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	<title>Postcapital Archive &#187; Politics</title>
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	<link>http://www.postcapital.org</link>
	<description>An art project by Daniel García Andújar / Technologies To The People</description>
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	<itunes:summary>An art project by Daniel García Andújar / Technologies To The People</itunes:summary>
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	<itunes:category text="Education" />
	<itunes:author>Postcapital Archive</itunes:author>
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		<item>
		<title>Hans D. Christ . Montagsdemo gegen Stuttgart 21 &#8211; 28.02.2011</title>
		<link>http://www.postcapital.org/2011/03/01/hans-d-christ-montagsdemo-gegen-stuttgart-21-28-02-2011/</link>
		<comments>http://www.postcapital.org/2011/03/01/hans-d-christ-montagsdemo-gegen-stuttgart-21-28-02-2011/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 01 Mar 2011 11:26:46 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Politics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[2011]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Stuttgart]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Stuttgart 21]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Video]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[]]></description>
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		<item>
		<title>WikiRebels &#8212; The Documentary</title>
		<link>http://www.postcapital.org/2011/01/11/wikirebels-the-documentary/</link>
		<comments>http://www.postcapital.org/2011/01/11/wikirebels-the-documentary/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 11 Jan 2011 14:53:45 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Politics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[2010]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[english]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[español]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[information society]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Video]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Wikileaks]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[(original SVT.se) [subtítulos en Español]]]></description>
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 (original SVT.se) [subtítulos en Español]</p>
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		<title>La Cultura y El Estado (traducción)  DAVID LLOYD Y PAUL THOMAS</title>
		<link>http://www.postcapital.org/2010/10/14/la-cultura-y-el-estado-traduccion-david-lloyd-y-paul-thomas/</link>
		<comments>http://www.postcapital.org/2010/10/14/la-cultura-y-el-estado-traduccion-david-lloyd-y-paul-thomas/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 14 Oct 2010 09:34:58 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Politics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Cultural Policies]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Culture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[David Lloyd]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[español]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Paul Thomas]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.postcapital.org/?p=406</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[La Cultura y El Estado (traducción)]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a title="View La Cultura y El Estado (traducción) on Scribd" href="http://www.scribd.com/doc/8067736/La-Cultura-y-El-Estado-traduccion" style="margin: 12px auto 6px auto; font-family: Helvetica,Arial,Sans-serif; font-style: normal; font-variant: normal; font-weight: normal; font-size: 14px; line-height: normal; font-size-adjust: none; font-stretch: normal; -x-system-font: none; display: block; text-decoration: underline;">La Cultura y El Estado (traducción)</a> <object id="doc_975223582398359" name="doc_975223582398359" height="500" width="400" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" data="http://d1.scribdassets.com/ScribdViewer.swf" style="outline:none;" ><param name="movie" value="http://d1.scribdassets.com/ScribdViewer.swf"><param name="wmode" value="opaque"><param name="bgcolor" value="#ffffff"><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"><param name="allowScriptAccess" value="always"><param name="FlashVars" value="document_id=8067736&#038;access_key=key-gauhh6cle4qdj3vzx4u&#038;page=1&#038;viewMode=list"><embed id="doc_975223582398359" name="doc_975223582398359" src="http://d1.scribdassets.com/ScribdViewer.swf?document_id=8067736&#038;access_key=key-gauhh6cle4qdj3vzx4u&#038;page=1&#038;viewMode=list" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true" height="500" width="400" wmode="opaque" bgcolor="#ffffff"></embed></object></p>
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		<title>MANIFIESTO FOR A SOCIETY OF UNEASINESS</title>
		<link>http://www.postcapital.org/2010/08/04/manifiesto-for-a-society-of-uneasiness/</link>
		<comments>http://www.postcapital.org/2010/08/04/manifiesto-for-a-society-of-uneasiness/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 05 Aug 2010 06:58:28 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Politics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[2010]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Daniel G. Andújar]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[english]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[umelec]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.postcapital.org/?p=401</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Václav Bělohradský Umělec 1/2010 / cz en de. Ilustrated by Daniel G. Andújar. Umelec magazine. p 76-109 MECHANISMS There are no facts in front of which we would be silenced in the same way as in front of a reality that appeared on its own, such that „there is nothing to talk about“. Builders of [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h2><a href="http://www.divus.cz/umelec/selected_articles.php?kind=by_author&amp;item=1575"><img class="alignnone" title="umelec" src="http://www.divus.cz/umelec/images/covers/2010-1.jpg" alt="" width="245" height="351" /></a></h2>
<h2><a href="http://www.divus.cz/umelec/selected_articles.php?kind=by_author&amp;item=1575">Václav Bělohradský</a></h2>
<h4><a href="http://www.divus.cz/umelec/selected_articles.php?kind=issue&amp;item=57">Umělec 1/2010</a> / <a href="http://www.divus.cz/umelec/article_page.php?set_lang=1&amp;item=1575">cz</a> <a href="http://www.divus.cz/umelec/article_page.php?set_lang=2&amp;item=1575">en</a> <a href="http://www.divus.cz/umelec/article_page.php?set_lang=3&amp;item=1575">de</a>. <a href="http://danielandujar.org" target="_blank">Ilustrated by Daniel G. Andújar</a>. <a href="http://www.divus.cz/umelec/selected_articles.php?kind=issue&amp;item=57" target="_blank">Umelec magazine. p 76-109</a></h4>
<p>MECHANISMS</p>
<p>There are no facts in front of which we would be silenced in the  same way as in front of a reality that appeared on its own, such that  „there is nothing to talk about“. Builders of universal empires require  an agreement between them to be announced as an agreement with reality  itself. If they succeed, there will be a worldwide universal empire,  which won‘t stand anything but „willing helpers“. &#8230;</p>
<p>The greatest contradiction of industrial society is the rational  nature of its irrationality, its rational foolishness. The system’s  ever-increasing level of productivity is accompanied by the ever more  rapid destruction of ancient worlds; sovereign political power rests on  the threat of nuclear holocaust; our thoughts and emotions are  subjugated to the power strategies of large corporations; the  helplessness of the majority increases in direct proportion to the  enormous and unprecedented power of the privileged minority. A society  filled with such contradictions can survive only because of the immense  effectiveness of its controlling mechanisms, which rob us of the ability  to perceive the system’s objectives and our role within it as an  offense to human reason and feeling. “The mechanism by which the  individual is bound to his society has itself been altered. Social  control is grounded in the new needs which it has created.” We become  the chief editor of a newspaper, we have a high salary, a person with a  high salary must live in a house outside of Prague, we take out a loan on our high salary,<br />
&#8230;<span id="more-401"></span></p>
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<p>Democracy as a public debate over what is relevant in different  situations is just an illusion – each situation is defined in advance,  like the canned laughter in American sitcoms.<br />
&#8230;</p>
<p>Democracy is in a stage of decline, it is slowly fading away; in its  place we are seeing the emergence of Crouch’s “post-democracy,” whose  main characteristic is the gradual replacement of the rule of law and  parliamentary democracy with a network of efficient lobbying power  structures whose aim is the implementation, through opportunistic  bargaining, of rules of the game advantageous to the most powerful  economic groups.<br />
&#8230;</p>
<p>The efficiency of technology is increasing so rapidly that is  rendering the very difference between the realm of means and the realm  of ends an archaism: Are not the ends in themselves merely the means for  the further expansion of technology?<br />
&#8230;</p>
<p>Democracy is that form of social organization in which questions of  frame are constantly left open; people are interested in them. Public  space has its own unique tension, its effervescence, because it is here  that opposing great truths are constantly encountering and controverting  one another. Disputes about great truths are useful: they render us  better and more open; they make our decisions more legitimate and  superior in quality. In fact, the general availability of questions of  frame and the public’s interest in them form a basic pillar of  democracy.</p>
<p>UNEASINESS</p>
<p>There are many reasons for the sense of uneasiness in modern  society. Above all, (&#8230;) there are the dizzying proliferation of signs,  images, expressions and declarations, as a result of which there has  been a sharp decline in reality. Many signs, little that is signified,  many meanings, little that is meaningful, many parts, few wholes, many  facts, little context, many copies, few originals, many images, little  that is depicted, much talk, little agreement, many goals, little  purpose, many representatives, little that is represented, many answers,  few questions.<br />
&#8230;</p>
<p>The sense of uneasiness is ever-present; it may not be strong, but  it is persistent. No, we do not feel ill; there is just too much –  information, food, garbage, people, packaging, books, signs, political  programs, places to fly to on holiday, loan offers, excessively hot days  in the year. There must be some kind of limit, some boundary beyond  which the things of this world can no longer be used and consumed, but  just venerated. We do not know where this boundary is; we just feel a  little uneasy.<br />
&#8230;</p>
<p>During the bird flu epidemic, shop sellers in Hong Kong wore sterile  masks on their faces with a smile drawn on them. In late modern  society, criticism is merely a “reproachful expression” drawn on  invisible masks worn in public by the protagonists of sponsored cultural  events. How to revive the fundamental virtue of liberal society – not  being indifferent to critical images of itself? I do not know, and the  fact that I do not know how to answer this question makes me uneasy.  What good is an intellectual if he doesn’t know how?</p>
<p>THE WEST</p>
<p>(&#8230;) – those who wish to remain Europeans must never allow  themselves to be controlled by the force emanating from everything that  we unreservedly accept as “natural.” Understand well: liberally educated  Europeans do not wish to deny their own prejudices, they merely wish to  understand them in relation to time and place, to the problems that  these prejudices were once meant to solve. Understanding liberates us  from the power held over us by the perspective of the whole, in which  the experience of historical conditionality has extinguished any notion  of the whole.<br />
&#8230;</p>
<p>The deepening environmental crisis, the scandalous helplessness of  the industrial democratic countries in the face of extreme events –  whether caused by anthropogenic climate change or natural climatic  developments – the horrible state of the Third World, the hypocritical  newspeak that calls aggression “preventive war” and the occupation of a  foreign country “liberating a people from tyranny,” the restriction of  civil rights through the “Patriot Act,” the ever closer alliance between  entertainers and politicians in order to mobilize the masses for the  further consumption of unnecessary things, the building of a “majority  consensus” through the strategic control of the media – all this is a  sign that wartime mobilization is the most intrinsic tendency of the  system.<br />
The Western political and economic system is extremist in its  normality: the “peaceful days” enjoyed by the inhabitants of the West  consist primarily in a war against nature and other forms of life.<br />
&#8230;</p>
<p>NATO expansion is merely an attempt at masking the saber rattling of our civilizational crisis.<br />
&#8230;</p>
<p>What strange victors, who have not resolved any of the issues the  more effective resolution of which was at the heart of the East-West  conflict: inequality among people is an ever-greater scandal for the  “Christian West,” democracy is increasingly absent from the adoption of  strategic decisions, loyalty questionnaires are a hundred pages long,  capital exerts an ever more total control over public space, the atom  bomb and technologically managed force continue to form the foundation  of political sovereignty, NATO is expanding, the Schengen Agreement has  fractured Europe into first-class Europeans, second-class Europeans, and  the peons in the Balkans and Ukraine; all around us new invisible walls  are springing up, and the Third World gets dirtier and hungrier, as do  the peripheries of our affluent cities; ministry of defense budgets are  growing, ministry of education budgets shrinking.<br />
&#8230;</p>
<p>Is not the hatred of the “white us” in this historical world a  normal answer to the way in which it has been invaded by this tolerant  “white us”? The ruined, historical worlds that remain in the wake of his  rule, collectively labeled the Third World – most of Africa, much of  Asia and possibly Latin America as well – are nothing more than  subjugated and exploited peripheries of the empire of global economic  growth, whose shaken and rapidly weakening center is this “white us.”<br />
&#8230;</p>
<p>The Global South is not just the Third World; anyone may find  himself there who refuses to convert to the †bercivilization and who  thus offers resistance to the empire of the growth of Growth.<br />
&#8230;</p>
<p>Consumerism is a democratically uncontrollable automatism resulting  from an uncontrolled demonic element of Western civilization: it is a  type of rapture, a seductive shadow-world into which man throws himself  in order to escape the contradictory world shown him by his reason.<br />
&#8230;</p>
<p>“What is reason?” we ask when watching a long, motionless line of  cars on the blocked highways when our cities declare a smog emergency,  when our limited resources have been destroyed in order to produce  superfluous things, when we discuss climate change caused by the  greenhouse effect, when the front pages of all Czech newspapers announce  the search for the next Czech Idol, when we see television images of  long lines of people at exchange offices in South Korea, Argentina, or  Moscow during various financial crises, when we watch reports from  Malaysian cities where disappointed candidates for affluence are looting  stores, or scenes from President Clinton’s Sexgate proceedings with Ken  Starr trying to find the legal definition of sex..<br />
&#8230;</p>
<p>The tyranny of values in industrial society necessarily leads to  colonialism, concentration camps, the genetic manipulation of everything  living, the reduction of nature to natural resources or its  transformation into a laboratory filled with laboratory animals such as  OncoMouseTM, a mouse that has been genetically engineered to be born  with cancer so that it can be used for experiments. The ends must be  bigger and bigger, so that the realm of means for their attainment –  techno-scientific power – can continue to grow.<br />
&#8230;</p>
<p>The most serious form of criticism is criticism of false  consciousness. The most important feature of modern industrial society  is alienation, in the sense that man does not know the laws of the world  that he has created and thus enslaves himself through his products.  Just as pre-modern man did not recognize that the gods were his  imagination, so does modern man fail to see that the world of goods  represents “his essential forces, transformed into objects, and a world  that… enslaves him” (Marx).</p>
<p>TEXT</p>
<p>Is reading the art of identifying the meaning of a text as inserted  by its author, or does a text receive its meaning from its readers, who  try to come to some kind of mutual agreement as to a “meaningful”  reading of texts?<br />
&#8230;</p>
<p>In an era characterized by such a colossal overproduction of texts,  we should be learning creative reading instead of creative writing.  There has been a sharp decline in meaning and a sharp increase in the  number of texts. If we do not learn to read them creatively, they will  swirl around us like a dark shroud of whirling dust.<br />
&#8230;</p>
<p>The theory of the implied reader is generally applicable. Every  person is a text in search of its implied reader, everyone hopes that  someone will read him just as he has written himself, as he has imagined  the acts and ideas that he has encoded into his life. It is true that  often this does not happen, and the cities are full of drunks mumbling:  “Joe, you can ask anyone; I’ve never been a coward, that’s just Wendy  talking trash about me!”<br />
&#8230;</p>
<p>Today, networks of computers are capable of spewing forth all  possible combinations of symbols and letters in a matter of seconds. I  am sure that even such texts long for their implied reader. But how to  become one? Let us conclude a new agreement on the reading of texts  during the era of globalization! Yes, but with whom, where, and what  about?<br />
&#8230;</p>
<p>People are made up of statements; they are surrounded by them. All  that they have said and heard whirls around in a jumbled mixture  consisting of their truths and the truths about them. Each statement  belongs in some landscape of statements and has meaning only if it can  be used for something within this landscape. Statements that are of use  within a landscape are called truths; those that stand in the way are  called mistakes or lies. Some statements can act as bridges in the  landscape, others as levers, shortcuts, artificial lakes, or shelters.  These landscapes of statements also contain many ruined truths, some of  which have been wasting away for ages, while others have collapsed  suddenly, people fleeing their ruins in panic. They are also home to  many truths that entangle people like spider webs, the spider patiently  waiting; some truths – such as the belief in hell – are traps laid eons  ago; others are new, designed using computers – economic growth, nuclear  energy, financial flows.<br />
&#8230;</p>
<p>We learn to navigate the overgrown corners of our landscapes of  statements under the supervision of our teachers, for these corners are  inhabited by ill-fated poets and delirious thinkers, angry young men,  long-haired rockers, and eccentric scholars who look after all the weeds  and shrubbery but who have not managed to avoid expressing doubts and  making heretical statements. Sometimes the voice of our conscience  chases us into these corners, we take a liking to them, and remain.<br />
&#8230;<br />
Over the past millennia we have combined a desert biblical landscape  full of shepherds, farmers, and seedsmen with extravagant statements  made by participants of Greek gay parties and homosexual libations –  thus was born Christian philosophy; in the name of the Renaissance, we  smuggled the Greek concept of beauty into our Christian landscape,  constructed bridges of statements between the claims made by the  crucified prophet from Palestine and the Englishman Darwin, or between  the vocabulary of stockbrokers and the verses of Otokar Březina. They  are flimsy bridges, but they can be crossed. Without interpretations,  the West’s landscapes of statements would not hold together, they would  be contradictory and filled with garbage, their boundaries would be  unclear, we would not understand relationships and contexts.<br />
&#8230;</p>
<p>Pilate’s famous question (the only sentence in the Gospels that  makes sense, wrote Nietzsche) has long changed its addressee. What is  truth? we today ask the scientist adding meal from dead cows to the feed  of live cows, and what we mean to say is: Do you know the boundaries of  the landscape to which your statements belong?</p>
<p>GROWTH</p>
<p>Industrial growth is war.<br />
Will the century of extremes ever end?<br />
American author Don DeLillo wrote:<br />
“While watching the first day of the attack on Iraq on television,  with the smart bombs exploding in the center of Baghdad, I got the sense  that technology itself forces us into war, that it has the need to  realize everything that can be realized. Our Progress needed to blow off  steam in that attack, with unprecedented precision.”<br />
The drive for war is encoded in the products that shape our daily  life; everything that we take into our hands contains the need to “blow  off steam.” After 1989, there was a brief period of hope that the drive  for war inscribed into technological and economic growth could be  overcome.<br />
We were mistaken.<br />
&#8230;</p>
<p>A civilization of economic growth reduces all meaning to nothing  more than a Great Objective; the greater the objective, the more capital  (accumulated energy, work, resources, and the efficient use thereof) is  required. Today, meaning has become hopelessly merged with the great  objectives of Euro-Atlantic technological civilization – economic  globalization, star wars, space travel, living to be a hundred  illness-free.<br />
Everything must contribute to the growth of capital – even protests  against its absurdity. Are you protesting? That is your right, but you  will have to purchase your means of protest from us! How to resist  capital without promoting its growth? How to express and implement the  difference between meaning and mere objective?<br />
&#8230;</p>
<p>What is the point of freedom, reason, and education if, no matter  what, we are all dragged along by the relentless automatism of the  economic growth of Growth, which nobody is capable of giving human  meaning?<br />
&#8230;</p>
<p>Is there any meaning to the endless devastation of the planet, the  world’s transformation into a pile of garbage, the tyranny to which the  Third World is subjected in the name of controlling raw materials?  Growth is not a universal good, as claimed by the council of  globalization that meets in Brussels or Washington.</p>
<p>COMMUNISM AND CAPITALISM</p>
<p>Is capitalist globalization a new “grand narrative” that we tell  ourselves at the end of the era of nation-states, whose expansion had  been the subject of all the grand narratives of the past two centuries?  Is it a new “recognized necessity,” the only resistance to which comes  from irresponsible extremists or the classes marked for extinction?<br />
&#8230;</p>
<p>A system founded on private ownership has a “big dirty secret” –  capitalists never pay the full costs of their “private” business. A  large share of the costs is paid by people who in some way are affected  by what the capitalist does with his property but who lack the legal  means to influence his activities. A company uses water from a river,  but its production costs do not include expenditures caused by the fact  that other people have to adapt to the impacts of its business  activities – changes in water quality, for instance. This is the vicious  circle of democratic policy: the oligarchies that have achieved a  hegemony in society support the governments, who in exchange for this  support happily allow them to transfer their private costs onto society  at large. Through the use of state and police control, governments  preventively take away their citizens’ rights to legally protest the  capitalists’ unpaid accounts.<br />
&#8230;</p>
<p>I called my first book of reflections from the nineties Capitalism  and Civic Virtues. The “and” between the market and virtues is a very  fragile bond, one that is constantly threatening to come apart. In the  second half of the 1990s, to cries of “Globalization, globalization!”,  several fanged monsters began gnawing away at this bond – successfully,  as the “global financial crisis” has shown.<br />
Communism was not disarmed by capitalism; it collapsed because the  bond between politics and civic virtues was severed. In Plato’s Apology,  we read that “virtue is not given by money, but that from virtue comes  money and every other good of man, public as well as private (…)”.  Renewing the bond between “virtue and money” may be a long process, but  it is the only possible solution to the current “global crisis” and  future crises as well.<br />
&#8230;</p>
<p>And now the same, but in a more erudite manner. We use the word  “externality” to label various ways in which costs are transferred onto  others and the word “internality” to describe ways of rectifying such  forms of inequality. The expression “legitimate disregard” is used to  describe the fact that people do not have the legal right to fight  business activities whose externalities are causing them harm.<br />
Right-wing ideology and politics then take up the struggle for the  greatest possible level of legitimate disregard. Through their  ideological apparatuses, right-wing parties work to create a majority  consensus for those governments that allow the oligarchy in whose  interests they govern to transfer as much of their costs as possible  onto all of society.<br />
&#8230;</p>
<p>In right-wing discourse, the word “freedom” means the right of  private owners to use their property with the greatest possible level of  disregard towards others.<br />
&#8230;</p>
<p>“If we limit the right of the owners of private property to transfer  a part of their costs onto all of society, this restricts the rights of  all because free enterprise is the most important form of freedom in  society!” – cries the Right. And the Left answers: “We are constantly  expanding the right of “citizens” to protest against the failure by the  owners of private property to pay their bills. One day you, too, will be  affected by the impacts of some “capitalist’s” business activities, and  not being a helpless victim is the most important form of freedom in  society.”<br />
&#8230;</p>
<p>hyper-bourgeoisie<br />
This word, which is borrowed from French sociologist Denis Duclos,  describes a “transnational” elite working to abolish first the  democratic welfare state, and subsequently all restrictions by which the  nation-states have fettered economic rationality over the past two  centuries. The hyper-bourgeoisie is “anti-cultural”: it delegitimizes  traditions, national memory and shared lifestyles, it censors all that  is capable of resisting financial capital, which redefines in its own  interest the plus and minus values historically assigned to things,  words, landscapes, and interpersonal relationships.<br />
&#8230;</p>
<p>The bourgeoisie was a part of a nation and acted within the history  of that nation; it was bound, morally and historically, by the  solidarity that brings together societies of a national language. The  hyper-bourgeoisie, on the other hand, attacks all historical societies  from the outside. Its global power is a lightning-fast “raid, plunder,  and run;” the obligations arising from a shared language or national  solidarity would only serve to restrict it. Investments managed by the  global nomenklatura can quickly and inexorably change the value which  human societies have assigned to landscapes, things, symbols,  interpersonal relationships – nothing and no-one may restrict them in  the name of solidarity among people or earthlings within the broadest  meaning of the word. The hyper-bourgeoisie and its paid  hyper-nomenklatura (employees of the EU, NATO, WTO, World Bank,  International Monetary Fund, PR hyper-corporations, and certain research  institutes) form a “transnational class” – they do not acknowledge any  obligations towards the nation whose language they are currently using  and on whose territory they are enforcing their strategic interests.<br />
&#8230;</p>
<p>The phrase “an irrational society of rational individuals” captures  the fact that in late industrial society, the whole of all individuals  acting rationally or working to maximize their own success forms an  insane society; rational individuals work to maximize their profits, but  taken together they form an insane society, one example being global  warming.<br />
Put differently: the more rational people are as individuals, they  more insane they are as a society. One convincing example of collective  stupidity is the private automobile: for each individual, it is  advantageous to drive to work in his own car; traffic jams and highway  accidents are the irrational result of this individual rationality.<br />
&#8230;</p>
<p>total market<br />
I use this term to define the expansion of market rationality beyond  all national, ethical, and social boundaries. Technological environment  lowers the cost of moving anything – information, knowledge, materials,  companies and their manufacturing output. There exist thousands of  individuals capable of performing my job better and for much lower pay,  and in a technological environment it is cheap to send my job to them.<br />
&#8230;</p>
<p>The total market insists that everything that is “technologically  possible” be “for sale” as quickly as possible, because it will not  tolerate any rational goal for man other than the “maximum consumption  of what is sold.” First of all, the total market conceals the actual  price of the consumed good – mineral water or fruits produced thousands  of miles away and transported to your local hypermarket have intolerably  higher environmental costs than locally produced water or fruits. And  secondly, it requires censoring all questions regarding the biological,  moral, and social sustainability of technologically realised  (realisable) human choice.<br />
&#8230;</p>
<p>Our century of extremes has been most deeply marked by the bloody  conflict between dead capital and live human work, between the meaning  and price of work. This conflict has not been resolved; the  entertainment industry has merely postponed it indefinitely.<br />
&#8230;</p>
<p>In the age of globalization, a new Marx will have to slightly alter  the introductory sentence to his critique of political economy: “The  wealth of global bourgeois society, at first sight, presents itself as  an immense accumulation of worlds. Everyone can choose into which world  he wants to be lulled to sleep, and by whom.”<br />
&#8230;</p>
<p>I believe that the historical catastrophe of communism was the  result of a lack of diligence in the face of reality, in the face of the  structure of human existence; it resulted from a terrible  overestimation of the “revolutionary act” of forcing a form of existence  on people that they could only feign in an artificial world – a world  in which they cannot live without a vast coercive apparatus.<br />
&#8230;<br />
Communism was not the same as Nazism, as the dogmatic warriors for  the capitalist system claim. It was a grand project of modernism whose  promises came to naught because of the resistance of the historical  world in which these ideas were to be implemented; the communists lacked  the necessary patience and so they declared the representatives of this  resistance to be “enemies of mankind” and eradicated them. As a result,  they found themselves in a terrible contradiction with the ideas that  had been the source of their historical legitimacy.<br />
&#8230;</p>
<p>As the discrepancy between democratic ideal and oligarchic reality  grows, current global capitalism increasingly resembles communism..</p>
<p>GLOBALIZATION</p>
<p>The earth is sown with wonders of technology, into which it is slowly sliding.<br />
&#8230;</p>
<p>Today, we describe the planet-wide expansion of industrial modernity  using the already devalued word “globalization.” That aspect of  globalization that, in terms of its radicalism, we view as a threat like  no other before is the detachment of techno-scientific-economic growth  from the right of the public to ask, “what meaning is there to it?” This  demand for meaning stands in the way of the automatic cumulative growth  of knowledge and power, and is thus suppressed from the public realm as  illegitimate, extremist, or proto-terrorist.<br />
&#8230;</p>
<p>Since the early 1990s, capitalism has been undergoing a dangerous  mutation – it is globalizing, becoming, in the words of Karel Kosík, a  “supercapitalism.” Democracy is too closely bound to the values that  form the foundation of the nation-state; supercapitalism drains  democracy by draining it of its sovereignty: free public space, civic  independence, a natural shared language, and anti-conformist and  transversal communication are beginning to stand in the way of the  growth of global uniformity, which cannot abide any limitations or  boundaries. Ralf Dahrendorf speaks of the “Singapore Syndrome,” the  danger of the emergence of an authoritarian capitalism controlled by a  “globalized nomenklatura” composed of the largest financial  institutions, the arms industry, Eurobureaucracy, multinational  corporations, and the managers of the media elite.<br />
&#8230;</p>
<p>Is there such a thing as a global culture capable of giving  globalization a humanly comprehensible objective? Globalization has  three central symbols – the atom bomb, the environmental crisis, and a  planetary media network. All national cultures are trapped in this  triangle, while the technocratic spider sucks them dry. The  philosophical question of the time is whether there is any  civilizational competence. By this, I mean the ability to respond to the  abrupt relativization of all national cultural models by finding some  kind of shared “grammar.”<br />
&#8230;</p>
<p>The post-bipolar world is controlled by structures whose focus is  not on the meaning of the exercise of power, but on the growth of power.<br />
&#8230;</p>
<p>(&#8230;) in a society of global growth, there is a growing community of people brought together by a “shared sense of absurdity.”</p>
<p>FROM THE HISTORY OF MODERNITY</p>
<p>Being an individual is nothing natural. It is the result of a long  educational process that began in Greece, when man broke free from the  world of myth he had taken for granted; this process strengthened under  the pastoral power of Christianity, which taught each person to examine  himself, to have a conscience, to struggle with his body, to see himself  as a unique and unreproducible individual. The strict maxim of cogito  ergo sum commanded man to always start from his  awareness/self-confidence, which raises him not only above other living  creatures, but also above the infinity of the cosmos. Then the Earth  began to turn and man was spun off from the center of the universe to  the periphery of the Milky Way, but his self-confidence grew; then came  the era of progress and Enlightenment, which taught man to trust his own  experiences and not allow himself to be confounded by holy authority or  the power of the majority.<br />
&#8230;</p>
<p>(&#8230;) the word “globalization” is connected to the word  “postmodernity,” which we use to describe the time between the first and  the second modernity. The first modernity was a massive hoax  perpetrated by a powerful discursive machinery controlled by the  officials of modern pastoral power – educators, teachers, poets,  psychiatrists, experts in the human sciences, engaged intellectuals,  ideologists – all of whom worked to make sure that the phrase  “industrial growth” and all sub-phrases derived therefrom would have a  higher, inner, figurative meaning in addition to its literal, material,  outer meaning: the development of production tools and the accumulation  of products in the form of goods. Their work ensured that the metaphor  inscribed within this word in booming verse and ornamental lettering was  kept alive, and that the figurative meaning of the word “growth” would  rule over its literal meaning (the higher controlled the lower, the  spiritual the material).<br />
The emergence of the society of communications overload, in which an  ever larger number of subcultures has their say, made the omnipresent  hypocrisy of this hoax readily apparent. The powerful representatives of  the “demands of the spirit against the demands of the material base”  reduced themselves to a grotesque preaching mafia, and the first  modernity came to an end.<br />
&#8230;</p>
<p>The era of postmodernity between the first and second modernity is  characterized by a preoccupied lack of awareness of the fact that the  metaphors that had previously given all events a higher meaning are  fading away. We do not dare see our new “grand narrative” within the  permanent darkness; the recently declared “end of grand narratives”  still applies.<br />
&#8230;</p>
<p>In the period between the first and second modernity there are  landfills containing the waste of the first modernity everywhere. This  waste has its beauty: in the random interplay of shapes, sounds, and  images we can often glimpse the old “figurative meaning”, distorted, out  of place, superfluous. Yes, the instability of events abandoned by the  grand metaphors of the first modernity – this is the aesthetic of  postmodernity. This installation of extinguished meaning reveals not  only the unyielding prosaism of global circumstances, but also the mass  nostalgia for the metaphoric world that once glittered in the word  “Enlightenment.” In Petr Zelenka’s film Wrong Side Up, a sculptor  installs a work at a gallery belonging to a man who used to narrate  newsreels under communism. The audience is fascinated by the words that  are the residue of those images, she repeats, taken by his words. An  allegory of our relationship to the loss of meaning between the first  and second modernity.<br />
&#8230;</p>
<p>The culture of the second modernity is being formed during a time  defined by the motto “There is no culture,” and the new grand narrative  is being shaped during a time defined by the motto “There is no grand  narrative.” The second modernity will begin once the fading of  metaphors, the sudden dusk of grand slogans, the proliferation of  boundless peripheries, and the unexpected fluctuations and mixing of  codes, places, and things become our new grand narrative.<br />
&#8230;</p>
<p>The bipolar world of the Cold War was simple: there is plenty of  time for peace and democracy, but first we have to defeat their enemies.  The two systems did not differ from each other in anything essential,  both were the largest global protagonists of the world’s transformation  into a pile of resources at our disposal, even if the “capitalist” pile  was more diverse and its consumers freer in digging around in it as they  wished.<br />
The Cold War is over, but the need to postpone peace, democracy, and  the question of the meaning of this constantly growing mass of  phenomena and things at our disposal endures. The question of the  growing absurdity of the civilization of the growth of Growth does not  fit into the global players’ strategies; what they need is another more  or less cold war so that they may again put off, until some distant  “later,” answering the question of the overall framework of the world in  which we are imprisoned; what applies now are wartime priorities,  people must be a priori suspected, inspected, monitored – the enemy  lurks everywhere.<br />
&#8230;</p>
<p>We live on the edge of giant landfills of used information and  images, discharged contexts and worn-out clichés, semiotic wrecks and  dilapidated linguistic traditions.</p>
<p>FROM ACTUALITY TO THE END</p>
<p>The difference between modernity and tradition has been a central  theme of the past three centuries: historians tell the history of the  world as a sequence of stories about when, where, and why the old world  came to an end and “modernization” took off – the victory of reason, the  rule of scientists of managers. In some places, this end came earlier,  in some, later; in some places, people resisted it; many were murdered.  All these stories lie about the most fundamental aspect of the matter.  Modernity is not a new thing. It is merely a new name for the old  religion of the West, which we call the “Cult of the Actual” –  Christianity and modernity are its two main forms.<br />
&#8230;</p>
<p>The end of the old times is coming at an ever faster pace, an  everlarger number of people are liberating themselves from the  darknesses of the past, say the chroniclers of the modern era. And with  them, Siemens, Ford, General Motors, Boeing, IBM, NASA, and their (all)  newspapers. Believers of the Actual are doomsayers prophesizing various  ends of the world; they point at one thing or another in our world –  scientific knowledge, for instance – and cry, “through this, the old  world will end forever.”<br />
The dogma of the Believers of the Actual is well-known: The present  is different from the past, time is not cyclical like the time of plants  and animals, but it is rolling inexorably forward to its end, beyond  which lies the new world. Anything that repeats itself is without  meaning – the stars circling above our heads according to their  unyielding laws, the seasons of the year. The cogito-subject wanders  aimlessly through his history, but it is an exalted wandering with a  glorious end – death (misery, lack of education, sickness) will be  defeated. The word “actual” describes the chasm between the past and the  mesmeric NOW, where everything is new, including man. Christians are  the most dangerous Believers of the Actual, the accelerated end of the  world is their genetic disorder, their heretical euphoria, their  effervescence that prevents them from awaiting the end of the world in  peace.<br />
Actuality is merely another name for Paul’s “death has been vanquished.”<br />
&#8230;</p>
<p>Jan Patočka wrote that the Christian faith is not the meaning sought  for and found by man, but the meaning “dictated from the hereafter.”  This concept of meaning as a dictate from “the hereafter,” as a revealed  truth that triumphs over the “temporal world of shadows, mortality, and  insecurity,” unites all Believers of the Actual within one large tribe.  Even venerated Western science in its temples – laboratories,  universities, multinational corporations – glorifies its statements as  being “objective” (i.e., dictated) facts, and thus it, too, is just one  of several ways of worshipping the religion of the Actual. Only that can  be actual which hails from world other than the one that we see with  our eyes, the one in which we die and in which we are constantly erring  and in fear: only that is objective which is guaranteed, like a message  from the hereafter, with a firm foundation in a netherworld accessible  only to scientists dressed in their white coats. The modern Believers of  the Actual replace the good word of the Almighty Father with the  dictate of scientific empiricism.<br />
&#8230;</p>
<p>The Cult of the Actual has its origins in Greek philosophy; it is  the legacy of the fable of the “true world” that a delusional Plato once  told his tribe. &#8230; Plato saw “pure spirits” behind all things, and the  elders of the tribe of Greeks were unable to convince him otherwise.  Not only that, but they succumbed to this delusional belief themselves,  and so Plato triumphed and founded the dreadful religion of the Actual,  whose believers did not celebrate as real the visible and transient  things around us, but the invisible ideas behind them, things we do not  see with our eyes but with our reason. For the crackpot Plato, reason is  something like an eye through which we see the true world behind the  shadows of this one.<br />
As we know from various sources, plenty of people tried to talk  Plato out of his delusion. They pointed out that they could see tables,  trees, and people, but not the idea of a table or of a person. Plato  arrogantly retorted: “No wonder, for you have eyes, but no intellect.”  He would probably have lost his arguments had the tribe of Greeks not  succumbed to the Romans and the Romans to Christianity, which packaged  Plato’s delusional world into their popular fable about a good Father  who sacrifices his own son out of love for Man and then celebrates  victory over death in the hereafter; this is the “Good News”  (evangelium) that the Almighty Father sends us through his Son,  incarnated as a mortal.<br />
Nietzsche’s statement that “Christianity is Platonism for the people  or for the poor” reminds us of the reason why the fable of the true  world was victorious – there were more poor people, they were hungry and  impatient and afraid of death. &#8230; the tribe of white men believed in  Plato’s netherworld and began to destroy this one. Not a Greek was found  who would put his hand on Plato’s shoulder and kindly tell him – that’s  just your delirium talking, seeing eternal ideas behind everything. And  so this delirium has been the normal state of white men for two  thousand years as they summon the end of the world. Their world.<br />
&#8230;</p>
<p>The Believers of the Actual have summoned the age of desperation,  the Earth is going to waste, all that is around us becomes a trap, and  our much-vaunted reason builds factory farms. We have succumbed to our  Plato and associated the meaning of life with the end of the world. And  the end is near. Our cities reek, the French coast – Cézanne, van Gogh,  Utrillo, Picasso! – is covered in a black mass, more and more seabirds  are dying encased in a shell of oil, there are Temelíns on every  horizon. The sectarian Believers of the Actual firmly shut their eyes  before these ends.<br />
What a strange story it was! Plato left the cave, followed by the  entire Academy, St. Paul exhorted the impatient Thessalonians – first in  good will, but later the borders burned and the stench of scorched  human flesh was everywhere – later still, Galileo turned the Earth under  our feet, Newton calculated how things move, where they are moving, and  the effect of this motion, Einstein ordered parallel lines to  intersect, the cyborg beckons with its virtual arm, hearts are  transplanted from one body to another, the globalizers have firmly bound  us with an invisible fiber, a butterfly flapping its wings in our  valley causes hurricanes on the other side of the world, there is a hole  in the ozone layer through which the Sun fries us like the millionaire  in Wolker’s unforgettable fairytale.<br />
Hell hasn’t frozen over; instead, the ice is melting. The unhappy end is near.<br />
&#8230;</p>
<p>WOMAN AND MAN</p>
<p>Philosophers have spent millennia arguing about the sex of angels,  but what about the sex of reason? For more than two thousand years,  reason was a primary male sexual characteristic, but today it passes as  neuter. God is father and mother, Pope John Paul II once said. Reason  has its male and female side, the philosophers say conciliatorily. But  the French flag is not neuter, nor are generals, managers, judges, or  the architect of Temelín. These are male roles. Like the African in  Sartre’s example, woman must speak in her own voice and say roughly  this: Male civilization is a catastrophe; it is missing a large piece of  reality, it is narcissist and hurtling into an abyss.<br />
Women in Central Europe have not spoken with their own voice; it was  too bloody and cruel here. There was fear. But many men here taught us  to identify the voice of women within the clamor of the male world. For  instance, Karl Kraus saw woman as an anti-Platonic being, rebelling  irrepressibly against the male world of pure ideas that subjugated the  real world with insatiate abstractions such as Law and Order. He studied  the trials of women who had rebelled against their families, and in the  “sinfulness” which the court of respectable men ascribed to these women  he saw a liberating primal force that rejected the recent era of  manipulation and prostitution. In 1929 he wrote: “You know that all my  life I have persecuted spiritual prostitutes, but never the prostitution  of the female body. Towards the end of the time that I have been  allotted in order to learn the things of this world, I assert that sex  is probably the only activity that does not prostitute itself in this  world, and that we have affixed the stigma of prostitution onto women in  order to distract attention from male prostitution in all vocations.”  At the pinnacle of male prostitution is the Media, which robs us of our  imagination and empties our hearts. Kraus believed that in their fight  against the Media’s emptying of the heart, women use their bodies, all  their instincts, and their most individual voice.<br />
&#8230;</p>
<p>I imagine that women’s voice will help us avoid two traps of reason.  The first trap is reason in the singular, which alone can discover  eternal and universal truths, and which therefore must be codified by  the state and professed by all citizens. Truths of reason in the  singular raise man above all other living beings with which we share the  planet. I believe that, through their touch, women teach us from  childhood (even when their lessons are censured) that reason is just one  of the human senses, and not lord over them. Reason is a piece of our  body. When we watch a landscape tortured by poisonous vapors, reason  protests within our body. “That is but feminine reason,” people used to  say. Yes, feminine reason! There are as many reasons as there are  reasons for the living bodies of all species to rise up against Law,  Order, Structures.<br />
&#8230;</p>
<p><a title="top" href="http://www.divus.cz/umelec/article_page.php?item=1575#top"><strong>▵</strong></a> <small>[12]</small></p>
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		<title>RSA Animate – Crisis of Capitalism</title>
		<link>http://www.postcapital.org/2010/07/03/rsa-animate-%e2%80%93-crisis-of-capitalism/</link>
		<comments>http://www.postcapital.org/2010/07/03/rsa-animate-%e2%80%93-crisis-of-capitalism/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 03 Jul 2010 08:57:45 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Politics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Capitalist]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Crisis]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[David Harvey]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Marxist]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.postcapital.org/?p=396</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Today&#8217;s Must-See Animated Capitalist Takedown from RSA and David Harvey thanks to Shuddhabrata Sengupta By Max Abelson June 29, 2010 &#124; 6:24 p.m If you watch just one funny and handsome Marxist critique of the financial crisis, make it the Royal Society for the Encouragement of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce&#8217;s animated version of David Harvey&#8217;s [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h1><a href="http://www.observer.com/2010/wall-street/todays-must-see-animated-capitalist-takedown-rsa-and-david-harvey">Today&#8217;s  Must-See Animated Capitalist Takedown from RSA and David Harvey</a></h1>
<p>thanks to Shuddhabrata Sengupta</p>
<div id="byline">By <a href="http://www.observer.com/author/max-abelson/">Max Abelson</a></div>
<div id="date">June 29, 2010 | 6:24 p.m</div>
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<p>If you watch just one funny and handsome Marxist critique of the  financial crisis, make it the Royal Society for the Encouragement of  Arts, Manufactures and Commerce&#8217;s <a href="http://comment.rsablogs.org.uk/videos/">animated version</a> of  David Harvey&#8217;s RSA speech &#8220;Crises of Capitalism.&#8221; It&#8217;s been <a href="http://newleft.tumblr.com/post/749959797/david-harveys-crises-of-capitalism-animated">making</a> <a href="http://youngmanhattanite.tumblr.com/post/749985251/newleft-david-harveys-crises-of-capitalism">the</a> <a href="http://6h057.net/post/750050224/youngmanhattanite-newleft-david-harveys">rounds</a> this afternoon, and for good reason: Mr. Harvey, a <a href="http://davidharvey.org/2008/06/getting-started/">Marxist scholar</a> who heads CUNY&#8217;s <a href="http://web.gc.cuny.edu/pcp/p_director.html">Center  for Place, Culture &amp; Politics</a>, describes not just the failures  that caused the ongoing fiasco, but the failure of how we&#8217;ve explained  it.</p>
<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s crap,&#8221; he says. &#8220;You should know it&#8217;s crap, and say it is. And  we have a duty, it seems to me, those of us who are academics, and  seriously involved in the world, to actually change our mode of  thinking.&#8221;</p>
<p>Listening to Mr. Harvey would be one thing, but the one-hand work  from RSA Animate — who has given the same treatment to <a href="http://comment.rsablogs.org.uk/2010/03/17/rsa-animate-smile-die/">Barbara  Ehrenreich</a>, <a href="http://comment.rsablogs.org.uk/2010/04/08/rsa-animate-drive/">Dan  Pink</a>, <a href="http://comment.rsablogs.org.uk/2010/05/06/rsa-animate-empathic-civilisation/">Jeremy  Pifkin</a>, <a href="http://comment.rsablogs.org.uk/2010/05/24/rsa-animate-secret-powers-time/">Philip  Zumbardo</a> — does wonders.</p>
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		<title>TIQQUN !!!</title>
		<link>http://www.postcapital.org/2010/06/01/tiqqun/</link>
		<comments>http://www.postcapital.org/2010/06/01/tiqqun/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 01 Jun 2010 15:54:46 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[City]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Tiqqun]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.postcapital.org/?p=390</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[TIQQUN 1 [pdf] Tiqqun 1 &#8211; Intégralité scannée [doc] Tiqqun 1 &#8211; Intégralité document word Eh bien, la guerre ! Qu’est-ce que la Métaphysique Critique ? Théorie du Bloom [pdf] version augmentée, La Fabrique.[de] [es] [it] Phénoménologie de la vie quotidienne Thèses sur le Parti Imaginaire Le silence et son au-delà De l’économie considérée comme [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://www.bloom0101.org/tiqqun.html" target="_blank">TIQQUN 1</a><br />
<a href="http://www.bloom0101.org/Tiqqunn1-ExercicesdeMtaphysiqueCritique1999.pdf"><img src="http://www.bloom0101.org/couvtiqqun1.jpg" alt="" width="200" height="299" /><br />
[pdf] Tiqqun 1 &#8211; Intégralité scannée<br />
</a><a href="http://www.bloom0101.org/tiqqun1.doc" target="_self">[doc] Tiqqun 1 &#8211; Intégralité  document word<br />
</a></p>
<p>Eh bien, la guerre !</p>
<p>Qu’est-ce que la Métaphysique Critique ?</p>
<p><a href="http://www.bloom0101.org/bloomfabrique.pdf" target="_self">Théorie du Bloom<br />
[pdf] version augmentée, La Fabrique</a>.<a href="http://www.bloom0101.org/translations.html" target="_self">[de] [es] [it]</a></p>
<p><span id="more-390"></span>Phénoménologie de la vie quotidienne</p>
<p>Thèses sur le Parti Imaginaire</p>
<p>Le silence et son au-delà</p>
<p>De l’économie considérée comme magie noire</p>
<p><a href="http://www.bloom0101.org/jeunefille.pdf" target="_self">Premiers  matériaux pour une théorie de la Jeune-Fille<br />
[pdf] version augmentée, vlcp.</a> <a href="http://www.bloom0101.org/translations.html" target="_self">[it]</a></p>
<p>Hommes-machines, mode d’emploi<br />
[pdf] version augmentée, Michel Baverey  éditeur</p>
<p>Les métaphysiciens-critiques sous le «mouvement des chômeurs»</p>
<p>Quelques actions d’éclat du Parti Imaginaire</p>
<p><a href="http://www.bloom0101.org/tiqqun2.pdf"><img src="http://www.bloom0101.org/couvtiq2.gif" border="0" alt="" width="200" height="299" align="top" /><br />
[pdf] Tiqqun 2 -Intégralité scannée</a></p>
<p><a href="http://www.bloom0101.org/igc.pdf" target="_self">Introduction à  la Guerre Civile<br />
[pdf] version vlcp</a> <a href="http://www.bloom0101.org/translations.html" target="_self">[en]  [de] [es</a>]</p>
<p>L&#8217;hypothèse cybernétique<br />
<a href="http://www.bloom0101.org/translations.html" target="_self">[de]</a></p>
<p>Thèses sur la communauté terrible<br />
<a href="http://www.bloom0101.org/translations.html" target="_self">[por] [it]</a></p>
<p>Le problème de la tête</p>
<p><a href="http://www.bloom0101.org/dispositifs.pdf" target="_self">&#8220;Une métaphysique critique pourrait naître comme science  des dispositifs&#8230;&#8221;<br />
[pdf] La Fabrique, 2009<br />
</a><br />
Rapport à la S.A.S.C. concernant un dispositif impérial</p>
<p>Le petit jeu de l&#8217;homme d&#8217;Ancien Régime</p>
<p>Echographie d&#8217;une puissance</p>
<p><a href="http://www.bloom0101.org/programme.pdf" target="_self">Ceci  n&#8217;est pas un programme<br />
[pdf] version augmentée, vlcp.</a></p>
<p><a href="http://infokiosques.net/spip.php?article127" target="_self">Comment Faire?<br />
[pdf]</a> -<a href="http://www.bloom0101.org/translations.html" target="_self"> [en][es]</a></p>
<p>links to other translations from the same group:<br />
<a href="http://bloom.jottit.com/">Bloom Theory</a><br />
<a href="http://terriblecommunity.jottit.com/">Theses on the Terrible  Community</a><br />
<a href="http://cybernet.jottit.com/">The Cybernetic Hypothesis</a><br />
<a href="http://younggirl.jottit.com/">Raw Materials for a Theory of the  Young-Girl</a><br />
<a href="http://linsqv.blogspot.com/">The Coming Insurrection</a></p>
<p>a &#8216;critical study guide&#8217;:<br />
<a href="http://tiqqunerie.jottit.com/">Avant Garde and Mission</a></p>
<ul id="pages">
<li><a href="http://tiqqunista.jottit.com/final_warning_to_the_imaginary_party">final  warning to the imaginary party</a></li>
<li><a href="http://tiqqunista.jottit.com/marginal_considerations_on_the_present_movement">marginal  considerations on the present movement</a></li>
<li><a href="http://tiqqunista.jottit.com/phenomenology_of_everyday_life">phenomenology  of everyday life</a></li>
<li><a href="http://tiqqunista.jottit.com/the_great_game_of_civil_war">the  great game of civil war</a></li>
<li><a href="http://tiqqunista.jottit.com/untitled_notes_on_citizenship_papers">untitled  notes on citizenship papers</a></li>
<li><a href="http://tiqqunista.jottit.com/you%27re_never_to_old_to_ditch_out">you&#8217;re  never to old to ditch out</a></li>
</ul>
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		<title>The Contemporary Misadventures of Critical Thinking</title>
		<link>http://www.postcapital.org/2010/05/28/the-contemporary-misadventures-of-critical-thinking/</link>
		<comments>http://www.postcapital.org/2010/05/28/the-contemporary-misadventures-of-critical-thinking/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 28 May 2010 16:45:56 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Politics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[2008]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Critical Thinking]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Jacques Rancière]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.postcapital.org/?p=385</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Jacques Rancière March 7, 2008 CCFI Noted Scholars Lecture Series Jacques Rancière is the Emeritus Professor of Aesthetics and Politics at the University of Paris VIII where he taught from 1969 to 2000. He continues to teach, as a visiting professor, in a number of Universities, including Rutgers, Harvard, Johns Hopkins, and Berkeley. His work [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://www.postcapital.org/2010/05/28/the-contemporary-misadventures-of-critical-thinking/"><em>Click here to view the embedded video.</em></a></p>
<h1><em><strong>Jacques Rancière</strong></em></h1>
<p><a href="http://www.ccfi.educ.ubc.ca/media.php" target="_blank">March 7, 2008 CCFI Noted Scholars Lecture Series</a></p>
<p>Jacques Rancière is the Emeritus Professor of Aesthetics  and Politics at the University of Paris VIII where he taught from 1969  to 2000. He continues to teach, as a visiting professor, in a number of  Universities, including Rutgers, Harvard, Johns Hopkins, and Berkeley.  His work has been translated into 14 languages, and has been subject to  numerous special issues, symposia and critical commentaries. His latest  titles to appear in English translation are: <em>Disagreement, Politics,  and Philosophy (1998), Short Voyages to the Land of the People (2003),  The Philosopher and his Poor (2004), The Flesh of Words (2004), The  Politics of Aesthetics (2005), Film Fables (2006), and The Hatred of  Democracy (2007).</em></p>
<p><strong><em><a href="http://www.ccfi.educ.ubc.ca/Videos/Ranciere%20Bryson%20Intro.mov">The   Contemporary Misadventures of Critical Thinking Introduction 1</a></em></strong></p>
<p><a href="http://www.ccfi.educ.ubc.ca/Videos/Ranciere%20Ruitenberg%20Intro.mov"><strong><em>The   Contemporary Misadventures of Critical Thinking Introduction 2</em></strong></a></p>
<p><strong><em><a href="http://www.ccfi.educ.ubc.ca/Videos/Ranciere%20talk.mov">The  Contemporary  Misadventures of Critical Thinking Video</a></em></strong></p>
<p><a href="http://www.ccfi.educ.ubc.ca/Videos/Ranciere%20questions.mov"><strong><em>Questions  &amp;  Discussion Video</em></strong></a></p>
<p><a href="http://www.ccfi.educ.ubc.ca/Videos/Dr.%20Jacques%20Ranciere%20CCFI%20Mar%2008.m4a"><strong><em>The  Contemporary Misadventures of Critical Thinking Podcast </em></strong></a></p>
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		<title>Dilemma &#8217;89: My father was a communist</title>
		<link>http://www.postcapital.org/2010/05/24/dilemma-89-my-father-was-a-communist/</link>
		<comments>http://www.postcapital.org/2010/05/24/dilemma-89-my-father-was-a-communist/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 24 May 2010 23:05:40 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Politics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[1989]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Communism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Europe]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[László Rajk]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Martin M. Simecka]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.postcapital.org/?p=381</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[László Rajk, Martin M. Simecka eurozine The Slovak author and journalist Martin M. Simecka and Hungarian architect and former samizdat publisher László Rajk are not only former dissidents of the younger generation, but also the sons of well-known persecuted communists. László Rajk sr. was the most prominent victim of the Rákosi show trials of 1949; [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div><a href="http://www.eurozine.com/authors/rajk.html">László  Rajk</a>, <a href="http://www.eurozine.com/authors/Simecka.html">Martin  M. Simecka</a></div>
<div><a href="http://www.eurozine.com/articles/2010-05-07-debate-en.html#" target="_blank">eurozine</a></div>
<p>The Slovak author and journalist Martin M. Simecka  and Hungarian architect and former samizdat publisher László Rajk are  not only former dissidents of the younger generation, but also the sons  of well-known persecuted communists. László Rajk sr. was the most  prominent victim of the Rákosi show trials of 1949; the writer Milan  Simecka sr. began his career in the Czechoslovak Communist Party and  became a dissident after 1968. In the first debate in the Eurozine  series &#8220;Europe talks to Europe&#8221;, held in Budapest, they discussed the  still unanswered questions surrounding the involvement of their father&#8217;s  generation in post-war communism, and the failings of today&#8217;s debate  about the past in the former communist countries. Moderated by Eva  Karadi, editor of <em>Magyar Lettre Internationale</em>.</p>
<p><strong>Eva Karadi:</strong> There is an interesting common feature in both your  biographies that has provided us with the title of our conversation:  &#8220;Dilemma &#8217;89: My father was a communist&#8221;. Martin Simecka, how well do  you know the circumstances in which your father became a communist?</p>
<p><strong>Martin Simecka:</strong> I know them very well because I  spoke to him about it all. After my father was expelled from the party  in &#8217;68 he became a dissident, and so he had time to reflect on his past.  He became a member of the party as early as &#8217;48, as an  eighteen-year-old. His personal motivation was very typical for the  younger generation in Czechoslovakia in the early 1950s. The  Czechoslovak First Republic was extremely leftwing: there was a strong  social-democratic party, a communist party and powerful leftwing  intellectual movements. Many members of the intellectual elite – the  writers and artists – were either communist or very leftist; it wasn&#8217;t <em>unusual</em> to be intellectual and leftist, or even communist. In this respect,  Czechoslovakia was different to Hungary or Poland. In the &#8217;48 elections  the communist party won about 60 per cent in the Czech Republic and  about 30 per cent in Slovakia, which was still a lot.</p>
<p>There were two profound reasons behind being a communist. One was the  very common feeling that the Red Army had liberated Czechoslovakia at  the end of the Second World War, and that it was the Russians who had  brought liberty. The second was that Edvard Benes, who was president  from late &#8217;38 and then in exile in London, himself supported the idea  that the Soviet Union is our friend, after Great Britain and others had  betrayed Czechoslovakia with the Munich Agreement in &#8217;38.<span id="more-381"></span></p>
<p><img src="http://www.eurozine.com/UserFiles/illustrations/simecka_jr_220x170.jpg" alt="" align="right" />My father&#8217;s mother was killed by an  American bomb and his father died before the war, so he was an orphan.  The state took care of him, gave him a grant to attend university.  &#8220;Look,&#8221; he told me, &#8220;I thought the communists were good people because  they helped me.&#8221; That was a personal reason, perhaps the main reason,  for him joining the Party, alongside the typical conviction of  Czechoslovakian intellectuals. He was from a social-democratic family,  not communist but social democratic. That was the classical step towards  joining the party in &#8217;48.</p>
<p>So I know very well how and why he joined the party. However I <em>don&#8217;t</em> know very much about the 1950s, when he was already a member of the  party. He wasn&#8217;t high up, but nor was he just an ordinary member: he was  at the university. There&#8217;s a gap here where I&#8217;m not sure what happened,  because I didn&#8217;t ask him much. I now regret that.</p>
<p><strong>EK:</strong> László Rajk, your father became a communist earlier: he  participated in the Spanish Civil War in the late 1930s. Were there  other arguments for becoming a communist at that time?</p>
<p><strong>László Rajk:</strong> My father would have been exactly one hundred years  old this week. You could say that in terms of generations, my father was  the one who took care of Martin&#8217;s. My father was very active in  colleges and education for young people, which was a common idea in  different communist parties. But naturally the story starts much earlier  and is almost the mirror of Czechoslovakia. In Hungary, Social  Democrats were only semi-free. It was an official party but was not  favoured, as it was in Czechoslovakia. Anyone who subscribed to any kind  of leftist idea, especially communism, had to be prepared to be  arrested, imprisoned or even tortured. In Hungary it was not a career  choice.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.eurozine.com/UserFiles/illustrations/Rajk1_jr_220x170.jpg" alt="" align="right" />It is also important to remember  that while the birth of Czechoslovakia provided an impetus for the  nations of Czechoslovakia, for Hungary the Treaty of Versailles was an  absolute shock. Hungary lost two thirds of its territory and of two  thirds of its population to the former Yugoslavia, Romania, Slovakia and  Austria, and to a lesser extent Slovenia and Croatia. My father was  born before the First World War, in other words before the Treaty of  Versailles, in Romanian Hungary, in Transylvania. That was a very  different start in life. It now seems that that people who came to  Hungary from Transylvania before the Versailles Treaty were drifting  towards nationalism, towards a kind of social consciousness on a  national basis, whereas those who came over after the Versailles Treaty,  in the 1920s, were drifting towards a leftist ideology, again because  of a social consciousness. Very little research has been done on this,  but it seems to be a phenomenon that holds true for my family. My  father&#8217;s elder brother became a fascist, and not only that, an Arrow  Cross member. This was at the time that my father was fighting in the  Spanish Civil War, in the International Brigades. So it is a typical  eastern European family. From university onwards, my father was  connected to, and actually a member of, the communist party.</p>
<p><strong>EK:</strong> Where did he study?</p>
<p><strong>LR:</strong> Again, this is a typical Transylvanian family story. There  were eleven siblings (eight brothers and three sisters). In the  traditional Transylvanian family, the eldest brother comes over to  Hungary, never marries, stays a bachelor and pays for the younger  brothers to come over. The eldest brother died and the next one took  over, so in fact it was the Arrow Cross brother who paid for my father&#8217;s  studies! He went to university, then to Paris, then back. He became a  typical cosmopolitan communist, a professional revolutionary. He was  well known internationally, especially after the end of the Second World  War and the liberation. My father immediately became a VIP within the  nomenklatura. He was a real communist hero, one of the very few  Hungarians who actively resisted the German invasion and Hitlerism.  Immediately after the war one could see not so much a dividing line  within the communist party, but a line of composition. On the one side  were the communists who had returned from Moscow, the Muscovites, and on  the other the very few who had been active at home and risking a lot.  Let&#8217;s call them the national wing of the communist party.</p>
<p><strong>EK:</strong> And also some with western background?</p>
<p><img src="http://www.eurozine.com/UserFiles/illustrations/Rajk_sr_138x219.jpg" alt="" /><strong>LR:</strong> Yes, that&#8217;s  right, some with western backgrounds as youngsters. The two types were  deeply different, even their personalities and their attitudes were  different. Also, as an artist I have to tell you that my father really  was a very handsome man: tall, with a deep voice, with beautiful spoken  Hungarian, that special Hungarian from Transylvania. He was the real  stuff of the communist party. And there was a lack of &#8220;stuff&#8221; at the  time. He was <em>the</em> most popular person in the communist party. And  then came the enigma, the show trial in 1949. It was the first show  trial in the Soviet bloc. Then came the Slánsky trial a year later, then  the Kostov trial in Sofia, the trials in Romania, everywhere&#8230; To cut a  long story short, it started with the usual paranoia of the Muscovites,  about spies and the Cold War and so on, and ended up in the second half  of &#8217;49 as a very simple but dirty power game against Tito, with my  father being hanged as a spy for Tito.</p>
<p><strong>EK:</strong> You both have the same name as your father. In your case,  László, it had a special meaning during the dissident period, when you  were a Samizdat publisher. János Kádár, who had a particular role in the  liquidation of your father, was quoted as saying that the only reason  you could oppose the system openly was that he wasn&#8217;t prepared to arrest  someone with the same name twice. But I know that you, Martin, also  share the same name as your father. You are actually called Milan. This  must mean something.</p>
<p><strong>MS</strong> No, it was actually very prosaic. My mother decided that I  should be called Milan, after my father. Then, when I began to write in  the early 1980s, my father said that it sounded pretty stupid to be  called Milan Simecka Jr. and that I should come up with something else.  My girlfriend at the time, now my wife, is called Marta. So that was it,  very prosaic, it had nothing to do with politics.</p>
<p><strong>EK:</strong> Could you tell us something about your relationship with your  father. Young men usually fight with their fathers and go other ways.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.eurozine.com/UserFiles/illustrations/simecka_sr_138x219.jpg" alt="" /><strong>MS:</strong> My father was  also tall, very handsome, very charming and popular. He died in 1990 of a  heart attack, after the revolution, by which time he was an advisor for  Vaclav Havel. When I was 14, my father was expelled from the party. He  lost his job at the university and became a dissident. Because of my  father, I was banned from studying at grammar school and university.  There was no chance; I was just not allowed to study at all. We had long  talks about who was guilty for the fact that I couldn&#8217;t study. My  father tried to explain, but he didn&#8217;t need to try very much. It was  clear that it wasn&#8217;t my father&#8217;s fault but the system&#8217;s. The communists  told my father that if he would just stop writing or stop talking, if he  at least changed his mind&#8230;</p>
<p><strong>EK:</strong> They were blackmailing you&#8230;</p>
<p><strong>MS:</strong> They even said to me that if I announced that I didn&#8217;t share  my father&#8217;s opinions – I didn&#8217;t even need to do it openly or publicly –  then I could study. As children we knew that this blackmailing was going  on. In a case like that you <em>can&#8217;t</em> fight with your father much  because there is such a common experience, such pressure from outside.  On the other hand I was lucky, because my father did feel guilty that  his child couldn&#8217;t study. So he took me to the meetings of the group of  Czech and Slovakian intellectuals and writers who in the late &#8217;70s had  formed around people like Ludvík Vaculík, Ivan Klíma, Vaclav Havel.  There were about twenty writers, all of whom were banned but published  abroad. I was the youngest, 22 years old, in this circle of writers whom  I loved. I later became a member. We had meetings every few months,  debating all day and publishing samizdat. It was my private university,  much better than any communist school.</p>
<p>However there&#8217;s another story. Almost all of these writers and  intellectuals except Vaclav Havel and Karel Pecka were former communists  who had become dissidents after &#8217;68. So there were huge debates about  the past. It wasn&#8217;t easy. There were people like Karel Pecka and Zdenek  Rotrekl who had both spent ten years in prison in the 1950s. After &#8217;68  they became colleagues and friends with people who were actually in  power in the 1950s – or at least people who were leading intellectuals  at the time, a younger generation that didn&#8217;t know or even <em>think</em> that there were dissidents in prison then. So there were some hard  discussions, where these older prisoners debated with the new prisoners –  in 1981 my father was in prison for one year, Vaclav Havel was in  prison for five years – about who was guilty and who bore greater  responsibility. It was pretty hard. There were some who tried to defend  themselves, who argued that they didn&#8217;t know and that they were young,  that they meant well and that it was just the time. My father never said  that. He tried to understand, maybe not apologize, but to understand  and explain. But still&#8230;</p>
<p>When I return to that time and remember those debates, my conclusion is  that friendships were in a way <em>too</em> close. You can&#8217;t tell your  friend that <em>he</em> is responsible for your imprisonment. I had to  live another twenty years to understand that I did not understand very  well what was going on in the 1950s; that I had false impressions of  that time. Even of my father. He explained how it was during the Slánsky  trial in &#8217;52. He was 22 at the time and listened to the trial on the  radio. &#8220;I wondered what was going on,&#8221; he told me, &#8220;but I didn&#8217;t realize  that it wasn&#8217;t true. I believed that what was on the radio was true.&#8221;  He first started have doubts in about &#8217;53, when Khrushchev held his  &#8220;secret speech&#8221; after Stalin&#8217;s death, and after the death of Gottwald in  Czechoslovakia. That&#8217;s when the first doubts started appearing. But  until then&#8230; no.</p>
<p><strong>LR:</strong> At the same time I experienced several&#8230; not metamorphoses,  but auto-da-fés of communism. The first was after the rehabilitation of  my father from &#8217;53. Other communists visited my mother and confessed  that they believed he had been betrayed. The next wave was after &#8217;56,  when people came out of prison, and when my mother and other people  returned to Hungary having been deported to Romania. That was in &#8217;58.  Another auto-da-fé occurred in &#8217;60 when people started to say that, yes,  those people who fought in the streets against the Stalinist regime in  &#8217;56 were right and we were wrong. Then again after &#8217;68 in Prague, when  communists became disillusioned and admitted that things couldn&#8217;t go on  as they were. So my life was a kind of pilgrimage from one auto-da-fé to  another.</p>
<p>Later I realized that people in the leftist or quasi-communist  hemisphere had a really tough time. Starting with the Spanish Civil war,  when the leftist French government withdrew the International Brigades  from Spain and arrested people who had been fighting for the Republic at  the French border. But I think the major shock was the  Molotov-Ribbentrop pact. For a communist this must have been an utter  shock. To remain a communist in such circumstances must have been very,  very difficult. Not only to remain a communist, but to believe and  convince yourself that the Molotov-Ribbentrop pact was a good thing. So  at the same time as all these auto-da-fés, these people had a habit of  convincing themselves that they were wrong as individuals, that <em>the  others</em> were right and that <em>they</em> were wrong. This is certainly  the road to complete disaster and frustration.</p>
<p>Another important thing to know is that in my family, and in a lot of  families around mine, imprisonment brought with it a kind of status.  Those who were imprisoned during the Horthy period before the war, and  then during the Stalin period, were the really high-ranking ones; they  really showed morality. Those who were imprisoned after &#8217;56 and received  sentences of only 10 months were called small-timers; they were the  low-ranking heroes. In Hungarian families, prison of course meant  something bad, but it wasn&#8217;t something to be ashamed of. On the  contrary: it showed that one&#8217;s family was really good. This distortion  of morality is a very important phenomenon in human life. When democracy  arrives, it&#8217;s very hard to adjust back. To start believing that one  should be ashamed of having been in prison. I would say that this  partially destroyed my soul, my way thinking.</p>
<p><strong>MS:</strong> In Czechoslovakia after &#8217;68, many young intellectuals were in  prison or had been punished in some other way. And as you say, this is a  source of enormous satisfaction. But I think it creates another even  greater problem, because it becomes much more difficult to ask  questions. This was also the case with my father. I felt sorry for him:  he came home from prison very ill, and in died a result of that illness.  It was difficult to say to him, &#8220;Well, yes, you were in prison, you  were a dissident, but still, how <em>was</em> communism in the 1950s?  After all, you were a high-ranking party member, you belonged to a  special class.&#8221; After &#8217;68, many who belonged to this generation felt  they had suffered enough. The dissidents around Vaclav Havel – he was  the exception in that he had not been a communist – enjoyed great  credibility and became a powerful voice in society. But precisely  because they <em>were</em> dissidents who had been fighting against  communism after &#8217;68, their past was almost forgotten.</p>
<p>In a debate of the past there is no place for morals. It&#8217;s not about  apologizing, it&#8217;s about knowing the truth. It is difficult to talk about  the 1950s and the communist past with former communists, because many  have suffered enough. They don&#8217;t feel a responsibility to tell the  truth. Somehow they think that they have the right to be silent, or to  explain that they are good people, or used to be, just sometimes in the  wrong way. I have a problem now that I didn&#8217;t have with my father until  89. But then he died. If my father were alive I would ask him what it  was really like when he was a young communist in the 1950s. Was he  responsible for students who were expelled from university? What really  happened when he was a member of the Party? Did he vote for something,  perhaps not the death penalty, but something that destroyed other  people&#8217;s lives? How was it? I have to say that I don&#8217;t know.</p>
<p>My father taught philosophy at the Art School in the late 1960s.  Students of his, who are now famous artists in Slovakia, have told me  that my father pressed them to join the party and that they refused. It  wasn&#8217;t pleasant to hear that. It was a picture of my father that I  didn&#8217;t know. It&#8217;s very rare that former communists, especially in  Czechoslovakia, talk honestly about the past. Pavel Kohout has written a  huge memoir that&#8217;s mostly about apologizing or explaining how stupid he  was. But there&#8217;s nothing much about the real impact he had on other  people&#8217;s lives as a young and fairly high-ranking communist. Ivan  Klimá&#8217;s memoir is the first book I have read that is really honest about  the past.</p>
<p><strong>LR:</strong> What you&#8217;re describing is a fascinating phenomenon, which  exists beyond our little post-Soviet island. I mean waving the Little  Red Book and so on. It seems to me that there&#8217;s a reluctance to face the  immediate past that brushes over almost everything: stupidity, cruelty,  awfulness. It is a general European phenomenon. I never heard, for  example, Daniel Cohn-Bendit saying, &#8220;I was a bastard, a stupid,  narrow-minded, short-sighted idiot.&#8221; In fact he says the opposite.</p>
<p>This is becoming a generational problem. I would say that your father&#8217;s  generation and the &#8217;68 generation in the West overlap. One could argue  that in eastern Europe we didn&#8217;t have the generation that posed the  famous question to their parents about their role in the Third Reich. We  don&#8217;t really hear these questions from our own children, and probably  that&#8217;s the problem. There is no catalyst for us to face the past. In any  case this isn&#8217;t only a socialist problem – it&#8217;s a European problem.</p>
<p><strong>MS:</strong> The one big difference between Cohn-Bendit and my father is  that Cohn-Bendit did no harm to anybody because he never had the chance.  That&#8217;s the difference between communists in eastern Europe and  communists in Western Europe. In the West, of course it&#8217;s disgusting,  but it&#8217;s not about being guilty or responsible, but just about your own  stupidity. The debate in Europe is still not clear. This bias towards  communism still exists. At a Eurozine conference in Vilnius in May 2009,  Timothy Snyder gave an amazing lecture comparing Communism and Nazism.  Some steps are slowly being taken at the political level, for example  the OSCE resolution in July 2009. In western Europe, it would have been  impossible ten years ago to put Communism and Nazism on the same level.  Now that is slowly happening. It is not about judgment, but about the  responsibility of the generation that still has some memory of the  period to explain how it was. Especially the 1950s. We can talk about  Kádárism or how it was after &#8217;68, but it&#8217;s nothing compared to  Stalinism, although the roots are the same. One can only discover the  real substance of communism through Stalinism, and not through Kádárism  or the normalization of Czechoslovakia, not even Poland in the 1980s.</p>
<p>I miss that. Even though a discussion might now have started in the  Czech Republic, especially after the Kundera affair, which, when we  published it in <em>Respekt</em>, had an enormous impact and sparked off  discussions about the 1950s.</p>
<p>But there is another problem. Since &#8217;89 I have spent almost my entire  life surrounded by former communists, who are always charming and nice  people. My wife Marta comes from a communist family: her father was  editor-in-chief of the communist paper in the 1950s and in Moscow during  the Second World War. We are all from these communist families. Our  families were victims of the <em>other</em> communists, the <em>bad</em> communists. Even today I have a problem saying that I am anti-communist.  I don&#8217;t like the word. I had a huge quarrel with Adam Michnik about the  Kundera affair, and he told me: &#8220;What&#8217;s happened to you that you now  belong to the anti-communists, that&#8217;s the worst thing in the world.&#8221; So  it&#8217;s still there, this leftwing intellectual mafia in Europe, if I can  put it like that. There is a deep link, not only of shared experience,  but a view of the world, the commitment to social equality and freedom,  which of course many communists had at the beginning. It is time to  debate the issue from a new perspective, especially now when the Left in  Europe is starving from a lack of ideas and no longer defends freedom.</p>
<p><strong>EK:</strong> I remember shortly after &#8217;89 there was a big conference in  Paris about what was going to happen to the Left in the East. Whether  the dissidents who did so much to change the system were on the Left or  on Right. We are still occupied with these problems. Now we are also  facing the far-Right. The question is: what system are you opposing?  During the dissident period there were leftists, or &#8217;68ers in the West,  who had a similar attitude, nice people you could talk to. But now their  children – your children – have grown up, and they have lots of  problems with this brave new world. Some sympathize with Marxism and  leftist radical movements. What about the dilemma of &#8217;89 from this point  of view. Have the aspirations of the dissidents been realized, or have  they also made some mistakes? What are we to make of Left and Right  today?</p>
<p><strong>LR:</strong> There are two fundamental elements in the political changes  that are rooted in the past and which none of the post-communist  countries have been able to handle. These are privatization and the  nomenklatura. Each country has tried a different method of privatization  or semi-privatization and none have been successful. None. I wouldn&#8217;t  say all of them were unsuccessful, but I would say that none were  successful. I wouldn&#8217;t leave this element out when talking about the  nomenklatura and how they survived, how they parachuted themselves into  the new era. These are two key questions that influence contemporary  political life and will continue to do so in the future. The lustration  law in the Czech Republic or the non-lustration law in Hungary, the  opening of the archives in Germany or the late opening of the archives  in Slovakia: all these are political issues today. None of these  countries were able to draw a line under the past and say &#8220;now we are  starting something new&#8221;. The past is constantly being used by  campaigners and politicians, negatively or positively, it doesn&#8217;t  matter. It is ridiculous that this is happening 20 years after the  changes. After all, &#8217;68 in Czechoslovakia was a little over ten years  after &#8217;56 in Hungary. Two decades is a long time.</p>
<p>We are still digging into these things. I don&#8217;t have an answer. I just  know that these are two fundamental issues. Hopefully the response of  the new generation will be not to question us, but to say &#8220;OK, you go  and stand in the corner and talk about the past, we&#8217;ll deal with the  present.&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>MS:</strong> I think they <em>will</em> ask, but it won&#8217;t be very pleasant  to answer. How could we create such a mess after 89?</p>
<p>Firstly, the dissidents weren&#8217;t prepared for the change because they had  so many of their own problems finding ways to survive under communism.  They were more obsessed with their own soul than with the regime. Of  course this was important for the human rights agenda, which proved  crucial in &#8217;89, but now this agenda has collapsed. In Hungary, the  dissidents might have thought more politically, or more deeply, but in  Czechoslovakia I remember very well that although there were many  debates, little thought was given to questions of how to rule the state  or how to change the economy, how to change the system. Most of the  debate was about how to <em>resist</em> the current system and not how to  create a new one. So when &#8217;89 came we were just not prepared.</p>
<p>Secondly, there is the question of political orientation. When we  started creating a party from the revolutionary movement in Bratislava,  we didn&#8217;t have a debate about whether we were on the right or on the  left. We did tests – you know those tests – and according to all of them  we were on the left. But we had to decide to be on the right, because  to be on the left was stupid. You had to privatize, you had to transform  the system, you had to distance yourself from the communist party. It  was very difficult to be a rightwing politician and at the same time  internally be on the left. Many former dissidents have since changed  their minds completely. For example, my friend Milan Uhde became a <em>very</em> rightwing politician and chairman of parliament in the Czech Republic.  Others became very left, like Petr Uhl. Many were somewhere in the  middle, but everybody had some problem. I don&#8217;t think we can make the  dissident movement entirely responsible for today&#8217;s regime. Their  influence in Europe weakened very fast, until you almost didn&#8217;t see any  former dissidents in politics except some exceptions like Havel.</p>
<p>Talking of lustration and the confrontation with the past, I still think  that the Czech route – first the lustration and then the opening of the  files – was the best one. Poland didn&#8217;t do this at the beginning of the  1990s and nor did Hungary – that&#8217;s why it&#8217;s a political issue now. In  the Czech Republic, lustration isn&#8217;t a political issue anymore because  all politicians have been lustrated. You can go into the files and you  know all about their past – unless they worked for the KGB, that is,  since we have no files from Moscow. In Poland it began to get political  about five years ago when they started opening the files. In Hungary the  real political issue has yet to come – if the files have not been  completely destroyed, that is. So in my experience, the sooner the  better. It is also especially good for former dissidents, because it  ceases to become their issue: they don&#8217;t need to point out who the bad  guys are because everybody knows. They no longer need to fight, it&#8217;s up  to the public.</p>
<p>Adam Michnik says that if you open the files it will mean a mess. He  thinks that they should be locked up for half a century until everyone  is dead. Another of his arguments is that these are <em>their</em> files,  created by the communists, the secret police. Do we really want those to  form the basis of our history? This is a strong argument rhetorically,  but the fact is that generally the files were not falsified: you can  trust them 99 per cent. Another thing is that the situation in Poland  was quite different from that in Czechoslovakia, because the Polish  secret police infiltrated a huge part of <em>Solidarnosc</em> in  preparation for the change. I suspect that that in many cases files  could have been falsified in anticipation of the change. This is not the  case in Czechoslovakia, because up until the very last moment the  Czechoslovak secret services were completely convinced that the regime  would survive another twenty years. Michnik feared that there were a lot  of cases that could have been devastating for the image of <em>Solidarnosc</em>,  with so many heroes later revealed to have been agents.</p>
<p><strong>EK:</strong> Perhaps it provides and opportunity to concentrate on what  politicians are doing now as opposed to thinking about things they did  forty years ago.</p>
<p><strong>MS:</strong> It depends on the social atmosphere. In the Czech Republic no  politician can survive if he used to be an agent of the secret police,  except in today&#8217;s communist party. But in Slovakia they can. It differs  from society to society.</p>
<p><strong>Question from the audience:</strong> Why did the majority of people not  respond to the dissidents? Why did they not respond to Charter 77? You  said that your father was expelled from the party and so became a  dissident. The historian Zbynek Zeman has said that he feels that many  of the &#8217;68ers became dissidents not because they stood for something,  but because they were purged. Therefore it was very hard for them to  define themselves as dissidents. How do we define dissent if it is not a  question of standing up for a particular view?</p>
<p><strong>MS:</strong> The years immediately after &#8217;68 were crucial for the whole of  Czechoslovak society. Half a million members of the Czechoslovak  communist party had to go through screenings. There was a quite  sophisticated system were everybody was asked about their attitude to  the Soviet &#8220;help&#8221; in &#8217;68. It was a crucial existential moment. Many  people said, &#8220;Well I didn&#8217;t really understand the occupation and the  circumstances, but yes I think it was help.&#8221; Everybody was made to lie.  The crucial question was whether or not you lied. If you did you were  &#8220;theirs&#8221;. You might be expelled from the party but you kept your job and  your children stayed at school. Sometimes it was enough if you just  stayed silent. But those who decided to say that it was an occupation,  that they were against it and still were – those people knew very well  that they had made a life-altering decision. Those who later became  dissidents had already decided at that moment. On one hand one can say  that they were pushed into the new existential situation, after which  they began to question themselves about their own communist past. My  father was an expert on that, he had long hours of discussion and wrote a  book about it. How could we have failed in the 1950s, how could we have  become communist? He saw this failure as an existential problem of the  world and society. These people were not pushed at that moment in &#8217;69  and &#8217;70, they decided.</p>
<p>Of course there were hundreds who, because of their involvement in &#8217;68,  had no chance at all. My father told me at that time that even if he had  lied he wouldn&#8217;t have had a chance. But hundreds of thousands had that  chance and they used it. They survived&#8230; and they became cynical. That  is why they didn&#8217;t take part in Charter 77. For them, it would have been  against their decision in &#8217;69 and &#8217;70 to take part in Charter 77. At  that time Czechoslovakia wasn&#8217;t so bad for many people, they had their  jobs, they had their children, everybody was cynical, nobody <em>believed</em> in the system. The dissidents were sometimes unbearably honest. It&#8217;s  hard sometimes to share ideas with people who are prepared to go to  prison – you can&#8217;t follow them, they are too exceptional. Society in  general was too cynical. In &#8217;89 it was different. It was a time of  change. For many people it was much easier at that time to sign the  petitions and to come to the square and to belong to the majority.</p>
<p><strong>LR:</strong> A very good, very successful Hungarian painter admitted in  &#8217;91 or &#8217;92 that he wouldn&#8217;t have become a dissident had he had the  chance to exhibit. It seemed he was pushed by the regime to become a  dissident. But then I asked him whether it was the nature of the regime  that it did not accept progressive painters. Whether the nature of the  regime, instead of cradling new talent and giving him the chance to  exhibit and a make career, was instead to push a talented young painter  to become a dissident. Yes, this was the nature of the regime. Many  people didn&#8217;t become dissidents voluntarily but were pushed into doing  so. But that is the very nature of dictatorships.</p>
<p><strong>MS:</strong> The more I learn about Hungary and Poland and about the past,  the more I see how deep the difference was. These decisive moments,  even the character of dissent. I didn&#8217;t sign the Charter, for one reason  that was for me crucial. Charter 77 tried to communicate with the  regime. They pointed to the Helsinki Pact and talked about human rights,  holding the regime to its agreements at the European level. Charter 77  was in favour of legitimizing the regime. For my generation, the regime  was something external. I lived a completely different life – the regime  was just an evil that I had to live with, but had nothing to say to.  That was the difference between my father and myself. I belonged to  another generation. They wanted to change the regime because they were  used to changing the regime in the 1960s. I never wanted to change the  regime because I never thought about it as something that I would be <em>able</em> to change. The only thing that I cared about was my own freedom and how  I could survive&#8230; how I could live on an island of freedom. My  father&#8217;s generation wanted to change it not so much because they still  felt it was their own, but more because political engagement leaves such  a mark on your thinking.</p>
<p><strong>Question from the audience:</strong> You said there is no place for  morality when it comes to dealing with the past – it&#8217;s not about saying  &#8220;I was young and stupid&#8221;. So it seems that in your opinion it&#8217;s about  the facts rather than reconciliation. But what would that achieve? Is  there a purpose in that? Or is it just about the truth – full stop?</p>
<p><strong>MS:</strong> No, otherwise I wouldn&#8217;t care so much. I think that the  younger generation – my son for instance, who is 25 – has no chance of  understanding history. The 1950s were exceptional, communism and Nazism  were exceptional regimes. It&#8217;s still important to talk about the past,  about personal experience, about how it was in detail, and not only to  rely on archives. I think that it&#8217;s the responsibility of those writers  and intellectuals who are still alive to talk about the past openly, as  Ivan Klíma has done. Through their experience you can understand what it  means to lose your freedom. That danger still exists. You can lose your  freedom every day. I believe that the younger generation is not aware  of the dangers. It is not systematic, it is perhaps not about life and  death, but it can be. So what I am calling for is to give the younger  generation at least the chance to understand the past and to prevent  them from making the same mistakes.</p>
<p>The debate series &#8220;Europe talks to Europe&#8221; is a cooperation of Eurozine  with the <a href="http://www.erstestiftung.org/" target="_blank"><strong>ERSTE  foundation</strong></a>. The Budapest debate was co-organized by <a href="http://lettre.c3.hu/" target="_blank"><strong>Magyar Lettre  internationale</strong></a> and <a href="http://www.colbud.hu/" target="_blank"><strong>Collegium Budapest</strong></a>.</p>
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		<title>Marx contre-attaque</title>
		<link>http://www.postcapital.org/2009/12/18/marx-contre-attaque/</link>
		<comments>http://www.postcapital.org/2009/12/18/marx-contre-attaque/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 18 Dec 2009 10:21:26 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Politics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[2009]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Alain Badiou]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Antonio Negri]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[français]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Jacques Rancière]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Michael Hardt]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Slavoj Žižek]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[By Aude Lancelin Created 16/03/2009 -Published on Bibliobs (http://bibliobs.nouvelobs.com) «L&#8217;idée de communisme» retrouverait-elle, par temps de crise, une vigueur inattendue? Alain Badiou [1], Slavoj Zizek [2], Toni Negri [3], Michael Hardt [4], Jacques Rancière [5] et plusieurs autres grands noms de la philosophie politique radicale mondiale étaient réunis, ce week-end, à Londres, pour un colloque [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div><a href="http://bibliobs.nouvelobs.com/print/11321" target="_blank">By Aude Lancelin</a></div>
<div>Created 16/03/2009 -Published on Bibliobs (<a href="http://bibliobs.nouvelobs.com/">http://bibliobs.nouvelobs.com</a>)</div>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><strong> <em>«L&#8217;idée de communisme»</em> retrouverait-elle, par temps de crise, une vigueur inattendue? </strong><a href="http://bibliobs.nouvelobs.com/alain-badiou" target="_blank"><strong>Alain Badiou</strong></a> <span>[1]</span>, <strong><a href="http://bibliobs.nouvelobs.com/slavoj-zizek" target="_blank">Slavoj Zizek</a> <span>[2]</span>, </strong><a href="http://bibliobs.nouvelobs.com/toni-negri" target="_blank"><strong>Toni Negri</strong></a> <span>[3]</span>, <a href="http://bibliobs.nouvelobs.com/michael-hardt" target="_blank"><strong>Michael Hardt</strong></a> <span>[4]</span>, <strong><a href="http://bibliobs.nouvelobs.com/jacques-ranciere" target="_blank">Jacques Rancière</a> <span>[5]</span> et plusieurs autres grands noms de la philosophie politique radicale mondiale étaient réunis, ce week-end, à Londres, pour un colloque sur cette notion. Aude Lancelin a suivi les débats<br />
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<div><img title="Faucille-Marteau_vignette.jpg" src="http://bibliobs.nouvelobs.com/files/BibliObs.com/Faucille-Marteau_vignette.jpg" alt="Faucille-Marteau_vignette.jpg" width="140" height="140" /></div>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><strong>On ignore si la tombe de <a href="http://bibliobs.nouvelobs.com/karl-marx" target="_blank">Marx</a> <span>[6]</span>, située au cimetière de Highgate à Londres</strong>, a été spécialement fleurie durant ce week-end. Il est certain en revanche qu&#8217;un hommage autrement plus stimulant vient d&#8217;être rendu au penseur au cœur même de la capitale britannique. Trois journées durant, du vendredi 13 au dimanche 15 mars 2009, les plus prestigieux noms de la philosophie politique radicale mondiale, de <strong>Slavoj Zizek</strong> à <strong>Alain Badiou</strong>, <strong>Toni Negri</strong>, <strong>Michael Hardt</strong>, <strong>Jacques Rancière</strong> et bien d&#8217;autres, se sont succédé à la tribune de la <a href="http://www.bbk.ac.uk/bih/" target="_blank">«Birkbeck university of London»</a> <span>[7]</span> pour réfléchir ensemble à l&#8217;avenir de l&#8217;idée communiste. Un amphithéâtre de neuf cent places avait été mis à disposition pour ce colloque à tous égards exceptionnel, sobrement intitulé <strong>«On the idea of Communism»</strong>. Il aura à peine suffi à contenir une foule spectaculairement jeune, attentive et rieuse, venue de l&#8217;Europe entière avec carnets de notes, canettes de Coca light et caméscopes high-tech pour entendre les grandes figures d&#8217;un concept politique qu&#8217;on disait salutairement mort.<span id="more-355"></span></p>
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<div style="margin: 3px; font-size: 16px; font-weight: bold; color: #ffffff;"><em><strong>«On the idea of communism», les participants au colloque<br />
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<div style="font-size: 11px; font-weight: bold; margin-left: 6px; margin-right: 6px;"><em>Le colloque <strong>«On the idea of communism»</strong>, qui s&#8217;est tenu au <a href="http://www.bbk.ac.uk/bih/" target="_blank">«Birkbeck Institute for the humanities»</a> <span>[7]</span>, Logan Hall, 20 Bedford Way, London, du vendredi 13 au 15 mars 2009, a rassemblé: </em><em>Judith Balso, Alain Badiou, Bruno Bosteels, Terry Eagleton, Peter Hallward, Michael Hardt, Toni Negri, Jacques Rancière, Alessandro Russo, Alberto Toscano, Gianni Vattimo, Slavoj Zizek.</em></p>
<p><em>Le <a href="http://bibliobs.nouvelobs.com/files/communism-programme.pdf" target="_blank">programme des interventions</a> <span>[8]</span> est <a href="http://bibliobs.nouvelobs.com/files/communism-programme.pdf" target="_blank">ici</a> <span>[8]</span>.<br />
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<p style="text-align: justify;">Doit-on voir dans cette étonnante affluence une conséquence des convulsions que connaît actuellement l&#8217;économie capitaliste mondiale? Il est certain que la désorientation actuelle se montre suffisamment profonde pour redonner un nouveau lustre aux objections marxistes. Ce n&#8217;est du reste pas le moindre de ses dégâts collatéraux, ne manqueront pas de grincer certains penseurs médiatiques hexagonaux. Prudence toutefois. On sait que les crises de cette ampleur peuvent faire sauter certains verrous idéologiques comme elles peuvent aussi déboucher sur le pire. Les Britanniques le savent bien, qui ont récemment connu des grèves ouvrières d&#8217;une ampleur inédite contre l&#8217;embauche de travailleurs étrangers. Une agitation inquiétante, vivement condamnée par <strong>Gordon Brown</strong>. Surpris par la réussite de leur propre démonstration de force, les organisateurs de ce week-end «rouge» non loin d&#8217;une City londonienne dramatiquement sinistrée se gardaient donc de tout triomphalisme.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><a href="http://bibliobs.nouvelobs.com/slavoj-zizek" target="_blank"></a></p>
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<div style="width: 204px;"><a href="http://bibliobs.nouvelobs.com/slavoj-zizek" target="_blank"><img title="Slavoj-Zizek_©Ibo-Sipa.jpg" src="http://bibliobs.nouvelobs.com/files/Slavoj-Zizek_%C2%A9Ibo-Sipa.jpg" alt="Slavoj-Zizek_©Ibo-Sipa.jpg" width="204" height="291" /></a></p>
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<div><a href="http://bibliobs.nouvelobs.com/slavoj-zizek" target="_blank">©Ibo/Sipa</a></div>
<div><a href="http://bibliobs.nouvelobs.com/slavoj-zizek" target="_blank">Slavoj Zizek</a></div>
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<p><span>[2]</span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><strong>Un tabou est bel et bien en train de tomber cependant</strong>. Celui qui pesait sur le mot même de <em>«communisme»</em>, criminalisé depuis la fin des années 70, usé et définitivement ringardisé au cours de la décennie suivante. Le 7 mars dernier, une semaine avant le colloque de Londres, le «Financial Times» lui-même, peu suspiciable de complaisances gauchistes, posait sans précautions la question: <a href="http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/ab5a8e92-0ab7-11de-95ed-0000779fd2ac.html?nclick_check=1" target="_blank"><em>«Communism: an alternative to capitalism once again?»</em></a> <span>[9]</span>. La veille, le journal avait déjà consacré un long portait au slovène <a href="http://bibliobs.nouvelobs.com/slavoj-zizek" target="_blank"><strong>Slavoj Zizek</strong></a> <span>[2]</span>, présenté en véritable rock star marxiste. De plus en plus populaire en Angleterre, désigné parmi les 25 «<em>top leaders» </em>intellectuels mondiaux par les lecteurs du «Foreign Policy» l&#8217;an dernier, Zizek a également été nommé directeur international dudit «Birckbek Institute», faculté ayant toujours maintenu une tradition d&#8217;accueil à l&#8217;égard des intellectuels communistes blacklistés pendant la guerre froide<em>(1)</em>. Une fonction honorifique qui lui aura permis de lancer l&#8217;idée de ce colloque avec le philosophe <a href="http://bibliobs.nouvelobs.com/alain-badiou" target="_blank"><strong>Alain Badiou</strong></a> <span>[1]</span>, lui aussi en voie de médiatisation accélérée au Royaume-Uni.</p>
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<div style="width: 170px;"><a href="http://bibliobs.nouvelobs.com/alain-badiou" target="_blank"><img title="Alain-Badiou_©Ibo-Sipa_0.jpg" src="http://bibliobs.nouvelobs.com/files/BibliObs.com/Alain-Badiou_%C2%A9Ibo-Sipa_0.jpg" alt="Alain-Badiou_©Ibo-Sipa_0.jpg" width="170" height="244" /> </a></p>
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<div><a href="http://bibliobs.nouvelobs.com/alain-badiou" target="_blank">©Ibo/Sipa</a></div>
<div><a href="http://bibliobs.nouvelobs.com/alain-badiou" target="_blank">Alain Badiou</a></div>
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<p><span>[1]</span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">Quelques jours avant le début de la manifestation, ce dernier apparaissait d&#8217;ailleurs à la BBC dans un célèbre talk politique pour y défendre son best-seller post-élections présidentielles, <a href="http://bibliobs.nouvelobs.com/de-quoi-sarkozy-est-il-le-nom" target="_blank"><strong>«De quoi Sarkozy est-il le nom?»</strong></a> <span>[10]</span>, qui vient de paraître en anglais chez Verso. Détail cocasse, si le célèbre auteur de <strong>«l&#8217;Etre et l&#8217;événement»</strong> est aussi l&#8217;objet de polémiques en Grande-Bretagne, c&#8217;est pour une raison inverse aux motifs français ordinaires. Le samedi 14, une petite manifestation anti-Badiou accueillait en effet à l&#8217;entrée le public&#8230; mais celle-ci était organisée par un quarteron de vieux militants du PC britannique, reprochant au philosophe sa supposée trahison social-démocrate et sa rupture avec les objectifs révolutionnaires. <em>Badiou go home</em>, en somme. Un comble pour le grand platonicien d&#8217;Ulm, encore caricaturé par beaucoup de médias français en sulfureux promoteur d&#8217;un maoïsme muséifié refusant de tirer les leçons des tragédies passées. Une opinion que ne semblait pas en tout cas partager le public du week-end, dont certains étaient venus de très loin pour observer de près le dernier maître lacano-althussérien issu des années 60, comme on vient toucher un morceau de la Sainte croix.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><strong>Loin de tout folklore bolchevique cependant</strong>, l&#8217;heure n&#8217;était pas à la rumination nostalgique ni à la provocation anti-libérale grossière durant ces trois journées de haute densité conceptuelle. L&#8217;humeur n&#8217;était évidemment pas davantage à une tentative de sauvetage partiel du bilan indiscutablement calamiteux des Partis-Etats communistes du XXe siècle. Sur ce plan-là, tous les intervenants étaient d&#8217;emblée d&#8217;accord. Deux conditions <em>sine qua non</em> déterminaient leur présence à cette manifestation. Être disposé à envisager positivement un renouveau de l&#8217;hypothèse communiste aujourd&#8217;hui, et n&#8217;être le porte-voix d&#8217;aucune formation politique institutionnelle. Non à la militance hargneuse, place à la <em>«patience du concept»</em>, selon l&#8217;expression du grand hégélien <strong>Gérard Lebrun</strong> citée par Zizek.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><a href="http://bibliobs.nouvelobs.com/toni-negri" target="_blank"></a></p>
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<div style="width: 217px;"><a href="http://bibliobs.nouvelobs.com/toni-negri" target="_blank"><img title="Toni-Negri_©Waechter-Caro_Fotos-Sipa.jpg" src="http://bibliobs.nouvelobs.com/files/Toni-Negri_%C2%A9Waechter-Caro_Fotos-Sipa.jpg" alt="Toni-Negri_©Waechter-Caro_Fotos-Sipa.jpg" width="217" height="245" /></a></p>
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<div><a href="http://bibliobs.nouvelobs.com/toni-negri" target="_blank">©Waechter/Caro Fotos/Sipa</a></div>
<div><a href="http://bibliobs.nouvelobs.com/toni-negri" target="_blank">Toni Negri</a></div>
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<p><span>[3]</span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">Moyennant quoi, et c&#8217;est en soi un événement, la totalité des personnalités conviées avaient accepté l&#8217;invitation, à l&#8217;exception de <strong>Giorgo Agamben</strong>, aux abonnés absents, et de la grande genderiste américaine <a href="http://bibliobs.nouvelobs.com/judith-butler" target="_blank"><strong>Judith Butler</strong></a> <span>[11]</span>, longtemps hésitante. Le philosophe <a href="http://bibliobs.nouvelobs.com/jean-luc-nancy" target="_blank"><strong>Jean-Luc Nancy</strong></a> <span>[12]</span>, prévu au programme, avait finalement dû renoncer la veille pour raisons médicales. Ainsi la gauche intellectuelle radicale était-elle représentée lors de ce meeting londonien dans ses multiples nuances, et ce jusqu&#8217;aux plus irréconciliablement opposées.</p>
<div><img title="Multitudes_revue.jpg" src="http://bibliobs.nouvelobs.com/files/BibliObs.com/Multitudes_revue.jpg" alt="Multitudes_revue.jpg" width="113" height="158" /></div>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><strong>Rien de commun en effet entre <a href="http://bibliobs.nouvelobs.com/toni-negri" target="_blank">Toni Negri</a> <span>[3]</span></strong>, ancien activiste italien devenu depuis la parution d&#8217;<strong>«Empire»</strong> &#8211; une référence théorique majeure pour le mouvement altermondialiste et certains collectifs de précaires ou d&#8217;intermittents &#8211; et <a href="http://bibliobs.nouvelobs.com/slavoj-zizek" target="_blank"><strong>Slavoj Zizek</strong></a> <span>[2]</span>, aux antipodes de l&#8217;acharnement negriste contre l&#8217;Etat-nation. Tous deux auront d&#8217;ailleurs une légère prise de bec au sujet de la politique menée par <strong>Lula</strong> au Brésil, défendue par Negri au détriment de <strong>Chavez</strong>. Rien de commun non plus entre son concitoyen <strong>Alessandro Russo</strong> et le même Negri, ardent promoteur du <em>«oui»</em> au traité constitutionnel européen.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><a href="http://www.arts.cornell.edu/romance/spanish/spanish_faculty/bosteels.html" target="_blank"></a></p>
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<div style="width: 150px;"><a href="http://www.arts.cornell.edu/romance/spanish/spanish_faculty/bosteels.html" target="_blank"><img title="Bruno-Bosteels.jpg" src="http://bibliobs.nouvelobs.com/files/BibliObs.com/Bruno-Bosteels.jpg" alt="Bruno-Bosteels.jpg" width="150" height="150" /></a></p>
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<div><a href="http://www.arts.cornell.edu/romance/spanish/spanish_faculty/bosteels.html" target="_blank">D.R.</a></div>
<div><a href="http://www.arts.cornell.edu/romance/spanish/spanish_faculty/bosteels.html" target="_blank">Bruno Bosteels</a></div>
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<p><span>[13]</span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">Avec son coauteur <strong>Michael Hardt</strong>, spécialement venu des Etats-Unis pour l&#8217;occasion, tous deux défendent en effet une forme de deleuzisme mutant, incarné en France par la revue <a href="http://multitudes.samizdat.net/" target="_blank"><strong>«Multitudes»</strong></a> <span>[14]</span>, qui tend à envisager positivement certaines formes du capitalisme avancé comme une possible production de <em>«commun»</em>, le paradigme de cela étant fourni par Internet. Rien qui puisse donc les rapprocher des vues d&#8217;un <strong>Badiou</strong>, ni de sa garde rapprochée représentée ici par <strong>Alberto Toscano</strong> ou le jeune professeur de littérature à Cornell, USA, <strong>Bruno Bosteels</strong>, auteur le vendredi après-midi d&#8217;une remarquable intervention sur le <em>«communisme à l&#8217;âge de la terreur»</em>, très informée de la situation passée et actuelle du gauchisme français.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><strong>Rien de commun entre eux non</strong>, hormis l&#8217;horizon communiste justement. Hormis le souhait de ne pas laisser l&#8217;adversaire continuer à proclamer l&#8217;échec et la souillure définitive de cette idée émancipatrice sans laquelle, <em>«il n&#8217;y aurait rien dans le devenir historique et politique qui puisse être d&#8217;un quelconque intérêt pour un philosophe»</em>, selon la phrase d&#8217;<a href="http://bibliobs.nouvelobs.com/alain-badiou" target="_blank"><strong>Alain Badiou</strong></a> <span>[1]</span> reprise sur l&#8217;affiche pourpre du colloque de Birkbeck. Ce souci-là, <em>«le souci de ne pas se laisser imposer l&#8217;idée d&#8217;échec par l&#8217;autre camp,</em> <em>c&#8217;est de Gaulle qui me l&#8217;a inspirée»</em>, glisse le philosophe français. <em>«Nous avons perdu? Non, nous n&#8217;avons pas perdu, a-t-il dit en 1940&#8230; Il est alors parti à Londres, avec rien dans les poches, rien sous la manche. Et quelques années plus tard, c&#8217;est en vainqueur qu&#8217;il est revenu à Paris.»</em> Ici Londres, les communistes d&#8217;hier parlent à ceux de demain.</p>
<p style="text-align: right;"><em>A.L.</em></p>
<p style="text-align: left;"><em> </em></p>
<div><em><img title="BBKlogo.jpg" src="http://bibliobs.nouvelobs.com/files/BibliObs.com/BBKlogo.jpg" alt="BBKlogo.jpg" width="177" height="69" /></em></div>
<p><em>(1) L&#8217;historien britannique marxiste <strong>Eric Hobsbawn</strong>, auteur de «l&#8217;Âge des extrêmes», y a notamment longtemps enseigné.</em></p>
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		<title>20 Years of Collapse</title>
		<link>http://www.postcapital.org/2009/11/10/20-years-of-collapse/</link>
		<comments>http://www.postcapital.org/2009/11/10/20-years-of-collapse/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 10 Nov 2009 08:25:26 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Politics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[2009]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Berlin Wall]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Cold War Era]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[english]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Slavoj Žižek]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.postcapital.org/?p=342</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[November 9, 2009 By SLAVOJ ZIZEK http://www.nytimes.com/2009/11/09/opinion/09zizek.html TODAY is the 20th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall. Duringthis time of reflection, it is common to emphasize the miraculousnature of the events that began that day: a dream seemed to come true,the Communist regimes collapsed like a house of cards, and the worldsuddenly changed [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>November 9, 2009<br />
By SLAVOJ ZIZEK</p>
<p><a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2009/11/09/opinion/09zizek.html" target="_blank">http://www.nytimes.com/2009/11/09/opinion/09zizek.html</a></p>
<p>TODAY is the 20th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall. Duringthis time of reflection, it is common to emphasize the miraculousnature of the events that began that day: a dream seemed to come true,the Communist regimes collapsed like a house of cards, and the worldsuddenly changed in ways that had been inconceivable only a few monthsearlier. Who in Poland could ever have imagined free elections withLech Walesa as president?<span id="more-342"></span></p>
<p>However, when the sublime mist of the velvet revolutions was dispelledby the new democratic-capitalist reality, people reacted with anunavoidable disappointment that manifested itself, in turn, asnostalgia for the “good old” Communist times; as rightist, nationalistpopulism; and as renewed, belated anti-Communist paranoia.</p>
<p>The first two reactions are easy to comprehend. The same rightists whodecades ago were shouting, “Better dead than red!” are now often heardmumbling, “Better red than eating hamburgers.” But the Communistnostalgia should not be taken too seriously: far from expressing anactual wish to return to the gray Socialist reality, it is more a formof mourning, of gently getting rid of the past. As for the rise of therightist populism, it is not an Eastern European specialty, but acommon feature of all countries caught in the vortex of globalization.</p>
<p>Much more interesting is the recent resurgence of anti-Communism from Hungary to Slovenia. During the autumn of 2006, large protests againstthe ruling Socialist Party paralyzed Hungary for weeks. Protesterslinked the country’s economic crisis to its rule by successors of theCommunist party. They denied the very legitimacy of the government,although it came to power through democratic elections. When thepolice went in to restore civil order, comparisons were drawn with theSoviet Army crushing the 1956 anti-Communist rebellion.</p>
<p>This new anti-Communist scare even goes after symbols. In June 2008,Lithuania passed a law prohibiting the public display of Communistimages like the hammer and sickle, as well as the playing of theSoviet anthem. In April 2009, the Polish government proposed expandinga ban on totalitarian propaganda to include Communist books, clothingand other items: one could even be arrested for wearing a Che GuevaraT-shirt.</p>
<p>No wonder that, in Slovenia, the main reproach of the populist rightto the left is that it is the “force of continuity” with the oldCommunist regime. In such a suffocating atmosphere, new problems andchallenges are reduced to the repetition of old struggles, up to theabsurd claim (which sometimes arises in Poland and in Slovenia) thatthe advocacy of gay rights and legal abortion is part of a darkCommunist plot to demoralize the nation.</p>
<p>Where does this resurrection of anti-Communism draw its strength from?Why were the old ghosts resuscitated in nations where many youngpeople don’t even remember the Communist times? The new anti-Communismprovides a simple answer to the question: “If capitalism is really somuch better than Socialism, why are our lives still miserable?”</p>
<p>It is because, many believe, we are not really in capitalism: we donot yet have true democracy but only its deceiving mask, the same darkforces still pull the threads of power, a narrow sect of formerCommunists disguised as new owners and managers — nothing’s reallychanged, so we need another purge, the revolution has to be repeated&#8230;</p>
<p>What these belated anti-Communists fail to realize is that the imagethey provide of their society comes uncannily close to the most abusedtraditional leftist image of capitalism: a society in which formaldemocracy merely conceals the reign of a wealthy minority. In otherwords, the newly born anti-Communists don’t get that what they aredenouncing as perverted pseudo-capitalism simply is capitalism.</p>
<p>One can also argue that, when the Communist regimes collapsed, thedisillusioned former Communists were effectively better suited to runthe new capitalist economy than the populist dissidents. While theheroes of the anti-Communist protests continued to dwell in theirdreams of a new society of justice, honesty and solidarity, the formerCommunists were able to ruthlessly accommodate themselves to the newcapitalist rules and the new cruel world of market efficiency,inclusive of all the new and old dirty tricks and corruption.</p>
<p>A further twist is added by those countries in which Communistsallowed the explosion of capitalism, while retaining political power:they seem to be more capitalist than the Western liberal capitaliststhemselves. In a crazy double reversal, capitalism won over Communism,but the price paid for this victory is that Communists are now beatingcapitalism in its own terrain.</p>
<p>This is why today’s China is so unsettling: capitalism has alwaysseemed inextricably linked to democracy, and faced with the explosionof capitalism in the People’s Republic, many analysts still assumethat political democracy will inevitably assert itself.</p>
<p>But what if this strain of authoritarian capitalism proves itself tobe more efficient, more profitable, than our liberal capitalism? Whatif democracy is no longer the necessary and natural accompaniment ofeconomic development, but its impediment?</p>
<p>If this is the case, then perhaps the disappointment at capitalism inthe post-Communist countries should not be dismissed as a simple signof the “immature” expectations of the people who didn’t possess arealistic image of capitalism.</p>
<p>When people protested Communist regimes in Eastern Europe, the largemajority of them did not ask for capitalism. They wanted the freedomto live their lives outside state control, to come together and talkas they pleased; they wanted a life of simplicity and sincerity,liberated from the primitive ideological indoctrination and theprevailing cynical hypocrisy.</p>
<p>As many commentators observed, the ideals that led the protesters wereto a large extent taken from the ruling Socialist ideology itself —people aspired to something that can most appropriately be designatedas “Socialism with a human face.” Perhaps this attitude deserves asecond chance.</p>
<p>This brings to mind the life and death of Victor Kravchenko, theSoviet engineer who, in 1944, defected during a trade mission toWashington and then wrote a best-selling memoir, “I Chose Freedom.”His first-person report on the horrors of Stalinism included adetailed account of the mass hunger in early-1930s Ukraine, whereKravchenko — then still a true believer in the system — helped enforcecollectivization.</p>
<p>What most people know about Kravchenko ends in 1949. That year, hesued Les Lettres Françaises for libel after the French Communistweekly claimed that he was a drunk and a wife-beater and his memoirwas the propaganda work of American spies. In the Paris courtroom,Soviet generals and Russian peasants took the witness stand to debatethe truth of Kravchenko’s writings, and the trial grew from a personalsuit to a spectacular indictment of the whole Stalinist system.</p>
<p>But immediately after his victory in the case, when Kravchenko wasstill being hailed all around the world as a cold war hero, he had thecourage to speak out passionately against Joseph McCarthy’s witchhunts. “I believe profoundly,” he wrote, “that in the struggle againstCommunists and their organizations &#8230; we cannot and should not resortto the methods and forms employed by the Communists.” His warning toAmericans: to fight Stalinism in such a way was to court the danger ofstarting to resemble their opponent.</p>
<p>Kravchenko also became more and more obsessed with the inequalities ofthe Western world, and wrote a sequel to “I Chose Freedom” that wastitled, significantly, “I Chose Justice.” He devoted himself tofinding less exploitative forms of collectivization and wound up inBolivia, where he squandered all his money trying to organize poorfarmers. Crushed by this failure, he withdrew into private life andshot himself in 1966 at his home in New York.</p>
<p>How did we come to this? Deceived by 20th-century Communism anddisillusioned with 21st-century capitalism, we can only hope for newKravchenkos — and that they come to happier ends. On the search forjustice, they will have to start from scratch. They will have toinvent their own ideologies. They will be denounced as dangerousutopians, but they alone will have awakened from the utopian dreamthat holds the rest of us under its sway.</p>
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