 |
 |
Weekly Worker 420 Thursday February 21 2002
Struggles for freedom
Michael Hardt and Antonio Negri Empire Harvard University Press, 2000,
pp496, £12.95
Marx’s revolutionary ‘old mole’, disappearing underground and resurfacing
unexpectedly, has “finally died”. It has been replaced by the “infinite
undulations of the snake”(p57).
In their metaphor for the kaleidoscopic campaigns thrown up against the
spread of capitalist globalisation, Hardt and Negri are nothing if unbounded
in their ambitions. Empire has indeed had a wide international
echo, even in notoriously conservative America, as proudly described by
the journal of Hardt’s employer, Duke University (November-December 2001).
The collaboration between the former leader of Potere Operaio (Workers
Power), unjustly imprisoned - and still on limited release - for ‘armed
insurrection’, and an American literary scholar has ranged beyond purely
academic objectives.
Empire ends by talking of the role of the militant in “positive,
constructive and innovative activity” and the “irrepressible lightness
and joy of being communist” (p413). Negri has recently declared that the
anti- (or rather, ‘alternative’) globalisation movement is becoming a
“new political subject” of struggle, of counter-power, forming a “social
body” (Le Monde January 27 2001).
Reaction from the left to the book has been mixed, and often highly critical.
(Important reviews include: Gopal Balakrishnan New Left Review
September 2000; Alex Callinicos International Socialism autumn
2001; John Kraniauskas Radical Philosophy September 2000; Malcolm
Bull London Review of Books October 4 2001; Mike Rooke What
Next? January 2002.) Few, however, ignore the transparent sincerity
of the authors and the seriousness of their efforts to come to grips with
contemporary capitalism. Nor that the debate should be brought to the
widest possible audience.
Empire is not easy to digest. It teems with concepts and references,
from the history of socialism, communism and the working class, to Foucault’s
disciplinary society and bio-power, Deleuze and Guattari’s desiring machines,
Castells’ network society and theories of postmodernism. Its frequently
serpentine language makes it often hard to grasp. But Negri has described
with clarity Empire’s two principal ideas: that there is no global
market without a juridical order, and that this new political power is
without a centre, without boundaries (T Negri, ‘L’Empire: stade
suprême de l’impérialisme’ Le Monde Diplomatique January 2001).
A powerful examination of the global constitution is backed up by an
analysis of economic and cultural transformations. The potential for resistance
and a new society - a third element - is discovered, amongst which what
the authors call the “multitude” (the ‘new proletariat’) is never far
away. In each domain Empire challenges the left to rethink its
stand.
Capital’s universal republic
“Empire can only be considered as a universal republic, a network of
powers and counter-powers structured in a boundless and inclusive architecture.
The imperial expansion has nothing to do with imperialism, nor with those
state organisms designed for conquest, pillage, genocide, colonisation
and slavery” (pp166-7). This is not meant to excuse the west from its
responsibility in subordinating and exploiting the planet, not to mention
armed interventions, from Korea to Afghanistan. Hardt and Negri’s argument
is that Empire legitimates itself through the expansion of legal norms,
a search for universal peace, and not brute force alone.
Thus, America has not only “international police power” but has become
part of a “legitimate supranational motor of juridical action”. “The importance
of the Gulf War derives rather from the fact that it presents the United
States as the only power able to manage international justice, not
as a function of is own national motives but in the name of global right”
(p180). From Blair’s doctrine of the international community, to former
leftists, converted to legal moralism enforced through humanitarian militarism,
one can see the centrality of this development. They are part of this
expansive network, which has absorbed national liberation struggles, tamed
many NGOs and caused the withering away of civil society.
This arrangement works through a hierarchy. At the top is the United
States, the principal holder of military might. Next are the global monetary
institutions that regulate exchanges, while nation-states are “filters
of the flow of global circulation and regulators of the articulators of
global command” (p310). Finally there is civil society, “channelling the
needs of the desires of the multitude” in ways that can be represented
within these structures. In this synthesis, there are parallels with the
early Roman empire painted by its Greek admirer, Polybius, as a balance
of monarchy, aristocracy and democracy. Empire today is “the monarchic
unity of power and its global monopoly of force; aristocratic articulations
through transnational corporations and nation-states; and democratic-representations
comitia” - nations, NGOs, media and “popular organisations” (p314).
A new eternal city appears in construction.
Imperialism in its colonial and neo-colonial forms, based on the export
of capital and the exploitation of raw materials, rested, Hardt and Negri
assert, on an “inside and an outside”. However, “Capital must eventually
overcome imperialism and destroy the barriers between outside and inside”
(p234). At the same time “the subjectivity of class struggle transforms
imperialism into Empire” (p235). Here lies the fundamental contradiction
that runs through the heart of the book.
On the one hand, Empire is replete with an analysis of the various
forms of governmentally, bio-power (Foucault’s concept of the management
of populations), postmodern, flexible accumulation, and the inexorable
expansion of “networks”. These, in stressing an impersonal logic, offer,
as critics such as Callinicos have observed, much in common with ‘hyper-globalist’
theories. That is, in other words, the dynamic fusion of capital, politics
and culture rolling over the planet.
On the other hand, there is the insistence that Empire, and modern production,
has arisen as a consequence of the powers of labour: “The proletariat
actually invents the social and productive forms that capital will be
forced to adopt in future” (p268). Capital’s problem after the worker
revolts of the 60s, a “refusal of work”, was to capture this in a new
postmodern structure, the “informatisation of production”. Indeed the
crises of the period were caused by the demands of employees: “The long
cycle of struggles against the disciplinary regime had reached maturity
and forced capital to modify its own structures and undergo a paradigm
shift” (p261).
The reasoning here resembles the ‘profit squeeze’ popular on the British
left (and the right) in the 70s: the workers were not just corroding capitalism
by just/unreasonable demands, but are always near to overthrowing it.
Hardt and Negri extend this notion further: living labour is a creative
social force that can no longer be measured: “the transcendental determinations
of value and measure that used to order the deployment of power (or really
determine its prices, subdivisions and hierarchies) have lost their coherence”
(p354). Politics and economics are “beyond value”. Labour is literally
escaping from the socially embodied categories of capitalism, as in Negri’s
earlier writing in Marx beyond Marx (1979), which introduced the
figure of the “self-valorising” salariat and the breakdown of divisions
between economics and politics.
“Self-valorising” signifies, it might be conjectured, a refusal to submit,
the rejection of work. An era of militancy may have forced some changes
in work arrangements, though mass unemployment under monetarism had perhaps
more effect. Loading responsibility onto the workers for crises in the
capitalist regime of accumulation may be intended to celebrate their power;
but it also mirrors neoliberal complaints about wreckers. The dialectic
of labour and capital is a one-dimensional account of capitalist development,
as recent debate initiated by Robert Brenner on the contradictions of
inter-capitalist ‘horizontal’ competition indicates. But if the self-valorising
proposition has some coherence, if debatable, it is impossible to make
sense of the claim that value is no longer measurable, as a trip to Sainsbury’s
will swiftly show. Without any further discussion of the labour theory
of value, and abstract labour (which opponents have always seen as non-measurable,
based on heterogeneous and non-equivalent work), we are left in a void.
Struggle and the multitude
Spontaneist forms of Marxism have often believed in the logic of the
process of class struggle to carry workers forward to clash with the state.
Hardt and Negri go one stage further. The main struggles of the last decades
of the 20th century - Tiananmen Square, the May 1992 revolt in Los Angeles,
the Chiapas uprising that started in 1994, the 1995-96 French strike wave,
and the work stoppages in South Korea of 1996 - were regional and national
events, which remained “incommunicable” outside their country of origin.
Blocked from travelling horizontally, every serious social conflict is
now forced to “leap vertically and touch immediately to the global level”
(p55) because they “directly attack the global order of Empire and seek
a real alternative” (p57).
Nevertheless, translating this potential into an effective reality, recognising
a “common enemy” and “language of struggles”, is lacking. What is the
social subject that bears the potential to coordinate the fight and rise
up against capitalism’s imperium? The concluding and even more unsatisfactory
arguments of Empire are centred on the concept of the “multitude”
- its potency and power - and the route to a new struggle for communism.
What exactly does this concept mean? It refers to the unbounded movements
and mingling of peoples, the deterritorialised force of living labour.
In part a race of new barbarians. It is the “creative subjectivities of
globalisation that have learned to sail on this enormous sea” (p60), “an
antagonistic and creative positivity” (p61). A new “nomad singularity”
constitutes Empire: “The ontological fabric of Empire is constructed by
the activity beyond measure of the multitude and its virtual powers” (p261).
Labour is where the new proletariat appears as this active power. It is
where the multitude is “becoming self-valorising. They express themselves
as machines of innovation. They not only refuse to be dominated by the
old system of values and exploitation, but actually create their own irreducible
possibilities as well” (p369).
Without going too far into somewhat abstruse philosophical byways, Hardt
and Negri have, as they state, swallowed hefty chunks of the ‘vitalist’
theory of Henri Bergson (1859-1941), though insisting on the “reality
of the being created” (p468n). And describe, in Bergson’s words, “a self
which lives and develops by means of its very hesitations, until the free
action drops from it like an overripe fruit” (H Bergson Time and free
will London 1959, p176). Thus the “insurgent multitude” is poised
for action. For, “Empire creates a greater potential for revolution than
did the modern regimes of power because it presents, alongside the machine
of command, with an alternative: the set of all the exploited and the
subjugated that is directly opposed to Empire with no mediation between
them” (p293).
The last battle
From this ambitious, to say the least, clarion call, we face the Last
Fight for the “self-valorisation of the human (the equal right of citizenship
for all over the entire surface of the world market; as cooperation (the
right to communicate, construct languages and control communication networks);
and as political power, or really as the constitution of a society in
which the basis of power is defined by the expression of the needs of
all” (p410). This is welded together by a demand for a guaranteed minimum
income - a call raised by both free-marketers and some sections of the
green and alternative left (though how it will be administered with freedom
of movement is, as has been pointed out, a hornet’s nest in itself).
Militants should play the role of the early 20th century Industrial Workers
of the World agitator, one who “best expresses the life of the multitude,
the agent of biopolitical production and resistance” (p411). From the
ruins of Empire will arise new cities - “great deposits of cooperating
humanity”. Prudently, Hardt and Negri state that, “Only the multitude
through its practical experimentation will offer the models and determine
when and how the possible becomes real” (p411).
It is beyond the scope of this review to explore in depth the full complexities
of Empire. The book’s great merit is to challenge some central
Marxist categories, notably imperialism. Plainly a critique of the illusions
of the left in the nation-state is in order, from the stillborn belief
of the old British New Left that constitutional reform would create a
more favourable environment for socialism, to the tragic adaptation of
national liberation movements to the global market.
Criticising the illusions of pursuing justice through the existing international
institutions rings many bells. Many well-meaning human rights activists
have wound up in juridical institutions more contorted than Bleak House’s
Court of Chancery. If Hardt and Negri are no Dickens, as their prose style
so painfully indicates, their sallies are well directed. The lack of a
‘centre’ to Empire may be off-putting, in view of the unilateralism of
the US, but it soon becomes apparent that the Washington-Wall Street-Pentagon
axis is placed at the summit of the system.
The greatest difficulties in the book come from three directions. To
begin with, Empire employs a variety of philosophical problematics,
spatchcocked rather than integrated together. The concept of the multitude
as a self-valorising subject is not even clarified to the extent that
we can pin down its independent existence, or how Foucault’s disciplinary
regime, and “biopower” (an inescapable net) mingles with Bergson’s absolute
creativity. Quasi-Marxist class struggle mingles with non-class theories
of sovereignty.
Next, the “mediations” between the multitude and Empire are asserted
to be breaking down. It stands facing the multitude with no intermediaries.
Yet what is Empire if not a system of complex mediations - civil bodies,
filters, networks, states, transnational corporations, and global institutions?
These ties, as Hardt and Negri indicate if only in passing, are what Marx
would call the “invisible threads” binding millions of people to the process
of globalisation. Such a formidable expansive apparatus has surely some
density of its own.
Finally, given this, how can the judiciary, power and biopolitical machine
standing over the plural multitude be shattered? Lyrical language, a heritage
from Negri’s autonomist origins, is used to smother any serious political
debate. There is not the slightest consideration of the hold of pro-neoliberal
ideologies over large sections of the population, the elected (however
imperfectly) free-market governments of the left and right, and a sheer
wanton ignorance of the problems faced by socialists assuming political
power, in however small degree now possible.
The thread of unresolved links between structure - the overwhelming power
of Empire, and agency, the strength of the multitude, runs through these
triple domains. There is no strategic politics to bring them closer. Where,
before the ultimate attack, does any subject go from now, in this workplace,
and tomorrow, in this strike, and the next day, in this election? Or the
day when Empire is overthrown?
This is the point where Hardt and Negri’s revolutionary snake retreats
under a stone. It is unlikely to emerge.
Andrew Coates
Print this page
Buy
this book
|
Empire
Michael Hardt, Antonio Negri
£12.95 |
Price correct at time of uploading |