a competitive national sport and a symbol of China’s distinctive cultural legacy” (Festa, 2006: 9). - 185 -
popular Chinese language a “crab” is a violent bully, making its image a new playful and satirical, but heavily political, way of criticising the harmonising “rivercrab society” (Xiao Qiang, 2007).123 Figure 11: Insist on three watches, establish rivercrab society (Source:
Xuanlv, 2010) One popular satire on it can be seen in the above rivercrab with three watches. The caption overhead reads: “insist on three watches, establish rivercrab society” (jianchi4 san4ge4daibiao4,4chuangjian4hexie4shehui4 坚持三个戴表, 创建河蟹社会).
The first phrase is a nonsensical mockery of the party slogan “insist on the three represents” (jianchi4san4 ge4daibiao4 坚持三个代表)124 and the second is a mockery of the slogan “establish harmonious society” (chuangjian4hexie4shehui4 创建和谐社会). The
political tactic here is one of intentional (mis)reading of official discourse, an iteration of party-state language against itself in order to reveal aspects of harmony that remain hidden from view in official discourse. Again, the acknowledgement of the purported
message and its hierarchical binary as well as the first deconstructive move of reversing that hierarchy are here in this picture, this is not a separate stand-alone symbol or event. 123 As a simple indication of the popularity of satirical depictions of the “rivercrab”, a
Google image search for the Chinese term “rivercrab society” (河蟹社会) gave ca 212 000 hits on 3 March 2011. 124 The “three represents” is previous General Secretary Jiang Zemin’s legacy tifa, which became a guiding ideology of the CCP at its Sixteenth Party
Congress in 2002, together with Marxism-Leninism, Mao Zedong Thought, and Deng Xiaoping Theory. It stipulates that the CCP should be representative to advanced social productive forces, advanced culture, and the interests of the overwhelming majority. The tifa
was part of the shift to Chineseness as a legitimising force of the CCP as a ruling party representative of the majority of Chinese people as opposed to its original legitimisation as a vanguard revolutionary party driven by the “proletariat”. It also helped legitimise the
rivercrab also displaces this binary and functions as a
inclusion of capitalist business elites into the party. However, the
new term which does not obey that order in any simple manner, but
rather shakes it up and brings to the fore the irresolvable contradiction
between these terms. To clarify the position of my analysis here in relation to Derrida’s, I speak of the rivercrab as a “second term” which displaces the harmony/discord binary implied in Hu’s harmonious
This
world and society. As such, it does not obey the order of that binary in a simple manner. However, it also does not necessarily function as a new “master term” in the way Derrida often seems to understand the role of a new term.
sensitive topic in China for millennia. Such practices have also been
known to academics in the Anglophone world for decades. For example, a
1938 article argues that literary persecution was especially cruel during
the Qing dynasty and continues with a description that
(1644-1911 AD) (Ku Chieh-Kang, 1938 [1935]: 254),
were the worst offenders, similar practices of harsh censorship had taken
place since the Qin and Han the first two dynasties of what is
(361-206 BC) (206 BC-8 AD),
typically considered imperial China. 125 In Derrida, some such terms that I have touched upon in the course of this thesis include iterability, which plays on “reiterate” and
combines the Latin iter (“again”) with the Sanskrit itara4(“other”) (Wortham, 2010: 78), and différance, which combines the two meanings of French différence, difference and deferral, “changing an ‘e’ to an ‘a’ adds time to space” (Massey, 2005: 49). It also includes
terms such as artifactuality, activirtuality, circonfession, avenir/à4venir, hauntologie and so on. Despite what may be interpreted as a dismissal at points of Derrida’s deployment of word play (as discussed in chapter 1. See also Baudrillard, 1996 [1990]: 25),
Baudrillard uses very similar tactics in his deployment of terms such as seduction, drawing on the original Latin sense of seducere, “to lead away”, and semiorrhage, semiotic haemorrhage (Baudrillard, 2002 [2000]: 208). 126 I should be noted that this article was
written by a Chinese author at a time when the 1911 nationalist revolution had recently thrown the Qing dynasty from power, which may have affected this commentary. - 189 - The article goes on to list numerous death sentences during the Ming dynasty (1368-
1644 AD), occasioned by the “homophonic nature of certain words employed” (1938 [1935]: 262). As in contemporary PRC, although “misreading” set texts could be very dangerous (1938 [1935]: 296-301), the attempt to provide set phrases and pre- structured
models for expression could not prevent such double meanings from seeping through text (1938 [1935]: 263). There is thus Chinese historical precedent of interplay between violent oppression of speech and the kind of linguistic resistance that builds on reiterative,
mocking punnery in ways similar to the contemporary deployment of rivercrabs. Crabs as cancerous disease Where associations emerging from Chinese language aligns crabs with harmony, bullies and competition, most European languages associate it with the
disharmony of the body that shares its name: cancer.127 In what follows I introduce the European roots of this term in order to foreground my subsequent analysis of the above “harmony/rivercrabs”, where I argue that these “rivercrabs” operate precisely according
to a cancerous logic. The term “cancer” is originally Latin, meaning “crab or creeping ulcer”, with its etymological roots in Greek karkinos, said to have been applied to such tumours because they were surrounded by swollen veins that looked like the limbs of a crab
(Demaitre, 1998: 620-6; Oxford Dictionaries, 2011b). Although the European term, like the Chinese one, has mythological connotations,128 a contemporary dictionary entry for “cancer” describes it as “a malignant growth or tumour resulting from an uncontrolled
division of cells”, but also as “an evil or destructive practice or phenomenon that is hard to contain or eradicate” (Oxford Dictionaries, 2011b). 127 Scandinavian languages have interpreted cancer to equate a crayfish, rather than a crab, to give the Swedish kräfta,
Norwegian kreft4and Danish kræft. 128 In astronomy, the “Cancer” constellation represents Hercules crushing a crab with his foot. This tale derives from Greek mythology, where the crab nipped Heracles when he was battling the monster Hydra and was crushed.
The mother deity Hera who was at odds with Heracles at the time honoured the crab’s courageous efforts by placing it in the heaven. In astrology, the cancer/crab is the fourth sign of the zodiac, which the sun enters at the northern summer solstice, about 21 June
(Oxford Dictionaries, 2011a). The term also has spatial connotations, indicating the direction south, as in the tropic of cancer. - 190 - In this second capacity, cancer is not separate from contemporary understandings of international politics and visions of a
harmonious world. Rather, the language of cancer and tumours has long been common in IR and politics, and cancer is frequently used as a metaphor for moral and political ills on the body politic to be cured or removed.129 At the same time, descriptions of
biomedical cancer often resort to metaphors or similes borrowed from societal relations130 and from military conflict and battle.131 In Chinese language, the close link between security in the medical and political realms is explicit in the character zhi (治), which
refers to both therapy (zhi4 liao 治療) and governance (zhi4li 治理) (Unschuld, 2010: xxvi; Cheung, 2011: 7). Many studies have shown how the knowledge systems of Western biomedicine and Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) reflect the intellectual and political
landscape in which they respectively developed.132 As such, many have understood the spatial distance between China and Europe as a foundation for an epistemological difference in understanding of their medical bodies, which directly parallels that which is
claimed to underpin the understanding of the 129 Hobbes gave a detailed analysis of dangers to the state as illnesses to the body politic (Hobbes, 1996: 221-30), building on an established metaphor of societies as bodies (Hale, 1971). For another example of early
European use, Italian thinker Francesco Guicciardini, writing in the 16th century, constantly repeats the metaphors of medicine and cure. Guiccardini identifies the disease with the Italian city states’ willingness to ally with outside states that are more powerful than
themselves, and cautions against ignoring “how dangerous it is to use medicine which is stronger than the nature of the disease” (Guicciardini, 1984: 20-1). The French Revolution saw the use of illness/therapy metaphors to justify the terreur as a cure for societal
illness (Musolff, 2003: 328). In contemporary scholarship, Susan Sontag in her famous Illness4as4Metaphor singled out cancer as a type of “master illness” that is “implicitly genocidal” (Sontag, 1991: 73-4, 84). Otto Santa Anna describes how the American civil rights
movement used cancer as a metaphor for racism in the 1960s (Santa Anna, 2003: 215-16, 222). In contemporary IR Kevin Dunn has written at length about the how Mobutu’s cancer-ridden body led to a recasting of him as a cancer on the body politic of the Republic
of Zaire, and Zaire in turn as a tumour on the region (Dunn, 2003: especially 139-42). See also Deborah Wills (2009) for recent use of “cancer” terminology in English language IR, and Wang Yizhou (2010: 11) for similar use in Chinese language IR. 130 For a good
overview of such metaphorical use in patients and media, see Lupton (2003). For a good overview of other forms of cultural and artistic expression relating to the narrativisation of cancer, see Stacey (1997). 131 For such military metaphors, see for example Annas
(1995: 745), Clarke (1996: 188), Stibbe (1997), Clarke and Robinson (1999: 273-4), Lupton (2003: 72), Reisfield and Wilson (2004) and Williams Camus (2009). 132 For its treatment in recently discovered Chinese medical literature, see Lo and Cullen (2005). For
commentary on the parallel emergence of political and medical epistemologies in imperial China, see Unschuld (2010). For commentary on parallel developments of political and medical knowledge in Europe, see Have (1987) and Stibbe (1997). - 191 - Chinese geo-
body, examined in previous chapters.133 Western biomedicine, it is thus said, follows Descartes and builds on the idea that parts of the body are discrete and can be calculated, measured and cured in isolation (Have, 1987; Kaptchuk, 2000).
His interest in
previous chapter drew on Baudrillard’s interest in the pre-programmed character of contemporary culture to examine the (re)production of human bodies as computer coded avatars on the Expo screen.
the coding of the human body also extended to the replication and
transmission of data on the micro level, in the form of genetic code and
cellular regeneration. As pure information, the human body is not
understood as the source of selfhood, but rather as an effect produced by
the code Embedded in this code is the potential for
(Baudrillard, 1994 [1981]: 98, see also Toffoletti in Smith, 2010: 28).
cancer and autoimmune disease According to Baudrillard, (Baudrillard, 2002 [2000]: 98, 207).136
excessive system that fuels the growth of anomalies – just like cancer and
autoimmune disease (Baudrillard, 2002 [2000]). What characterises these anomalies in Baudrillard’s theorising is that “they have not come from elsewhere, from ‘outside’ or from afar, but are rather a product
of the ‘over-protection’ of the body – be it social or individual” (Smith, 2010: 59): 136 Like cancer, the question of immunity reinforces the close link between the governance of the socio- political and the bio-medical body, as “immunity” was originally a legal
concept in ancient Rome (Cohen, 2009: 3). For my analysis of cancer and autoimmunity in Baudrillard’s work, I focus on the various articles collected in Screened Out (2002 [2000]), and particularly the essay “Aids: Virulence or Prophylaxis-” (2002 [1997]).
[e]very structure, system or social body which ferrets out its negative,
critical elements to expel them or exorcise them runs the risk of
catastrophe by total implosion and reversion, just as every biological body
which hunts down and eliminates all its germs, bacillae and parasites – in
short, all its biological enemies – runs the risk of cancer or, in other
words, of a positivity devouring its own cells. It runs the risk of being
devoured by its own anti-bodies the system’s overcapacity (Baudrillard, 2002 [1997]: 3). On this reading, “
to protect, normalise and integrate” is shown throughout (Smith, 2010: 60) (we could say “harmonise”)
Moreover,
meanings of hexie4 和谐 explored at the outset of this chapter was always already there in the character – through its pictographic make-up, its alternative pronunciation as hú and through its homonym the rivercrab.
“harmonious” system is not so different from what Derrida and Baudrillard describe in contemporary “Western democracy” or late capitalist “consumer society”. Although China is often recast as the opposite
The lack
above, follow a similar pattern to those commonly prescribed for dealing with unco-operative elements of the geo-body. Biomedicine typically resorts to screening, “surgical strikes”, chemo- and radio-therapies (Marcovitch, 2005: 112).
threaten the system itself. This, in turn, exposes an aporia at the very
heart of the system, in that the dis-ease must be cured, but cannot be
cured without sacrificing the system itself: “there is no effective
prevention or therapy; the metastases invade the whole network
‘virtually’ … He who lives by the same will die by the same” (Baudrillard, 2002 [1997]: 2). Or, in Derrida’s words:
“there is no absolutely reliable prophylaxis against the autoimmune. By definition” (Derrida, 2005 [2003]-b: 150-1). To Baudrillard, the fact that cancer is a reflection of the body’s victimisation by the disruption of its genetic formula is thus what makes it impossible
for conventional medicine to cure it: “[t]he current pathology of the body is now beyond the reach of conventional medicine, since it affects the body not as form, but as formula” (2002 [1997]: 1). To put it a different way, the fact that the system itself produces,
through its own code, that which threatens it means there is little use looking to the rationality of the system to combat its excrescences: “[i]t is a total delusion to think extreme phenomena can be abolished. They will, rather, become increasingly extreme as our
cancer, we might be said to be paying the prize for our own system: we
are exorcising its banal virulence in a fatal form Again, this is (Baudrillard, 2002 [1997]: 5).
military action can only “cure the symptom but not the source”,
harmonisation or re- balancing of the system will prevent radicalism from
breeding (2010: 16). In view of the above explanation of cancer, we may concur with both him and Baudrillard that traditional treatment may only serve to aggravate the problem through weakening the system and causing collateral damage.
However, having excavated the forms of therapy suggested by the “alternative” of “harmonisation” by TCM or Chinese IR, it appears that it stands equally powerless. Increasing harmonisation is unlikely to curb cancer/crabs, but may rather contribute to spurring
crabs it produces. Spatiotemporal bordering in an onco\operative system What, then, are the spatio-temporal implications of these crabs, as metastases of an (auto)immune and onco-operative system- Nick Vaughan-
Williams (2007) has productively drawn on Derrida’s notion of autoimmunity to discuss spatial and temporal bordering. The temporal bordering he discusses draws on Brian Massumi’s description of “flashes of … sovereign power” as a particular form of pre-
to have preceded itself. Where there is a sign of it, it has always already
hit This form of decision is accordingly a foregone
” (Massumi, 2005: 6, cited in Vaughan-Williams, 2007: 188).
by the Great Firewall is having “been GFWed” (Walters, 2006, for examples see Calon, 2007; Chow, 2010). The self-attacking or autoimmune logic
of such GFW-ing is clear in the “blocking” of Internet and telephone access that was used in attempts to harmonise Xinjiang during the 2009 riots. This firewalling was intended to prevent “splittism” from spreading, yet could only do so by splitting Xinjiang as a spatial
The practices of
attempts to secure the temporal and spatial borders of political community” could refer to something less localised in time and space than may at first appear (Vaughan-Williams, 2007: 191).
marked by the way they spread and metastasise through mutation of the
code. In this way, we can understand how Chinese crabs similarly migrate,
multiply and change in what is precisely an “iterative” manner. Every crab draws on previous
iterations of harmony and crabs, but also mutates into something different. One example of such a “metastasis” can be seen in the figure below. It shows a replica of the logo for the computer game “World of Warcraft”, saying instead “Rivercrab World” (hexie4shijie
河蟹世界). The text at the top means “do things others could never do” (做别人永远做不到的事), and the one below means “the late arrival of the battle expedition” (迟到的远征). The links to themes discussed throughout this thesis are marked, including the
direct link to Hu’s “harmonious world” policy, the competition inherent in games and play and the violent military underpinning of harmonious world. Figure 12: Rivercrab world of warcraft (Source: Heifenbrug, 2008) - 203 - The rivercrab metastasises in similar ways
into numerous constellations – some very close copies, some with more creative distance. The rivercrab recurrently appears on blogs and can be found in an online dictionary compiled by China Digital Times (Xiao Qiang, 2010; China Digital Space, 2011a), where it
appears together with dozens of other characters and expressions that have metastasised from similar homonymic wordplay and in reaction to governmental harmonisation. It also appears as a permanent feature on the cap of another Internet meme, the “Green
Dam Girl” (绿坝娘). The Green Dam Girl is an anthropomorphism of the “Green Dam Youth Escort” software (绿坝·花季护航) that was developed under the direction of the Chinese government to filter Internet content on individual computers.146 The Green Dam
Girl and rivercrab also appear in merchandise (Xu Yuting, 2009; Gaofudev, 2011; Lotahk, 2011), numerous cartoons (Hecaitou, 2009a; Hexie Farm, 2011) and music videos (Stchi, 2009; Tutuwan, 2009; DZS manyin, 2010) that typically work through copies of copies,
interweaving the themes and symbols discussed throughout this thesis. In one such music video, the connection between rivercrabs, harmony and Tianxia is once more highlighted (Tutuwan, 2009). This cover-song called “Harmony or die” features the chorus “Green
dam, green dam – rivercrab/harmonise your entire family (lv4ba,4lv4ba,4hexie4ni4quanjia4 绿坝绿坝 – 河蟹/和谐你全家), sometimes writing the same- sounding lyrics as “harmony” (和谐), sometimes as “rivercrab” (河蟹) in the subtitles. The second verse begins:
Green dam - green dam, will kill you in the bud. Rivercrabs all under heaven, arrogant attributes erupt [She] has asked you not to open your eyes too wide Is it possible that [she is] envious and jealous-147 146 According to China Digital Space: “Pre-installation of
Green Dam software was originally intended for all new computers; however, because the proposed policy proved deeply unpopular, mandatory pre-installation has been delayed to an undetermined date. Green Dam girl first appeared sporadically in June 2009 on
Baidu’s online encyclopaedia” (China Digital Space, 2011b). Some, however, suggested that the actual reason for the government’s about-face was the many security flaws within the software that allowed hackers to take over computers (jozjozjoz, 2009), and that it
was built on copyright and open sourcecode violations (Koman, 2009). Popular Chinese blogger Hecaitou (和菜头) says the Green Dam Girl shows the creativity of the post-80s generation in resisting Internet regulation (Hecaitou, 2009a). 147 绿坝‐绿坝 把你萌杀
(lv4ba4W4lv4ba,4ba4ni4meng4sha) - 204 - This kind of video typically brings together numerous key elements discussed here with reference to the onco-operative nature of contemporary Chinese society: the Green Dam Girl, rivercrabs, harmony, Internet
censorship, cleansing and Tianxia.148 This mixing of online lingo and symbols is reiterated also in art off-line. In a 2011 art exhibition at the Postmaster Gallery in New York, Kenneth Tin-Kin Hung exhibited his mixed media installation “The Travelogue of Dr. Brain
Damages” (Hung, 2011). The installation was a response to the increasing harmonisation of artistic and netizen dissidence in China, and explored the role of the Internet in facilitating “both freedom and suppression” (Hung, 2011). The Chinese title Naocan4youji4( 脑
残游记) is a wordplay on Lao4Can4youji (老残游记), “The Travelogue of Lao Can”, a late Qing dynasty novel attacking the injustice and hypocrisy of government officials at the time. The project thus questioned whether the Internet in China is an effective tool for
social change, through remixing Chinese netizens’ meme languages with Western icons. The installation consisted of 10 framed digital prints, a 6-minute long video and a ping-pong table sculpture, seen in the figure below. Several of the prints in this installation
include replicas of one or more rivercrabs, often copied from images circulated on blogs. For example, in the piece titled “Justice Bao faces the Red Sun everyday” (天天见红日), Bao4Zheng (包拯), a Song dynasty judge who is a symbol of justice in China, is holding a
On the walls behind the prints
laptop of the “Great Firewall” brand displaying a copy of the rivercrab with three watches that was discussed at the beginning of this chapter (Hung, 2011).
were written in large red characters: “You are not a real man until you
have leaped the Great Wall of China” which is one (Bu4fan4changcheng4fei4haohan 不翻长城非好汉),
character from the original quote from Mao: “You are not a real man until
you have been to the Great Wall of China” (Bu4dao4changcheng4fei4 河蟹天下 傲娇属性大爆发 (hexie4Tianxia,4aojiao4shuxing4de4baofa) 拜托了你们
眼别睁态大 (baituo4le4nimen,4yan4bie4zheng4tai4da) 莫非羡慕妒嫉了吗- (mofei4xianmu4duji4le4ma-) My translation. Full video with Chinese subtitles can be found online (Tutuwan, 2009). 148 See for example (Hrehnr, 2009b; Stchi, 2009, which later got a
avatar dancetroop found at Hrehnr, 2009a; DZS manyin, 2010). - 205 - haohan 不到长城非好汉). The calligraphic style recalls the hand-painted signs that forbid uncivilised behaviour (like spitting) and promote harmonisation in Chinese cities, but also the signs that
appear on walls to be demolished. Figure 13: “Ping, ping, no pong” artwork by Kenneth Tin\Kin Hung (Source: Kenneth Tin\King Hung) The central sculpture of the installation, seen in the figure above, was titled “Ping, ping, no pong” (Ping,4ping,4wu4pang4 乒乒无
乓) and consisted of a ping-pong table with a whole cut out in the shape of a rivercrab on the Chinese side panel. The net was replaced by a sculptured wall, symbolising the Great Firewall of China, and accompanied by a ping-pong ball to symbolise the exchange of
information (Hung, 2011). The sculpture highlights how the purported harmonious “win-win” of mutuality is undermined by harmonisation, in the form of the rivercrab. Through depicting the rivercrab as a clearly visible and distinct hole or void, this installation also
the final point I want to argue is that this hybridity, in combination with
the autoimmune logics of which they are part, imbues them with a radical
undecidability . Derrida too emphasises this link between the autoimmunitary and undecidability: suppression in the name of the (harmonious) system may be legitimate in protecting it from those who threaten it, but is
simultaneously autoimmunitary in exposing the immune system by which the system defends itself as an “a4priori abusive use of force” (Derrida, 2005 [2003]-a). In this final section I thus want to emphasise the links between cancer/crabs and undecidability of the
in an aspect of the lore surrounding them, that refers to the way the crab
moves in time and space, in a forward and backwards motion that has
been connected to threatening dishonesty, but also to the inability to
decide something one way or the other, or to predict where it is going (Demaitre,
1998). This undecidability embodied in the crab is also emphasised by the Chinese interpretation of harmony that sees its roots in cooking. The crab can at times be poisonous and as a bottom-feeder it often includes contaminated substances. At the same time,
however, it is considered a delicacy and is believed to nourish the marrow and semen, making it a symbol of male potency and virility (The Vanishing Tattoo, 2011). As crabs are considered exemplary “salty” they can in the logic of TCM either disturb or restore
harmony of the body through their effect on the kidneys, and can thus cause or treat cancer (Lu, 1986: 52, 125-6; Wong and Sagar, 2010: 16).150 Like Derrida’s reading of the pharmakon in “Plato’s Pharmacy”, the crab, then, is simultaneously potential poison and
potential cure – indeed Derrida says that “[t]he pharmakon is another name, an old name, for this autoimmunitary logic”.151 Again, the interpretation of the crab as alimentary poison/cure as always already central to the concept of harmony can be seen in the
building blocks of the harmony concept itself. An alternative explanation of the character 和 reads the radical to the left 禾, which depicts standing grain,152 with the radical to the right 口, which depicts an opening or mouth.153 Together they link harmony to
eating, or having plenty of grain 禾 to eat 口.154 David Hall and Roger Ames accordingly argue that “harmony is the art of combining and blending two or more foodstuffs so they come together with mutual benefit and enhancement without losing their separate
and particular identities, and yet with the effect of constituting a frictionless whole” (Hall and Ames, 1998: 181, cited in Callahan, 2011: 259). Callahan also draws on this metaphor in a famous passage from the Spring4and4Autumn4Annals (Lüshi4chunqiu 呂氏春秋),
where a minister uses it to explain to his king the art of empire building: “[y]our state is too 150 For one example of such a cure: “Bake one male crab and one female crab and grind into powder, take the powder with wine all at once to facilitate healing of breast
cancer” (Lu, 1986: 126). 151 Derrida (2003a: 124, see also, Derrida, 1976 [1967]: 292; 1981 [1972]; 1995 [1989]-a: 233; Derrida, 2005 [2003]-a: 52, 82, 157). This is also how Chinese lore traditionally conceives of poisons/cures more generally, as is clear from the
“Five Poisons” (wu4du 五毒), incidentally near-homonymous with “no poison” (wu4du4 无毒). These are, like the crab, actually five animals that have traditionally been held to counteract harmful influences through counteracting poison with poison. They also had
corresponding medicines made from five animals or corresponding herbs, used to treat ulcers and abscesses, probably through active ingredients such as mercury and arsenic (Yetts, 1923: 2; Williams, 1976). 152 According to a dictionary definition
(Hanyu4da4zidian4weiyuanhui, 1995: 4.2588.1). 153 According to a dictionary definition (Hanyu4da4zidian4weiyuanhui, 1995: 1.566.14). 154 This etymology can be found in a number of dictionaries and books on Chinese characters (Wieger, 1965 [1915]: 121a;
Karlgren, 1974 [1923]: 70; Lindqvist, 1991: 187; Hanyu4da4zidian4weiyuanhui, 1995: 1.602.1). small and is inadequate to have the full complement of the necessary ingredients. It is only once you are the Emperor that you would have the full complement” (Lvshi4
chunqiu, 1996, cited in Callahan, 2011: 260). To Callahan, this shows the constructed nature of harmony, built through “an active political process, and judged from a particular perspective – in this case the king’s perspective” (Callahan, 2011: 260). In Chinese
mythology, the crab is similarly associated with sovereign power and violent might, as well as with guarding and screening the passage into secured spaces. For example, in Chinese mythology and popular fiction, the Chrystal Palaces of the Dragon Kings of the Four
Seas are guarded by shrimp soldiers and crab generals (Mythical Realm, 2011). This stands as a parallel to the guarding of Chinese sovereign space by the Great Firewall, and the Green Dam Girl with her crab sign of repressive authority. At the same time, however,
this crustacean army is parodied in the Chinese idiom of “shrimp soldiers and crab generals” (xiabing4xiejiang4 虾兵蟹将), which is used to denote useless troops, a connotation which remains with contemporary Internet users, as can be seen in the image below,
which depicts shrimp soldiers and crab generals as precisely “ineffective troops” (Lee, 2011). Figure 16: Shrimp soldiers and crab generals: Ineffective troops (Source: Sean Lee) What is clear from these
metastases and their association is the undecidability of these crabs of
the onco-operative Chinese system. They are simultaneously poison and
cure, effective harmonisers and useless troops, a consequence of
sovereign bordering of time and space and that which “falls through” or
escapes such confines. This undecidability is inseparable from the “mutual
contamination” seen above in the crabs’ interaction with their environment and with other species of the zoology that has emerged as part of netizens’ play with humorous homonyms in the face of Internet harmonisation.
“[t]his self-
community (whether inoperative, unavowable, - 212 - or coming, as for Blanchot, Nancy, Agamben), but the condition of its existence” (Thomson, 2005). This is certainly the case for Hu’s “harmonious world”. In this way
They make us
potential to cultivate collective resistance, collective empowerment or grassroots communities. If measured against such standards, rivercrabs certainly appear as “ineffective troops” in battling out Chinese politics.
constituted as normal, natural, and accepted ways of carrying on” (Edkins, 1999: 12).
in the flesh of the organic body (prostheses, pharmacology) and in the space between
organic bodies (digital enhancement of the bodily interaction, advertising, virtual sex) is the cause of an
acceleration of the nervous vibration up to the point of spasm. In Guattari’s
parlance a refrain (retournelle) is the link between the subject of enunciation and the
deterritorialization that takes the form of a spasm. In his last book, Chaosmosis (1992),
Guattari writes that ‘Among the fogs and miasmas which obscure our fin de millenaire, the question of subjectivity is now returning
to ward off the ordeals of barbarism, the mental implosion and chaosmic
spasms looming on the horizon.’ Then he writes: ‘We have to conjure
barbarianism, mental implosion, chaosmic spasm’.2 This last expression
marks the consciousness of the darkness, and of the pathology that
capitalism is bringing about. In that book Guattari foretold that the millennial transition
was going to be an age of fog and miasmas, of obscurity and suffering.
Now we know that he was perfectly right. Twenty years after Chaosmosis,
we know that the fog is thicker than ever and that the miasmas are not
vanishing, but becoming more dangerous, more poisonous than they have
ever been. Chaosmosis was published just a few months before the death of its author in 1992, when the world powers met
in Rio de Janeiro to discuss and possibly to decide about the pollution and global warming that in those years was becoming
increasingly apparent as a threat to human life on the planet. The American President George Bush Senior declared that the
American way of life was not negotiable, meaning that the US did not intend to reduce carbon emissions, energy consumption and
economic growth for the sake of the environmental future of the planet. Then, as on many other occasions afterwards, the United
the
States government refused to negotiate and to accept any global agreement on this subject. Today, twenty years later,
devastation of the environment, natural life and social life have reached a
level that seems to be irreversible. Irreversibility is a diffi cult concept to
convey, being totally incompatible with modern politics. When we use
this word we are declaring ipso facto the death of politics itself. The
process of subjectivation develops within this framework, which reshapes
the composition of unconscious flows in the social culture. ‘Subjectivity is
not a natural given any more than air or water. How do we produce it,
capture it, enrich it and permanently reinvent it in order to make it
compatible with universes of mutating values?’3 The problem is not to
protect subjectivity. The problem is to create and to spread flows of re-
syntonization of subjectivity in a context of mutation. How can the subjectivity flows that
we produce be independent from the corrupting effects of the context, while still interacting with the context? How to create
autonomous subjectivity (autonomous from the surrounding corruption, violence, anxiety)? Is this at all possible in the age of the
social life is a spasmogenic rhythm, a spasm that is not only exploiting the
work of men and women, not only subjugating cognitive labour to the
abstract acceleration of the info-machine, but is also destroying the
singularity of language, preventing its creativity and sensibility. The financial
dictatorship is essentially the domination of abstraction on language, command of the mathematical ferocity on living and conscious
tools for the conceptual elaboration both of the surrounding and of the
internalized chaos. A chaoide is a form of enunciation (artistic, poetic, political, scientific)
which is able to open the linguistic flows to different rhythms and to
different frames of interpretation. Chaosmosis means reactivation of the
body of social solidarity, reactivation of imagination, a new dimension for
human evolution, beyond the limited horizon of economic growth.
How does digital capitalism intertwine with the concept of uncertainty? What key changes have taken place in the structuring of the
world, via the digital and the biotechnological, what forces have emerged or coalesced, and finally, how do they affect the realm of
subjectivity and consumption? Here, Arthur Kroker has transposed McLuhan into the twenty-first century, performing an
interrogation of what he calls the
"digital nerve," basically the exteriorization of the human
sensorium into the digital circuitry of contemporary capitalism (Kroker, 2004:8I).This
(in)formation, "streamed capitalism," rests not exclusively on exchange value, nor material
goods, but something much more immaterial, — a postmarket, postbiological,
postimage society where the driving force, the "will to will," has ushered in a world
measured by probability. In other words, this variant of capitalism seeks to bind chaos by
ever-increasing strictures, utilizing an axiomatic based on capture and control, with vast
circuits of circulation as the primary digital architecture . This system runs on a densely
articulated composition, similar to the earlier addressed concept of sado-monetarism,
based upon extensive feedback loops running between exchange value and abuse value.
This assemblage, however, has multiple levels, and not all are connected to the grid at the same speeds; a number of different times
exist within this formation, including digital time, urban time, quotidian time, transversal time, etc. Spatially,
the
structure relies not on geography but "strategic digital nodes" for the core of the
system, and connectivity radiates out from these nodal points (Kroker, 2004: 125). For example, a
key site for these points would be the Net corporation, defined as "as a self-regulating,
self-reflexive platform of software intelligence providing a privileged portal into the
digital universe" (Kroker, 2004: 140). Indeed, his mapping of digital capitalism has clear parallels with the shifts Katherine
Hayles analyzes, in particular the underlying, driving mechanism whereby information severs itself from embodiment. Boredom
and acquisitiveness become the principle markers of this new form of capitalism, which
provides a rationale, or a new value set for the perpetual oscillation between the two
poles, producing an insatiable desire for both objects and a continuing stream of fresh
and intense experience. Perhaps the most densely argued assessment of capitalism, whose obvious parallel would be
Marx's Capital, is the two volumes by Deleuze and Guattari, Anti-Oedipus and A Thousand Plateaus, With all the concern over the
theoretical concepts developed in these books, it
remains extremely important to understand the
analysis as possessing a fundamental focus on the question of political economy .
Capitalism forms, via its structural and affective matrix, a system capable of unparalleled cruelty and
terror, and even though certain indices of well-being have increased, "exploitation
grows constantly harsher, (and) lack is arranged in the most scientific ways " (Deleuze &
Guattari, 1983: 373). Their framework for analysis targets the global, where the deepest law of
capitalism sets limits and then repels those limits, a process well known as the concept
of deterrorialization. Capitalism functions, then, by incessantly increasing the portion of
constant capital, a deceptively concise formulation that has tremendous resonance for
the organization of the planet—resources continually pour into the technological and
machinic apparatus of capture and control, to the increased exclusion of the human
component (Deleuze & Guattari, 1987: 466—7). In other words, it not only thrives on crisis but one of the
principle definitions of capitalism would be to continually induce crisis; nostalgia for a
"los time" only drives these processes. The planet confronts the fourth danger, the most
violent and destructive of tendencies, characterized as a turning to destruction,
abolition pure and simple, the passion of abolition (Deleuze & Guattari, 1987: 229). Deleuze and Guattari
make clear this fourth danger does not translate as a death drive, because for them desire is "always assembled," a creation and a
composition; here the task
of thinking becomes to address the processes of composition. The
current assemblage, then, has mutated from its original organization of total war, which
has been surpassed "toward a form of peace more terrifying still," the "peace of Terror
or Survival" (Deleuze & Guattari, 1987: 433). Accordingly, the worldwide war machine has entered a
postfascist phase, where Clauscwitz has been dislocated, and this war machine now targets the entire
world, its peoples and economies. - An "unspecified enemy" becomes the continual
feedback loop for this war machine, which had been originally constituted by states, but
which has now shifted into a planetary, and perhaps interstellar mode, with a seemingly
insatiable drive to organize insecurity, increase machinic enslavement, and produce a
"peace that technologically frees the unlimited material process of total war" (Deleuze &
Guattari, 1987: 467).7 Deleuze has analyzed these tendencies extensively in his own work, in particular with his dissection of active
and reactive forces in his book on Nietzsche but also in his work on Sade and Masoch, where he points to a
type of sadism
that seems capable of attempting a "perpetually effective crime" to not only destroy
(pro)creation but to prevent it from ever happening again, a total and perpetual
destruction, one produced by a pervasive odium fati, a hatred of fate that seeks absolute revenge in
destroying life and any possible recurrence. (Deleuze, 1989: 37). This tendency far outstrips what Robert Jay
Lifton has described as the "Armageddonists," in their more commonly analyzed religious variant and in what he calls the
secular type, both of which see the possibility of a "world cleansing," preparing the way for a new
world order, be it religious or otherwise (Lifton, 1987: 5—9). Embedded within the immanence
of capitalism, then, one can find forces which would make fascism seem like "child
precursors," and Hitler's infamous Telegram 71 would be applied to all of existence ,
perpetually. (Deleuze & Guattari, 1987:467). One final complication in terms of currently emerging
subjectivities, the well-known analysis in Anti-Oedipus where capitalism, as basically driven by a certain
fundamental insanity, oscillates between "two poles of delirium, one as the molecular
schizophrenic line of escape, and the other as paranoiac molar investment " (Deleuze &
Guattari, 1983: 3I5). These two markers offer dramatically different possibilities for the issues
8
of subjectivities and agency, and questions of consumption and the political can be
posed within their dense and complex oscillations.
The expectation of a ballot for cognitive labor in the round accelerates the
productive system of Semiocapitalism inherent in the speech act. Time is now
fractalized, broken into pieces to be consumed. Capitalism has moved past the
material and now infiltrates all knowledge becoming Semiocapitalism, a game
of mirrors that hides itself from the material view.
Bifo 15. Franco “Bifo” Berardi, Professor of Social History of Communication at the Accademia di Belle Arti of
Milan, "Heroes: Mass Murder and Suicide", Verso 2015, pg. 136-142
looming in the clear skies of the self-appointed ‘new economy’. The social
imagination was so charged with apocalyptic expectation that the myth of
the global techno-crash sent a thrilling wave of anticipation around the
world. Although the announced apocalypse went by the name of the ‘Millennium Bug’, when the clocks
turned twelve on the night of the millennium itself, the absence of any
cataclysmic event left the global psyche teetering on the brink of an abyss
of the collective imagination. A few months later, in spring of the year 2000, the dotcom crash ushered in the
slowmotion collapse – a collapse that, in one way or another, has never been really overcome – despite Bush’s infi nite war, despite
the proclaimed recovery.The recombinant alliance of cognitive work and fi nancial
capital was over. The young army of free agents, selfexploiters and virtual
prosumers was transformed into modernity’s horde of precarious
cognitive workers: cognitarians, cognitive proletarians and internet-slaves who invest nervous energy in exchange for
a precarious revenue. Precarity is the general condition of semio-workers. The
Work time is fragmented and cellularized. Cells of time are put up for sale
online, and businesses can purchase as many of them as they want
without being obligated in any way to provide any social protection to the
worker. Depersonalized time has become the real agent of the process of
valorization, and depersonalized time has no rights, no union organization
and no political consciousness. It can only be either available or
unavailable – although this latter alternative remains purely theoretical
inasmuch as the physical body still has to buy food and pay rent, despite
not being a legally recognized person. The time necessary to produce the
info-commodity is liquefi ed by the recombinant digital machine. The
human machine is there, pulsating and available, like a brainsprawl in
waiting. The extension of time is meticulously cellularized: cells of
productive time can be mobilized in punctual, casual and fragmentary
forms. The recombination of these fragments is automatically realized in
the network. The mobile phone is the tool that makes possible the
connection between the needs of semiocapital and the mobilization of
the living labour of cyberspace. The ringtone of the mobile phone
summons workers to reconnect their abstract time to the reticular flux. In
this new labour dimension, people have no right to protect or negotiate the time of which they are formally the proprietors, but are
effectively expropriated. That time does not really belong to them, because it is separated from the social existence of the people
the mind is formed and enters into relations with other minds, becomes a
psychopathogenic environment. To understand semiocapital’s infi nite
game of mirrors, we must fi rst outline a new disciplinary fi eld, delimited
by three aspects: the critique of political economy of connective
intelligence; the semiology of linguistic-economic fl uxes; and the
psychochemistry of the info-sphere, focused on the study of the
psychopathological effects of the mental exploitation caused by the
acceleration of the info-sphere. In the connected world, the retroactive loops of
general systems theory are fused with the dynamic logic of biogenetics to
form a post-human vision of digital production. Human minds and fl esh
are integrated with digital circuits thanks to interfaces of acceleration and
simplifi cation: a model of bio-info production is emerging that produces
semiotic artefacts with the capacity for the auto- replication of living
systems. Once fully operative, the digital nervous system can be rapidly
installed in every form of organization. The digital network is provoking
an intensifi cation of the info-stimuli, and these are transmitted from the
social brain to individual brains. This acceleration is a pathogenic factor
that has wide-ranging effects in society. Since capitalism is wired into the
social brain, a psychotic meme of acceleration acts as pathological agent:
the organism is drawn into a spasm until collapse.
The world is accelerating towards the catastrophe, the only question we can
ask when faced with the current political sphere is Should We Take Shelter?
Our alternative is one where instead of reaching for survival and failing we
engage the coming apocalypse through a banishing of hope for the future.
Bifo 15. Franco “Bifo” Berardi, Professor of Social History of Communication at the Accademia di Belle Arti of
Milan, "Heroes: Mass Murder and Suicide", Verso 2015, pg. 212-215
supplement the family income. Money is tight, but, thanks to his job, Curtis manages to
pay for the mortgage of the house. Yet during the night Curtis’s sleep is
troubled by the nightmarish premonition of catastrophe. He decides to
build a storm shelter in his backyard. To build the shelter he needs
money, his salary is not enough for the task, and he goes to the bank to
ask for a loan. ‘Beware my boy’, says the good bank director, ‘these are diffi cult times. You
have a family – running into debt is dangerous’. But Curtis insists that he
needs money in order to build a shelter and to protect his family from the
imaginary tempest. Signifi cantly, Jeff Nichols conceived the plot of the movie described here, Take Shelter, at the
end of 2008, after the bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers, during the time in
harvest of tempest is ripe. The hope of the Arab Spring is turning into a
nightmare too: Syrian civil war is spreading beyond the Syrian borders.
The Islamic State is declared. The implausible idea of the Caliphate is
becoming real and taking hold of a territory. And the Egyptian revolution
has been trashed by the democratically elected Islamist government,
subsequently overthrown by Sisi, Mubarak’s avatar. Israel is threatening
Iran and Iran is threatening Israel, while Hezbollah announces the
creation of a special force destined to occupy Northern Israel. Money is
our shelter, the only way we have to access life. But at the same time, if
you want money you have to renounce life. Don’t build a shelter, it is
surely going to be useless. Furthermore, building shelters is the job of those who
are preparing the storm. Remain calm. Don’t be attached to life, and most
of all: don’t have hope, that addictive poisonous weed.
This is what the myth recounts. But let's see what happens when it sets itself up as the objective
discourse of the 'pulsion'. With the term 'pulsion', which has both a biological and a psychical
definition, psychoanalysis settles down into categories that come straight
from the imaginary of a certain Western reason: far from radically contradicting
this latter, it must then interpret itself as a moment of Western thought . As
for the biological, it is clear that scientific rationality produces the distinction of
the living and the non-living on which biology is based. Science, producing
itself as a code, on the one hand literally produces the dead, the non-living,
as a conceptual object, and, on the other, produces the separation of the
dead as an axiom from which science can be legitimated. The only good
(scientific) object, just like the only good Indian, is a dead one. Now it is this
inorganic state to which the death drive is oriented, to the non-living status
that only comes about through the arbitrary decrees of science and, when
all's said and done, through its own phantasm of repression and death.
Ultimately, being nothing but the cyclical repetition of the non-living, the death drive
contributes to biology's arbitrariness, doubling it through a psychoanalytic route. But
not every culture produces a separate concept of the non-living; only our culture produces it,
under the sign of biology. Thus, suspending the discrimination would be enough
to invalidate the concept of the death drive, which is ultimately only a theoretical
agreement between the living and the dead, with the sole result that science loses
its footing amongst all the attempts at articulation. The non-living is
always permanently sweeping science along into the axiomatics of a
system of death (see J. Monod, Chance and Necessity [tr. Austyn Wainhouse, London:
Collins, 1970] ).
2NC A2: Euro-Centrism
The affirmative has engaged in a creation of the other in the image of the ideal
model, which engenders ressentiment as the perpetual pursuit of perfect. This
production of difference and destruction of Otherness is the factor underlying
contemporary racism.
Baudrillard 94 “Figures de l'alterite” (Jean, spoke French) //pday
In the case of 9/11, the thrilling images of a major event; in the other, the shaming
images of something that is the opposite of an event, a non-event of
obscene banality, the atrocious but banal degradation not merely of the
victims but also of the amateur stage managers of this parody of violence.
For the worst thing about this is that here we have a parody of violence, a parody of war
to do with itself and can no longer bear itself, other than in inhuman self-parody. These
images are as lethal for America as the pictures of the World Trade Center
in flames. Yet it is not America in itself that stands accused, and there is no point laying all this at the Americans’ door: the
infernal machine generates its own impetus, freewheeling out of control
in literally suicidal acts. The Americans’ power has in fact become too much for
them. They no longer have the means to exorcize it. And we are party to that power. It is the whole of the
West whose bad conscience crystallizes in these images; it is the whole of
the West that is present in the American soldiers’ sadistic outburst of
laughter; just as it is the whole of the West that is behind the building of the
Israeli wall. This is the truth of these images; this is their burden: the excess of a potency designating itself as abject and
pornographic. The truth of the images , not their veracity, since, in this situation, whether
they are true or false is beside the point. We are henceforth – and forever – in a
state of uncertainty where images are concerned. Only their impact
counts, precisely insofar as they are embedded in war. There isn’t even a need for
“embedded” journalists any more; it’s the military itself that is embedded
in the image; thanks to digital technology, images are definitively integrated into
warfare. They no longer represent; they no longer imply either distance or perception
or judgement. They are no longer of the order of representation, or of information in the strict sense and, as a result,
the question of whether they should be produced, reproduced, broadcast
or banned, and even the “essential” question of whether they are true or false, is
“irrelevant.” For images to constitute genuine information they would have
to be different from war. But they have become precisely as virtual as war today and hence their own specific
violence is now superadded to the specific violence of war. Moreover, by their omnipresence, by the rule that
everything must be made visible, which now applies the world over, images – our present images – have
those who knew and remained silent (or of those who revealed it?). At any rate, the whole of
the real violence is diverted on to the question of openness, democracy
finding a way to restore its virtue by publicizing its vices.
2NC A2: Policy-Making Good
Policymaking and international relations are predicated on the symbolic
exchange of semiotics. Their binaristic thought process of normative legal
scholarship misinterprets the importance of art and makes impact calculus
impossible.
Polat 12 (Necati, professor of IR at Middle Eastern Technical Institute, “International Relations,
Meaning and Mimesis." Interventions (2012))
This book argues for imitation and exchange, and all that is associated
with these notions, such as copy, repetition, derivation, representation,
mediation, illustration, reflection and narrativity, as a pervasive force in
the construction of meaning in the study of international politics. Usually
a concept of disdain in the mainstream imagination in the study area, this
force is often shorthanded as mimesis. The established thinking, which
dismisses mimesis as simply subordinate and insignificant, tends to treat
meaning as fixed, self-same and unified beyond the fluidity it presents in
its specific manifestations. I hold that a radical distinction between
meaning and mimesis that informs this mindset not only fails to provide
adequate explanations of basic phenomena in inter-state politics but is
also unsound ethically for excluding difference, or alterity, that defines
mimesis. Strictly associated with literary and aesthetic theory, the
concept of mimesis has become an increasingly significant theme that
inspires and guides research in diverse fields of learning, social, political,
even biological (as in memetics). The study of international politics has so
far remained aloof from this interdisciplinary current. Almost equally
uncharted and unexplored in the study area is the very concept of
meaning, long transformed in the philosophy of language, chiefly through
the work by Wittgenstein. In this book, I try to show how these two themes, both new to the study of
international politics, are linked by applying Wittgenstein’s insights on reproduction and
repetition (as constitutive of meaning in language) to processes of
knowledge production in making sense of inter-state politics, equally
defined by representation and exchange. Added to this coupling of
meaning and mimesis in the book is the notion of the empowered and
discerning subject, of agency, that I consider to be a perennial function of
mimesis in each and every case, as taught by Lacan, rather than anterior,
or an exception, to mimesis. Obviously, the relevance and practical use of some
such undertaking may be questioned from the perspective of mainstream
theorizing. Yet, like many, pondering on the issue of relevance, I cannot
help but notice how remote and useless the theories of the established
imagination seem to be, as I put these words down, in drawing mere
sense out of the monumental developments of regime change that have
been taking place in several states in north Africa since late 2010, let aside
their utter failure in having predicted them. I try to offer an explanation in Chapter 1 for the
apparent success of the settled imagination in the research community in the face of its inadequacy to explain and predict
eventualities that are central to the practice of the community, notably as observed following the momentous shift in eastern
Europe from the late 1980s that, similarly, mostly eluded the gaze of the mainstream. An alternative to this gaze, with arguably
more practical use, would be to locate and focus on ‘the event’ that is the object of inquiry in some form, not as a category that can
be placed against a narrative of it, but as a condition that negates an absolute distinction of the event and the narrative – what
Wittgenstein would call a ‘game’, and what is perhaps best exhibited in the remarkable filmic oeuvre of Abbas Kiarostami. The
version of it, which, purportedly cut off from (and despising) the domain
of mundane exchange, is only a power tool. It is rather a re-humanization
that is perhaps reminiscent of Husserl in the 1930s on the ‘crisis’ of
European sciences: we certainly have smart, elegant theories, and
complicated research programmes based on them, but we do not seem to
be any closer to understanding international politics, for we gravely
ignore the narrativity in our down-to-earth, everyday experiences of
phenomena, in which policy-makers as main sponsors have no interest.
The human person as the agent of experiences in this heightened sense of
awareness towards the event – alert to worldly exchange that is
constitutive of all meaning – is a subject that is inseparable from practices
of subjugation in time and space, as suggested by Foucault. Yet, this is not what I do in this book. I do not
try to sample this gaze as an alternative to the mainstream, although my conviction that some such approach to international
politics would be more genuinely relevant and practical underwrites much of what I do. Instead, I offer some
justification for this gaze by hopefully demonstrating how deeply
problematic the conventional imagination is on meaning in inter-state
relations in its trade mark reliance on a distinction between meaning and
mimesis, not only in the more dominant political realisms in the
mainstream but also in forms of theorizing that are critical of those. In so
doing, I target a set of binary oppositions focal to the mainstream and try
to read them closely, as instructed by Derrida: sovereignty and
intervention, peace and war, identity and difference, law and violence,
and integration and the nation state. In each of these binary oppositions,
which simply reiterate one overarching distinction of meaning and
mimesis, the first term is typically privileged as ‘present’ or essential, at
the cost of the other term deemed to be inessential, thus ‘absent’.
Derrida, like Wittgenstein, argues for narrativity as intrinsic to meaning; and since
narrativity is traditionally assumed to be a quality of the term in the
binary that is absent, each and every one of the binaries is rendered in
this interaction as ultimately susceptible to a deconstructive
transfiguration. I pursue this reading by locking on a handful of concepts
that are pivotal to the study of international politics: the modifier
‘international’, peace, ethics, law and integration. The reassessment of these concepts
ventures at once into the assumptions, mostly tacit, that underlie a host of issue areas, offering critical appraisals. These
The fact that Waltz uses a mere tale, a flight of imagination, a playful
moment with reality, in putting through his hard-nosed message on state
security is arguably more significant than the message itself . His reliance
on the mediation and license of a story in constructing the reality of inter-
state relations seems to be more of a revelation, leading to rich
theoretical insights, than the lessons he ultimately draws from the story;
namely, a vision of world politics predicated on dour facts and stern
practice, uninfected by fiction and fantasy. What is more, Waltz does not
simply tell a tale; admittedly he retells a tale. In advancing the parable, he
only repeats – that is, copies – an earlier narrative by Rousseau. Yet the
reproduction, which is the representation of a representation, and which
comes in a hugely influential discussion of Rousseau, in which the latter is
associated with a brutally cynical view of state conduct, is in effect only a
semblance of the original. The parable is originally and briefly offered by Rousseau as an illustration of how
primitive humans, moving from an earlier state of nature with a solitary life to a next stage when they came to mix with others,
‘were strangers to foresight, and far from troubling their heads about a distant futurity, they gave no thought even to the morrow.’ 2
The parable replicated by Waltz is presented immediately after these words in Rousseau’s discourse. Last but by no
means least, Waltz uses the tale he appropriates from Rousseau to
suggest an image, a representation, of world politics. The thematic
account of state behaviour he advances is not the practice itself, the real
thing, but a picture, a mirror, reflecting the practice. The curious
conceptual realm implied in the words parable, tale, imagination, play,
mediation, representation, fiction, narrative, fancy, repetition, copy,
reproduction, semblance, replication, illustration, appropriation, image,
picture, mirror, and reflection – used in the preceding paragraph to define the exploitation of the stag-hunt
analogy by Waltz – is at the heart of the main argument in the present book. This argument is about mimesis, a
notion that roughly refers to the elusive interaction between the same
and the similar, that which is and its representation, the real thing and
emulation, the original and the copy.3 The interplay between the terms forms a semantic domain often
identified through the aid of concepts such as imitation, reiteration, and narrativity. The interchange denoted
treating mimesis as simply derivative and suspect. On this take, mimesis inevitably produces an effect
in its functioning that estranges those exposed to it from the genuine
article. After all, the re-presentation is not the same as that which is
present, but a simulation, which is ultimately a distortion for the
unavoidable, defining gap that the representation analytically has with
what it represents. The reality (the origin) reproduced is assumed in this
thinking to stand unmatched, unique, autonomous, self-contained, and
self-referential; whereas the representation is an epiphenomenon, a
shadow, lacking substance, autonomous essence, capable of signifying
only through what it mimics. That this view may be an oversimplification in its radical distinction of reality
and mimesis is cued in ‘the magic of art’ cliché, of which Adorno speaks. A vivid statement of incredulity
centred subject. The reality depicted remains open and is as such more
true to life perhaps than a photographic rendition that reproduces a
linear perception of the physical presence, only part of reality, leaving out
all else. To go one step further, the uncertainty that emerges out of the painting by
Picasso is arguably more ‘real’ than forms of realism from the Renaissance
onwards, in the sense that quantum physics, with its inherent
uncertainty, is considered to be more real than the conventional physical
accounts it has come to replace; uncertainty in some fashion is at the
heart of our efforts to interact with reality. The gaze not simply depicts
but in effect constitutes the object, an insight that reverses the
conventional hierarchy between reality and its representation. The vision of inter-
state politics articulated by Waltz as a mere depiction of reality can be said therefore to be in serious denial of reality it otherwise
champions. His representation of reality may be compelling, as the realist European art is, in its limpid outline of what it purports to
depict, but it also crucially excludes many pertinent features, chiefly the intertextuality intrinsic to life, and is oblivious, unlike, say,
quantum physics, to the problems related to the authority of the gaze. Take the following representation of state behaviour on war,
goals’, he observes, ‘if, after assessing the prospects for success, it values
those goals more than it values the pleasure of peace.’ 12 This reproduction
of state behaviour in theory relies on a logic that is perhaps admirable in
its artless, forthright realism and in its economy with words. Peace is
obviously an interest for the state, thus desirable. But there are also
interests which the state can achieve through war. Prospects for going to
war will ultimately depend on an assessment of conflicting interests 6
Introduction by the state. This estimation of war and peace seems to be
unassailable, until we notice that the brutally realistic representation it
relies on critically leaves out the value and meaning of peace, treated in
the account as a mere interest among others; entities – as interests
attainable through either war or peace – are de-contextualised by Waltz
beyond recognition. They are transformed into mere entries in the same broad category marked as ‘interests’, a
wholesale treatment of a range of concepts out of touch with the intersubjective meaning and purpose associated with each. The
impressive, yet abstract, logic through which Waltz identifies friendship between states as a mere interest excludes from its
depiction of reality a great deal, operating in a vacuum-like thought experiment greatly dissociated from the pertinent reality.
Besides, even if peace is to be treated as a mere interest among others, it should be possible to make a case for peace as the
overriding interest regardless of circumstances, as has been suggested in forms of liberal idealism, given the unavoidable loss and
misery associated with war, even for those fighting on the victorious side. But this is precisely the point. Waltz’s elegant calculation
of state interests makes sense only if it remains at a certain level of economy in representation, with the cost suffered by human
persons in war crucially filtered out, omitted from the picture. The state, on whose behalf people fight, is reified by Waltz as yet
another abstraction that serves no practical purpose in terms of everyday intersubjectivity. This domain of mundane exchange that
seems to evade the account by Waltz is, incidentally, the only possible source of meaning, theoretical or otherwise. The everyday
mimesis as the source of meaning, notably suspended in the reconstruction of the state behaviour on peace, does go on to make
unannounced appearances in Waltz’s discourse nevertheless, to remind us of its all-powerful presence, as in the statement, only a
few lines removed from the discussion of peace as a mere interest: ‘love affairs between states are inappropriate and dangerous.’ 13
2NC A2: Simulation Good
In the construction of a realm of meaning that has minimal contact with
historically specific events or actors, simulations have demonstrated the power
to displace the "reality" of international relations they purport to represent.
Simulations have created a new space where actors act, things happen, and the
consequences have no origins except the artificial cyberspace of the simulations
themselves. Their realism has become hyperrealism.
der Derian 90 (James, recipient of the Bosch Berlin Prize in Public Policy at the American
Academy and professor at the University of Sydney, “The (S)pace of International Relations:
Simulation, Surveillance, and Speed.” International Studies Quarterly, Vol. 34, No. 3, Special
Issue: Speaking the Language of Exile: Dissidence in International Studies (Sep., 1990), pp. 295-
310)
The 1AC was a spectacularized simulation of the semiocratic IR system where Surveying the rise of a consumer society, anticipating
the failure of conventional, radical, spatial politics in 1968, Guy Debord, editor of the journal Internationale Situa- tionniste, opened
the real and the apparent, the true and the false, the good and the evil. In the excessive, often nihilistic vision of Baudrillard, the
task of modernity is no longer to demystify or disenchant illusion-for
"with the real world we have also abolished the apparent world" (see Nietzsche,
1968: 40-41; Der Derian, 1987: Ch. 9)-but to save a principle that has lost its object:
spectacle retains its representational power today. 9 For related analyses of the
representational shift that marks modernity and postmodernity see also Baudrillard (1983b), Benjamin (1969), McLuhan (1964), and
this development. In a very short period the field has oscillated: from realist representation, in which world-historical
figures meant what they said and said what they meant, and diplo- matic historians recorded it as such in Rankean fashion ("wie es
eigentlich gewesen ist"); to neorealist, in which structures did what they did, and we did what they made us do, except of course
when neorealists revealed in journals like the International Studies Quarterly and International Organization what they "really" did;
to hyperrealist, in which the model of the real becomes more real than
the reality it models, and we become confused.'0 What is the reality
principle that international relations theory in general seeks to save? For the
hard-core realist, it is the sovereign state acting in an anarchical order to maintain and if possible expand its security and power in
the face of penetrating, de-centering forces such as the ICBM, military (and now civilian) surveillance satel- lites, the international
terrorist, the telecommunications web, environmental move- ments, transnational human rights conventions, to name a few of the
more obvious. For the soft-core neorealist and peace-research modeler, it is the prevailing pattern of systemic power which provides
stable structures, regime constraints, and predicta- ble behavior for states under assault by similar forces of fragmentation. Before
we consider how simulations in particular "work" to save the reality princi- ple, we should note the multiple forms that these
simulations take in international relations. From the earliest Kriegspiel (war-play) of the Prussian military staff in the 1830s, to the
annual "Global Game" at the Naval War College in Newport, Rhode Island, simulations have been staged to prepare nation states for
future wars; by doing so, as many players would claim, they help keep the peace: qui desiderat pacem, praeparet bellum.
Simulations are used at other defense colleges, such as the strategic and counterterrorist games played at the National Defense
University or the more tactically oriented computerized "Janus" game perfected at the Army War College." Then there are the early
academic models, like Harold Guetzkow's seminal InterNa- tion Simulation (INS), which spawned a host of second- and third-
generation models: SIPER (Simulated International Processes), GLOBUS (Generating Long- term Options by Using Simulation), and
SIMPEST (Simulation of Military, Political, Economic, and Strategic Interactions).'2 Many simulations are now commercially available:
the popular realpolitik computer game Balance of Power; the remarkably sophisticated video games modeled on Top Gun, the
Iranian hostage rescue mission, and other historical military conflicts; and the film/video WarGames, in which a hacker taps into an
Air Force and nearly starts World War III. And then there are the ubiquitous think-tank games, like those at the Rand Corporation,
that model everything from domestic crime to nuclear war, as well as the made-to-order macro- strategic games, like the war game
between Iraq and Iran that the private consulting company BDM International sold to Iraq (the highest bidder?). It may grate on the
To be
is missing in such drills, because regardless of the realism of the simulation, it is just that, a simulation of the real thing.' "
sure, much more was involved in the decision to fire at the Airbus, not
least the memory of the U.S.S. Stark which was nearly destroyed in the
Persian Gulf by an Exocet missile from an Iraqi warplane. But I would like
to suggest that the reality of the nine months of simulated battles
displaced, overrode, absorbed the reality of the Airbus. The Airbus
disappeared before the missile struck: it faded from an airliner full of
civilians to an electronic representation on a radar screen to a simulated
target. The simulation overpowered a reality which did not conform to it.
Let us look at another case, an exemplary intertext of simulation: the work of Tom Clancy. Clancy saves U.S. hegemony in The Hunt
for the Red October when a Soviet commander of a nuclear submarine defects, with the submarine which contains ad- vanced
technology, more advanced than the silencing technology that the U.S. four years later penalized Toshiba (and jeopardized relations
with Japan) for transfer- ring to the Soviets. Clancy, whose Red October dustjacket sports a hyperbolic blurb from Reagan, supplied
in kind one for Thomas Allen's book on strategic simulations, War Games Today: "Totally fascinating," Clancy wrote, "his book will be
the standard work on the subject for the next ten years." Clancy's Patriot Games received a lauda- tory review from Secretary of
Defense Caspar Weinberger in the Wall Street Journal, which was then reprinted in the Friday Review of Defense Literature of the
Pentagon's Current News for the edification of the 7,000-odd Defense and State Department officials who make up its readership
(Current News 7 August 1987: 6). Clancy's Red Storm Rising, inspired by war gaming, was cited by Vice-Presidential candidate Dan
Quayle in a foreign policy speech to prove that the U.S. needs an anti-satellite capability.i8 In Patriot Games, Clancy magnifies the
threat of terrorism to prove that the state's ultimate power, military counter-terror, still has utility. In a later novel, The Cardinal of
the Kremlin, Clancy plots the revelations of a mole in the Kremlin to affirm the need to reconstruct with Star Wars the impermeable
million dollar simulation center is currently under construc- tion, I learned that simulations are becoming the
preferred teaching tool. And at the Foreign Service Institute simulations like the "Crisis in Al Jazira" are being used
to train junior-level diplomats in the art of crisis management and counterterrorism (see Redecker, 1986). This is not to
We have to do something. We
Our reality: that is the problem. We have only one, and it has to be saved. `
can't do nothing.' But doing something solely because you can't not do
something has never constituted a principle of action or freedom. Just a
form of absolution from one's own impotence and compassion for one's
own fate. The people of Sarajevo do not have to face this question. Where they are, there is an absolute need to do what
they do, to do what has to be done. Without illusion as to ends and without compassion towards themselves. That is what being real
And this is not at all the `objective' reality of their misfortune, that reality
means, being in the real.
which `ought not to exist' and for which we feel pity, but the reality which exists as it is -- the
reality of an action and a destiny. This is why they are alive, and we are the ones who are dead. This is why, in our own
eyes, we have first and foremost to save the reality of the war and impose that -- compassionate
-- reality on those who are suffering from it but who, at the very heart of war and distress, do
not really believe in it. To judge by their own statements, the Bosnians do not really believe in the distress which surrounds
them. In -- 134 -the end, they find the whole unreal situation senseless, unintelligible. It is a hell, but an almost hyperreal hell, made
the more hyperreal by media and humanitarian harassment, since that makes the attitude of the whole world towards them all the
more incomprehensible. Thus, they live in a kind of spectrality of war -- and it is a good thing they do, or they could never bear it.
But we know better than they do what reality is, because we have chosen them to embody it. Or simply because it is what we -- and
the whole of the West -- most lack. We have to go and retrieve a reality for ourselves where the
bleeding is. All these `corridors' we open up to send them our supplies and our `culture' are, in
reality, corridors of distress through which we import their force and the
energy of their misfortune. Unequal exchange once again. Whereas they find a kind of additional strength in the
thorough stripping-away of the illusions of reality and of our political principles -- the strength to survive what has no meaning -- we
go to convince them of the `reality' of their suffering -- by culturalizing it, of course, by theatricalizing it so that it can serve as a point
of reference in the theatre of Western values, one of which is solidarity. This
all exemplifies a situation which has now
become general, in which inoffensive and impotent intellectuals exchange their woes for those of the
wretched, each supporting the other in a kind of perverse contract -- exactly as the political class
and civil society exchange their respective woes today, the one serving up its corruption and
scandals, the other its artificial convulsions and inertia. Thus we saw Bourdieu and the Abbé Pierre offering
themselves up in televisual sacrifice, exchanging between them the pathos-laden language and sociological metalanguage of
wretchedness. And so, also, our whole society is embarking on the path of commiseration in the literal sense, under cover of
ecumenical pathos. It is almost as though, in
a moment of intense repentance among intellectuals and
politicians, related to the panic-stricken state of history and the twilight of values, we had to
replenish the stocks of values, the referential reserves, by appealing to that lowest -- 135
-common denominator that is human misery, as though we had to restock the hunting grounds
with artificial game. A victim society. I suppose all it is doing is expressing its own
disappointment and remorse at the impossibility of perpetrating violence upon itself. The New
Intellectual Order everywhere follows the paths opened up by the New World Order. The misfortune, wretchedness
and suffering of others have everywhere become the raw material and the
primal scene. Victimhood, accompanied by Human Rights as its sole
funerary ideology. Those who do not exploit it directly and in their own name do so by proxy. There is no lack of
middlemen, who take their financial or symbolic cut in the process. Deficit and misfortune, like the
for its objective reproduction in perpetuity. When fighting anything whatever, we have to start out
-- fully aware of what we are doing -- from evil, never from misfortune.
2NC A2: Threats Real
Their prediction of catastrophes leads to a real repression of a virtual crime,
and this reduces existence to pure policing. Information thus merely becomes
the production of these non-events that produces a terror that power ends up
exerting on itself as it turns against its own populations. This makes war
inevitable.
Baudrillard 05. Jean Baudrillard, you should know who he is, excerpt from “Event and Non-
Event” originally published as "Le Virtuel et l'événementiel" in "Cahier de L'Herne 84: Jean
Baudrillard", edited by François L'Yvonnet, 2005. This translation published as part of
Semiotexte(e)'s 2007 edition of Baudrillard's "In the Shadow of the Silent Majorities" by Stuart
Kendall 2007, http://insomnia.ac/essays/event_and_non-event/
This world order is aiming at a definitive non-event. It is in some ways the end of
history, not through the fulfillment of democracy, as Fukuyama would have it, but through
preventive terror, a counter-terror that precludes every possible event. A
terror that power ends up exerting upon itself, under the sign of security.
There is a ferocious irony here: an antiterrorist world system that ends up
internalizing terror, inflicting terror on itself and emptying itself of all
political substance -- to the point of turning against its own population. Is
it a trace of the cold war and of the equilibrium of terror? But this time it is a deterrence without
cold war, a terror without equilibrium. Or rather it is a universal cold war, crammed into the
smallest cracks of social and political life.
This precipitation of power into its own trap reached a dramatic extremity
in the episode of the Moscow theater, where hostages and terrorists alike were
commingled in the same massacre. Just as in mad cow disease, the entire herd slaughtered
as a prevention -- God will recognize his own. Or as in the Stockholm Syndrome: their
confusion in death makes them virtual accomplices (that the presumptive criminal should be
punished in advance in Minority Report proves a posteriori that he couldn't have been
innocent).
And that is effectively the truth of the situation: in one way or another, the populations
themselves are a terrorist threat to power. And it is power itself that,
through repression, involuntarily seals this complicity. The equivalence in
repression shows that we are all virtually the hostages of power. By extension, one
can hypothesize a coalition of every power against every population -- we have had a foretaste
of it with the war in Iraq, since it has happened, with the more or less covert assent of every
power, in contempt of world opinion. And if global demonstrations against the war
have offered the illusion of a possible counter-power, they have certainly
revealed the political insignificance of that "international community"
confronted with American realpolitik.
Henceforth, we are concerned with the exercise of power in its pure state, without bothering
about sovereignty or representation, the integral reality of a negative power. As long as it draws
its sovereignty from representation, as long as political reason exists, power can find its
equilibrium -- in any case it can be challenged and contested. But the erasure of that sovereignty
leaves power unchecked, without counterpart, wild (with savagery no longer natural, but
technical). And, by a strange twist of fate, it recovers something from primitive societies, which,
according to Claude Lévi-Strauss, lacked history because they knew nothing about power.
What if our present global society, basking in the shadow of this integral
power, was again becoming a society without history?
But this integral reality of power is also its end. A power that is only founded on
prevention and the policing of events, which has no other political will than to brush
specters aside, in turn becomes spectral and vulnerable. Its virtual power is total, its
power to program everything in terms of software, indexes, packages, etc., but suddenly it
can no longer take any chances, except at its own expense, through all
kinds of internal weaknesses. At the height of its mastery, it can no longer lose face.
Such is, literally, the "Hell of Power."
Policing the event is essentially the job of information itself. Information is the most
effective mechanism for the derealization of history. Just as political economy is
a gigantic mechanism for the fabrication of value -- the fabrication of signs of wealth, but not of
wealth itself -- thus the entire system of information is an immense machine
made to produce events as signs, as values exchangeable on the universal
market of ideologies, of spectacle, catastrophes, etc., in short, for the
production of non-events. The abstraction of information is no different from the
abstraction of the economy. And just as all commodities, thanks to the abstraction of their
value, are exchangeable among themselves, so every event becomes substitutable one for
another on the cultural market of information. The singularity of the event, irreducible to its
coded transcription and to its mise-en-scène -- which, simply put, makes an event an event -- is
lost. We enter into a realm where events no longer really happen, thanks
to their production and diffusion in "real time" -- but rather lose themselves
in the void of information. The information sphere is like a space that, once events have
been emptied of their substance, recreates an artificial gravity and returns the events to
circulation in "real time." Once divested from history, events are thrown back
onto the transpolitical stage of information.
The non-event is not where nothing happens. On the contrary, it is the domain of
perpetual change, of a relentless actualization, of an incessant succession in real
time, from whence this general equivalence, this indifference, this
banality which characterizes the degree zero of the event.
2NC Accident
Death is natural and death is inevitable, but ours is the culture of the Accident. The Aff’s
fantasies of catastrophic death is symptomatic of a societal phantasm of sacrifice and the violent
artifice of death. This imagination of the accidental death reduces non-catastrophic deaths to
meaninglessness and dooms all of us to banality and thus, we all become hostages in the
simulacra of accidental death, willed by the rest of society to Die.
Baudrillard 93. Jean Baudrillard, French sociologist and cultural theorist, former professor at
European Graduate School, Symbolic Exchange and Death: Theory, Culture & Society. Sage
Publications, Inc. 1993, pg. 164-166
Why is it that today there are no expected and foreseen deaths from old age, a
death in the family, the only death that had full meaning for the
traditional collectivity, from Abraham to our grandfathers? It is no longer even touching, it is almost ridiculous, and
socially insignificant in any case. Why on the other hand is it that violent, accidental, and chance death,
which previous communities could not make any sense of (it was dreaded and cursed
as vehemently as we curse suicide), has so much meaning for us: it is the only one that is generally talked
about; it is fascinating and touches the imagination . Once again, ours is the culture
of the Accident, as Octavio Paz says. Death is not abjectly exploited by the Media since they are happy to gamble on the
fact that the only events of immediate, unmanipulated and straightforward significance for all are those which in one way or another
bring death onto the scene. In this sense the most despicable media are also the most objective. And again, to interpret this in terms
of repressed individual pulsions or unconscious sadism is trivial and uninteresting, since it is a matter of a collective passion.
group is enriched by a partner. To us, the dead have just passed away and
no longer have anything to exchange. The dead are residual even before dying. At the end of
a lifetime of accumulation, the dead are subtracted from the total in an
economic operation. They do not become effigies: they serve entirely as alibis for the
living and to their obvious superiority over the dead. This is a flat, one-
dimensional death, the end of the biological journey, settling a credit:
'giving in one's soul', like a tyre, a container emptied of its contents. What
banality! All passion then takes refuge in violent death, which is the sole
manifestation of something like the sacrifice, that is to say, like a real
transmutation through the will of the group. And in this sense, it matters little
whether death is accidental, criminal or catastrophic: from the moment it
escapes 'natural' reason, and becomes a challenge to nature, it once again
becomes the business of the group, demanding a collective and symbolic
response; in a word, it arouses the passion for the artificial, which is at the same time sacrificial passion. Nature is
uninteresting and meaningless, but we need only 'return' one death to 'nature', we need only
exchange it in accordance with strict conventional rites , for its energy (both the dead
person's energy and that of death itself) to affect the group, to be reabsorbed and expended by the
group, instead of simply leaving it as a natural 'residue'. We, for our part, no longer have
an effective rite for reabsorbing death and its rupturing energies; there remains the phantasm of sacrifice, the violent artifice of
the
death. Hence the intense and profoundly collective satisfaction of the automobile death. In the fatal accident,
absurd, for official reason; for the symbolic demand, which we have never
been without, the accident has always been something else altogether.
Hostage-taking is always a matter of the same scenario. Unanimously condemned, it
inspires profound terror and joy. It is also on the verge of becoming a political ritual of the first order at a
time when politics is collapsing into indifference. The hostage has a symbolic yield a hundred times superior to that of the
automobile death, which is itself a hundred times superior to natural death. This is because we rediscover here a time of the
sacrifice, of the ritual of execution, in the immanence of the collectively expected death. This death, totally undeserved, therefore
revolt, based on the right to life and to security, and is neither the object nor the cause of a
ludic terror. 29 Only the worker, as is well known, plays too freely with his security, at the whim of the unions and bosses
We are all hostages, and that's the secret of hostage-taking, and we
who understand nothing of this challenge.
are all dreaming, instead of dying stupidly working oneself to the ground,
of receiving death and of giving death. Giving and receiving constitute one symbolic act (the symbolic
act par excellence), which rids death of all the indifferent negativity it holds for us in the 'natural' order of capital. In the same way,
our relations to objects are no longer living and mortal, but instrumental
(we no longer know how to destroy them, and we no longer expect our own death), which is why they are really dead objects that
end up killing us, in the same fashion as the workplace accident, however, just as one object crushes another. Only the automobile
accident re-establishes some kind of sacrificial equilibrium. For death is something that is shared out, and we must know how to
share it out amongst objects just as much as amongst other men. Death has only given and received
meaning, that is to say, it is socialised through exchange. In the primitive order, everything is done
so that death is that way. In our culture, on the contrary, everything is done so that death is never
come and free it. The myth and the ritual that used to free the body from
science's supremacy has been lost, or has not yet been found. We try to
circumscribe the others, our objects and our own body within a destiny of
instrumentality so as no longer to receive death from them but there is nothing we can do about this the same goes for
death as for everything else: no longer willing to give or receive it, death encircles us in
Baudrillard advocates an
IV. Baudrillard’s war and others’ wars in China and Asia As shown at the outset of this article,
interest in the other as Other, but is unclear about how this feeds in to knowledge about that other. What
form can our ‘interest’ take, if we disallow the attempt to gain
knowledge? We return, then, to the question of how we as scholars may approach Others’ wars, as they are
thought, operationalised and simulated in other places. What I think emerges
from the above is an understanding that ‘the global’, as we may understand it through Baudrillard, is precisely global.
Systems that try to assimilate anything and everything into their own
programmes exist in different forms in different places, including in Asia.
To essentialize these systems into one great mysterious unit of imagined
Alterity would ironically be a way to deny such alterity by fetishizing it
and reducing it to an Identity of Otherness. From Baudrillard's notion that every system contains the seed
of its own demise stems his suspicion of centralized systems and the pretence to holistic unity .
These systems, of which the American-led war on terror is one example and Zhao's
whether the theorist recognises it or not. Of course, an argument could be made that all attempts at understanding,
studying or explaining something is a violent act that reduces its
purported object to a knowable unit and denies its alterity. That argument would have a
point – after all, speaking is an act of violence and there are numerous problems
Identity as Other, for the purposes of exclusion, which again is surely intolerably patronising. Perhaps
we can draw on Baudrillard not so much to remind ourselves only of the alterity of exotic Others elsewhere, but to remind ourselves of the Other in the
Self. Perhaps the most crucial thing is to remember, with Coulter I think, that it is not those other (Asian, foreign) Others and Their wars that are
radically other to Us and Our wars, but people that are radically other to each other – and we who are radically other to ourselves, despite and through
all our attempts to knowledge.
So refuse the affirmatives engagement to allow the cloak of mystery to fall once
again
Nordin 2014 “Baudrillard and War Radical Exoticism: Baudrillard and Others’ Wars” (Dr.
Astrid, Department of Politics, Philosophy and Religion, Lancaster University, UK) //pday
Baudrillard’s reading of the Gulf war, then, gives us a thought provoking account of the
effects of an American or Western system that simulates war in a manner that
never meets or engages the Asian other that is purportedly at the
receiving end of this violence. This analysis of war mirrors Baudrillard’s
interest elsewhere in a code or system that disallows alterity, the seduction of the
irreconcilable, or any form of Rumsfeldian ‘unknown unknown’, allowing only
domesticated forms of knowable ‘difference’. This raises the question of how we
deal with the idea of otherness in Baudrillard’s own writing, and for the
purposes of this article in his writing on war.
In Baudrillard’s writing on this ‘system’ of simulation, it is sometimes European democracy,
sometimes the modern West, sometimes consumer society more broadly, that
are driven by the ‘perverse’ logic he describes (Baudrillard 2002 [2000]: 97, 207; 2004
[2002]). Baudrillard appeals to a ‘we’, the specificity of which varies across his writings
(Baudrillard 1989 [1986]: 116). Thus, as John Beck has noted, ‘there is no outside of the
American rhetoric of achieved utopia; for Baudrillard, it erases all alternatives’ (Beck
2009: 110). In The Spirit of Terrorism, Beck similarly notes the deployment of a Western ‘we’ in
opposition to an enemy ‘them’, ‘not dissimilar to those utilized by official American (and British)
discourse determined to externalise the other side’ (Beck 2009: 112). Beck argues that the 9/11
attacks revealed to Baudrillard that there is ‘another side, a reading of American power that can
move inside it but remains other to it’ (Beck 2009: 112). This, however, does little to destabilise
the original us/them binary.
On anything we may imagine beyond these imagined units of the ‘we’, Baudrillard is largely
silent. Of course, we should not over-emphasise the potentially problematic consequences of
Baudrillard’s focus on these specific spatio-temporal configurations – after all, nobody can write
about everything, nor should they necessarily try. Nonetheless, Baudrillard’s ascription of the
logics he describes to the modern West, European democracy and consumer society raises the
question of what lies outside those configurations and on what logics that outside may operate.
Baudrillard has a limited amount to say about this outside, but with regards
to Asia, and more specifically Japan, he argues for increased exoticisation (Baudrillard
2003a). For Baudrillard, it is the modern West’s refusal of alterity that spawns nostalgia for
the Other, who is now always already domesticated (Baudrillard 1990 [1987]:145, 165).
Despite this nostalgia, we must not try to ‘foster’ difference. It is
counterproductive to call for ‘respecting the difference’ of ‘marginalized groups’, as
this relies on a presumption that they need to have an Identity and makes the marginal
valued as such, thus leaving the marginal where they are, ‘in place’. Difference must
therefore be rejected in favour of greater otherness or alterity: ‘otherness
[l’altérité] is not the same thing as difference. One might even say that
difference is what destroys otherness’ (Baudrillard 1993 [1990]: 127, 131). Thus ‘the other
must stay Other, separate, perhaps difficult to understand, uncontrollable’ (Hegarty 2004:
118). In this way, Baudrillard advocates more ‘exoticism’, an interest in the other as Other. The
Other can only remain Other insofar as we resist the urge to assimilate.
The biggest threat to the global order lies within. In the transcapitalist era, any
oppositional revolution against the system that acts through means of semiotic
abstraction risks being complicit in the evils it tries to critique. Deterrence leads to
war, not peace. Terror leads to true insurrection against the system.
Pawlett 14 (William Pawlett, a professor of media and cultural studies at the
University of Wolverhampton, International Journal of Baudrillard Studies,
Baudrillard and War, “Society at War With Itself,” Volume 11, Number 2, May
2014, http://www2.ubishops.ca/baudrillardstudies/vol-11_2/v11-2-pawlett.html , LD)
I. Introduction It all depends on the ground we choose to fight on … most
often … we choose to fight on ground where we are beaten before we
begin (Baudrillard 2001: 119). This paper examines Baudrillard’s assertion, made in later works including Impossible Exchange (2001),
The Intelligence of Evil (2005) and Pyres of Autumn (2006), that individuals, society and indeed the global
So which
their emphasis on desire as productive and liberatory force, complicit with the mechanisms of advanced consumer capitalism (Baudrillard 1987: 17-20).
capitalism – banker’s bonuses, corporate tax avoidance – is integral to the system , yet it fails to bring about meaningful
This is where Baudrillard’s position departs decisively from anti-globalists and from neo-Communists such as Negri, Zizek, and Badiou . Global power has
deliberately sacrificed its values and ideologies, it presents no position, it
takes no stand, it undermines even the illusion that “free markets”
function and has made “capital” virtual; become orbital it is removed
from a terrestrial, geo-political or subjective space. These are protective
measures enabling power to become (almost) hegemonic (Baudrillard
2009a: 33-56; 2010: 35-40).
*It has become impossible to locate a nexus of power – power is everyone and
in everyone. We have internalized power and usurped the position of the
master, but this power turns on the self as tyranny of the self by demanding
maximization of opportunities. The West has already parodized and
desacralized itself; there is no sovereign. We are now dually complicit with the
system – over-eager acceptance and deep rejection. The most pure form of
subjugation of the system is through subtle defiance – through silence, radical
indifference, and hyperconformity.
Pawlett 14 (William Pawlett, a professor of media and cultural studies at the
University of Wolverhampton, International Journal of Baudrillard Studies,
Baudrillard and War, “Society at War With Itself,” Volume 11, Number 2, May
2014, http://www2.ubishops.ca/baudrillardstudies/vol-11_2/v11-2-pawlett.html , LD)
individuals, of towns, cities and nations can allow one man to tyrannise
them, a man who has no power except the power they themselves give
him, who could do them no harm were they not willing to suffer harm’ (La
Boetie 1988: 38). It seems people do not want to be free, do not want to
wield power or determine their own fates: ‘it is the people who enslave
themselves’ (La Boetie 1988: 41). People in general are the accomplices of the powerful and the tyrannical, some profit directly
through wealth, property, favour – ‘the little tyrants beneath the principal one’ (1988: 64), but many do not, why do they not rebel? Baudrillard takes up La Boetie’s emphasis on
servitude being enforced and maintained from within, rather than from without. Yet, there are also major divergences. La Boetie deplores the “common people” for accepting
III. Duality There is a kind of progressive break with the world, the terminal
phase of which might be said to be that in which the Other has
disappeared, and in which one can now feed only on oneself (with a relish
mingled with horror and disgust) (Baudrillard 2010: 42). The notion of duality and the “duel” is fundamental to Baudrillard’s
thought and can be seen running through all of his major terms, processes and relations. In Passwords Baudrillard defines
reversibility as ‘the applied form’ of duality (2003: 81). Baudrillard’s analysis of duality and its conflict
with ‘integrism’ spans the largest, anthropological, global and structural levels through to the micro-level of everyday life, and smaller still into the world of viruses (Baudrillard
1993b: 161-3). For example , symbolic exchange consists in a dual and reversible process
of gift and counter-gift which work against or in defiance of the abstract,
unified and hierarchic process of commodity exchange. The notion of
seduction consists in the dual and reversible relations that take place
between masculine and feminine not in the biological opposition of male
and female. Fatal strategies are closely related to symbolic exchanges in
that they consist in the sudden ironic reversions and failures of the
system of power, which falters precisely because it is unable to respond
to the rule of symbolic exchange (1990b; Baudrillard & Noailles 2007: 78). In
Baudrillard’s later terminology ‘the hell of the same’ is always haunted by
radical otherness (1993b: 113-123); there is always ‘the other side’ of the
perfect crime, ‘the nothing’ or singularity that ‘runs beneath’ the
something (2001: 6-9). Duality, in Baudrillard’s sense (seemingly inspired by the
religion of Manichaeism – see Smith (2004) and Pawlett (2014)) challenges as
reductive all thought based on determinate conceptual oppositions:
good/evil, real/unreal, masculine/feminine, both dialectical and
empirical. Duality posits something else, something unknown,
unmanageable and beyond understanding in terms of oppositions. This
something, or “nothing”, forms the duality along with, and in antagonism
to, the great series of oppositions which are taken to constitute the
totality of life. In other words, what is generally taken to be real, material,
objective and universal is strictly limited . From the perspective of duality,
the vast sum of identities and differences, the immense plurality of the
world, is still homogeneous at the level of signs. Duality, in Baudrillard’s sense, does not contend that the
world is divided into two opposed principles, nor that there are two fundamental perspectives on the world. Rather, it posits two worlds: one
and destined to emerge from each other . The dynamic, alternating energy of duality defies
structure, value, power and hierarchy. However, morality seeks to
separate or “distil” Good and Evil, working to produce the conceptual
opposition good/evil, literally barring their symbolic exchange, denying
their duality. Modernity, or Post-modernity, is even less tolerant of Good
and Evil as symbolic forms, and works to replace both the symbolic and
moral dimensions of Good and Evil with the reductive, individualised and
psychologised notions of happiness/wellbeing in opposition to
misfortune/ victimhood (2005: 139-158). “Evil” reduced to misfortune is
understood as something accidental, something that can and should have
been secured, controlled and finally eliminated, for example by a culture
of insurance, surveillance, risk assessment and “future-proofing”.
Reduced to a quantifiable scale happiness should always increase, and
misfortune decrease. The cultural demand now is that we show all the
signs of happiness at all times, and, for Baudrillard, the simulacra of
happiness and wellbeing sustain the system and flourish precisely in order
to obscure the symbolic dimension of Evil, which is nevertheless
ineradicable. This is not a historicist position, Good and Evil as symbolic
forms are not eliminated, they are diverted, disjointed, severed,
smothered yet they remain, and indeed take their revenge on
happiness/misfortune. Good has been progressively disarticulated from Evil, the goal being its universalisation, yet, Baudrillard insists, Evil
reappears or “transpires” through the hegemony of this enervated sense of Good, often generated by very measures employed to eliminate it : "by denying
essence, neither does Good. They are relational; each is internal to the other, a charge that is carried by the other. Good and Evil as
symbolic forms are not reducible to individual acts or choices , but they emerge in the ambivalence and
The party-state version of harmonious world has then been deployed to ‘do’
various concrete things in Chinese international politics. At the level of
imagining difference, it appears to share our concern here with
multiplicity and openness. However, groups and cultures are described in ways that
correspond with David Kerr’s ‘blending diversity under universalism’, which tends towards an
imagination of difference as hierarchically ordered, and sometimes as something that should be
eliminated. The future harmonious world is envisaged as an ‘inevitable
choice’, and China is imagined as having a privileged position in the
construction of this future because of its purported harmonious nature
based on history. It is inevitable, yet needs to be constructed and
fostered. Against this background, ‘harmonious world’ is said by some to
indicate ‘an increasingly confident China relinquishing its aloofness to
participate and undertake greater responsibilities in international affairs’.
Nonetheless, the term remains to a significant extent a ‘catch all’ phrase
of friendly connotations. ‘Harmonious world’ may be useful precisely because of its
vague and elusive implications, that nonetheless speak to both Chinese and non-Chinese
sensibilities. Indeed, ‘who could argue against global peace and prosperity?’
Nonetheless, what emerges from accounts of harmony as articulated in
China in the last decade is a tension in the harmony concept between its
need for multiplicity on the one hand, and its presupposition of
universalisability on the other. Bart Rockman has suggested that harmony may be
a ‘necessary glue without which neither a society nor a polity are
sustainable’, but that ‘complete social harmony is ultimately suffocating
and illiberal’. Jacob Torfing has also taken issue with predominant understandings of
harmony in Southeast Asia that he argues present a ‘post-political vision of politics
and governance that tends to eliminate power and antagonism’. Drawing on
Laclau and Mouffe, he understands such a post-political vision as both theoretically
unsustainable and politically dangerous. It is unsustainable because power and
antagonism are inevitable features of the political dimensions of politics. Therefore politics:
cannot be reduced to a question of translating diverging interests into
effective [win-win] policy solutions, since that can be done in an entirely de-
politicized fashion, for example, by applying a particular decision-making
rule, relying on a certain rationality or appealing to a set of undisputed
virtues and values. Of course, politics always invokes particular rules, rationalities and
values, but the political dimension of politics is precisely what escapes all
this. Politics, then, unavoidably involves a choice that means eliminating
alternative options. Moreover, although we base our decisions on reasons
and may have strong motivations for choosing what we choose, we will
never be able to provide an ultimate ground for any given choice – in
Derridean terms, such grounds will always be indefinitely deferred. Therefore, ‘the ultimate
decision will have to rely on a skillful combination of rhetorical strategies and the use of force’.
The acts of exclusion that politics necessarily entails will produce
antagonism between those who identify with the included options and
those who do not. For this reason, the attempt by the promoters of harmony
to dissociate harmonious politics from the exercise of power, force and
the production of antagonism, claiming a harmony where everyone wins
and no-one looses, is bound to fail. Moreover, the post-political vision of politics and
harmony is dangerous because its denial of antagonism will tend to alienate those excluded
from consideration. This, Torfing writes, will
tend to displace antagonistic struggles
from the realm of the political to the realm of morals, ‘where conflicts are
based on non-negotiable values and the manifestation of “authentic”
identities’. Such non-negotiable values would be the opposite of the cooperative harmony
sought. To both Rockman and Torfing, then, complete or perfect harmony will defeat harmony
and create disharmony. In this way, the excessive production of harmony is what produces the
disharmonious elements that come to threaten it. We can see this happening in
contemporary China, where the ‘harmonising’ policies enforced under the
‘harmonious society’ slogan have produced a range of oppositional
movements, from Chinese youth mocking harmony online to the
increasing number of selfimolations we currently witness in and around
Tibet. Numerous scholars argue that in order to imagine harmony, we need to
imagine heterogeneity and multiplicity. We can now add that the problematic
organisation of difference that remains in imaginations of harmonious world
eliminates the multiplicity in the here-now that is a prerequisite for
harmony. What these renditions of harmony show, I believe, is that the tensions in and logics
of harmony are very similar to the ones that are described by Derrida and others in terms of the
autoimmune. What we see in these accounts is an irresolvable contradiction ,
which mirrors the autoimmune logic outlined at the beginning of this article. Harmony must
by definition be universal, but its universalisation by definition makes
harmony impossible. In this respect harmony works on a self-defeating
and self-perpetuating logic that is very similar to what we saw described
in the ‘modern West’ and in ‘democracy’.
2NC China Rise Link
The world no longer operates through the logic of nation building, but rather
the over profusion of simulation - the expo was not isolated to Shanghai, the
entire globe is a world fair – a harmonius simulation of international coherence
where countries are isolated spatial and cultural totalities, where the
distinctions between visiting the expo and being the expo are blurred until all
notions of subject are rendered incoherent, copies of copies without originals,
simulacra avatars in a virtual hyper-reality – This is the expo; have fun at the
American pavilion!
Nordin 12
(Astrid H.M. Nordin [Lecturer in the Department of Politics, Philosophy and Religion at Lancaster
University], “Time, Space and Multiplicity in China’s Harmonious World”, 2012, The University of
Manchester Library, https://www.escholar.manchester.ac.uk/uk-ac-man-scw:186417, pages
149-168)
TAKING BAUDRILLARD TO THE FAIR Above, I have examined different ways in which China is imagined as ahead in the historical queue that is posited at Expo 2010. However, as explained in the introduction to this thesis, a most common way of imagining China
elsewhere in discourse on the country’s relation to the world is as behind, or catching up. This way of understanding China’s role in international politics has its roots in an imagination of Chinese experience as radically different to that of Western modernity – as the
take the next step and understand China’s mega events not only on the
level of representation and ideology, but also on the level of simulation
and simulacra. such a reading is that we need to stop
106 I moreover argue that a consequence of
imagining China as the “other country”. Mega event genres came about in Western industrialising capitalist countries engaged in nation building and imperial
kind of time-structuring institution in modernity time ” (Roche, 2003: 102, emphasis in original). Like Roche, I examine how
and modernity are negotiated by a mega event, but rather than looking
for this time-shaping capacity in the scale and cyclical occurrence of
events I examine one particular event, that is Expo 2010. World fairs have been described as instrumental in creating
the distinction between reality and representation, a dualism that has become central to the way we capture the modern world (Mitchell, 1988; Harvey, 1996). In the remainder of this chapter I 106 Penelope Harvey has begun the work of reading world fairs as
simulacra in Hybrids4of4Modernity:4 Anthropology,4the4Nation4State4and4the4Universal4Exhibition (1996). Recent publications have hinted at the possibility of such a reading of Chinese mega events. Most notably, Price and Dayan’s Owning4the4 Olympics4takes
off in an imaginary of the Beijing Olympics as “spectacle, festival, ritual, and finally as access to truth” and concludes: “Or should we rewrite MacAloon’s sequence in a style inspired by Baudrillard: ‘spectacle, festival, ritual, and finally… simulacrum-’” (Dayan, 2008:
400). To my knowledge none have followed through with an empirical analysis of what such a reading may look like in the Chinese case. explore what happens when we read the world fair – symbol of modernity – through the work of Jean Baudrillard – symbol of
I suggest that we read Expo 2010 not only as an exercise of nation-
postmodernity.
building, but as shaping also the imaginary of the world as a holistic unit.
Expo 2010 could easily be read as a representation of the world, as
mimicry or a fake version of the real world beyond its gates. I read it
instead as simulation. the world fair is everywhere, that in fact the My key claim is that
circulated in virtual hyper-reality. I finally conclude through asking how to be fair in such a simulacral world fair. I argue that thinking the world in terms of its simulacral fairness
the imaginary, the true and the false, the original and the fake as
pertinent and as sensitive as in contemporary China. The lack of respect in
China for copyright is a frequent bone of contention in its foreign relations. Domestic relations have been shaken in recent years by the “tainted milk” scandal, where a number of infants were killed and hundreds of
threat” because China may be faking it, “a wolf in sheep’s clothing” ( Gang Lin, 2005: 1).
Expo 2010 was a highly controlled space, yet it too had its own associated
scandals of fakery The
. Some suggested that Expo 2010’s mascot, Haibao, was a resurrection of American cartoon character Gumby, dubbing it “The Gumbygate scandal” (V Saxena, 2010).
media is based on this process of the never-ending creation of fake. the And
government itself is constantly creating this ‘fake’. If you go to remote places in China you discover very shocking realities, people
The
can’t even find something to eat, but you still think this country is a great country. So when you want to know the facts and get information you are actually challenging power. They are afraid of this (Wang Xiaofeng in Marianini and Zdzarski, 2011).
the real and the fake of the harmonious world is disappearing in a system
of self- referential signs. the whole system becomes weightless, it is Through this process:
we need not
between the sign and the real is, of course, by no means originary with Baudrillard, but has a long and varied tradition from Friedrich Nietzsche (1999 [1872]) to Derrida (1981 [1972]). 108 As explained in chapter 2,
or discreet. significance of simulation, and its key effect is that in place of “the truth” we have a myriad of truths taking the shape of signs of reality and myths of origin (Baudrillard, 1994 [1981]: 6). Baudrillard uses the example of
Disneyland in the contemporary era is the world fair, the most recent, the
biggest, the most expensive and the most visited of which, again, was
Expo 2010. Expo 2010 is built up of fantasm and as one of its feature
4Like Disneyland,
books announces “100 years of Expo dream” (Shanghai shibohui shiwu xietiaoju, 2009). At the same time, as will be seen in this chapter, Expo 2010
The nation state has been the key cultural, political and economic
(Harvey, 1996: 35).
unit through which both IR and world fairs have traditionally told the tale
of global community, and Expo 109 Indeed, this paper, too, works through
recycling and intentionally so. the spatial
(of Baudrillard, Harvey, Expo 2010) 2010 recycles this conceptualisation. As I argue above,
hide that it is the “real” world, all of the “real” world that is the fair. The presentation of
does, as it is not content with a country, but must simulate the world –
always striving to be more inclusive, with Expo 2010 priding itself on
including pavilions of more countries than ever before, an inclusion which
cost the PRC government large sums in the form of subsidies (Xinhua, 2010e). In this way Expo 2010 marks a
shift from ideological nation-building to worlding by simulation. Shanghai, China and the world that surround the Expo are no longer real, but hyper-real, belonging now to the order of simulation: “[i]t is no longer a question of a false representation of reality
(ideology) but of concealing the fact that the real is no longer real, and thus of saving the reality principle” (Baudrillard, 1994 [1981]: 12-13). The relation between Baudrillard’s different phases or orders – those that dissimulate something and those that dissimulate
that there is nothing – comes to the fore in the hyper-awareness and self-reflexivity of Expo 2010, as it had begun to do in previous world fairs (Harvey, 1996). There were frequent references to the self- representations of previous world fairs, in TV programs, books
into fair and the fair into the world. As I will continue to show throughout this chapter, the distinction between one as real or original and the other as fake or copy can no
longer be upheld. All4we4 have4are4versions4or4layers4of4the4harmonious4world/fair,4all4simulacra. This is why I argue with this chapter that we4need4to4take4the4step4and4study4it4as4such, rather than limit ourselves to reading China’s mega events purely
on the level of representation and ideology, upholding the reality principle. The layers of simulacra are all world/fair, but cannot be4the fair in a fully present way because Baudrillard, and others with him, have upset the dichotomisation of presence and absence.110
For this reason, the relation between the layers of simulacra is not that of a coherent system, of stable exchange or of dialectics. The world/fair is simultaneously nowhere and now here. To be recycled, or when is the fair- I have asked in the previous section where
the fair is and argued that “fairness” is everywhere and anywhere – that the world/fair is simultaneously nowhere and now here. I turn next to the temporality of simulacra in this formulation to ask when the fair is. Looking for the world/fair somewhere and
sometime beyond the dichotomisation of presence and absence I argue that the fair works through recycling, revival and reuse, that as a rem(a)inder, it is not new. What better place to start than with beginnings and origins- “We require a visible past, a visible
continuum, a visible myth of origin, which reassures us about our end. 110 This problematique has been discussed among others by Jean-Luc Nancy (1991 [1983]), Giles Deleuze and Felix Guattari (1988 [1980]) and Derrida (1976 [1967]). - 159 - Because finally we
Beginnings were certainly important to displays of China
have never believed in them” (Baudrillard, 1994 [1981]: 10).
This kind
history” of more than 8000 years of civilisation, a sign that reads in English “Dadiwan Site in Qin’an County Believed to Start the Chinese Civilization” in Chinese language simply reads “Civilization begins – Qin’an Dadiwan” (文明肇启).
The fascination
as its own past” (Baudrillard, 1994 [1981]: 10). IR scholars are performing this same exhuming ritual when we dream of the emerging “Chinese school” of IR theory as a radical alternative to “the West”.111
This tactic of
exterminate the evidence to the contrary. The conversion or simple discovery of these different beings is usually enough, for the Renaissance Christians as for scholars of IR, to slowly exterminate them.
tactic in PRC policy towards its “internal others” in areas like Tibet and
Xinjiang. Chinese policy towards its ethnic minorities is presented as
112
cycles, metabolism, circulation and recycling. These are said to be key to the proper functioning of the system. This pavilion is evocatively constructed as a sewerage system interspersed with circulating billboard messages of interconnection. It is
explicit about its rejection of linear models , as in a pair of diagrammatical signs of which the first reads “A linear model will result in excessive pollution and
to an end – since the leftovers, all the leftovers – the Church, communism,
ethnic groups, conflicts, ideologies – are indefinitely recyclable … History
has only wrenched itself from cyclical time to fall into the order of the
recyclable In
(Coulter, 2004). Through these examples we can see the world/fair engaged in different phases of simulation, which can be understood as dissimulating something, but also as dissimulating that there is nothing.
and start analyzing China’s mega events also as simulacra. The world/fair
is simultaneously nowhere and now here. The world/fair is recycled. To
be screened, or who is the fair- the Having asked in previous sections where and when the fair is I turn to the question of who is the fair. What happens to subjectivity in
more like your self; it is a question of recycling. At other points, moving through the world/fair our bodies are more
explicitly hi- jacked by screening, made to do things potentially against
our will proliferated, taken apart.
(and indeed through or in advance thereof), The Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region case for example shows visitors’ images captured and
repeatedly displayed on screens. As citizens of the world/fair our bodies are captured and displayed as copy upon copy throughout Expo 2010, media and academic work, including this thesis. Figure 8: Screened in Ningxia autonomous region case (Source: Astrid
Nordin) This hijacking technology is not simply in the hands of states. Siemens powerfully commoditised Chinese cultural heritage and the Chinese national modernisation project in its Tianxia4yi4jia pavilion discussed above. To English language audiences the
scribed role, and this play has only one script, one where we all sing along
with the Chinese tune. From these examples we can see two kinds of technologies operating in the world/fair: ones that represent the world and ones that operate through simulation, “provoking a reflexive
awareness of artificiality and simulacra”: [t]he first of these conceives of technology as enabler, and is the concept that lies behind the notion of the Expo as a technology of nationhood. Technology enables a perspective that can produce wholeness from
virtual hyper-reality. The Expo is us: our bodies, our dreams, our future.
Their harmonious conception of Chinese rise to the global stage is nothing but
the integration of China into the Westphalian order of integral reality – you
should be skeptical of academic claims of this nature as they circulate
academia.
Nordin 12
(Astrid H.M. Nordin [Lecturer in the Department of Politics, Philosophy and Religion at Lancaster
University], “Time, Space and Multiplicity in China’s Harmonious World”, 2012, The University of
Manchester Library, https://www.escholar.manchester.ac.uk/uk-ac-man-scw:186417, pages
135-149)
China’s rise is commonly described in terms of inevitable destiny
We have seen how
imagined form and significance of such a rise China has placed new . Since 2008
Olympic games, the 2009 60th anniversary of the founding of the PRC, as
well as Expo 2010 Shanghai China. Expo 2010 was seen as an expression
of and tool for the building of harmonious world by Chinese academics (for
also associated with harmony by the party- state. Chinese Premier Wen
Jiabao stuck closely to the official articulation of “harmonious world”
when he described the Shanghai Expo as: an encyclopedia lying open on
the land and a magnificent painting showcasing the integration and
harmony of diverse cultures … The World Expo is a vivid demonstration of
the diversity of human civilizations. The Shanghai Expo has offered a
broad stage for inter-cultural exchanges and integration, reminding us
that we live in a divers and colorful world the Expo had (Wen Jiabao, 2010a). He continued to argue that
made possible by China’s economic rise, but was also part of establishing
the story of such a rise as true, and of narrating a future where China rises
to be the benevolent leader of a new harmonious world order. In this chapter I examine the
2010. I go about this examination in two parts. In the first part I trace the two cosmologies that I outlined in the academic literatures in the previous chapter, “unit- based” and “holistic” spatial
imaginaries. I continue to argue, now in the context of Expo 2010, that the two cosmologies are not mutually exclusive. I show how they are deployed at the Expo in ways that reinforce one another by ordering
spatial difference through teleological time. The two cosmologies are worked out in conjunction with one another at Expo 2010, in ways that support a particular discourse on China and the world, prescriptive of a
Who is the world fair- Reading the world/fair as simulacrum disrupts the
fair’s notions of inside and outside, now and then, subject and object to
the point where these terms are no longer workable. What we end up with is not the many turning into the one,
with the convergence of others into the self. Instead, what remains is a fragmented plethora of truth, not the unreal but the hyper-real. My reading of Expo 2010 as simulacra examines some of the distinctions
implied in the where,4when4and4who4of the world/fair, and shows that we may be better off not taking our distinctions so seriously. THE TWO COSMOLOGIES AND HARMONY AT EXPO 2010 Expo 2010 took place
Unit-
and to the online version of Expo 2010, where one’s avatar can stroll through a virtual 3D replica of the site, visit pavilions and partake in numerous exhibitions as well as interact with other visitors.
Expo visitors,
Expo, we can take guided tours of pavilions and exhibitions and get a virtual passport in which we can collect visa stamps from the various territories visited. Likewise, at the
who may never have been abroad and may not own a passport in the
outside world, can get a multitude of visa stamps and “play” at being
well-travelled. It draws up borders
It is an enactment of the world that pretends such international life is readily available and unrestricted.
This
nation-state system echoed in citizenship regimes inside the Expo when producing a “real” passport meant one could jump pavilion queues for the pavilion of the country that had issued it.
imaginary, these bounded units are also enveloped in the holistic celestial
order of one-worldness. The key terms in holistic imaginaries are the “all-
encompassing” or “all-inclusive”, that with “no outside” or “no
exception”, “network”, and of course “Tianxia”. The holistic imagination
of everything as always already connected to everything else appears in
the room in Urbanian4Pavilion themed “Connection”( This room is 交往).
based on the “scientific theory called six degrees spatial theory”, which
states that no two people are separated by more than 6 relationships (Xu
Wei, 2010: 27). On the ceiling a film is projected showing selected
people’s movements on a map. Portraits of people appear in circles
connected by lines to more and more other people/circles until they form
a web or network on the round screen, bringing your mind to the Earth
and thus the idea that all people of the world are connected (Xu Wei,
2010: 27). There is no one outside the network. Moreover, this claim is
backed up by science, and thus requires no further explanation. The Pavilion of City Being
describes the city as a living being or organism, focusing on the theme of shengming (生命), meaning life, being or bios. The holistic imagination implied in this idea of the city as one body or life is clear from
slogans such as “city being multiplies endlessly, held together by superseding cycles” and “the unceasing adjustment between people and city maintains city life harmonious, healthy city life requires our common
protection” (Xu Wei, 2010: 40). The Pavilion4of4Urban4Planet moreover draws on a holistic spatial imaginary to tell us on the “Road of Solutions” how the resolution to the world’s problems can be found: “[t]he
seasons change, settlement becomes cities and trading routes develop into a completely4networked4world … Only with open mind and allWinclusive4view can we bring the hope of sustainable growth to our
planet Earth” (emphasis added). These references to the organically connected single organism or body, the web of connections with no outside and the completely networked world with an all inclusive view all
provide the basis of a holistic spatial imaginary. Moreover, the comments above indicate that this holistic imaginary is taken to demand the harmonious balance of all and “our common protection”. Classification
the Expo draw on both unit-based and holistic notions of space. This instance shows the two
spatial imaginaries coexisting in contemporary China, and so refutes the idea that one would be superseding the other. I next look closer at how they work in tandem at the Expo. Throughout the Expo,
holistic Tianxia
classification of space is marked. We have seen it above in the unit-based form of mapping state units, as well as that of regions as containers of culture. The
aligned with division of time into eras, often in its ancient/modern guise.
This is where, just as in much academic discourse, we see evidence of the
alignment of dichotomized here/there, modern/ancient and
subject/object (cf. Fabian, 1983). As a number of “developing” countries could not fund their own participation in Expo 2010, Chinese subsidies to these countries ensured there were
I believe in China’s
preparation for the Shanghai Expo. Online commentators echo such narratives, and one commentator on the Expo online “Dream Wall” comments that “
actual strength, a country that has 5000 years of civilisation must be able
to produce glory once more ” (Expo Shanghai Online, 2010c). Finally, the feature film of the Xinjiang regional pavilion demonstrates how
land of four great civilisations of the world ... It once was the road of
bonze Xuanzang, the silk road, the road of western expedition and the
road of eastern return … The great transformation of 60 years is the
evidence of our diligence and intelligence … Today, the assistance from
the motherland also lights up the passion in Xinjiang (Expo Shanghai
Online, 2010g) .104 This quote brings together the numerous elements that make possible the problematic imagination of self-other relations that is under discussion in this thesis. A
separation between civilisations is posited. Xinjiang is subsequently conceived of as a place where these separate civilisations meet. Progress is imagined as a return to a state that once was, and that is now
returning through Chinese diligence in its (re)civilising mission. One can only wonder at the irony as the motherland’s assistance “lights up the passion” in Xinjiang after the brutal ethnic clashes in the years
running up to the Expo (Xinhua, 2009d). 104 Bonze Xuan Zang is a Buddhist sage from Chinese literary classic Journey to the West. Metaphors of lines, circles, spirals and pendula may be used to describe this
temporality, but may be misleading as they change significance in their combined use (cf. Gell, 1992). Analogue clock time, for instance, may be circular if used as for example a toy, but indicates linear time flow
when allied with other concepts, such as civilisational progress and development. The point of China’s progress/return (to its rightful place as world leader) is not whether we describe it using the metaphor of the
in the world ” (中国处于世界领先) and another exclaimed that by then “China has really changed into a great cultural country, ten thousand countries come to pay tribute ” (万邦来朝)105
future of Chinese cities” (Expo Shanghai Online, 2010a). The Xinjiang pavilion is labelled “Xinjiang – a 105 This set formulation is commonly used to indicate great
power. - 146 - harmonious land”. We go to the Expo on a harmonious train, to visit Harmony Tower, and if we hurt ourselves we can have a band-aid from the harmonious first aid kit. Figure 5: Harmonious first aid
system, or it will fail. All things must be incorporated. This, the claim is, is
a distinctly Chinese idea of world order. Throughout all of these imaginings of China in the (harmonious) world, the two spatial
As in a miracle of scientific
Chinese people in 2015. Entering Siemens’ harmonious and commercialised rendition of Tianxia we are photographed.
Tianxia, the Expo worldview portrays itself as “from the world” or “from
everywhere”, yet insists on “specifically Chinese” terms and experience.
This is reinforced as the Expo shows an already nationalistic domestic
audience a China that rightfully rises to the place of world leader and the
folly of anyone imagining that such a rise would be less than beneficial to
all. This is buttressed by readings of foreign involvement and investment
in the Expo as endorsements of the Chinese model for its rise, and is
taken as a showcase for how harmonious the world is under Chinese
leadership. The Expo worldview portrays itself as “from the world”, yet insists on the singular China’s Future as the (Harmonious) World’s Future. On this view, there is only one Future, and it
does not welcome contestation. I propose that we can refuse scripting our songs in the pre-programmed manner suggested by predominant imaginings at the Expo. It can indeed be possible to meet the challenge
of coeval multiplicities that time and space should present us with. In the next section I begin to unsettle the dominant rendition of time, space and China in the world by way of reading it through the work of Jean
Baudrillard.
Debate is disappearing in the proliferation of harmony – the holistic
spacitalization of the globe produces a domesticticated form of difference that
eliminates the possibility for the truly Other– harmony is not meaningless, but
imbued with “hyper-meaning” – more meaningful than meaningful, which
paradoxically makes harmony terminate only its own disappearance – we
should engage in onco-operative logic to make possible coeval multiplicies that
undermine the perfectibility of debate in a process that pushes through to its
disappearance – this is the only political act left – bet on the form of 恶搞
(Ègǎo)
Nordin 12
(Astrid H.M. Nordin [Lecturer in the Department of Politics, Philosophy and Religion at Lancaster
University], “Time, Space and Multiplicity in China’s Harmonious World”, 2012, The University of
Manchester Library, https://www.escholar.manchester.ac.uk/uk-ac-man-scw:186417, pages
214-231)
conundrum for those who want to think about global politics as truly
political. One attempt at managing and grappling with the opportunities and challenges that multiplicity presents us with from “beyond the European imperium” has
been recent Chinese thinking about harmony and the concept of “harmonious world” (Inayatullah and Blaney, 2004: ix). This thesis is to be read
However, Xi has
Xi will introduce other tifa during his time in leadership, and some may expect a decline of “harmonious world” after he comes to power.
also made use of the language of harmony in the run-up to his take-over,
for example when he headed a large Central Government delegation to
the Tibet Autonomous Region Between 17 and 22 July 2011, for events to
mark the 60th Anniversary of what the party-state calls the “peaceful
liberation of Tibet”.155 Moreover, he was responsible for the inauguration ceremony of the 2008 Beijing Olympics, where harmony played a central
role. For these reasons, it seems reasonable to expect that Hu’s stepping down from the presidency is not the last we will hear of harmonious world in Chinese policy or
academic discourse (see Nordin, 2011: 17). The cat-and-mouse game with online dissidents also
continues. A search for banned terms on Sina Weibo on 2 November 2011 showed the term “蟹农场” (xienongchang) to be
censored. The term refers to a series of political cartoons with the English name “Hexie farm”. This “hexie” refers to the double
meaning of harmony and rivercrabs, with the Chinese title using the term
for “crab” (xie 蟹) in this formulation. The cartoons focus on censorship
and violent promotion of harmonious policies and have become
widespread amongst other things through the China Digital Times project
(Hernandez, 2011; Hexie Farm, 2011). New puns are constantly created, then censored, giving
rise to further new terms. The rivercrabs have now morphed into new
humorous “national treasure” words that are deployed in egao culture
online. One such replacement word for harmony/rivercrabs is shuichan
(水产), meaning “aquatic product”. Another is the evocative near-homonym hēxiě or hēxuè (喝血), which means to “drink
blood”, an expression particularly popular in Taiwan. Through such terms, harmony/rivercrabs continue
have
heaven” (Tianxia4 天下), “the kingly way” (wangdao4 王道), “the hegemonic way” (badao 霸道), “harmonism” (hehe4zhuyi4 和合主义), and so on. Yet, in the texts I
with Chinese elites at the head. I have shown these terms and spatio-
temporal imaginings to reappear in party-state documents, academic
writing and the visualisations of harmonious world at Expo In all these contexts, I have shown
some of the things “harmonious world” does at the level of ideology, as a second order simulacrum. At this level, the key “doing” of harmonious world in the contexts I
examined is the allochronic organisation of time, space and multiplicity. This is politically problematic because it reduces not only the challenge, but the opportunity that time
and space could and should present us with: coeval multiplicities. This thesis thus presents a rebuttal of claims that “harmonious world” and associated concepts such as “All-
China, a context that has hitherto received less attention in these debates
than it merits. For these debates, it cautions against the allure of China as
an Other or alternative that escapes the traps of allochronic thinking.
HARMONISATION WILL NOT TAKE PLACE The second question I asked in the introduction to this thesis was: what is the overall effect of the proliferation of “harmony” in
contemporary Chinese society- After officially launching “harmonious world” in 2005, the PRC party-state has continued spurring the concept’s proliferation in Chinese and
The threat
Chinese harmonization. In the context of its “hyper- meaning”, resistance to harmony and harmonious world must be thought of differently.
Therefore, those who promote the truth of it as a war and historical event
are the warmongers, the accomplices (Baudrillard, 1991; Merrin, 1994: 440). On the same logic,
it is misplaced to be for or against harmony. We have seen various
aspects of the “hyper- meaning” of harmony and harmonisation (total co-operation,
total subjugation, total respect for difference, totally moral leadership, total control). None of these things are taking place
That harmony is not taking place, I stress once more, does not
in terms of excess.
mean it does not have effects. Two academic commentators claim with regards to its policy formulation that “it is implicit that a
harmonious world is one where supposed ‘heresies’ are tolerated” (Guo Sujian and Blanchard, 2008b: 4). Based on the finding that harmonious world repeats an allochronising
different time from our own means denying them coevalness in the here-
now. The implication in the texts I have examined is that “they” will
eventually come around to seeing the world as “we” do, which in turn has
depoliticising effects.THERE IS AN APORIA AT THE HEART OF HARMONIOUS WORLD AND COEVAL MULTIPLICITIES The third and final question I
asked in the introduction to this thesis was: are there contradictions in or between different articulations of “harmonious world”- How are these made visible- I have argued
above that the diversity of more or less official accounts of a harmonious world is undermined in that they all fall back on allochronising assumptions. However, I have also
shown how official language migrates and morphs in different contexts through which “harmonious world” is undone – resisted, deconstructed and changed – by its very own
logic. A reading of China’s mega events as simulacra of both the second and third order (ideology and simulation) has revealed how notions of inside/outside, now/then and
subject/object come apart. Moreover, dissident play with the concept of harmony makes visible certain contradictions, both between different articulations of harmonious
world and within the concept itself. I began this thesis by outlining the two contradictory imperatives of multiplicity, the threat and the promise of difference. Throughout the
Harmony must by
examination of harmonious world, this term has revealed itself as mirroring the aporetic imperatives of coeval multiplicity.
governance that tends to eliminate power and antagonism” (Torfing, 2010: 257). Drawing on
Laclau and Mouffe, he understands such a post-political vision as both theoretically
interests into effective [win-win] policy solutions, since that can be done
in an entirely de- politicized fashion, for example, by applying a particular
decision-making rule, relying on a certain rationality or appealing to a set
of undisputed virtues and values. Of course, politics always invokes
particular rules, rationalities and values, but the political dimension of
politics is precisely what escapes all this (Torfing, 2010: 257-8). Politics, then,
unavoidably involves a choice that means eliminating alternative options.
Moreover, although we base our decisions on reasons and may have
strong motivations for choosing what we choose, we will never be able to
provide an ultimate ground for any given choice – in Derridean terms, such grounds will
always be indefinitely deferred. Therefore, “the ultimate decision will
have to rely on a skilful combination of rhetorical strategies and the use
of force” (Torfing, 2010: 258). The acts of exclusion that politics necessarily entails will
produce antagonism between those who identify with the included
options and those who do not. For this reason, the attempt by the
promoters of harmony to dissociate harmonious politics from the exercise
of power, force and the production of antagonism, claiming a harmony
where everyone wins and no-one looses, is bound to fail. Moreover, the
post-political vision of politics and harmony is politically dangerous
because its denial of antagonism will tend to alienate those excluded
from consideration – those who count as “no-one” when everyone wins
and no-one loses. This, Torfing writes, will tend to displace antagonistic struggles from the realm of the political to the realm of morals, “where conflicts
are based on non-negotiable values and the manifestation of ‘authentic’ identities” (Torfing, 2010: 258). Such non- negotiable values
and boundaries, or else all we have is the unitary One. Such is language.
Rockman goes on to argue that although homogeneity of ascriptive identities like ethnicity, language or religion may enhance
for the Other, who is now always already domesticated, a mass version of
what we saw in presentations of “ethnics” at Expo 2010 (Baudrillard, 1990 [1987]: 145, 165).
We have seen the same refusal of alterity in Chinese discourses on
harmonious world, with its focus on proper understanding and the
insistence on difference in order to make the world “colourful”. It is the
same nostalgia and exhuming ritual that IR scholars perform when
dreaming of an emerging “Chinese school” of IR theory as a radical
alternative to “the West”. Despite this nostalgia, we must not try to “foster” difference. It is
counterproductive to call for “respecting the difference” of “marginalized
groups”, as this relies on a presumption that they need to have an
Identity and makes the marginal valued as such, thus leaving the marginal
where they are, “in place”. Difference must therefore be rejected, to
some extent at least, in favour of greater otherness or alterity: “otherness [l’altérité] is not
the same thing as difference. One might even say that difference is what destroys
otherness” (Baudrillard, 1993 [1990]: 127, 131). Thus “the other must stay Other, separate, perhaps
difficult to understand, uncontrollable” (Hegarty, 2004: 118). In this way, Baudrillard advocates more “exoticism”, an
interest in the other as Other, and as beyond assimilation into “proper understanding” in the present. To Hutchings this absence of a “proper understanding” of the other in the
present is no doubt disappointing, because other times are indeed identified with an unpresentable supplement and thus with that which cannot be known, but only hoped for.
the Other can only remain Other insofar as we resist the urge to attempt
But
such assimilation. The alternative would be to fall back into “the One”
and loose sight of the possibility of harmony and coeval multiplicities.
What we have, then, is an aporia at the heart of both coeval multiplicities
and of harmonious world, despite attempts to conceal it. I have aimed through this thesis to
question little by little the attempts at harmonious organisation of time and space as belonging to the sovereign that this concealment has implied. I have examined different
strategies of reading and using “harmony” in ways that reveal the excluded other of Hu’s harmony – discord and competition – to be always already there within the political
of its excessive proliferation. Third, when the aporia at the heart of the
harmony concept is recognised, it allows for a re- politicisation of
“harmonious world” and China’s role in world politics. I have argued that these findings make an
important contribution to both scholars of Chinese international politics and to theorists of time, space and multiplicity in IR. But where does this leave us- A key
discourse and its constitutive binaries, nor simply outside them. They
work, instead, on their margins and limits, disrupting and displacing them,
as we have seen rivercrabs do. This makes them “[n]either/nor, that is,
simultaneously, either/or” (Derrida, 1987 [1972]: 43, emphasis in original). We can add to the previous discussion about the times and
spaces of undecidable harmony, and the potential I have located in it for thinking coeval multiplicities, through drawing on Derrida’s discussion of auto-immunity in relation to
the term renvoyer, which means re-sending, sending away, sending back (to the source) and/or sending on (Haddad, 2004: 37). Derrida explains that the autoimmune process:
consists always in a renvoi, a referral or deferral, a sending or putting off. The figure of the renvoi belongs to the schema of space and time, to what I had thematized with such
insistence long ago under the name spacing as the becoming-space of time or the becoming-time of space. The values of the trace or of the renvoi, like those of différance, are
elections and the advent of democracy” (Derrida, 2005 [2003]-a: 36). So too does it postpone the coming of
harmony. Here, truly “harmonious” behaviour by the sovereign is
postponed until later, until more harmonious times. China needs to
become strong first, be in control of harmony on the inside first, use hard
power first. This renvoi reinforces my claim that there is no essence to harmony, no self with which harmony can be self-same. To paraphrase Derrida, this
double renvoi (sending off – or to – the other and putting off, adjournment) is an autoimmune fatality or necessity. It is inscribed directly in
system is not only a process by which harmony attacks a part of itself . This
renvoi, moreover, consists in a deferral or referral to the other: as the undeniable, and I underscore undeniable, experience of the alterity of the other, of heterogeneity, of the
singular, the not-same, the different, the dissymmetric, the heteronomous (Derrida, 2005 [2003]-a: 38, emphasis in original). By undeniable, here, Derrida also means that it is
only deniable. The only way that it is possible to protect meaning is through a sending-off (renvoi) by way of denial. Harmony is differantial in both senses of différance. It is
différance,4renvoi, and spacing. This is why spacing, “the becoming-space of time or the becoming-time of space” is so important. (Derrida, 2005 [2003]-a: 38). Harmony, like
democracy, is what it is only in the différance by which it defers itself and differs from itself. Harmony can never achieve the indivisibility that it claims as its prerequisite. To the
extent that it tries to do so, it must enforce its law with violence (disharmony). In this sense, it is impossible. But, the perceptive reader may ask, do the traces and cracks that
make harmony come apart not also appear in the argument of this thesis- Could the same not be said about the argument that harmony is impossible- Indeed. A successful
failure. And the same is true for “coeval multiplicities”. This thesis has questioned whether it is possible to imagine harmonious world in a way that allows for coeval
However, the
multiplicities. The temptation set up by this question is to answer in terms of the dichotomy it implies: it is either possible, or impossible.
reveal the contradictions and complexity that reside within what we try to enact and make possible. The purpose has been to show
that the post-political articulations of “harmonious world” do not hold up,
and to bring the political back into the harmony concept. COEVAL MULTIPLICITIES AND
HARMONY TO COME I have argued that harmonious world will not take place , I have argued against its possibility, I have
used it against itself, and written an entire thesis with the express strategy to make it disappear. Are scholars then to resolutely
question of exclusions and exceptions. Despite itself, it invites questions about what or who has
been excluded, why and on what grounds. I therefore take it as an
invitation to question and challenge the reality, precisely, of the divisions
that deployments of harmony have made visible to us. In the party-state’s
version of harmony, China’s future is an active programme, but
importantly this future is described through the oxymoron of “inevitable
choice” (State Council of the PRC, 2005b), legitimised as rational due to the application of
China’s “scientific outlook on development” and prescriptive of a future
where China will always stand for “fairness and justice” (Hu Jintao, 2007). I have questioned such
prescriptive narratives, in order to open up to the undecidability of an unimaginable future for harmonious world. The reason that I have
incalculable and the exceptional, no thing and no one, nothing other and
thus nothing, arrives or happens” (Derrida, 2005 [2003]-b: 148, emphasis in original). And again, “[w]ithout
autoimmunity, with absolute immunity, nothing would ever happen or
arrive; we would no longer wait, await or expect, no longer expect one
another, or expect any event” (Derrida, 2005 [2003]-b: 152, see also 157). This is why Derrida insists on the future “to come”
(avenir/à4venir). In accordance with my argument for (im)possible coeval multiplicities, this places focus on what comes, rather than that which begins from the self or the One.
Chinese language has the same connotations of the future as that which comes, where the character lai 来, meaning precisely “to come”, is part of the term for future, weilai 未
来. This places it in a chain of meanings of the “to come” as “future” (weilai4 未来 or jianglai4 将来), “return” (huilai4 回来), and “originally” (yuanlai4 原来). This echoes with
the spectral temporality discussed in this thesis, where the future is to come as a return of the other that is also its (non)origin. As we have seen weilai, the future, was itself
This article has asked what it means to be fair. I have argued that the fair is not a fake copy of a
“real” world, but that as simulation it marks the breakdown of the distinctions
of the copy from the original, of the fair from the world. The world/fair is
everything and nothing, simultaneously nowhere and now here. I have
shown that the world/fair works through recycling, revival, and reuse that,
as a rem(a)inder, is not new. I have further argued that being in the world fair
turns us all into simulacral avatars without original, circulated in virtual
hyperreality. All these claims have serious consequences for the study of China in the world.
My reading here shows the problem of thinking of China as the “other
country.”66 Baudrillardian simulacra have come to symbolize postmodernity,
continental philosophy, late capitalism, and an American way of life. All of
these terms imply a where, when, and who. A key finding of this article is that the
implied answers to those questions are not as straightforward as may at first glance appear.
Reading Expo 2010 as simulacra shows that we cannot locate “China” as an other, in
another place and another time, than that of our purported late
capitalism or postmodern condition. Importantly, though, through Baudrillard’s
simulacra we can see how this is not a case of “catching up,” of those
behind (finally) becoming like us. The point is not that “the others” have
now become “the same,” so that we can happily apply our “Western
theories” and ignore difference. The point is, rather, that reading the
world/fair as simulation messes with its notions of inside and outside,
now and then, subject and object to the point where these terms are no
longer workable. What we end up with is not the many turning into the one, with the
convergence of others into the self. Instead, what remains is a fragmented
plethora of truth, not the unreal but the hyperreal. The effect is our own
disappearance. The object becomes us, sees us. We see ourselves through the
Expo. The Expo is us. My reading here of Expo 2010 as simulacra has examined some of the
distinctions implied in the where, when, and who of the world/fair and shows that we may be
better off not taking our distinctions so seriously. But of course, the study of the world/fair is
serious. We all want to base our work on fair ground, but what happens to fair descriptions
when that ground has turned out to be a fairground? In the simulacral world/fair, can
we still retain strategy? Already in his earlier work, Baudrillard had come to the
conclusion that in a “hyperrealist” system, “[s]trictly speaking, nothing
remains for us to base anything on.” In a hyperreal world of simulacra, the
weight of information makes modernity (and its space) fall apart. This has
shattering implications for meaning: “where we think that information
produces meaning, the opposite occurs.”68 Meaning, truth and the real
are reversed, that is, they are divested of any universal meaning, which
restricts them to local, partial objects.69 In this age of simulation, we have
surpassed old versions of uncertainty and made our problem permanent.
Recycling and simulation, with what they do to reality, to time and space,
demand something from us: we no longer have the choice of advancing,
of preserving in the present destruction, or of retreating—but only of
facing up to this radical illusion. In this manner, the uncertainty of the
simulated world/fair is not necessarily a cause for pessimism. Coulter has
claimed, “Baudrillard has long found a radically uncertain and ultimately
unknowable world a far more comfortable place to live than one which is
predictable. Baudrillard lives, as well as do [sic], in a world in a permanent
state of reversibility, and he prefers it to a world that is accomplished.” I
agree with Coulters sentiment, but think we are better off thinking of Baudrillard’s (and
our) being in this recycled world as profoundly uncomfortable. The question
posed is most pertinent to the way we think about the world and our role in worlding: Does the
world have to have meaning, then? That is the real problem. If we could accept this
meaninglessness of the world, then we could play with forms, appearances and our impulses,
without worrying about their ultimate destination . . . Do we absolutely have to choose between
The absence
meaning and non-meaning? But the point is precisely that we do not want to.
of meaning is no doubt intolerable, but it would be just as intolerable to
see the world assume a definitive meaning. This implosion or
disappearance of meaning, truth and the real, however, does not mean
we cannot have strategy: “Theoretical violence, not truth, is the only
resource we have left us.”74 The strategy Baudrillard has developed is a “fatal
strategy,” one that values uncertainty and where, in contrast to banal
theory, the subject is no longer under any illusion of being more cunning
than the object.75 In contrast to the teleological narratives on China in the
world—in common approaches of IR theory, in the PRC government’s
rendition of China’s inevitable rise to world leadership, and in the
conceptualizations of time and space at Expo 2010—the world described
by Baudrillard is not determined. In this world, “everything is
antagonistic” rather than harmonious and good will not necessarily
triumph over evil. The strategy, then, is not for theory like in Enlightenment thought to
reflect the real but instead to work as a challenge. The world/fair is not compatible
with the “real” that is imposed upon it. Importantly though: “the function of
theory is certainly not to reconcile it, but on the contrary, to seduce, to
wrest things from their condition, to force them into an overexistence
which is incompatible with that of the real.”77 The purpose then of theory
is to s(t)imulate the (im)possible in the world/fair. My hope with this article is to
take one small step in such a direction and provoke us into thinking of China’s
“mega events” beyond representation, reality, and ideology—to think of
them in terms of simulacra.
2NC Consumption
Dying to achieve immortality, the affirmative attempts to rid uncertainty
through consumption and materialism that leads to disenchantment with life.
This loss of wonder is the twilight of society, constructing the ultimate sacrifice
of thinking and knowledge.
Wiltgen 05. James Wiltgen, Professor at the University of California, PhD from UCLA in Latin American Studies,
“Consumption in the Age of Information”, Bloomsbury Academic, pg. 103-107
How to address the question of uncertainty becomes one of the most pressing issues of the contemporary moment, not in order to
"overcome" it, but to create new ways to think about both the ancient and current strands, a type of genealogy if you will
(Baudrillard, 1993:43). Hannah Arendt has argued, in The Human Condition, that uncertainty stems from a
"difficulty to believe in reality," and one of the key symptoms of this transition begins with Hobbes and his
introduction of the essential facets of "making and reckoning," where "only what I am going to make will be real" (Arendt, 1958:
300).5 Arguably the determining factor here, according to Arendt, occurred with the shift from an ancient belief of immortality, a
sense that in spite of the most lacerating of tragedies to befall individuals, families and city-states, there existed a strong perception
of continuity, that humans would always be in the world, to a sense of eternity, which Arendt dates most resolutely from the Fall of
the Roman Empire (Arendt, 1958: 20).6In the modern age, the shift solidifies with three events: the discovery of the "New World"
circa 1500, the Protestant Reformation, and the invention of the telescope and a new science to accompany it. A defining moment
for this emergence then, comes with Descartes and his dubito ergo sum, where doubt of reality becomes the defining relationship
between the subject and the world, where the certitude salutis, or the certainty of knowing if one can attain salvation has been
broken, where un Dieu cache produces two nightmares for the French thinker: either the reality of this life may be a dream, or a
Dieu trompeur, an evil spirit, "willfully and spitefully betrays man"(Arendt, 1958:276—9).The pagan "belief" in the immortality of life
would be replaced, then, by the Christian "belief" in the immortality of the individual, but in the modern age even this would be
"lost," replaced by what many observes deem a vast and terrifying vacuum, a void almost completely empty, conceptualized in
physics by the Big Bang and further exacerbated by recent "discoveries" that the universe is now flying apart at ever greater speeds.
Following this analysis, the primary explanation of the organization of both the macro-level as well as the microlevel will be a need,
the most abstract of need, to fill the vacuum left by the oblivion, or withdrawal, or disappearance of a former organizing center. Of
course, one can detect the outlines of both Nietzsche and Heidegger, among others, where they link the emergence of nihilism with
the trajectory of Western thought and culture. A pervasive new strain of thinking has emerged from a variety of earlier strands, and
as Arendt argues, "man can know only what he makes" and the famous homo faber takes center stage, as "man carries certainty of
himself within himself". However, this formulation folds in upon itself, as the set of forces creating "homo faber" have now mutated,
"redrawing" the measure, and contributing dramatically to uncertainty (Arendt, 1958: 279, 298). The form of measure has been set
adrift, and the human now seems to be part of a vast "experiment" about which only tendencies can be discerned — as Leonard
Cohen notes, "Though all the maps of blood and flesh are posted on the door, there's no one who has told us yet what Boogie Street
is for" (2001). Arendt acknowledges this shift, this pervasiveness of doubt and uncertainty on the part of the human condition, and a
"new zeal for making good in this life emerges," where "man can know only what he makes himself" (Arendt, 1958: 276, 293). The
implications for consumption would seem quite clear in this analysis, as humans have been thrust back upon themselves,
and the only reality possible in this scenario involves a radical and perhaps reactionary materialism, a
because the contemporary world has extinguished its double, and there is
no longer anything for which the world can be exchanged (Baudrillard, 2001: 3). The
planet has entered what he calls the "ontological night," where la pensee unique or the concept of the
"good," seeks to extinguish its opposite, but the good in this case seems to be at the "control of a suicide machine" (2001: 98, 15,
37,99). Due to this pervasive malaise, which might, if at all possible, be attributed to a certain " blind consumption ...
we are building a perfect clone," a "virtual technological artifact, so that
the world can be exchanged for its artificial double" (200IL 99, 14, 28). He
also argues that humankind, "in its blind will for greater knowledge ... is
sacrificing itself to an experimental destiny unknown to other species ... in
order to construct his immortal double" (2001: 33). This points to gathering forces of a "final
solution" where the good has completely triumphed, the culmination of modernity's destruction of the world’s double, so an
arguments that have been made for the "disenchantment" of modern life, a loss of the
sense of wonder, beginning with Max Weber and continuing through a number of thinkers, including Hans Blumenberg;
in place of disenchantment, she argues for a new form of "ataraxy", a new type of thinking the cosmos as Lucretius might have it —
as a poetics to Venus, as a celestial harmony of the infinite swerve of atoms in the unfathomable expanse of the void. This
intellectual maneuvering requires what might be called, in another context, a "leap," to think what Bennett calls "primordial
harmony" (Bennett, 2001: 48, 140, 169). A way to transvalue Arendt s concept of "eternity," "repeating" it as a pagan belief in the
continuity of existence, a way to "overcome" the pervasive and pernicious effects of ressentiment, and provide belief in this world.
will be
affirmation of the world, as well as their call for the formation of a "new earth." Before addressing these issues, it
The irreversibility of biological death, its objective and punctual character, is a modern fact of
science. It is specific to our culture. Every other culture says that death begins before
death, that life goes on after life, and that it is impossible to distinguish
life from death. Against the representation which sees in one the term of the other, we must try to see the
radical indeterminacy of life and death, and the impossibility of their autonomy in the symbolic order. Death is
not a due payment [échéance], it is a nuance of life; or, life is a nuance of death. But our modern idea of death is
controlled by a very different system of representations: that of the machine and the
function. A machine either works or it does not. Thus the biological machine is either dead or
alive. The symbolic order is ignorant of this digital abstraction. And even biology acknowledges that we start dying at birth, but this remains with
the category of a functional definition. 25 It is quite another thing to say that death articulates life, is exchanged with life and is the apogee of life: for
then it becomes absurd to make life a process which expires with death, and more absurd still to make death equivalent to a deficit and, an accelerated
Neither life nor death can any longer be assigned a given end: there
repayment.
is therefore no punctuality nor any possible definition of death. We are living entirely
within evolutionist thought, which states that we go from life to death: this is the illusion of the subject that sustains both biology and metaphysics
Methuen, 1990, p. 14] The subject's identity is continually falling apart, falling into God's forgetting.
But this death is not at all biological. At one pole, biochemistry, asexual protozoa are not affected by death, they
divide and branch out (nor is the genetic code, for its part, ever affected by death: it is transmitted unchanged beyond individual fates). At the
other, symbolic, pole, death and nothingness no longer exist, since in the
symbolic, life and death are reversible. Only in the infinitesimal space of
the individual conscious subject does death take on an irreversible
meaning. Even here, death is not an event, but a myth experienced as
anticipation. The subject needs a myth of its end, as of its origin, to form
its identity. In reality, the subject is never there: like the face, the hands and the hair, and even before
no doubt, it is always already somewhere else, trapped in a senseless distribution, an endless
cycle impelled by death. This death, everywhere in life, must be conjured up and localised in a precise point of time and a
precise place: the body. In biological death, death and the body neutralise instead of
'real' than the immortal soul: both result simultaneously from the same
abstraction, and with them the two great complementary metaphysics: the idealism of the soul (with all its
moral metamorphoses) and the 'materialist' idealism of the body, prolonged in biology. Biology
lives on as much by the separation of mind and body as from any other Christian or
Cartesian metaphysics, but it no longer declares this. The mind or soul is not mentioned any more: as an ideal
principle, it has entirely passed into the moral discipline of science; into the
The Accident
Arcade, 1990] ) than biological science, which, techniques and axioms, has passed entirely over to the side of the 'non-body'.
the soldier who meets Death at a crossing in the marketplace, and believes he saw him
make a menacing gesture in his direction. He rushes to the king's palace and asks the king for his
best horse in order that he might flee during the night far from Death, as
far as Samarkand. Upon which the king summons Death to the palace and reproaches him for having frightened one of his best servants. But
Death, astonished, replies: "I didn't mean to frighten him. It was just that I was
surprised to see this soldier here, when we had a rendez-vous tomorrow,
in Samarkand." Yes, one runs towards one's fate all the more surely by
seeking to escape it. Yes, everyone seeks his own death, and the failed acts are the most
successful. Yes, signs follow an unconscious course. But all this concerns the truth of the rendez-vous in Samarkand; it does not account for the seduction of the story, which is in
no way an apologue of truth. What is astounding about the story is that this seemingly inevitable rendez-vous need
not have taken place. There is nothing to suggest that the soldier would have been in Samarkand without this chance encounter, and without the
ill-luck of Death's naive gesture, which acted in spite of itself as a gesture of seduction. Had Death been content to call the soldier back to order, the story would lose its charm.
The gesture does not appear to be part of a strategy, nor even an unconscious ruse; yet it takes on the
Everything here is hinged on a single, involuntary sign.
unexpected depth of seduction, that is, it appears as something that moves laterally, as a sign
that, unbeknownst to the protagonists (including Death, as well as the soldier), advances a deadly command, an aleatory sign
behind which another conjunction, marvelous or disastrous, is being enacted. A conjunction that gives the sign's trajectory all the characteristics of a witticism. No one in the
liberty of the two central characters (Death was free to make his gesture,
the soldier to flee), they were both following a rule of which neither were
aware. The rule of this game, which, like every fundamental rule, must
remain secret, is that death is not a brute event, but only occurs through
seduction, that is, by way of an instantaneous, indecipherable complicity,
by a sign or signs that will not be deciphered in time. Death is a rendez-
vous, not an objective destiny. Death cannot fail to go since he is this rendez-vous, that is, the
allusive conjunction of signs and rules which make up the game. At the same time,
Death is an innocent player in the game. This is what gives the story its secret irony, whose resolution appears as a stroke of wit [trait d'esprit], and provides us with such
sublime pleasure - and distinguishes it from a moral fable or a vulgar tale about the death instinct. The spiritual character [trait spirituel] of the story extends the spirited
character [trait d'espritgestuel] of Death's gesture, and the two seductions, that of Death and of the story, fuse together. Death's astonishment is delightful, an astonishment at
the frivolity of an arrangement where things proceed by chance: "But this soldier should have known that he was expected in Samarkand tomorrow, and taken his time to get
there..." HoweverDeath shows only surprise, as if his existence did not depend as
much as the soldier's on the fact that they were to meet in Samarkand.
Death lets things happen, and it is his casualness that makes him
appealing - this is why the soldier hastens to join him. None of this involves the unconscious,
metaphysics or psychology. Or even strategy. Death has no plan. He restores chance with a chance
gesture; this is how he works, yet everything still gets done. There is
nothing that cannot not be done, yet everything still preserves the
lightness of chance, of a furtive gesture, an accidental encounter or an
illegible sign. That's how it is with seduction... Moreover, the soldier went to
meet death because he gave meaning to a meaningless gesture which did
not even concern him. He took personally something that was not addressed to him, as one might mistake for oneself a smile meant for
someone else. The height of seduction is to be without seduction. The man seduced is caught in spite of himself in a web of stray signs. And it is because the sign has been
Not only do we renounce death, but also we let our desire, which is really
the desire to die, lay hold of its object and we keep it while we live on. We
enrich our life instead of losing it. (Eroticism, p. 142) Here, luxury and prodigality
predominate over functional calculation, just as death predominates over
life as the unilateral finality of production and accumulation: On a
comprehensive view, human life strives towards prodigality to the point of anguish, to the point
where the anguish becomes unbearable. The rest is mere moralising chatter. . . . A febrile unrest
within us asks death to wreak its havoc at our expense. (ibid., p. 60)
This festivity takes place because it reinstates the cycle where penury imposes the linear
economy of duration, because it reinstates a cyclical revolution of life and death where Freud
augurs no other issue than the repetitive involution of death. In Bataille, then, there is a
vision of death as a principle of excess and an anti-economy. Hence the
metaphor of luxury and the luxurious character of death. Only sumptuous
and useless expenditure has meaning; the economy has no meaning, it is
only a residue that has been made into the law of life, whereas wealth
lies in the luxurious exchange of death: sacrifice, the 'accursed share', escaping
investment and equivalence, can only be annihilated. If life is only a need to survive at any cost,
then annihilation is a priceless luxury. In a system where life is ruled by value and
utility, death becomes a useless luxury, and the only alternative.
In Bataille, this luxurious conjunction of sex and death figures under the sign of continuity, in
opposition to the discontinuous economy of individual existences. Finality belongs in the
discontinuous order, where discontinuous beings secrete finality, all sorts of finalities, which
amount to only one: their own death. We are discontinuousbeings, individuals
who perish in isolation in the midst of an incomprehensible adventure,
but we yearn for our lost continuity. (Eroticism, p. 15)
Death itself is without finalities; in eroticism, the finality of the individual
being is put back into question: What does physical eroticism signify if not a violation
of the very being of its practitioners . . . ? The whole business of eroticism is to
destroy the self-contained character of the participants as they are in
their normal lives. (ibid., p. 17)
Erotic nakedness is equal to death insofar as it inaugurates a state of communication, loss of
identity and fusion. The fascination of the dissolution of constituted forms: such is Eros (pace
Freud, for whom Eros binds energies, federates them into ever larger unities). In death, as in
Eros, it is a matter of introducing all possible continuity into discontinuity,
a game of complete continuity. It is in this sense that 'death, the rupture
of the discontinuous individualities to which we cleave in terror, stands
there before us more real than life itself' (ibid., p. 19). Freud says exactly the same
thing, but by default. It is no longer a question of the same death. What Freud missed was not
seeing the curvature of life in death, he missed its vertigo and its excess, its reversal of the
entire economy of life, making it, in the form of a final pulsion, into a
belated equation of life. Freud stated life's final economy under the sign
of repetition and missed its paroxysm. Death is neither resolution nor
involution, but a reversal and a symbolic challenge.
Power is born from the prohibition of death and repressive socialization of life. The Aff’s attempt
to take death hostage by suspending exchange between life and death undergirds the instituted
division that lays the foundation for all other forms of oppression and exclusion.
Baudrillard 93. Jean Baudrillard, French sociologist and cultural theorist, former professor at
European Graduate School, Symbolic Exchange and Death: Theory, Culture & Society. Sage
Publications, Inc. 1993, pg. 129-131
the agency that oversees this prohibition of death: power. Shattering the union of the
living and the dead, and slapping a prohibition on death and the dead: the primary source of social control. Power is
possible only if death is no longer free, only if the dead are put under
surveillance, in anticipation of the future confinement of life in its
entirety. This is the fundamental Law, and power is the guardian at the gates of this Law. It is not the repression of
unconscious pulsions, libido, or whatever other energy that is fundamental, and it is not anthropological; it is the
repression of death, the social repression of death in the sense that this is
what facilitates the shift towards the repressive socialisation of life.
Historically, we know that sacerdotal power is based on a monopoly over death and
exclusive control over relations with the dead. 4 The dead are the first restricted area, the
exchange of whom is restored by an obligatory mediation by the priests. Power is established on death's borders. It will
death, the decree that suspends exchange between life and death, the tollgate
and border control between the two banks. This is precisely the way in which power will
later be instituted between the subject separated from its body, between
the individual separated from its social body, between man separated
from his labour: the agency of mediation and representation flourishes in this rupture. We must take note, however,
that the archetype of this operation is the separation between a group and
its dead, or between each of us today and our own deaths. Every form of power will
have something of this smell about it, because it is on the manipulation and administration of death that power, in the final analysis,
All the agencies of repression and control are installed in this divided
is based.
space, in the suspense between a life and its proper end, that is, in the production of a literally
fantastic and artificial temporality (since at every instant every life has its
proper death there already, that is to say, in this same instant lies the
finality it attains). The first abstract social time is installed in this rupture of the indivisible unity of life and death (well
before abstract social labour time!). All the future forms of alienation that Marx
hostage: the pact with the Devil is only ever a political-economic pact). Life given over to death: the very
operation of the symbolic.
2NC Deterrence
Entrenched in unipolarity, the threat of US nuclear weapons
foreshadows a precarious tempest. The imperial aggression stems from
17th century mercantilism, the need to control resources, markets, and
reduce humans to gears in an economic machine. This consumption is
the self-implosive model beckoning for disastrous collapse.
Wiltgen 05. James Wiltgen, Professor at the University of California, PhD from UCLA in Latin American
Studies, “Consumption in the Age of Information”, Bloomsbury Academic, pg. 110-112
During the latter stages of the Cold War, the United States and the Soviet Union effectively took the entire planet hostage, in
the sense that questions of war and peace made by those two countries had the distinct possibility of ending global life as it
has been commonly conceived. Indeed, after the advent of the hydrogen bomb, nuclear submarines, and MIRVed missiles, the
destructive capacity of the two countries reached almost "mythical" proportions, producing
what Helen Caldicott has called "nuclear madness" (2002), and Robert Jay Lifton has cited
as a type of idolatry for what only god or the gods could do in the past, namely destroy the
world (1987: 25). With the end of the Cold War, the United States emerged as the only
"superpower," a "hyperpower" consolidating the destructive power of the world's most
advanced war machine, and, responding to Nietzsche's question about who would have the will to become lords of the
earth by responding: only those who would be willing to destroy it. In an intriguing twist on the course of theoretical
formulations, the attempt by poststructuralism to undermine binary formations has, in a certain sense, come to pass — the
"binary" division of the Cold War has been dissolved, but now the situation seems poised between a return to a type of
unipolar formation, what Baudrillard called lepensee unique, or the advent of something more significantly dispersed and
multiple. Strangely, large factions across the political spectrum remain nostalgic for the previous
era of "stability," also known by the acronym MAD, mutually assured destruction. There is little doubt,
however, that we have moved into another phase and another moment of dangerous intensity, where the
stakes for global life continue to sway in the balance. What has become abundantly clear involves the
triumph of the US growth model, based on a neo-liberal approach, which seeks to marketize as much of the
worlds economy as necessary, with the exception of those areas the hegemonic powers
deem crucial to exempt from those forces.9This dense and complex series of formations, or
capitalism in another virulent manifestation, has been characterized by Deleuze and
Guattari as "the age of cynicism, accompanied by a strange piety," where "capitalism's
supreme goal is to produce lack," what they call "antiproduction" (Deleuze & Guattari, 1983: 225, 235). Two
clarifications — first, cynicism corresponds to the notion used here of monetarism, an objectifying and quantifying
of all existence, while the strange piety reverberates with a notion of "sadism," where the ressentiment
produced by the "disappearance" of God, coupled with sexual, digital, and bio technological mutations, drives
capitalism, and where powerful tendencies within the system qua system would rather "will
nothingness than will nothing at all."10 Second, the production of lack has been set by the system itself, and the
psychodynamics of the individual and the family have been generated from the macro-level, not the other way around. While
one might grant complex feedback loops between the macro and the micro, the determining forces in this analysis stem from
the aggregate level of capitalism itself. This
lack induced by capitalism has produced a "quasi-infinite
debt," where debt becomes the debt of existence, of life itself; however, it is important to note that there
exist several types of debt, but the analysis here concerns the overarching one crystallized by relations of exchange, distilled
and distorted by capitalism itself. (Deleuze & Guattari, 1983: 197). A
new system of domination emerges, one
generated by the mechanisms of the market and ressentiment , where confinement and discipline no
longer form the key organizing principles of society, but debt, and where humans have begun the shift from individuals to
"dividuals." In this society of control, digital and biotechnological modulations produce continuous vibrations, oscillating
the human condition between forces of enslavement and what might be termed "other potentialities"
(Deleuze, 1995: 178-82). The
American model, then, bases itself on a type of passive forgetting,
which constantly configures the past into a self-justifying archive for the future expansion
and manipulations of capitalism.11 Again, this approach can be understood as the culmination of a long term
dynamic, or as William Spanos argues, "the Occident has been essentially imperial since its origin in late Greek and especially
Roman Antiquity" (Spanos, 1999:3—5). Aggressive control of resources, the installation of market
relations via debt, a political leadership offering "certainty," and the reduction of humans to
cogs in a global matrix provide key elements of this model — the crucial question becomes: can it sustain itself, or has
the model created an architecture of production and consumption which the planet and its resources cannot continue to
supply? As one response, Heidegger might be paraphrased here, that "only a (technologically-beneficent) God can save us
now." Obviously, these questions are far too dense to unravel here, but certain trends can be discerned. This situation will not
be "solved" if American power goes into decline, as so many predict, because the basic tendencies have such tremendous
resonance throughout the globe, with China and India being key examples in the processes of globalization. In Bataille s terms,
the American-inspired variant of capitalism has perfected a restricted economy, and rather than expending some of the excess
of energy in "profitless operations," they
consume extensively, a type of reactive destruction, bent on
a repetition for the sake of repetition, a repetition of the same, as the principle means of
overcoming existential and political uncertainty (Bataille, 1988: 25).u What, indeed, is to be done?
2NC Economizing Death
In the economic organization, death has been converted to wage, labor, and
production. By removing death from our collective futures, the Aff has removed
all of us from the circulation of symbolic goods, and have perpetuated the
symbolic extermination of objects. We should embrace death – be ready to die
– and refuse to be put to the slow death of labor.
Baudrillard 93. Jean Baudrillard, French sociologist and cultural theorist, former professor at
European Graduate School, Symbolic Exchange and Death: Theory, Culture & Society. Sage
Publications, Inc. 1993, pg. 38-43
true and the false, reality and appearance. Political economy has reduced them to just
one: production. But then the stakes were large, the violence extreme and hopes too high. Today this is
over. The system has rid production of all real stakes. A more radical truth is dawning, however, and the system's victory allows
us to glimpse this fundamental stake. It is even retrospectively becoming possible to
everywhere immanent in the code. Labour power is instituted on death. A man must die
to become labour power. He converts this death into a wage. But the
economic violence capital inflicted on him in the equivalence of the wage
and labour power is nothing next to the symbolic violence inflicted on him
by his definition as a productive force. Faking this equivalence is nothing next to the equivalence, qua
signs, of wages and death. The very possibility of quantitative equivalence presupposes death. The equivalence of
wages and labour power presupposes the death of the worker, while that
of any commodity and any other presupposes the symbolic extermination
of objects. Death makes the calculation of equivalence, and regulation by indifference,
possible in general. This death is not violent and physical, it is the
indifferent consumption of life and death, the mutual neutralisation of
life and death in sur-vival, or death deferred. Labour is slow death. This is
generally understood in the sense of physical exhaustion. But it must be understood in another sense. Labour is not opposed, like a
a violent death. That is the symbolic reality. Labour is opposed as deferred death to
the immediate death of sacrifice. Against every pious and 'revolutionary' view of the 'labour (or culture) is
the opposite of life' type, we must maintain that the only alternative to labour is not free time, or non-labour, it is sacrifice. All
this becomes clear in the genealogy of the slave. First, the prisoner of war
is purely and simply put to death (one does him an honour in this way). Then he is 'spared'
[épargné] and conserved [conservé] (=servus), under the category of spoils of war and a prestige good: he becomes a slave and
passes into sumptuary domesticity. It is only later that he passes into servile
labour. However, he is no longer a 'labourer', since labour only appears in the phase of
the serf or the emancipated slave, finally relieved of the mortgage of
being put to death. Why is he freed? Precisely in order to work. Labour therefore everywhere draws its inspiration
from deferred death. It comes from deferred death. Slow or violent, immediate or deferred, the
refused this honour. And labour is first of all the sign of being judged worthy only of
life. Does capital exploit the workers to death? Paradoxically, the worst it inflicts on them is refusing them death. It is by
deferring their death that they are made into slaves and condemned to the
indefinite abjection of a life of labour. The substance of labour and exploitation is indifferent in this
symbolic relation. The power of the master always primarily derives from this
suspension of death. Power is therefore never, contrary to what we might imagine, the power of putting to
death, but exactly the opposite, that of allowing to live a life that the slave lacks the power
to give. The master confiscates the death of the other while retaining the right to risk his own. The slave is refused this, and is
condemned to a life without return, and therefore without possible expiation. By removing death, the
master removes the slave from the circulation of symbolic goods. This is the
violence the master does to the slave, condemning him to labour power. There lies the secret of power (in the dialectic of the
master and the slave, Hegel also derives the domination of the master from the deferred threat of death hanging over the slave).
Labour, production and exploitation would only be one of the possible avatars of this power structure, which is a structure of death.
longer a sacrifice it doesn't touch the most important thing, the différance
of death, and merely distils a process whose structure remains the same.
2NC Form First
The affirmative labors under the myth of the subject – a myth spun by
consumerism. Their focus on the content of the system rather than its form
forecloses true liberation.
Robinson 12 “Critique of Alienation” (Andrew, political theorist, author, and activist based in
the UK.)//pday
Baudrillard is highly critical of the view that consumerism amounts to liberation. It is true
that certain older regimes of authoritarianism have decayed. But the new regime is also
a system of control. Repression persists, but it moves sideways. The image of a sterile,
hygienic body and fear of contamination establishes an inner control which removes desire from
in terms of status leads to a re-racialisation. Puritanism
the body. The ranking of bodies
becomes mixed-up with hedonism in this ranking process. The body as locus of desire
remains censored and silenced, even when it appears to undergo
hedonistic release. Sexuality is expressed in consumption so it can’t disrupt the status
quo. What is now censored is the symbolic structure and the possibility of deep meaning.
Living representations are turned into empty signs. Because of this change, the old
resistances to repression no longer work.
Similarly, groups supposedly liberated – such as women, black people, and young people
– are denied the effects of liberation by being re-encoded in terms of myths. Once
labelled as irresponsible, people’s liberation is attached to a coded meaning
which demands and bars responsibility and social power. Real liberation is
avoided by giving people an image of themselves to consume – women are given the image of
Woman, the young an image of Youth, technological change by Technology
(gadgets), and so on. Liberation is thus nullified, and re-encoded as a role and as
narcissism. Concrete gains for liberation movements are side-effects of this immense
strategic operation to disempower oppressed groups through their reduction to a function
or role. We are drip-fed little bits of democracy and progress to ensure the system’s
survival. They operate as its alibis. Even if income equality is encouraged, the system can
survive by moving inequality elsewhere, to status, style, power and so on.
In this book, I want to reconsider the cultural history of the century from this point of view: the
mythology of the
future. The future is not an obvious concept, but a cultural construction and
projection. For the people of the Middle Ages, living in the sphere of a theological culture, perfection was placed in the
past, in the time when God created the universe and humankind. Therefore, historical existence takes the
shape of the Fall, the abandonment and forgetting of original perfection and unity.
The rise of the myth of the future is rooted in modern capitalism, / in the experience
of expansion of the economy and knowledge. The idea that the future will be better
than the present is not a natural idea, but the imaginary effect of the peculiarity of
the bourgeois production model. Since its beginning, since the discovery of the new continent and the
rewriting of the maps of the world, modernity has been defined by an amplification of the very
limits of the world, and the peculiarity of capitalist economy resides exactly in the
accumulation of the surplus value that results in the constant enhancement of the
spheres of material goods and knowledge. In the second part of the nineteenth century, and in the first
part of the twentieth, the myth of the future reached its peak, becoming something more
than an implicit belief: it was a true faith, based on the concept of "progress," the
ideological translation of the reality of economic growth. Political action was
reframed in the light of this faith in a progressive future. Liberalism and social
democracy, nationalism and communism, and anarchism itself , all the different
families of modern political theory share a common certainty: notwithstanding the
darkness of the present, the future will be bright. In this book I will try to develop the idea that the
future is over. As you know, this isn't a new idea. Born with punk, the slow cancellation of the future got underway in
the 1970s and 1980s. Now those bizarre predictions have become true. The idea that the future has
disappeared is, of course, rather whimsical—since, as I write these lines, the future hasn't
stopped unfolding. But when I say "future," I am not referring to the direction of time. I am
thinking, rather, of the psychological perception, which emerged in the cultural
situation of progressive modernity, the cultural expectations that were fabricated
during the long period of modern civilization, reaching a peak in the years after the
Second World War. Those expectations were shaped in the conceptual frameworks
of an ever progressing development, albeit through different methodologies: the Hegelo-Marxist
mythology of Aufhebung and founding of the new totality of Communism; the
bourgeois mythology of a linear development of welfare and democracy; the
technocratic mythology of the all-encompassing power of scientific knowledge; and
so on. My generation grew up at the peak of this mythological tempor-alization, and it is very difficult, maybe impossible, to
get rid of it, and look at reality without this kind of cultural lens. I'll never be able to live in accordance with the new reality, no
matter how evident, unmistakable, or even dazzling its social planetary trends. These trends seem to be pointing toward the
dissipation of the legacy of civilization, based on the philosophy of universal rights. The
right to life, to equal
opportunities for all human beings, is daily denied and trampled on in the global
landscape, and Europe is no exception. The first decade of the new century has marked the
obliteration of the right to life for a growing number of people, even though
economic growth has enhanced the amount of available wealth and widened the
consumption of goods. A growing number of people are forced to leave their villages
and towns because of war, environmental waste, and famine. They are rejected,
marginalized, and simultaneously subjected to a new form of slave exploitation. The
massive internment of migrant workers in detention centers disseminated all over
the European territory dispels the illusion that the "camp" has been wiped out from
the world. Authoritarian racism is everywhere, in the security laws passed by
European parliaments, in the aggressiveness of the European white majority, but
also in the ethnicization of social conflicts and in Islamist fundamentalism. The
future that my generation was expecting was based on the unspoken confidence
that human beings will never again be treated as Jews were treated during their
German nightmare. This assumption is proving to be misleading. I want to rewind
the past evolution of the future in order to understand when and why it was
trampled and drowned.
2NC Identity
Your project of identity replicates the semiotic exchanges of culture
invest into the information accumulation that sustains capitalism inside
the realm of production. Identities fall into the trap of proliferating of
points of aggression culminating in an acceleration of semiotic
exchanges.
Bifo 15. Franco “Bifo” Berardi, Professor of Social History of Communication at the Accademia di Belle Arti of
Milan, "Heroes: Mass Murder and Suicide", Verso 2015, pg. 121-125
rhetoric on war focuses on pre-emption and the claim that China will
never be a ‘hegemonic’ or warmongering power – unlike the US. In this
rhetoric, the Chinese war is by nature a non-war. Official documents
emerging in the last decade repeatedly stress that China is by nature
peaceful, which is why nobody needs to worry about its rise. In the 2005 government
whitepaper China’s Peaceful Development Road, for example, we are told that: [i]t is an inevitable choice based on China’s historical and cultural
tradition that China persists unswervingly in taking the road of peaceful development. The Chinese nation has always been a peace-loving one. Chinese
culture is a pacific culture. The spirit of the Chinese people has always featured their longing for peace and pursuit of harmony (State Council of the PRC
some would call ‘soft power tools’ as a way of getting others to become more like yourself without any need for
outright ‘war’ or other forms of physical violence. In a discussion of the official government rhetoric of ‘harmonious world’ under former president Hu
Jintao, Shi Zhongwen accordingly stresses that the doctrine opposes going to extremes, and therefore contradicts what Shi calls ‘the philosophy of
struggle’ (Shi Zhongwen 2008: 40, where ‘struggle’ implies Marxist ideology). Qin Zhiyong similarly argues that China needs to steer away from
heterogeneous world, someone must change. Zhao argues that: one of the principles of Chinese
political philosophy is said ‘to turn the enemy into a friend’, and it would lose its meaning if it were not to remove conflicts and pacify social problems –
in a word, to ‘transform’ (化) the bad into the good (Zhao Tingyang 2006: 34). Moreover, this conversion to a single ‘good’ homogeneity should happen
through ‘volontariness’ rather than through expansive colonialism: ‘an empire of All-under-Heaven could only be an exemplar passively in situ, rather
clues as to how this idea of the ‘good’ to which everyone should conform
would be determined, Zhao’s idea of self-other relations seems to rely on
the possibility of some Archimedean point from which to judge this good,
and/or the complete eradication of any otherness, so that the one space
that exists is completely the space of self (Zhao Tingyang 2006: 33). Thus, Zhao confesses that
‘[t]he unspoken theory is that most people do not really know what is
best for them, but that the elite do, so the elite ought genuinely to decide
for the people’ (2006: 32). As explained by William A. Callahan: By thinking through the world with a view from everywhere, Zhao
argues that we can have a ‘complete and perfect’ understanding of problems and solutions that is ‘all-inclusive’. With this all-inclusive notion of Tianxia,
there is literally ‘no outside’.… Since all places and all problems are domestic, Zhao says that ‘this model guarantees the a priori completeness of the
of the themes that interested him in Western approaches to the first Gulf war. Most strikingly, this is a way of
talking about war that writes out war from its story. Like deterrence, it is
an imagination of war that approaches it via prevention and pre-emption.
What is more, we recognise an obsession with the self-image of the self to
itself – in this case, a Chinese, undemocratic self rather than a Western,
democratic one. In this Chinese war, like in the Persian Gulf of which Baudrillard wrote, there is no
space for an Other that is Other. In the Tianxia imaginary, Others can only
be imagined as something that will eventually assimilate into The System
and become part of the Self, as the Self strives for all-inclusive perfection.
There is no meeting with an Other in any form. Encounter only happens
once the Other becomes like the Self, is assimilated into the One, and
hence there is no encounter at all (for an analysis that reads Baudrillard and Tianxia to this effect in a Chinese non-
war context, see Nordin 2012). (iii). Contemporary Chinese war and its various modes As was the case with the first Gulf War, the war that
we are waiting for here in the Chinese case is thus a non-war. If by war we
mean some form of (symbolic) exchange or some clash of forms, agons, or
forces (as we tend to do even in the current ‘cutting edge research’ in ‘critical war studies’, see Nordin and Öberg 2013) – we cannot
expect it to take place. In China, we see not only a participation in the
Western system of (non)war through the war on terror, but also another
system that precisely denies space for imagining an other as Other, which
in turn makes the idea of exchange impossible. In this sense, the Ancient
Chinese approach to war through the Tianxia concept – at least as it is reflected by
current Chinese thinkers like Zhao Tingyang and Yan Xuetong – is not a Clausewitzean war continuing
politics by other means, but precisely a continuation of the absence of
politics by other means. It arguably shares this aspect with both the first and the second Gulf Wars. This,
however, is certainly not to say that there are not those who fear a
Chinese war or that we have no reason to fear it. In various guises, the
war that is imagined through a Clausewitzean ontology of agonistic and
reciprocal exchange returns and is reified also in China. It is not uncommon for authors
discussing the Chinese traditions of thinking war that I describe above to begin their discussion by explicitly drawing on Clausewitz and take his war as
scenes from the Civil War between Guomindang nationalists and Communist
troops. The Second Sino-Japanese war is another popular setting for these
reifications of war, providing the backdrop for another large budget film by Feng Xiaogang, the 2012 Back to 1942 (Yijiusier 一九四二), and
Life and
international star-director Zhang Yimou’s The Flowers of War (Jinling shisan chai 金陵十三钗). Another example is Lu Chuan’s City of
Death (Nanjing! Nanjing! 南京!南京!) which became a box office hit in China in 2009, but was criticized for its
portrayal of a Japanese soldier as a fully formed and sympathetic person in
its narration of the Nanjing massacre. Off screen China has, in the reform era since Mao’s death, seen a new and
these
(these museums and their exhibits of war have been studied for example by Mitter 2000, 2003 and Waldron 1996). Many of
the Anti-Japanese war, particularly relating to various Campaigns to Support the People’s Liberation Army and Military
Dependents, and in annually recurring celebrations of the Spring Festival, the Anniversary of the founding of the People’s Republic, Army Day and the
‘National Humiliation Day’ which has received much academic attention in recent years (Callahan 2004, 2009; Wang Zheng 2008). Much ofthe
state-led reification of war, and particularly its treatment in academic publications
and governmental speeches, has centred on the ‘numbers game’ of
claiming high death tolls and economic costs of the battle histories of the
Anti-Japanese war, rather than fore-fronting the all-too-human element
that may be found in for example memoir literature (Coble 2007, 406). Accordingly, other
scholars have argued – and I agree with them here – that ‘[a]lthough Chinese movies and television
took place in the Persian Gulf was the spectacle of war, what is taking place in contemporary China is
perhaps better understood as the spectacle of non-war. Like the spectacle of war it has a range of
strategic and political purposes for everyone involved. Like the pre-emptive narratives
of Tianxia, the reifications of war that hark back to a Clausewitzean
ontology relay a war that is scripted or coded in advance, disallowing
alterity. And to those who fear the possibility of the Chinese war, we might
indeed see reasons to fear, but also provide a reminder that it is stupid to
be for or against this war, if we do no for a moment question its
probability, credibility or level of reality.
What emerges is not silence but an understanding that there exist the very
same Systems of assimilation which are not merely an extension of American
capitalism and democracy, and should not be essentialized into Alterity. The
same critical lens should be applied to people designated as radical Others
simply due to their geographic location.
Nordin 14 (Dr. Astrid Nordin, Lecturer in the Department of Politics, Philosophy and
Religion at Lancaster University, “Radical Exoticism: Baudrillard and Others’ Wars,” International
Journal of Baudrillard Studies, Volume 11, Number 2, Special Issue: Baudrillard and War, May,
2014, http://www2.ubishops.ca/baudrillardstudies/vol-11_2/v11-2-norden.html)//AG
Baudrillard advocates an
IV. Baudrillard’s war and others’ wars in China and Asia As shown at the outset of this article,
interest in the other as Other, but is unclear about how this feeds in to knowledge about that other. What
form can our ‘interest’ take, if we disallow the attempt to gain
knowledge? We return, then, to the question of how we as scholars may approach Others’ wars, as they are
thought, operationalised and simulated in other places. What I think emerges
from the above is an understanding that ‘the global’, as we may understand it through Baudrillard, is precisely global.
Systems that try to assimilate anything and everything into their own
programmes exist in different forms in different places, including in Asia.
To essentialize these systems into one great mysterious unit of imagined
Alterity would ironically be a way to deny such alterity by fetishizing it
and reducing it to an Identity of Otherness. From Baudrillard's notion that every system contains the seed
of its own demise stems his suspicion of centralized systems and the pretence to holistic unity .
These systems, of which the American-led war on terror is one example and Zhao's
whether the theorist recognises it or not. Of course, an argument could be made that all attempts at understanding,
studying or explaining something is a violent act that reduces its
purported object to a knowable unit and denies its alterity. That argument would have a
point – after all, speaking is an act of violence and there are numerous problems
Identity as Other, for the purposes of exclusion, which again is surely intolerably patronising. Perhaps
we can draw on Baudrillard not so much to remind ourselves only of the alterity of exotic Others elsewhere, but to remind ourselves of the Other in the
Self. Perhaps the most crucial thing is to remember, with Coulter I think, that it is not those other (Asian, foreign) Others and Their wars that are
radically other to Us and Our wars, but people that are radically other to each other – and we who are radically other to ourselves, despite and through
all our attempts to knowledge.
2NC Simulation
Simulation bad
Gerofsky 10 “The impossibility of ‘real-life’ word problems (according to Bakhtin, Lacan, Zizek
and Baudrillard)” (Susan, Simon Fraser University, 2000, PhD, Curriculum Theory)//pday
Baudrillard's ideas about representing ‘reality’ are discussed primarily in relation to his concept
of simulations and simulacra in postmodern society, and in his concept of the impossibility of
exchange in our contemporary world (and thence, the impossibility of equivalence or
representation). Much of Baudrillard's work is focused on the idea of absence, particularly the
absence of a referent for signs and the absence of a transcendent reality
to ground claims of truth and validity. Both these absences are important in
our consideration of reality and mathematical word problems, since these
problems consist of words and stories often taken to refer to ‘real-life
situations’, and since their use in mathematics education is often legitimized
by claims to validity in the realm of a greater reality.
In his essay, ‘Simulacra and Simulations’ (Baudrillard, 1988), Baudrillard presents the idea of the
‘precessession of the simulacra’ in our contemporary globalized, networked,
digitized society – the idea that simulations now precede, and in fact
supplant reality, existing entirely without any corresponding or matching
referent, and interacting primarily with other simulations:
It is no longer a question of imitation, nor of reduplication … it is rather a question of
substituting signs of the real for the real itself … A hyperreal sheltered …
from any distinction between the real and the imaginary, leaving room
only for the orbital recurrence of models and the simulated generation of
difference. (p. 170)
Baudrillard's ‘hyperreal’ is best exemplified by the most exuberant excesses of American and
now global culture (Las Vegas, various Disneylands) which establish environments based on
simulated ‘nostalgic’ or ‘historical’ references to a history that has been altered and fictionalized
(namely Main Street USA, or the Luxor Hotel and Casino).
One step beyond simulation, simulacra arrive prior to any referent, create a virtual experience
that is taken as real, and interact with other simulacra and simulations. We are all becoming
casually familiar with simulacra through our interactions on networked social software on the
Internet. We throw sheep at one another on Facebook, participate in the viral proliferation of
video genres on YouTube, and watch our universities use ‘real’ cash to purchase virtual islands
for online campuses on Second Life.
Our postmodern world of networked computers and digital media creates strange
and hitherto-unknown simulacra that have effects beyond the virtual. An
article in the Canadian magazine Walrus (Thompson, 2004) documents some aspects of the
economy of virtual worlds in online fantasy games like EverQuest and Ultima Online.
The Gross National Product of EverQuest, measured by how much wealth all the players
together created in a single year inside the game … turned out to be $2,266 US per capita. By
World Bank rankings, that made EverQuest richer than India, Bulgaria, or China, and nearly as
wealthy as Russia. It was the seventy-seventh richest country in the world. And it didn't even
exist. (Thompson, 2004, p. 41)
Not only are there multi-million dollar businesses that trade in game points, game levels,
avatars, offshore banking and currency trading amongst games, but gaming sweatshops in China
and Mexico have recently been documented. In these sweatshops, hundreds of low-wage
employees are hired to spend long hours and days playing games so that their on-line characters
gain powers, levels, and virtual possessions, which are then sold through brokers to wealthy
buyers.
Real-life wars are fought using video games and virtual environments, to the point where
simulacra may take precedence in creating experiences of war, at least for the privileged:
The US military has already licensed a private chunk of [an online ‘world’ called] There and
created a simulation of the planet on it. The army is currently using the virtual Baghdad
in There as a training space for American soldiers. (Thompson, 2004, p. 47)
For reasons like this one, Baudrillard made the famous, highly controversial statement that the
Gulf War of 1991 had not taken place. Certainly the nature of warfare has changed drastically
when both training and missile launches take place in virtual, video game environments and
when battles are telecast live by satellite on CNN.
Following McLuhan et al. (2005), it could be argued that the world of technology-
mediated simulacra where we now live creates a total service
environment that mitigates against a definable real that can be separated
from the virtual; the real and virtue are inextricably entangled and
mutually affecting.
Baudrillard goes beyond technological arguments to an even more
fundamental argument for the impossibility of any representation of the
real in any secular society. Using Levi-Strauss and Marcel Mauss’ anthropological
concepts of exchange as a fundamental to the circulation of commodities in a society,
Baudrillard (2001) argues that exchange has become impossible, and thus ‘reality’ exists only as
simulacra:
There is no equivalent of the world. That might even be said to be its definition – or
lack of it. No equivalent, no double, no representation, no mirror … There is
not enough room both for the world and for its double. So there can be
no verifying of the world. That is, indeed, why ‘reality’ is an imposture.
Being without possible verification, the world is a fundamental illusion. (p.
3)
Baudrillard's argument deals with the world or universe as a whole, but also
with systems within the world like law, politics, economics, aesthetics,
even the field of biology. In any of these systems, it is possible to pretend to
be able to represent reality at the micro level, but at the macro level, the
entire system is without grounding, unless we posit a ‘higher reality’
through religion or metaphysics (and this is not acceptable in a secular society).
Taking politics as an example, Baudrillard (2001) writes:
Politics is laden with signs and meanings, but seen from the outside it has
none. It has nothing to justify it at a universal level (all attempts to ground
politics at a metaphysical or philosophical level have failed). It absorbs
everything which comes into its ambit and converts it into its own substance,
but it is not able to convert itself into – or be reflected in – a higher reality
which would give it meaning. (p. 4)
For ‘politics’, we could substitute ‘mathematics’, since Gödel's Theorem has proved it impossible
to devise a mathematical system that is both consistent and complete; or ‘physics’, since
quantum mechanics and Heisenberg's uncertainty principle have placed a radical uncertainty
and inconsistency at the heart of this field and of our ideas of matter itself.
Baudrillard's (2001) concept of impossible exchange leads to a conclusion very much like
Lyotard's assertion that, in our postmodern condition, no grand narratives are possible. Writing
about economics, Baudrillard (2001) says,
That principle [of a grounding of the field in reality and rationality] is valid
only within an artificially bounded sphere. Outside that sphere lies radical
uncertainty. And it is this exiled, foreclosed uncertainty which haunts
systems and generates the illusion of the economic, the political, and so
on. It is the failure to understand this which leads systems into
incoherence, hypertrophy and, in some sense, leads them to destroy
themselves. For it is from the inside, by overreaching themselves, that
systems make bonfires of their own postulates, and fall into ruins. (p. 6)
Taking this big, universe-sized idea to our little world of mathematical word
problems, there is a kind of unacceptable hubris in claims that there can be a
precise equivalence, a transparent matching, an exchange between
‘reality’ and these brief, generic pedagogic stories. To claim that mathematical
word problems (or the theorems of physics, or the narratives of history, or
novels in the style of ‘Realism’) have a relationship of identity with reality
is to ‘make a bonfire of our own postulates’. Baudrillard's concept of reality, like
Lacan's ‘Real’, cannot be captured in language or signs of any kind; it cannot
be matched up with its equivalent, since it is constitutionally impossible
to have an equivalent for reality. Positivistic science, a universe
completely marked out with the grid lines of Newtonian physics,
mathematician and astronomer Pierre-Simon Laplace's deterministic project to
know all present, past and future eventualities by extrapolation from a
complete knowledge of this instant – all of these aspects of the Modernist
projects have been foreclosed by the impossibility of providing a
grounding or an exchange for reality, and we are left with an unresolvable
uncertainty, perhaps mystery, at the heart of things.
2NC Securitization
Securitization against death is a form of blackmail which dispossess us of our own death in order
that we die the only death the system authorizes—inside a glass sarcophagus. The aff merely
adds more bandages to the sarcophagus and maintains its repressive social control through the
continuous industrial prolongation of life that inevitably culminates in our destruction. To
recognize the radical compatibility of life and death is to refuse such social domestication and
colonization.
Baudrillard 93. Jean Baudrillard, French sociologist and cultural theorist, former professor at
European Graduate School, Symbolic Exchange and Death: Theory, Culture & Society Baudrillard
Jean. Sage Publications, Inc. 1993, pg. 177-180
Death is dissuaded at the price of a continual mortification: such is the paradoxical logic of
security. In a Christian context, ascesis played the same role. The accumulation of suffering and
penitence was able to play the same role as character armour, as a protective sarcophagus
against hell. And our obsessional compulsion for security can be interpreted
as a gigantic collective ascesis, an anticipation of death in life itself: from
protection into protection, from defence to defence, crossing all
jurisdictions, institutions and modern material apparatuses, life is no
longer anything but a doleful, defensive book-keeping, locking every risk
into its sarcophagus. Keeping the accounts on survival, instead of the
radical compatibility of life and death. Our system lives off the production
of death and pretends to manufacture security. An about-face? Not at all, just a
simple twist in the cycle whose two ends meet. That an automobile firm remodels itself on the
basis of security (like industry on anti-pollution measures) without altering its range, objectives
or products shows that security is only a question of exchanging terms. Security is only an
internal condition of the reproduction of the system when it reaches a
certain level of expansion, just as feedback is only an internal regulating
procedure for systems that have reached a certain point of complexity.
After having exalted production, today we must therefore make security heroic. 'At a time when
anybody at all can be killed driving any car whatsoever, at whatever speed, the true hero is
he who refuses to die' (a Porsche hoarding: 'Let's put an end to a certain glorification of
death'). But this is difficult, since people are indifferent to security: they did not want it when
Ford and General Motors proposed it between 1955 and 1960. It had to be imposed in every
instance. Irresponsible and blind? No, this resistance must be added to that which traditional
groups throughout have opposed to 'rational' social progress: vaccination, medicine, job
security, a school education, hygiene, birth control and many other things: Always these
resistances have been broken, and today we can produce a 'natural', 'eternal' and
'spontaneous' state based on the need for security and all the good things
that our civilisation has produced. We have successfully infected people
with the virus of conservation and security, even though they will have to
fight to the death to get it. In fact, it is more complicated, since they are fighting for the
right to security, which is of a profoundly different order. As regards security itself, no-one gives
a damn. They had to be infected over generations for them to end up
believing that they 'needed' it, and this success is an essential aspect of
'social' domestication and colonisation. That entire groups would have
preferred to die out rather than see their own structures annihilated by
the terrorist intervention of medicine, reason, science and centralised
power this has been forgotten, swept away under the universal moral law
of the 'instinct' of conservation. However, this resistance always reappears,
even if only in the form of the workers' refusal to apply safety standards in the factories; what
do they want out of this, if not to salvage a little bit of control over their lives, even if they put
themselves at risk, or if its price is increasing exploitation (since they produce at ever greater
speed)? These are not 'rational' proletarians. But they struggle in their own way, and
they know that economic exploitation is not as serious as the 'accursed
share', the accursed fragment that above all they must not allow to be
taken from them, the share of symbolic challenge, which is at the same
time a challenge to security and to their own lives. The boss can exploit
them to death, but he will only really dominate them if he manages to
make each identify with their own individual interests and become the
accountant and the capitalist of their own lives. He would then genuinely
be the Master, and the worker the slave. As long as the exploited retain
the choice of life and death through this small resistance to security and
the moral order, they win on their own, symbolic, ground. The car driver's
resistance to security is of the same order and must be eliminated as immoral: thus suicide has
been prohibited or condemned everywhere because primarily it signifies a challenge that
society cannot reply to, and which therefore ensures the pre-eminence of a single suicide over
the whole social order. Always the accursed share (the fragment that everyone takes from their
own lives so as to challenge the social order; the fragment that everyone takes from their own
body so as to give it; this may even be their own death, on condition that everyone gives it
away), the fragment which is the whole secret of symbolic exchange,
because it is given, received and returned, and cannot therefore be
breached by the dominant exchange, remaining irreducible to its law and
fatal to it: its only real adversary, the only one it must exterminate.
2NC Value to Life Impact
Transparency is impossible, and striving for it kills all value to life.
Han 15 “The Transparency Society” (Byung-Chul, professor of philosophy and cultural studies
at the Universität der Künste Berlin)//pday
Thus, Humboldt also observes of language: [A] thing may spring up in man, for which no
understanding can discover the reason in previous circumstances; and we should . . . violate,
indeed, the historical truth of its emergence and change, if we sought to exclude from it the
possibility of such inexplicable phenomena.4 The ideology of “postprivacy” proves equally naïve.
In the name of transparency, it demands completely surrendering the private sphere, which is
supposed to lead to see-through communication. The view rests on several errors. For one,
human existence is not transparent, even to itself . According to Freud, the ego
denies precisely what the unconscious affirms and desires without reserve. The id remains
largely hidden to the ego. Therefore, a rift runs through the human psyche and
prevents the ego from agreeing even with itself. This fundamental rift
renders self-transparency impossible. A rift also gapes between people. For this
reason, interpersonal transparency proves impossible to achieve. It is also not worth
trying to do so. The other’s very lack of transparency is what keeps the relationship alive.
Georg Simmel writes: The mere fact of absolute knowledge, of full psychological
exploration, sobers us even without prior intoxication, paralyzes the vitality
of relations. . . . The fertile depth of relationships, which senses and
honors something more, something final, behind all that is revealed . . . ,
simply rewards the sensitivity [Zartheit] and self-control that still respects
inner privacy even in the most intimate, all-consuming relationship which
allows the right to secrets to be preserved.” Compulsive transparency lacks
this same “sensitivity”—which simply means respect for Otherness that can
never be completely eliminated. Given the pathos for transparency that has laid hold of
contemporary society, it seems necessary to gain practical familiarity with the
pathos of distance. Distance and shame refuse to be integrated into the accelerated
circulation of capital, information, and communication. In this way, all confidential spaces
for withdrawing are removed in the name of transparency. Light floods them, and they
are then depleted. It only makes the world more shameless and more naked.
Autonomy presumes one person’s freedom not to understand another. Richard Sennett
remarks: “Rather than an equality of understanding, a transparent equality,
autonomy means accepting in the other what you do not understand, an
opaque equality.”6 What is more, a transparent relationship is a dead one, altogether
lacking attraction and vitality. A new Enlightenment is called for: there are
positive, productive spheres of human existence and coexistence that the
compulsion for transparency is simply demolishing. In this sense, Nietzsche writes:
“The new Enlightenment. . . . It is not enough to recognize in what ignorance man and animal
lives; you must also learn to possess the will to ignorance. You must
understand that without such ignorance life itself would be impossible, that under this
condition alone does the living preserve itself and flourish .”7 It has been demonstrated that
more information does not necessarily lead to better decisions.8 Intuition, for example,
transcends available data and follows its own logic. Today the growing, indeed
the rampant, mass of information is crippling [eliminating] all higher judgment. Often
less knowledge and information achieves something more. It is not unusual
for the negativity of omitting and forgetting to prove productive. The
society of transparency cannot tolerate a gap [Lücke] in information or of sight. Yet both
thinking and inspiration require a vacuum. Incidentally, the German word for happiness [Glück]
derives from this open space; up until the Late Middle Ages, pronunciation revealed as much
the negativity of a gap would be a
[Gelücke]. It follows that a society that no longer admits
society without happiness. Love without something hidden to sight is
pornography. And without a gap in knowledge, thinking degenerates into calculation. The
society of positivity has taken leave of both dialectics and hermeneutics. The dialectic is based
on negativity. Thus, Hegel’s “Spirit” does not turn away from the negative but endures and
preserves it within itself. Negativity nourishes the “life of the mind.” Spirit has “power,”
according to Hegel, “only by looking the negative in the face and tarrying with it.”9 Such
lingering yields the “magical power that converts it into being.” In contrast, whoever
“surfs” only for what is positive proves mindless. The Spirit is slow because it
tarries with the negative and works through it. The system of transparency abolishes
all negativity in order to accelerate itself. Tarrying with the negative has given way to
racing and raving in the positive. Nor does the society of positivity tolerate negative feelings.
Consequently, one loses the ability to handle suffering and pain, to give them form.
For Nietzsche, the human soul owes its depth, grandeur, and strength precisely to the
time it spends with the negative. Human spirit is born from pain, too: “That tension of
the soul in unhappiness which cultivates its strength, . . . its inventiveness
and courage in enduring, persevering, interpreting, and exploiting
suffering, and whatever has been granted to it of profundity, secret,
mask, spirit, cunning, greatness—was it not granted through suffering ,
through the discipline of great suffering?”10 The society of positivity is now in the
process of organizing the human psyche in an entirely new way. In the course of
positivization, even love flattens out into an arrangement of pleasant
feelings and states of arousal without complexity or consequence. Alain Badiou’s
In Praise of Love quotes the slogans of the dating service Meetic: “Be in love without falling in
love!” Or, “You don’t have to suffer to be in love!”11 Love undergoes domestication and is
and comfort. Even the slightest injury must be
positivized as a formula for consumption
avoided. Suffering and passion are figures of negativity. On the one hand, they
are giving way to enjoyment without negativity. On the other, their place has
been taken by psychic disturbances such as exhaustion, fatigue, and depression—all of
which are to be traced back to the excess of positivity. Theory in the strong sense of the
word is a phenomenon of negativity, too. It makes a decision determining what belongs and
what does not. As a mode of highly selective narration, it draws a line of distinction. On the basis
of such negativity, theory is violent. It is “produced to prevent things . . . from
touching” and “to redistinguish what has been confused.”12 Without the
negativity of distinction, matters proliferate and grow promiscuously. In this
respect, theory borders on the ceremonial, which separates the initiated and the
uninitiated. It is mistaken to assume that the mass of positive data and
information—which is assuming untold dimensions today—has made theory
superfluous, that is, that comparing data can replace the use of models.