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Title: Postanarchism in a Nutshell Author: Jason Adams Date: 2003 Language: en Topics: post-anarchism Source: Retrieved on June 12th, 2009 from http://info.interactivist.net/node/2475
In the past couple of years there has been a growing interest in what
some have begun calling âpostanarchismâ for short; because it is used to
describe a very diverse body of thought and because of its perhaps
unwarranted temporal implications, even for those within this milieu, it
is a term that is more often than not used with a great deal of
reticence. But as a term, it is also one which refers to a wave of
attempts to try to reinvent anarchism in light of major developments
within contemporary radical theory and within the world at large, much
of which ultimately began with the Events of May 1968 in Paris, France
and the intellectual milieu out of which the insurrection emerged.
Indeed, in the preface to Andrew Feenbergâs recent book on the events,
When Poetry Ruled the Streets, Douglas Kellner points out that
poststructuralist theory as it developed in France was not really a
rejection of that movement as is sometimes thought, but for the most
part was really a continuation of the new forms of thought, critique and
action that had erupted in the streets at the time. As he puts it, âthe
passionate intensity and spirit of critique in many versions of French
postmodern theory is a continuation of the spirit of 1968 Baudrillard,
Lyotard, Virilio, Derrida, Castoriadis, Foucault, Deleuze, Guattari, and
other French theorists associated with postmodern theory were all
participants in May 1968. They shared its revolutionary elan and radical
aspirations and they attempted to develop new modes of radical thought
that carried on in a different historical conjecture the radicalism of
the 1960sâ (2001, p. xviii).
Thus, whether it is fully self-conscious of this fact or not, it is
ultimately against this background that âpostanarchismâ has recently
emerged as an attempt to create a hybrid theory and practice out of the
most compelling elements of early anarchist thought as well as more
recent critical theories that have emerged out of this and similar
milieus around the world, thus reinvigorating the possibility of a
politics whose primary slogan is âall power to the imaginationâ in our
own time. It should come as no surprise that this would eventually take
place since it is well-known that anarchism was a major element of the
events; this is evidenced not only in Raoul Vaneigemâs statement that
âfrom now on, no revolution will be worthy of the name if it does not
involve, at the very least, the radical elimination of all hierarchyâ
(2001, p. 78) but also in a remarkably resonant statement by Michel
Foucault a decade later, in which he stated that âwhere Soviet socialist
power was in question, its opponents called it totalitarianism: power in
Western capitalism was denounced by Marxists as class domination; but
the mechanics of power in themselves were never analyzed. This task
could only begin after 1968, that is to say on the basis of daily
struggles at the grass roots level, among those whose fight was located
in the fine meshes of the web of powerâ (Gordon, 1980, p. 116).
These are just two of the most obvious examples of this legacy, but
countless others like this could easily be dug up to make the case
further â even if it might be countered that many of the participants
were also largely influenced by existentialism, phenomenology, the
Frankfurt School and Western Marxism in general, it is undeniable that a
strong anarchistic, anti-hierarchical ethic permeated the entire affair
just as it has the theorists who emerged out of it. Thus it can clearly
be seen how anarchism has, though perhaps indirectly, nevertheless been
a major influence on many of these thinkers, all of whom produced the
main body of their works in the aftermath of the events. Paul Virilio
for instance, has often directly expressed his affinity with anarchism,
citing his participation as one major reason for this. Despite
widespread delusions asserting the contrary, poststructuralists did not
simply âgive upâ on insurrectionary and other social movements after May
â68 either.
Virilioâs involvement, along with that of Foucault, Deleuze, and
Guattari in the Autonomia and free radio movements in Italy and France
in the late 1970s, Foucaultâs engagement with queer liberation and
prison abolition movements in the 1980s, Luce Irigiray and Judith
Butlerâs connection with third-wave feminism in the 1990s and Derrida
and Agambenâs work with the Sans Papiers/No Border movement as well as
Hardt and Negriâs extensive ties with the antiglobalization movement of
the past several years should alone be more than enough evidence to
destroy that myth. Further absurd critiques that are sometimes heard,
which seek to take a rather unique example such as cyberfeminist Donna
Haraway to argue that poststructuralists are universally uncritical of
technology or a neo-nihilist like Jean Baudrillard to prove that they
unwaveringly reject the possibility of resistance are also quite
ignorant since the flip side of such untrue and totalizing statements is
that a politics of âresistanceâ was a central element throughout the
entire corpus of Foucaultâs work, just as the relentless critique of
âthe art of technologyâ in all its forms ranging from military ordnance
to television has been crucial throughout Virilioâs work.
Indeed, far from the images some would give of it, poststructuralism
emerged out of a much larger anti-authoritarian milieu which began by
taking what up to that point had existed as radical, but still abstract
theories and put them into practice in the streets of Paris; for all its
limitations over the years, because its origins are to be found here, it
nevertheless contains many strong anarchistic elements that are not
found elsewhere; therefore, it would seem obvious that amongst these
thinkers there would likely be a great deal of radical theory that would
be of use to anarchists today who wish to keep their theory relevant to
the contours of a structure of domination that does not exist outside of
space and time but which is constantly in a state of flux and
transformation.
As mentioned, the term âpostanarchismâ has emerged recently as a term
that could be used to describe the phenomenon whereby this radically
anti-authoritarian poststructuralist theory has developed and mutated
and split off into dozens of hybrid critical theories over the past
three decades, finally coming back to inform and extend the theory and
practice of one of its primary roots.
Anarchism seems to perpetually forget the lessons of recent events that
have shaped the lived present we inhabit daily, all to the unhappy ends
of a fetishization of on the one hand the âproud traditionâ of the past
and on the other the âglorious promiseâ of the future. As we have seen
in the example of the anarchistic events of May â68, it is not simply
poststructuralism that is informing anarchism today, but in fact the
reverse is and has certainly been the case as well, despite this having
been largely ignored by almost everyone â until recently. In order to
understand what the emerging phenomena of postanarchism âisâ in the
contemporary moment, first of all one should consider what it is not; it
is not an âismâ like any other â it is not another set of ideologies,
doctrines and beliefs that can be laid out positively as a bounded
totality to which one might conform and then agitate amongst the
âmassesâ to get others to rally around and conform to as well, like some
odd ideological flag. Instead, this profoundly negationary term refers
to a broad and heterogeneous array of anarchist theories and practices
that have been rendered âhomelessâ by the rhetoric and practice of most
of the more closed and ideological anarchisms such as
anarchist-syndicalism, anarchist-communism, and anarchist-platformism as
well as their contemporary descendants, all of which tend to reproduce
some form of class-reductionism, state-reductionism or liberal democracy
in a slightly more âanarchisticâ form, thus ignoring the many lessons
brought to us in the wake of the recent past.
Postanarchism is today found not only in abstract radical theory but
also in the living practice of such groups as the No Border movements,
Peopleâs Global Action, the Zapatistas, the Autonomen and other such
groups that while clearly âantiauthoritarianâ in orientation, do not
explicitly identify with anarchism as an ideological tradition so much
as they identify with its general spirit in their own unique and varying
contexts, which are typically informed by a wide array of both
contemporary and classical radical thinkers.
Interestingly enough, all of this is to a surprising degree quite in
line with the very origin of the term in Hakim Beyâs 1987 essay
âPost-Anarchism Anarchyâ. In this essay, he argues that the thing that
is keeping anarchism from becoming relevant to the truly excluded of
society, which is also the thing driving so many truly
anti-authoritarian people away from anarchism, is that it has become so
caught up in its own tightly bordered ideologies and sects that it has
ultimately mistaken the various doctrines and âtraditionsâ of anarchism
for the lived experience of anarchy itself. Between the dichotomous
prison of a tragic past and impossible future, he says that anarchism
has become an ideological doctrine to be adhered to rather than as a
living theory with which to gum up the decentered works of the
postindustrial society of control, all of this resulting in the
universal foregoing of any real politics of the present, a point also
made by Raoul Vaneigem in May â68, but in regards to society in general.
Bey goes on to emphasize the various ideological anarchismsâ lack of
attention to real desires and needs as being as reprehensible as their
reticence in the face of more recent radical theory, those challenging
thoughts and ideas that might appear to be âriskyâ or uncomfortable at
first glance, especially to an anarchism increasingly comfortable in its
form, not unlike the post-industrial temp worker, who at the end of the
day plops down into the Lay-Z-Boy and stays there out of sheer
exhaustion; if we were to resist this temptation and open anarchism up
to an engagement of this sort, he argues, âwe could pick up the struggle
where it was dropped by Situationism in â68 & Autonomia in the seventies
& carry it to the next stageâ (1991, p. 62) far beyond where the
grassroots radicals, anarchists, existentialists, heterodox Marxists and
poststructuralists have ever taken it in the past.
But for Bey, a postanarchist politics would really only become possible
if anarchists could somehow find the will to abandon a whole host of
leftover fetishisms which have kept anarchism in its own private little
network of self-imposed ideological ghettoes, including all types of
ideological purity, conceptions of power as simply blatant and overt,
fetishisms of labor and work, biases against cultural forms of
resistance, secular cults of scientism, anti-erotic dogmas which keep
sexualities of all forms in the closet, glorifications of formal
organization to the detriment of spontaneous action and territorialist
traditions that link space and politics, thus ignoring the possibility
of nomadic praxis. Fourteen years later, after some important
foundational work by radical theorists such as Andrew Koch, and Todd
May, this schematic formulation of âpostanarchismâ reappeared under the
same sign but in a rather different and more fleshed-out concept
developed by the Australian political theorist Saul Newman in his book
âFrom Bakunin to Lacan: Antiauthoritarianism and the Dislocation of
Powerâ.
Here the term refers to a theoretical move beyond classical anarchism,
into a hybrid theory consisting of an synthesis with particular concepts
and ideas from poststructuralist theory such as post-humanism and
anti-essentialism; Newman explains that âby using the poststructuralist
critique one can theorize the possibility of political resistance
without essentialist guarantees: a politics of postanarchism...by
incorporating the moral principles of anarchism with the postructuralist
critique of essentialism, it may be possible to arrive at an ethically
workable, politically valid, and genuinely democratic notion of
resistance to domination...Foucaultâs rejection of the âessentialâ
difference between madness and reason; Deleuze and Guattariâs attack on
Oedipal representation and State-centered thought; Derridaâs questioning
of philosophyâs assumption about the importance of speech over writing,
are all examples of this fundamental critique of authorityâ (2001, p.
158).
As is implied in Hakim Beyâs conception of postanarchism, here too it is
obvious how the antiauthoritarianism which Newman sees running
throughout poststructuralist theory would have emerged originally in the
world-historic social movements at the end of the 1960s; in the process,
the radically anti-authoritarian spirit of anarchism, as one of the
primary elements of these milieu, mutated into a thousand different
miniviruses, infecting all of these critical theories in many different
ways that are only now really being rediscovered. Yet, although he is
critical of the essentialism which he sees as endemic within the thought
of canonic anarchists like Kropotkin and Bakunin, Newmanâs conception of
postanarchism does not reject all early anarchist thought; his embrace
of Stirnerâs egoism as the most important precursor to a politics of
this sort illustrates this quite clearly. Finally, it should be noted
that it is precisely in this sense that Newmanâs conception is actually
quite similar to the âpostmarxismâ of Ernesto Laclau and Chantal Mouffe,
in that while it is postanarchist it is also postanarchist (2001, p. 4)
in that it is by no means a total rejection of early anarchisms but
rather a step beyond the limits defined for them by the Enlightenment
thought which had not yet really been subjected to a great deal of
critique, while simultaneously embracing the best elements produced by
that same revolution in human consciousness including such obvious
aspects as the ability of people to govern themselves directly without a
sovereign lording over them; the viral strains of a mutant
poststructuralism suddenly reappearing in a new form after a long and
nomadic exile.
Since the publication of Newmanâs book in 2001, there have been several
attempts to articulate a conception of postanarchism that would bring on
board many of his specific ideas regarding the anarchistic elements of
radical poststructuralist thought yet which would also bring it back out
of the halls of academia and into broader, more diverse, and more
flammable environments, much as Bey had originally described his
conception of the term in 1987. Earlier this year, I started a listserv
and website by the name of postanarchism which was intended to do just
that; I advertised its existence on Indymedia websites all over the
world, on Infoshopâs bulletin board and on multiple radical activist and
anarchist listservs all of which drew hundreds of anarchists, activists
and intellectuals, most commonly attracting those who somehow find a way
to be all three simultaneously. Since that time there has emerged an
increasingly dynamic discussion which has ranged from the activist topic
of social movements like the No Borders movement which has taken on
board the ideas of critical theorists like Giorgio Agamben, Michael
Hardt, Antonio Negri and Jacques Derrida, to the more strictly
intellectual question of the extent to which early anarchist thinkers
such as Bakunin and Kropotkin were essentialist in their conceptions of
the human subject to the more explicitly anarchist discussion of what
tendencies in contemporary anarchism, such as insurrectionary anarchism,
social ecology or anarchist-feminism might be the most relevant in the
contemporary world order.
There is now even talk of a postanarchism anthology which would collect
the dozens of essays that have been circulating around the internet and
bring them all together in one place; so far the anthology will likely
include such interesting proposals as one by former Black Panther member
Ashanti Alston on the outlines of what he conceives as a
poststructuralist African anarchism, combining the thought of Wole
Soyinka, Sam Mbah, Todd May and Saul Newman as well as another by Jesse
Cohn and Shawn Wilbur which would critique Newmanâs conception of
postanarchism, arguing that even Bakunin and Kropotkin were far less
essentialist and more far critical of scientism than he generally
allows. As can easily be discerned by examining this trajectory, the
result of this listserv, website and ensuing anthology is that not only
has the discussion and the definition of postanarchism now become a
hybrid of Beyâs and Newmanâs conceptions of the term, but it has also
become that of dozens of others who have been writing about the
intersections between anarchism, poststructuralism and other critical
theories since at least the early 1990s, with a pace and dynamism that
has been steadily increasing on into its crescendo in the present
moment. In this often unknowingly simultaneous endeavor, anarchists from
all kinds of backgrounds with all kinds of ideas have sought to make
contemporary anarchisms relevant to them in their own unique situations,
often going beyond poststructuralism itself, borrowing liberally from
the best of contemporary radical theory including phenomenology,
critical theory, Situationism, postcolonialism, autonomism,
postmodernism, existentialism, postfeminism, and Zapatismo amongst
others. Andrew Koch for instance argues that postfeminists such as
Helene Cixous, Luce Irigiray and Julia Kristeva all have a great deal to
teach contemporary anarchists about the authoritarian elements of
patriarchal foundationalism; Ricardo Dominguez uncovers poetic
revelations in the links between Zapatista strategies of decentered
netwar and eleuzo-Guattarian rhizomatic forms of resistance to the State
form, neither of which he reminds us, need be âplugged inâ to be
effective.
Thus, it should be clear from all of this that the other than opposition
to all forms of domination, the only thing all of these theorists share
is an extreme lack of consensus over what it means to combine anarchism
with these extremely divergent philosophies; in fact, while some have
used it as an excuse to whole-heartedly write off earlier tendencies
such as anarchist-syndicalism, ironically some of the main theorists
touted as exemplary by such postanarchists, including Paul Virilio,
Michael Hardt and Antonio Negri have all flirted with versions of that
exact tradition in various parts of their works, even using terms like
âgeneral strikeâ, (Virilio, 1997, p. 41) âanarcho-syndicalistâ
(Armitage, 2001, p. 19) and âOne Big Unionâ all in the positive (Hardt
and Negri, 2000, p. 206).
What this means then, is that radical theory, just like the world in
which it has emerged, is always in a perpetual state of flux, a nomadism
that never settles down, never completely hardens into one particular
shape and in which the âpastâ eternally returns in new and unexpected
ways in the present; many poststructuralist intellectuals, for instance,
after having been denounced as increasingly apolitical and obscurantist
have paid heed to these calls by using much clearer language and
actively trying to engage their theories with the practice of actually
existing social movements.
This recent tendency, exemplified most clearly in certain works of Paul
Virilio, Giorgio Agamben, Jacques Derrida, Michael Hardt and Antonio
Negri, can thus be seen as a return to the roots of poststructuralism in
the Events of May â68 when intellectuals revolted against their roles as
the organizers of the cybernetic society and together with millions of
workers, immigrants, women and others, turned this world upside down, if
only for a few brief, blissful moments. It is in this way that the
appearance of postanarchism in recent years can also be seen as an
aspect of this return of the recently forgotten past, at least partially
as a result of the return of a world-historical social movement that has
been challenging all forms of technocratic domination, carrying the
struggle of May â68 and the Italian Autonomia to the next stage as Bey
had hoped; a phenomena perhaps best summed up, at least for the moment,
by the proclamation, âneither the normalization of classical anarchism
nor the depoliticization of poststructuralism!â
To visit the postanarchism clearinghouse website or to join the
postanarchism listserv, which now has several hundred members from all
over the world engaging in discussions like this, please visit the
âpostanarchismâ link at
Publications.
Anarchy, Poetic Terrorism. Brooklyn: Autonomedia.
The French May Events of 1968. Albany: SUNY Press.
Other Writings 1972â1977, Michel Foucault. New York: Pantheon Books.
University Press.
Strategy. London: Verso.
Anarchism. University Park: Pennsylvania State University Press.
the Dislocation of Power. Lanham: Lexington Books.
Aldgate Press.