đŸ Archived View for library.inu.red âș file âș colin-ward-temporary-autonomous-zones.gmi captured on 2023-01-29 at 08:55:19. Gemini links have been rewritten to link to archived content
âĄïž Next capture (2024-06-20)
-=-=-=-=-=-=-
Title: Temporary Autonomous Zones Author: Colin Ward Language: en Topics: housing, Murray Bookchin, TAZ Source: Retrieved on 20 March 2010 http://raforum.info/spip.php?article1079&lang=fr
Iâve a big agenda of books I would like to read or write and for
ordinary reasons, like a low income, I stay at home but get lured abroad
when somebody else pays the fares. This explains why anarchists from
several countries, like France, Germany, the Netherlands and Italy, have
asked me for my opinion on the views of Hakim Bey. [1]
It is always an embarrassment since for a long time I had no idea about
who this person and his opinions were or are. Plenty of us, including
myself, are hesitant about revealing the vast scope of our own
ignorance. Two sources have explained to me what these questioners were
talking about. One, of course, is Freedomâs invaluable feature âFood for
Thought ... and Action!â and the other is Murray Bookchinâs recent book
Social Anarchism or Lifestyle Anarchism: An Unbridgeable Chasm [2].
Bookchin and I have opposite ways of coping with people whose ideas have
some kind of connection with our own but with whom we disagree. His is
to pulverise them with criticism so that they wonât emerge again. Mine
is to follow the policy of Paul Goodman, who had been a subject of the
Bookchin scorn. Goodman enjoyed telling a fable:
âTom says to Jerry: âDo you want to fight ? Cross that line!â and Jerry
does. âNowâ, cries Tom, âyouâre on my side!â We draw the line in their
conditions ; we proceed on our own conditions.â
As a propagandist I usually find it more useful to claim as comrades the
people whose ideas are something like mine, and to stress the common
ground, rather than to wither them up in a deluge of scorn.
What I learn from Bookchinâs book is that Hakim Beyâs book is called
TAZ: The Temporary Autonomous Zone, Ontological Anarchism, Poetic
Terrorism, that the authorâs real name is Peter Lamborn Wilson, and that
his book has a whole lot of notions that wouldnât appeal to people of
the Bookchin/Ward generation. And after his demolition job, Murray asks:
âWhat, finally, is a âtemporary autonomous zoneâ ?â He explains it with
a quotation from Hakim Bey describing how:
âThe TAZ is like an uprising which does not engage directly with the
state, a guerrilla operation which liberates an area (of land, of time,
of imagination) and then dissolves itself, to re-form elsewhere /
elsewhen, before the state can crush it.â
And he goes on to quote from Hakim Beyâs essay how in a TAZ we can
ârealise many of our true desires, even if only for a season, a brief
Pirate Utopia, a warped free-zone in the old Space/Time continuumâ and
how âpotential TAZsâ include âthe sixties-style tribal gathering, the
forest conclave of eco-saboteurs, the idyllic Beltane of the neopagans,
anarchist conferences, and gay faery circlesâ not to speak of, as Murray
quotes, ânight-clubs, banquetsâ and âold-time libertarian picnicsâ â no
less.
Murray Bookchin, naturally, comments that âhaving been a member of the
Libertarian League in the 1960s, I would love to see the Bey and his
disciples surface at an âold-time libertarian picnicâ!â And he makes
some down-to-earth comments on Hakim Beyâs praise for âvoluntary
illiteracyâ and for homelessness as âin a sense a virtue, an adventureâ.
Rightly, in my view, Murray remarks that:
âAlas, homelessness can be an âadventureâ when one has a comfortable
home to return to, while nomadism is the distinct luxury of those who
can afford to live without earning their livelihood. Most of the
ânomadicâ hoboes I recall so vividly from the Great Depression era
suffered desperate lives of hunger, disease and indignity and usually
died prematurely â as they still do today in the streets of urban
America.â
He wins us over to stern realism, but that one concept of Temporary
Autonomous Zones is so familiar to me, and probably to him too, that
itâs worth considering outside the Hakim Bey context. Plenty of us must
have been in situations when we reflect that we all have certain
experiences that seem to us to be the way things would happen if we were
living in an anarchist society.
I think it was as long ago as 1970 that a reader of Anarchy, Graham
Whiteman, was writing there about the equivalent of temporary autonomous
zones that he perceived in the vast rock or pop festivals that started
happening in 1967, notably the event at Woodstock in New York State in
August 1969. There were plenty more closer to home in the subsequent 25
years.
But once the phrase Temporary Autonomous Zones lodges in your mind you
begin to see it/them everywhere: fleeting pockets of anarchy that occur
in daily life. In this sense it describes a perhaps more useful concept
than that of an anarchist society, since the most libertarian societies
that we know of have their authoritarian elements, and vice versa. I was
reading recently the biography by Michael Holroyd of the painter
Augustus John, a self-declared anarchist who was also rather a monster
in creating around himself the particular version of anarchy that
appealed to him. Holroyd is describing Johnâs return, in his 73^(rd)
year in 1950 to St-RĂ©my in France, to a place he had left in a hurry in
1939:
âFrench feeding wasnât what it had been and the wine seemed to have gone
off. But in the evening, at the Café des Variétés, he could still obtain
that peculiar equilibrium of spirit and body he described as
âdetachment-in-intimacyâ. The conversation whirled around him, the
accordion played, and sometimes he was rewarded âby the apparition of a
face or part of a face, a gesture or conjunction of forms which I
recognise as belonging to a more real and harmonious world than that to
which we are accustomedâ.â
The old painterâs last phrase describes rather beautifully the sensation
of what another Freedom contributor, Brian Richardson, calls âgolden
momentsâ. His unaccustomed glimpse of a more real and harmonious world
is the meaning that I am inclined to ascribe to the words about
Temporary Autonomous Zones.
Â
[1] Originally appeared in Freedom, Spring 1997
[2] Edinburgh, AK Press f5.95, post-free from Freedom Press