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Title: To Acid-Words
Author: Alejandro De Acosta
Date: 2014
Language: en
Topics: language, spectacle, poetry, morality, détournement, mediation
Source: Retrieved on 5 October 2018 from https://archive.org/details/TheImpossiblePatienceCriticalEssays20072013
Notes: from The Impossible, Patience published by Ardent Press, 2014

Alejandro De Acosta

To Acid-Words

Parts of “To Acid-Words” were first presented at a meeting of the

Berkeley Anarchist Study Group in November, 2011. The rest of it was

meditated on (and off) for the following two years, with a last burst of

effort in early 2014. This is to say that it has layers, strata. It is

an attempt to address the tremendous anxiety anarchists seem to have

about language, and each of its sub-sections responds analytically to

various attitudes towards language in the milieu. I think of it as a

necessarily incomplete piece, in that it addresses a relation the

anarchist milieu constantly denies in seeking out a better language

(instrumental, operational), a pre-language, or a non-language. This

relation is, of course, its relation to what it knows as Society. But

the relations to language in the milieu, and our collective anxiety

towards it, can never be entirely considered apart from more or less

discernible social attitudes. Ultimately, although there is nothing to

be said in general about language from an anarchist perspective, it is

sometimes worthwhile to trace the lineaments of some particular

anarchist attitudes to language, as I have done here. Two caveats:

first, this piece is written from a monolingual point of view, as it

addresses a largely monolingual milieu. A vastly different approach to

these questions could have begun from multilingualism and translation.

Second caveat: what is said here about poesy and poetry is delicately

presented in a sideways pedagogy, introducing an idea or three to

unfortunate readers who have little experience of these. (That, for

example, the term I’ve used for a certain idea of language, Language, is

also commonly used for a loose school of poets and writers whose works

have contributed to inspiring precisely the approach I’ve taken here, is

only one of the minor ironies of this essay.)

& so you print your poems

& no one cares

they hate you sometimes

tell you to go to work

like every one else

or they want you to explain

in american, in english,

in old english, in slang

in political, in sexual,

in religious, in psychological,

in revolutionary terms &

language,

what you meant

& so you hide

take acid

& write an acid poem

or a poem about your city

& say its to increase awareness

of the environment

& its words to expand your

head so you don’t have

to take acid

and endanger your life

“if it really is dangerous”

— d.a. levy

le militant n’entend pas, ne voit pas le langage et c’est à ce prix

qu’il peut militer

[the militant does not hear, does not see language, and this is the

price he pays for his militancy]

— Roland Barthes

What I add to these lines—what I place between them—is a kind of

enumeration, argumentation through serial juxtaposition: anecdotes and

examples, a series of scenes I have been witness to; analysis, thinking

through what I heard and saw; references, the things people said, or

wrote, and also a way of looking back at what they did not say, or

write. And asides for what remained to be noted. I place it all between

d.a. levy’s positive but dangerous “awareness / of the environment / &

its words” and Barthes’ two negatives, his thought of a militancy that

depends on a denial of language, to show something of the gray space

some of us inhabit.

So this is not exactly about anarchists. Nor is it about the society

they want to transform, dismantle or destroy. It is about how the

society anarchists want to transform, dismantle or destroy transforms,

dismantles, or destroys them in the moment of saying what there is to

do, of writing what they want or think. And about some ways to resist.

Part 1: Moral

I’m quite serious about the need to resist the tyranny of elemental

words... They’re words that brook no argument, that are intended to be

outside of syntax and thus outside of history. I try to resist this when

I write.

— Bob Perelman

How Activists Talk

As I have experienced it, the anarchist milieu (our gray space) is not

exclusively or even principally made up of activists. But in the

sub-cultural spaces, the social overlaps, and the political neighborhood

of the anarchist milieu there is activism, and so there most certainly

are activists. It’s important to be careful here, because among some

anarchists activist, like liberal, is an epithet. The activists I am

talking about are both those picked out and ridiculed with such

epithets, and, often enough, some less obvious characters. We will only

understand activists (and their talk) if we make them strange again,

because sometimes they are our friends. They are also us on some days or

in the past; they are us though we are in denial about it. Some

anarchists are activists and say so; others are activists in denial.

Someone said: “activists without the word.” Others again aren’t

activists but bear in their speech and action the inertia of activist

approaches and tactics, an entire way of life that shapes what it is to

be of the Left in North America and probably elsewhere.

Whoever they are, activists talk at meetings. Of course activists also

talk in other situations, but it seems to me that to be an activist is

tendentially to reform any situation into a meeting. For example, there

are people who only socialize by bringing elements of the meeting into

the social situation, at the limit by turning social situations into

meetings wholesale. There are rallies and protests and so on, but these

have much in common with meetings; one sometimes gets the feeling that

everything would be over if the people or institution being protested or

rallied against would agree to a meeting. Consequently, the activist

utopia is a society assembled out of meeting-atoms, a federation of

meetings.

The way activists talk at their meetings is primarily in

margarine-words. These may be slogans, phrases whose function is to

circulate, not to mean; or they may be certain oily words that slip from

mouth to ear, person to machine, situation to scene. One way to

recognize margarine-words is repetition: they are used a lot,

functioning as code words or passwords, their appropriateness assumed,

never shown. Ultimately, this is because their circulation is also the

usually unquestioned circulation of moral beliefs; but in any given

iteration, the repetition may be well-nigh meaningless, just a little

index, gentle reminder of the shared morals rather than harsh

mnemotechnic. It is never really clear which is primary, which gives

form to which: the morality at work, or the compulsion to repeat in its

collusion with the most gregarious drives. In any case, the meeting (or

the rally, etc.) is the pedagogical site where these morals are usually

circulated and sometimes, memorably, inculcated. Another way to

recognize margarine-words is that, as repeatable units, they can be

coded negatively as well as positively, so that avoiding them or using

them only as terms of derision becomes as important as using the ones

that are to be circulated, owned, and appreciated. That is how we get,

for example, “activists without the word,” and moralistic immoralists.

To take this analysis one step further and understand what activism

really is, we would have to deepen the discussion of the relation

between morality and technology, the primitive technics of repetition

and circulation, their ever-larger and more sophisticated technological

networks, their absorption of ancient codes and modern laws, and so on;

that is, discuss politics. It is difficult to explain how these two

co-operate, because sometimes morality is just that, moral principles

and deliberation and tradition and so on; and sometimes I write morality

and realize I am talking more about a certain undeliberated

obsessiveness, a sort of neurosis of doing the good that neurotically

redefines the good as its own neurotic world-view... how all of these

levels of neurosis compose modern political subjects is a question to be

set aside for now.

Instead, let’s leave matters in the realm of family resemblances and

generalize for the productive fun of it about how activists use their

margarine-words. Afterwards, we will have to thank the activists for

making this all so clear, because they are clearly not the only ones who

speak in margarine-words. Margarine-words are all of ours when we aren’t

paying attention; activists are just those who step forward most

flagrantly to show us how we all repeat.

ASIDE 1

Many of the rhetorical effects I designate here as margarine-words are

more matters of speech than writing; thus here I concentrate on how some

talk. The mana-words I turn to further on are best understood as

inventions in writing, though they do have a strange orality in mutant

speech. It turns out that it’s when margarine-words are written down

that they are most egregious (though careful listening will find them

out); and that mana-words sound strangest when spoken as mutant speech.

That said, in this essay I will refer to speech and writing more or less

interchangeably, as they occur to me.

Activists use margarine-words primarily in two ways. One is the talk of

the bureaucrat, the functionary. Sometimes the speaker is not so good at

it, so you have to listen a bit more closely to hear the

proto-bureaucrat, the proto-functionary learning her role. Even when it

is sophisticated, her talk, which on the face of it is common-sensical

and even rational, tends in the long run to the obtuse. She can’t make

eye contact for looking, or pretending to look, at all the details.

These are the people said to “fetishize process”—but this is usually

because what they want can’t be said or done in the language of process.

To speak in this way is one way to attempt, with varying degrees of

success, to instrumentalize language. In part this means to understand

and govern the selective circulation of margarine-words. That’s the

rationality of it, achieved once a critical mass of margarine-words has

been circulated, usually re-circulated if those present at the meeting

are familiar with or help out in the task. But because it seeks to

master people through margarine-words, and not the margarine-words

themselves (mastered, they might cease to circulate, or be erased, as

one with good taste stops using certain phrases, develops a studied

silence with respect to the parlance they wish to abandon), this speech

is a calculated violence done to language, ignoring aesthetic

considerations as well as ethical ones (supposing every morality is the

harsh reduction of what was or could have been an ethics). Stories told

with margarine-words are moral stories; the moral is what you have to

do, or not.

The other way of speaking is more mysterious. At first, it just seems to

be the talk of the leader, or would-be leader, his exhortations, but in

its sinews it is a kind of hysterical discourse, which perhaps has its

origin in the loss of control over the first (bureaucratic) one as

margarine-words begin to circulate beyond anyone’s control. The speaker

realizes at some level, not necessarily conscious, that an ersatz

accumulation of margarine-words is powerful, draws attention, generates

or at least concentrates energy, so he goes for it, he overdoes it, he

says whatever comes to mind as long as it accelerates the recirculation

of margarine-words. It is a way of speaking that to an attentive

listener (by definition someone not implicated in the activist project

at hand) seems so wrong that it is right. Instrumentally right. Here the

instrumentalization of language, which always eventually fails, tips

over into something much less rational. The leader, like the bureaucrat,

manages desire as best he can, but his management also depends on the

ability to unleash what is less than rational in speech. This may be

done cynically, with an eye to benefit from the ensuing confusion, or in

wide-eyed hopefulness, confidence that desire is desire for the good, is

itself good. In either case the details get lost, the

instrumentalization gets scrambled, gets noisy. He can’t make eye

contact for looking, or pretending to look, at the horizon.

ASIDE 2

Do activists listen? Not as activists. But they do hear—they hear the

exhortations, calls to action.

I wrote that the details get lost. Suppose, for example, that someone

you knew had at some point read a well-known poem, and thought he had

found in some of its well-known lines a grand illustration of his

sentiments. Suppose that the proof offered was a kind of translation of

those lines into margarine-words. Suppose, moreover, that when he

explained this to you, it became clear that he had so profoundly misread

the lines that, beyond all ordinary questions of interpretation, he

could only have arrived at his self-affirming interpretation by

unconsciously inverting the traditional and accepted understanding of

the lines. It is a kind of wrong that is so patently wrong that it could

not subsist without a lengthy justification of reading against the

grain, or an absurdist will to reverse all conventional readings. But go

on supposing, and suppose that your acquaintance was in no way capable

of such experimental reversals. Suppose rather that it were obvious that

he thought himself to be in line with the traditional and accepted

reading of the lines. How to understand this? He is on one hand so wrong

that his illustration by means of the lines simply becomes incoherent.

In another, stranger sense, this reading that is so plainly a

non-reading shows a peculiar will to instrumentalize the artwork, to

seize upon its cultural cachet. Supposing all this, you could have been

witness to the ever repeated birth of propaganda. Incidentally, then, a

new definition of propaganda: violent translation of poetry into

margarine-words.

If we could accede to an impossible situation wherein the instrumental

use of language, the circulation of margarine-words, could be paused

long enough to examine how morality is at work in it, we would find a

collusion in it of moral stories and stories about language itself. As

though margarine-words can only circulate on the condition of pushing

away any other possibility for speech. Often enough an activist will say

something that sounds like

what you say is theoretical, abstract. I am without theory; I only speak

concretely.

The proof of this concreteness is orientation to action. Listen, it is

the leader, showing the usefulness of his words. Attend to variants of

this story long enough and you will eventually discern the moral, which

is simple enough. It seems to be:

You are bad, you use language to refer to itself; therefore I am good; I

use language purposefully, in mind of action.

At the meeting, an activist is speaking, saying something, but you can’t

talk about how it is said. What is to be attended to is some content (a

plan of action) that is presumably shared. The accusation of abstraction

leveled at users of mutant speech flows from this situation, since

mana-words tend to bear the traces of their invention or borrowing more

noticeably than the margarine-words preferred by activists.

Margarine-words are always ingratiating, seeking to slip by unnoticed.

At the meeting sometimes the bureaucrat seems to say:

My language is the only good way to refer to these matters; I am using

language only in this proper way. You should not use it differently in

responding, or suggest that activists might be using it differently in

the way they speak.

Listen, she is preventing deviation from her script.

How is orientation to action—as the criterion of concreteness and

propriety—a problem? In two ways: first, because action is usually

defined too narrowly. It is likely to mean a process or event that is

interpersonal, public, somehow forceful, often requiring muscular

effort, loud, and so on. Which is to say that it is political, and not

infrapolitical, micro-political, anti-political, or apolitical. These

sorts of processes or events are adequately modeled, “represented”, so

the activist supposes, in her language. When it is a theoretical

language, it is deployed with an eye to application in practice (which

means the kind of narrowly construed political action I’ve just

described); when it is a practical language, it is deployed as almost

pure instrumentality: “go there,” “do this,” etc.

If you question the moral of the story that says you are theoretical and

the activist is not, you will meet the push to “do something”—to prove

the “this-sidedness” of what you have to say with actions the leader or

the bureaucrat will recognize as political.

By now it should be clear that our gratitude to the activists is for

showing those of us who are listening how this operation works. At the

same time it should be clear that, aside from the activists, there are

many, many actionists, if by that word I may be allowed to refer to

those who define action in roughly the way I have above, whether or not

they are activists in terms of their tactics or their morality.

And what is the second problem with orientation to action? Simply put,

that action is not the solution to every situation. At least I clamor

for the perspective wherein action has neither priority nor primacy.

Inaction, doing nothing, stopping, quitting, and so on, are not

secondary or invalid, morally deficient and politically ineffective

though they may appear to the actionists.

The word radical, so often used by activists (but not just them), in our

milieu generally means very little other than good. Most know the

etymological story, which is often repeated at meetings or other

instructive scenes and teaches that a radical is one who, given a

problem, issue, relation, or situation, gets at its root. A radical

claims to think, wishes to act, in terms of the root. A simple

illustration. Many years ago someone explained radical feminism to me as

that feminism which conceives the subordination of women as the root of

all oppression and domination—i.e. that all other asymmetries of power

are either directly derived or analogically modeled on this root.

Despite the undeniable fact of the subordination of women (easier to

affirm than to determine who in the last instance is a woman) I found

and continue to find it painfully naĂŻve to claim that power could ever

be exercised so simply (in one primary or root form with its analogues

and derivatives). In this case the radicalism would amount to pursuing,

or at least believing, such an analysis (and actively not pursuing or

believing others); at a deeper level, it has to do with believing in a

certain purchase of analysis (in the especially non-analytic way that

activists tend to use this term) on realities of social and other kinds.

One could be more generous to the radicals (or just concede more to what

they claim is ordinary usage) and suggest that by getting at the root

they mean something more like: discovering the true matrix of relations

of force underlying whatever problem, issue, relation, or situation is

at stake for them. They would then be radical not in the sense that they

seek a root or assume that there is one but in a vaguer sense, implying

a kind of downward-seeking motion that we could call looking for basic

structures, root-like structures. So a radical does not stop until some

component relations of force, the asymmetrical relations of power, have

been discovered. It seems to me that this is closer to how radical is

generally used: those who are habituated to the downward-seeking motion.

They speak—by extension: act, move—in characteristic ways. Analysis or

theory works for them first as an unveiling, digging up, finding out;

then, as a guide to action.

The supposition that what one discovers in the downward-seeking motion

is liberatory is perhaps part of what is at stake in the use of radical

more as a noun than as an adjective, or its adjectival use in a sloppy,

all-purpose manner, indicating another kind of social identity, meaning

roughly the right kind of activist, equivalent to activists like us or

activists who agree with us. We pass from repetition to gregariousness.

In that mode radical, the adjective, may be coupled with countless

activities, situations, places, tasks. What does it add?

It adds a morality, or rather it is an index that a moral code is at

stake. As I noted, radical is just a synonym for good, where what is

good is delineated in a largely unspoken and thus unquestioned morality.

This might explain such otherwise confusing constructions as:

radical mommy

radical cheerleader

radical stripmall

If we try to understand these constructions according to the first

definition I suggested, they are almost incoherent. What is the

fundamental or root aspect of being a cheerleader, for example? Whatever

it is, a radical cheerleader would be an excellent cheerleader.

According to the second sense, what is intended might be something more

like this: there are radicals, habitués of the downward-seeking motion,

and as such they have earned the right to call themselves and what they

do radical. If one of these radicals takes up cheerleading as an

activist project, cheerleading, otherwise under suspicion as a practice

of mainstream society, becomes radical cheerleading. This means good

cheerleading, not as cheerleading but as a suitable activity for a

radical. But then radical does not really mean one who goes to the root

of cheerleading, but rather one who can make an activity (otherwise

under suspicion) good, adjectivally radical, by lending interest and

energy to it. It is the valuation associated with the downward-seeking

motion. It is also the value that margarine-words bear as passwords or

code-words. Cheerleading can in this sense be recuperated, but this

changes nothing about it—the routines, contents of chants, etc. is not

what one would claim was at the root! What changes is the “message”—it

is now margarine-words as enthusiastically repeated cheers.

Can we say anything different about other instances of “radical”

politics?

In 2006 AK Press published a book called Horizontalism. It is sub-titled

“voices of popular power in Argentina” and has to do with mutual aid

networks and forms of neighborhood and workplace autonomy after the

financial collapse in 2001. Marina Sitrin, who edited the book and has

done the most to popularize the titular word in Anglophone contexts,

writes:

Horizontalidad is a living word, reflecting an ever-changing experience.

While I have translated it as horizontalism, it is more of an anti-ism.

Horizontalism is not an ideology, but more of a social relationship, a

way of being and relating.

Indeed, the oral histories and interviews in the book testify to an

extreme suspicion about established politics of any sort. This

suspicion, which sometimes spills over into hostility, is manifest among

other things in the descriptive term used for the organization of

meetings, neighborhood assemblies, occupied spaces, and so on:

horizontalidad.

It was not long after I read this book that I met a number of activist

anarchists who regularly used the term horizontalism, in obvious

reference to the book, to describe their own practices and those of

others. In fact, it seemed that these folks used the terms horizontalism

and anarchism almost interchangeably, except that anarchism was for

those in the know, what I would call the milieu, and horizontalism was

for negotiating with other activists, or for “the community”—the latter

meaning in this case those to be organized. The initial conflation makes

some amount of sense, as the organizations these activists are a part of

were the kind populated by anarchists who do not advertise their

anarchism to “the community.” Their emphasis on organizing as such made

it easy to refer to what was happening as horizontal organizing. Still,

it struck me when I realized that with this crowd horizontalism had

become a euphemism for anarchism, a way to mince words at best, at worst

to dissimulate or confuse their convictions.

One could perhaps trace this back to Sitrin’s decision to translate the

adjectival noun horizontalidad, literally horizontality, which models a

state of affairs or a process, as horizontalism, the, as she puts it,

anti-ism. But it is also a perfect illustration of how those used to

margarine-words comfortably adopted horizontalism as a way to purposely

make their position more vague when engaging in activism, while, in the

doing, adding one more note of imprecision to that position.

Should we distinguish how militants talk and how activists talk? Only to

some extent. I have known many less militants than I have activists.

It’s possible I’ve never met a militant, only would-be militants, which

drives me to say that these folks were a species of activist, not so

much in their political opinions or organizational forms but in their

general orientation to action—and their relation to language. Tiqqun

wrote some instructive pages on militants in This Is Not a Program,

wherein they emphasize the militants’ separation from their communities

(activists seek rather to integrate so as to organize). The world of

militants is always tendentially the world of secrecy and clandestinity.

As if to escape the bureaucratic deployment of language, militants often

turn to a completely operational language, trimming analysis down to a

series of simple presuppositions about which no further discussion is

necessary. Would-be militants imitate this minimalism in their brief

statements claiming actions.

But if, as Barthes suggests, the militant is a limit-point, the one who

does not see language, one could see activists, in their exhortatory and

managerial modes, as being just a little bit more aware of language,

because they must be more integrated into ordinary speech. Integrated

into

...the most banal of apparatuses, like a boozy Saturday night among

suburban petit bourgeois couples [...] it often happens that we

experience the characteristic, not request, but possession, and even the

extreme possessiveness involved with every apparatus. And it is during

the vacuous conversations punctuating the dreadful dinner party that we

experience it. One of the Blooms “present” will launch into his tirade

against perpetually-on strike-government-workers; once performed (the

role being well known), a counter-polarization of the social-democratic

type will issue from one of the other Blooms, who will play his part

more or less convincingly, etc., etc. Throughout, these aren’t bodies

speaking to each other, but rather an apparatus functioning. Each of the

protagonists sets in motion the series of ready-to-use signifying

machines, which are always-already inscribed in common language, in

grammar, in metaphysics, in the THEY.

THEY = SOCIETY, as anarchists use the word. This constant of political

speech that is what the horizontalism example suggests: there is a

minimum consciousness of the experience of language as a raw material to

be rendered instrumental, even as there is a generalized amnesia about

how this process works. As a guideline, the demand for ordinary speech

is always repeated when people deviate too much from the preferred

margarine-words (which, being passwords, get a pass). And this ordinary

speech is itself dense with other (older, unknown) margarine-words, the

keywords of the society that activists seek to change, that we

anarchists want to dismantle, transform or destroy.

Our Operation Margarine

This story is about something that repeats: a loophole, a silent

acrobatic maneuver accomplished in the course of political speech.

At an anarchist gathering, I attended a workshop whose stated intent was

to question the notions of justice and accountability.[1] Accountability

is another margarine-word, the use of which that day stretched from the

leftist demand for “police accountability” to our own “accountability

processes” and their implied moralities—not to mention their

interminable slowdowns and failures. The hour or so of discussion went

like this: at first, everyone who spoke dared to call police

accountability into question, describing it as a reformist slogan, and

so on; to a lesser extent, our own use of the word in accountability

processes also came into question. For a time it seemed as though no one

who spoke wanted any kind of accountability. The word was effectively

being crossed out: any positive use began to feel suspect. As the hour

wore on, and with no one explicitly recanting their initial statements,

a kind of discursive inertia seemed to be doing its slow and even work.

(Here we might consider silence: what was not said by the majority of

those in the room who did not speak, so the dynamics of the group, the

crowd—and the pauses and hesitations of those who did speak up.)

Eventually, everyone was talking about accountability again: not their

kind, but our kind; not the bad kind that is ours, but the good kind

that could be ours; not fake accountability, but true accountability.

Perhaps some felt for a time that it was possible to discard

accountability, the slogan, the bad word we had crossed out, and gesture

towards the true relation, the word we might eventually just use without

crossing it out verbally or otherwise. Around then someone spoke up and

said something like:

despite all this critique, everyone here has returned to using the word

more or less in the way initially questioned and objected to.

My first thought was: that comfortable circle is one of the ways

critique works! Which may as well mean: does not work. Even those who

continued to speak against accountability treated it as a reality, gave

the word traction, importance as that which we might, we could, maybe

should, with great deliberation, refuse, cross out... so that what would

replace accountability as a demand or goal needed to be provisionally

referred to as... accountability.

The idea of margarine-words occurred to me after that gathering, when I

recalled reading an essay by Roland Barthes about a commercial involving

a subtle and effective ideological operation. Barthes describes

Operation Margarine as a way of “inserting into Order the complacent

spectacle of its drawbacks” and suggests that is a “paradoxical but

incontrovertible way of exalting” Order.[2]

Paradoxically—exalting—order. This is the “schema” he offers of the

Operation:

take the established value which you want to restore or develop, and

first lavishly display its pettiness, the injustices which it produces,

the vexations to which it gives rise, and plunge it into its natural

imperfection; then, at the last moment, save it in spite of, or rather

by the heavy curse of its blemishes.

He calls Operation Margarine a kind of “homeopathy”:

one cures doubts about the Church or the Army by the very ills of the

Church and the Army. One inoculates the public with a contingent evil to

prevent or cure an essential one. To rebel against the inhumanity of the

Order and its values, according to this way of thinking, is an illness

which is common, natural, forgivable; one must not collide with it

head-on, but rather exorcise it like a possession: the patient is made

to give a representation of his illness, he is made familiar with the

very appearance of his revolt, and this revolt disappears all the more

surely since, once at a distance and the object of a gaze, Order is no

longer anything but a Manichean compound and therefore inevitable, one

which wins on both counts, and is therefore beneficial. The immanent

evil of enslavement is redeemed by the transcendent good of religion,

fatherland, the Church, etc. A little ‘confessed’ evil saves one from

acknowledging a lot of hidden evil.

The master-stroke of the essay, which takes us from propaganda or

ideology to what Barthes called myth, passes from the initial examples

about the Army and the Church to an advertisement for Astra margarine:

The episode always begins with a cry of indignation against margarine:

‘A mousse? Made with margarine? Unthinkable!’ ‘Margarine? Your uncle

will be furious!’ And then one’s eyes are opened, one’s conscience

becomes more pliable, and margarine is a delicious food, tasty,

digestible, economical, useful in all circumstances. The moral at the

end is well known: ‘Here you are, rid of a prejudice which cost you

dearly!’ It is in the same way that the Order relieves you of your

progressive prejudices.

It should be obvious enough how such a schema is at work in the

discourse around the Army or the Church (or all the institutions that

resemble Armies and Churches). Extending it to Astra margarine was

Barthes’ way of saying something about how utterly common of an

operation is at work here, how natural or naturalized this inverting or

turning-inside-out gesture is. That is where Barthes leaves us, in the

diffuse world of advertisements, tiny shreds of propaganda. The calque

of Operation Margarine I have been discussing here, ours, if it is a

myth, is larval or malformed, probably because, like our politics, it

belongs to a different kind of order. Our side is, let’s assume, the

side of the critics of Order; our speech, often enough, bears or

formulates critiques of Order. Our stories, our myths, accordingly, are

the stories and myths of Order, critical though their form may be.

ASIDE 3

This is in part because critique in anarchist circles means more speech

against what I don’t like than undermining-questioning the grounds of

claims. This has a lot to do with why we talk so much about Society.

Of necessity our Operation Margarine is more curious. We are, most of

us, critics of ideology, of Order as such, perhaps, so our version has

less to do with Myth as ideology, as a confusing veil, and more with

that kind of myth we secrete as with a gland in the brain. How stories

go; how they turn out... In my story, we saved accountability,

ultimately by leaving it as the name for what was to replace

accountability. This leaves open the possibility of someone who will see

fit to extend its range back from our processes (where it seemed to be

more acceptable because now under our control) to the police and their

allies (Order), because in saying everything bad we could think about

the idea in practice, we left unchanged its status as Good. This has

less to do, then, with an incontrovertible master narrative (we were

indeed able to say we were against accountability) and more about the

slow and silent work of gregariousness and repetition on behalf of a

morality it is hard to think of, or outside of.

A conclusion about margarine-words: most of the time our speech cannot

separate itself from what has been captured by the category of the Good.

When we speak in such a way as to repel away from a word associated with

the good (crossing out as “critique”), its magnetic force will attract

either that same word, or another, to do very similar work (continuing

to use the crossed-out word or a euphemistic variant).

One might well ask what a different outcome for the workshop could have

been. Maybe none. Maybe we have them just to state problems. One could

well consider that many anarchist gatherings happen primarily to make

possible a kind of cathartic venting, especially for those who are less

than activists or prefer to avoid meetings, which have their own ritual

catharsis. But I doubt this would satisfy most. We move on to ask how to

shut down Our Operation Margarine. A radical proposal might have been:

let us stop using the terms justice and accountability Moratorium! What

would happen if we really could be disciplined enough to abandon these

words, or any of our other margarine-words? Not an escape from myth, or

from morality, certainly. For a group to choose to eject a word or words

from its speech seems more like an experiment for a poetry workshop than

a political operation.

The advocates of Order retain an arsenal of terms that we use otherwise

for their own purposes. They do not erase the word anarchy; they rather

use it in a way that we feel is either wrong or has the incorrect moral

valuation (i.e. responding either that’s not anarchy! or that is

anarchy, and it is good, not bad). To temporarily attempt to erase a

word would be to, temporarily, make it powerful, attractive,

interesting... To permanently erase a word? First, words do not show up

in the dictionary with the dagger-cross next to them because of anyone’s

conscious action. That is the great work of collectives, one thing you

can count on the masses for: anonymous forgetting... Second, it is

preposterous to think the milieu’s ban on a word could have any lasting

effect on anyone not involved. The milieu (our gray space) is porous,

characterized by constant entry and exit; the ban would never work,

because it would have to be constantly announced. This repetition would

amount to graduating the terms to the status of negatively charged

margarine-words.

Beyond these practical problems of usage, accountability, like all

margarine-words, is not just replaceable by euphemisms, but is itself a

stand-in for other words we are more likely to avoid (we and the police

and their allies) for some reason or another—guilt, for example. We can

continue to play the game of replacing one word with another while the

underlying morality changes very little if at all, and do so for the

most part beyond anyone’s purview. Our Operation Margarine, or something

like it, is probably a major aspect of how these margarine-words get

circulated in and out of fashion as they do, part of our larger tennis

match with Order, which might be more pessimistically described as

Order’s tennis match with itself. From the point of view of such

pessimism, which is to some extent the necessary point of view of the

milieu, perhaps the only way out is to play the replacing-game very

crudely, to play it backwards instead of forwards, using the wrong word

instead of the right one. Recall the Situationist-esque vocabulary that

was based on a pretend version of this game:

[]

and so on. If we cannot stop saying accountability, we might as well

call it guilt, mismatching behavior and speech. Later this year we can

talk about Evil, because the mismatch, the glaring, and, for many,

unpleasant contrast, is what is really at stake. Guilt is indeed the

relatively true feeling or desideratum hidden behind accountability, but

saying so is worth our while only to disrupt. Our next step in this game

should not be to repeat ourselves, but to pass on to the more absurd

place. This is the logic of détournement and plagiarism, which sidesteps

the supposition that one can speak in earnest in such gatherings,

meetings, workshops, and so on. This play can also turn ugly, as

described in the pamphlet Cabal, Argot:

When arguing, it is preferential to argue for the sake of being

difficult. Semantics are absolutely worth fighting over.

Being difficult and other ludic, non-serious activities in our speech,

playing the replacing-game but doing so backwards and wrong, touting the

bad as the good and making the weaker argument the stronger, are the

only means we have so long as we remain in a more or less political

space. And often enough, we awaken to the fact that we have been forced

into such spaces. Fortunately, there are other spaces.

As I was in the course of writing this essay, an exchange between

Kristian Williams and Crimethinc. appeared addressing topics close to

what I’ve been discussing here.[3] Setting out from Orwell’s

denunciation of vices in political speech and writing, Williams aptly

points out a range of words quite similar to what I have been calling

margarine-words. About such vague jargon he notes:

People who write this sort of thing may have some general idea of what

they are trying to say—but they needn’t have.

I was pleased to see the very word that first triggered some of these

thoughts noted in his article:

“Accountability,” “community,” “solidarity,” and “freedom” are used, in

the overwhelming number of cases, simply as markers to signify things we

like or favor.

Agreed. What I think I am adding to this, what Williams does not

discuss, is that the “things we like or favor” are held together not by

vague agreement but also by an undiscussed moral fabric. Presenting the

problem as a problem of shoddy writing and vague speech is deceptive. He

comes closer when he writes of the jargon:

The words serve instead to indicate a kind of group loyalty, an

ideological border between our side and the other side: we believe this,

and they don’t. Or rather: we talk in this way and say this sort of

thing; they talk in some other way, and say some other sort of thing.

Again, agreed, but rather than being concerned with a contrast between

jargon that says little and a supposedly attainable speech or writing

that is both political and communicative, I respond that the jargon is

not just a bad choice, but in some important sense a condition (of being

a political subject, our neurotic speech as such; of our time, the

Spectacle, about which more later). It is also important to note that

what Williams is pointing out here is mainly to be noticed in speech,

and only derivatively in writing.

I said margarine-words were not just jargon terms, but slogans, compact

phrases, sometimes whole fragments of speech. To their ready

instrumentality I can now add the trait that reading Williams made me

realize was missing: fear. Margarine-words mobilize fear; they result

from a fearful impression, and their use perpetuates that same fear. The

flight away from that fear could result in adopting a different set of

margarine-words (and attempting to frighten the frighteners: turf-war as

debate), or developing a taste for mutant speech or even acid-words.

I suppose I am more pessimistic than either Williams or Crimethinc., but

I will agree with the latter when they write

if we stay within the bounds of language that is widely used in this

society, we will only be able to reproduce consensus reality, not

challenge it

and (this is of equal importance):

those who are convinced that they speak precisely—yet see imprecision

virtually everywhere they look—rarely communicate well with others.

That’s not how communication works. It is a mutual undertaking, for

which rulebooks are no more useful than they are for any other kind of

voluntary relationship.

In any case, when Williams repeats Orwell’s “principle”,

Let the meaning choose the word, and not the other way about

and his six rules for English prose, adding

were there a contemporary anarchist style guide, nearly all of these

rules would be reversed,

it is easy enough to agree. But that is because I take Orwell’s rules as

an excellent means to dismantle the imagined style guide (of anarchists,

of activists, of leftists, of identity politicians, of many others).

That, however, is the limit of their usefulness. For it is not really a

question of better writing in a space where so few read and even less

write. The tensions at work in our speech will not be resolved by

codifying written language, or even improving its style.

That is why it is telling that Crimethinc. returns to speech.

Questioning the normality that margarine-words depend on and reproduce,

and the communication that can only be assumed as given and available by

the frightened, the path to mutant speech is another road to what

Crimethinc. calls a mutual undertaking; and the challenge to reality is

the path to acid-words, speech and writing beyond hope and fear,

“if it really is dangerous.”

Part 2: Amoral

Beneath the poetry of the texts,

there is the actual poetry,

without form and without text.

— Antonin Artaud

Mutant Speech

The preceding is mostly a critique of the continued use of words whose

significance is exhausted by the context they are caught in. I am now

led to an argument in favor of words that function differently, the

mutant speech I’ve already had occasion to reference. DĂ©tournement is

sometimes a sign of being trapped, and at other times the operation of

those who are capable of entering another space. It depends on whether

one regards the overall effect as purely destructive, or whether the new

content generated in moments of negation and obfuscation is of any, even

temporary, use.

A kind of ludic strategy unfolds in the second case, an idiom

characterized not by the oily morality of margarine-words but by the

attraction and repulsion of mana-words. Mutant speech, the strange

constructions formed when mana-words are assembled into talk, is another

form the compulsion to repeat may take. It is, on the whole, more

conscious and deliberate than the repetition of margarine-words; it

appears at the edge of politics, there where it spills over into the

anti- and a-political.

Mana-words are the seemingly untranslatable terms that anthropologists,

philosophers and other theorists invent or radically repurpose, their

clumsy or graceful neologisms, and their redeployment of ordinary words

from living and dead languages. Mutant speech is recognizable in that

its repetitions are not of the familiar margarine-words, but citations

of more or less rare mana-words. Mutant speech is not just the use of

mana-words judged competent by experts and specialists, but encompasses

an entire range of hesitations, creative mistakes, more or less willful

misinterpretations, and qualifications that betray, sometimes, a

hyperconsciousness of language, and, at other times, a kind of psychotic

break-out from the neurotic repetition of margarine-words. This last

phenomenon could be described as a successful but involuntary

détournement of margarine-words as described earlier.

Our action-oriented milieu tends on the whole to respond badly to

mana-words unless they are old and familiar (often in the process of

becoming margarine-words). In our gray space many are not comfortable

with mutant speech, preferring what they take to be ordinary language,

which always includes a set of socially or sub-culturally approved

margarine-words. When mutant speech arises in their presence, or when

reading presents them with too many mana-words, many immediately hurl

the accusation of abstraction, and some also deliver a judgment of

complicity with oppressive institutions. As to the accusation, first,

mana-words are not necessarily abstract. Abstraction is rare, and that’s

what is desirable about acceding to it; mana-words are rare as well but

only sometimes abstract. At one point potlatch was a mana-word, as was

mana itself, which gave me the idea (Mauss glosses it as “spiritual

force”). Nothing especially abstract about them, just the novelty of

their appearance in our language. In the case of truly abstract words,

such as singularity, no one really knows what abstraction is or does; we

have precious few opportunities to discover what it can do as a

linguistic operation. I have already outlined why and how an activist or

actionist would respond to it with hostility. Part of the way

margarine-words operate is such that many reserve the right to declare

that their speech (e.g a word like people or community) is not abstract,

while other terms (e.g. biopower) are. This is more or less willfully

misinterpreting the rarity of the word’s appearance (which in many cases

signals precisely the novelty or fragile instability of mutant speech)

as the only index of its present and future purchase or effects. As for

the judgment of institutional complicity, such a reaction is obvious

enough to predict: anyone who is trained to read or speak in an academic

setting (usually the institution in question) is taken to respond

primarily to that social/work space and only secondarily to the milieu.

Be that as it may, it seems to me that an individual’s allegiances are

very important when deciding whether to collaborate with, trust, or

befriend them, and not very important at all in appraising their speech

or writing in its sheer functioning or manifestation. But then those

concerned would have to allow themselves to be drawn (or not) by the

mana-words themselves instead of trying to determine what team their

user is on. Rather than a lazy dismissal of terms due to their

abstraction, one could simply opt out of their circulation and not use

them, sparing the rest of their circle their ressentiment-in-language.

It is not so different to say: I will not use this term than to say: I

do not enjoy this poetry.

The idea that what is said in mutant speech can be always translated

into the talk of margarine-words is ultimately a prejudice in favor of

the latter that costs us the potentials of the former. Though it is not

always activists that do it, its most stereotypical form is the

activists’ bid to translate other forms of speech and writing into what

they deem ordinary language (whatever is meant by this, it is a medium

for margarine-words). The accusation of abstraction amounts to

preparation for such translation, since margarine-words are equally

likely to be abstract, their apparent familiarity coming down to the

greater rate of their repetition, their more successful function as

passwords or codewords. I would recommend to those that demand

translation into common terms that they merely respond to mutant speech

with I don’t understand this speech, which should mean something not too

different from I don’t like this music or this poetry.

Someone who finds they hate all music or all poetry and feels that it

can and should be expressed in another form, or not be expressed at all,

might in that moment consider the silence they are wishing for, as the

best possible form of what otherwise has to be taken to mean I do not

know what music is, or I have no true experience of poetry. As saying so

would usually be taken as a request for acquaintance or explanation, the

most I can recommend to one who finds themselves in such a relation is

not forced translation but silence. About which more further on.

The rarity of mana-words, their degree of abstraction, is tied to

extraction procedures. It is a rare thing to be able to extract a word

from its context and redeploy it. In its extracted form it can become

useless in its former context. The function and use of extraction is

precisely this newly generated specificity and orientation, which can

also be a kind of studied uselessness. The détournement of

margarine-words takes place when speakers recognize the speech situation

into which they have been placed, or into which others are trying to

place them, and begin to speak from the perspective of the extraction of

terms (sometimes even hinting at a possible extraction will do to

destabilize the situation).

When one finally accedes to mutant speech, it is easy enough for another

to point out that such speech, what is called its theory, cannot be put

into practice. Indeed, that uselessness is precisely the desired

interfering effect that the détournement operated. It is more difficult

to understand in what sense the circulation of extracted mana-words is

itself a practice of language, a different kind of repetition. The

mana-words so circulated (cited alongside practices) always generate

confusion. If they do not, it is because they are in the process of

becoming, or have already become, new margarine-words. So people are

right that abstract concepts, and mutant speech generally, cannot be put

into practice without a process of interpretation and concretization.

This process could render them margarine-words, or it could produce

bizarre new practices (but bizarre practices could also appear on their

own with no forethought on anyone’s part).

One might note, for example, that it is precisely mana-words that never

return to us from propaganda machines in spectacular forms.

Margarine-words are shared with and to a large extent take their motive

power from the mass and its leaders. Some will always be engaged in

saying what freedom, justice, and hope really mean, and it will always

be a waste of time. These words do too much work for the mass and its

leaders in a society like ours. Mana-words are non-recuperable precisely

because they have no generalized use. That is why I write mana-words and

not theory, placing them besides what is most compelling about poetic

speech and argots of every sort, as three instances of linguistic

creativity too underdetermined to reliably motivate and parallel power

operations. Mana-words are effective situationally, for some people, in

some ways. They are repeated, but not on condition of being recognized.

They do not always assume contect, but often require context to be

established in the real time of speech—mutant speech.

Everything I’ve written on mutant speech so far has been an engagement

with the imagined (always imagined and imaginary) ordinary speakers of a

language, those whose life is a perpetual risk of margarine-words. On

the other side, those who have opted for a less ordinary path, familiar

with mutant speech, exhibit different relations to mana-words. Mutant

speech could also be called queer speech, being close to what is

discussed in the journal bĂŠdan as

a force which can interrupt the domination of language over life

Though I would call that language Language, the ordinary Language with

its margarine-words. In bĂŠdan we read

We engage with language insofar as we can deploy it in service of the

body. We speak, we put word to paper in order to send a wink to those

with whom we have not yet or cannot at present conspire in a practice of

jouissance

Jouissance, parenthetically, being a perfect example of a mana-word.

Some take maximum pleasure in their repetition, enjoying an almost

uninterrupted flow of mana-words. Here I will resort to some analogies

that are less than analogies, along the bodily lines laid out in bĂŠdan,

to show that mutant speech does not just have to be more or less

successful communication. It is first of all attempted communion. Play

with mana-words is not unlike covering one’s body with water or make-up,

or fragrances or lotions, or also smearing oneself with a stream of

spit, cum, piss, or shit that one wishes were continuous. The criteria

at work here are aesthetic or hedonistic. Others are begged, sometimes

commanded (if the speaker or writer is a top), to smell, to feel the

mana-words. The speaker or writer appears for a second as they cover

themselves in these words-marks, smearing themselves and sometimes

smearing others. From the specialized and academic point of view, this

is the least competent kind of mutant speech; in the milieu, it is one

of the most common forms, the little dance some do when they first

become enamored with what we call theory.[4] It is repetition for its

own pleasurable sake, repetition discovered as a pleasurable event, the

breakdown of the passwords and codewords and joy in that failure.

A second form, more competent from the point of view of the specialists,

deploys the mana-words in baroque combinations and ornate arrangements.

The speaker or writer shows, not their smeared skin, but their entire

body as it approaches escape velocity... no ordinary language can catch

up to this theory machine. The repetition becomes communicative to an

extent, though the effects of extraction are still felt: this is

repetition with a difference. Though the more pedestrian critics cannot

distinguish between this spaceflight and the smearing, those who discern

the difference are left asking: why these terms and not others? Why

these theorists? The recession of this mutant speech from what is most

oppressive about margarine-words is clear enough: but who is satisfied

with a merely reactive strategy, with one more critique? Is anything

really gained by sublimating the pleasure of sloppiness?

A third form of mutant speech would be to generate the mana-words

oneself. But that would already be something else, translation or

creation. In short, no longer repeating. I call those words, as they are

created, or when they are recharged with mana, acid-words.

Jabberwocky, the language

The language Jabberwocky came up, as I recall, in a conversation some

years ago, one among many conversations with anarchists where a

discomfort with language was manifest. I later diagnosed this discomfort

as an anxiety. I only remember some of the participants, many of whom I

had just met that night, and, as usual, I think more people were

listening than speaking.

How the discomfort was manifest that night, what repeats in such anxious

conversations, is not difficult to outline. First, there seems to be an

ambient impatience, some frustration with language as such. This can

begin with a few words on the language of an enemy, with the

vilification of a politician or a onetime friend, but it eventually

extends to anyone’s use of language. From bullshit to ideology; from

dishonesty or disingenuousness to a generalized paralysis of expression.

Here’s the second part: someone will make an implicit or explicit

reference to a certain primitivist refusal of language, or what some

call “symbolic culture” generally, a kind of reference to its existence,

without taking it on—for good reason. As these conversations often show,

primitivism is something more like a commonplace reference than a stated

position... Really, what is there to debate here? For a few engaged

interlocutors, it is easy enough to include someone named John Zerzan in

the twentieth-century philosophy category in Wikipedia, or to write an

article criticizing his “philosophy of language”, but this kind of

classification and attempted engagement completely misses the affective

withdrawal of the not-so-thought-out refusal. The gesture I am writing

about is the gesture of the many who feel primitivists are right about

something, while not wanting to discuss it as a matter of philosophy or

theory. The point— the symptom—is the feeling, the acceleration of the

refusal. That is why, finally, there is some vague sense in the

conversation, if it gets this far, that the refusal of language is part

of a long list of refusals, and the reference to language is one more

way of talking about Everything or The Totality or Capital or

Civilization, etc. The conversation I recall was an unremarkable example

except for one detail. Perhaps in jest, one of the speakers said that he

advocates “speaking in Jabberwocky” as a way out of the Language he

knows.

I think he meant that Jabberwocky, the language, is not an other to

English, but an other to Language—to language as we know it. “Speaking

in Jabberwocky” takes the refusal of Language into account; it is in

fact a hypothetical practice emerging from this refusal. And in this

refusal I imagine a demand that repetition, conscious or unconscious,

dull or creative, come to a halt. Language appears to them as part of a

Totality that cannot be simply sidestepped, because some urge to speak

is inevitable, and Language is precisely the government of those urges,

their guidance, standardization, branding, and so on. But since these

individuals will not be governed, and since, so desperation says,

eventually all speech decays into margarine-words, and perhaps that is

all it ever was, they conclude that we should just somehow stop. Without

positing an immediate way out (or a way out to immediacy), “speaking in

Jabberwocky” intimates something else: what one could do with that

inescapable urge is to speak in a way that is nonsensical. What was my

interlocutor getting at with this reference to nonsense? A parodic

speech, a parody of speaking? Speech in a very different kind of code,

in an invented language?

I am not sure. It would have been easy enough to object that he

explained the idea using ordinary English and not Jabberwocky. I would

rather emphasize—what has made this conversation stick in my memory—that

when seeking a way out of Language (as Spectacle, with all of the

implied traits of Spectacle—totalizing, mediating, representative,

communicative—that speech, in short, that places us on the side of

instituted authority and authority to come), he gave it the name of a

poem. The name of the language is the title of a poem; and the title of

the poem is a nonsense word. He invoked for me, that is to say, the

studied play with language that poetry can involve.

To get to acid-words, I set out from this insight. It is perhaps a

paradox, or maybe just the weird way things go, that the greatest

refusal of the urge to repeat becomes the motor of creation, of

differentiation. To get to acid-words, I take inspiration from a poetic

outlook, not to recommend poetry in one form or another, but rather to

speak as one who has been transformed in his relation to language by

poetic speech and writing. This is something other than a defense of

art, much less of literary institutions or canons. I am less concerned

to defend the arts than to acknowledge the fact of their various

existences, valued for some, dangerous and despised for others, as one

aspect of that inevitability of speech I referred to above. I would now

recast it as an inevitability of expression. On the side of writing,

this fact is greater than literature, though literature flows from it;

on the side of speech, it includes all sorts of symbolic and linguistic

creativity, including the anonymous productions of slang, argots, cant,

and various other oral joys: the poesy that happens as if by accident

(though what is accidental is knowing it is poetic, knowing it as

poetry).

“Jabberwocky”: the poem, and then the imagined language. The poem first:

it was of course the first stanza, identical to the last, that my

interlocutor had in mind. You have probably seen it:

’Twas brillig, and the slithy toves

Did gyre and gimble in the wabe:

All mimsy were the borogoves,

And the mome raths outgrabe.

It appears in Lewis Carroll’s Through the Looking-Glass, where Alice

first encounters it as a mirror-image. Upon reading it, she remarks “it

seems to fill my head with ideas—only I don’t know exactly what they

are.” The five stanzas between the first and last, though they all

include nonsense words, follow a kind of adventure narrative.

Beware the Jabberwock, my son!

The jaws that bite, the claws that catch!

Beware the Jubjub bird, and shun

The frumious Bandersnatch!

And so on. Gillian Beer observes:

The syntax in ‘Jabberwocky’ is stable, although the semantics are odd,

so the story is stable though its elements are obscure.

A little less than twenty years earlier, Carroll had published the

first/last stanza as a “curious fragment” under the title “Stanza of

Anglo-Saxon Poetry.” Definitions for the eleven key words followed; in

Through the Looking-Glass, the anthropomorphic egg Humpty Dumpty offers

similar (but not identical) definitions to Alice.

In sum: though an exemplar of nonsense verse, “Jabberwocky” is hardly

nonsense in the usual sense of the word. A narrative may be discerned in

it, and tone, and feeling; and the words that seem to make that

discernment difficult are not beyond explanation—explanation that the

author did not even leave to the reader. As Beer writes: stable syntax,

strange semantics. Additionally, the prehistory of the first/last stanza

as a fake sample of old English shows Carroll’s concern, in his

construction of portmanteau words for nonsense effects, with real

linguistic history and processes of word formation. So what strikes us

about “Jabberwocky” is not just the initial shock of nonsense, but also

the pleasure of inventiveness, and the related pleasure of commentary on

that invention.

Jabberwocky, the language, would then have some or all of these traits:

first, speaking and hearing it is pleasurable for most: it is patterned

and tuneful, sharing some traits of language as we know it (or whatever

dominant Language it exists in initial relation to) and some traits of

language as it could have been. Jabberwocky makes enough sense that

speakers/readers of Language can follow a story in Jabberwocky, while

still feeling the need to call it nonsense. Upon closer examination,

speakers/readers of Language will determine that Jabberwocky can’t be a

complete other to Language. It is not an other Language; it dramatizes

something of the coming-into-being of language itself. At the same time,

in showing this coming-into-being it is recognized as nonsense and

designates sense itself as the precarious factor in speech. Here again I

would essay an analogy that is something other than an analogy and say

that what is dramatized here is the image of an animal that speaks, as

in myth, as in fable, as in reality. In the essay in bédan I’ve already

cited, there is a discussion of birds in Edelman’s theory and

Hitchcock’s film, indomitable birds that symbolize “our struggle”:

in describing this domestication of the world by meaning, Edelman is

borrowing heavily from Hocquenghem’s understanding of the body as

colonized by language through the process of domestication. Edelman, one

last time: “Thus the birds in their coming lay to waste the world

because they so hate the world that will not accept them that they, in

turn will accept nothing but the destruction of the world.”

The writer in bĂŠdan concludes:

Here we must understand ourselves as the birds or else the text offers

us nothing.

We are the birds, the animals that speak. Which is to say that

Jabber-wocky, the language, is not only a pastime, but also something

corrosive, destructive, the vehicle of a bodily shift, yes, as with

mana-words. It is deployed not only conspiratorially with the aim of

orgiastic communion, but to destroy the world (though I would write

World, as I write Language).

Jabberwocky, the language, mirrors Language, and it recedes from it,

carving out another space for itself; it recedes as it mirrors. What is

it showing in its reversal? A fact.

This fact could be stated as follows:

Poesy happens.

Or:

Acid-words are possible.

The inevitability of language, which is experienced as the urge to

speak, to sing, to write, to mark—it sometimes manifests as poesy. Gary

Snyder wrote

language rises unbidden.

The other ways language manifests are partially relevant here, but what

is truly remarkable is that something like poesy happens, not as

literature, not as a secondary aesthetic or artistic consideration, but

foremost as the unbidden arrival of language—of speech, of the marks

that become writing. Showing us our ancestors speaking exclusively in a

poesy that preceded the distinction between literature and myth (as

though gripped, at the dawn of language, by that indistinct firstness,

its fascination), Vico suggested that poesy might be the event of

language.

people living in the world’s childhood were by nature sublime poets

Or more precisely:

in all nations speech in verse preceded speech in prose.

But not necessarily the advent of what, in all those conversations, we

felt the need to reject. Not Language. Of course the history that

follows the Vician poetic dawn, the history of civilization, more

recently of capital and Spectacle, is the history of Language, of the

mediating image, of representation. There is indeed a poetry written in

and as Language. Poetry in service of the state; surrealism in service

of the revolution. (Debord called the Spectacle the epic poem of the

commodity’s competition with other commodities.) But there is also—there

has never ceased being— poetry in the service of nothing, or in the

service of itself, new and irresponsible, another image, another speech,

and that is what I think the reference to “Jabberwocky” amounted to in

my imagination, and that is how this mask came to life. From there I

write to acid-words.

Spectacle/Language

Debord wrote of the Spectacle that it is a social relation between

persons mediated by images. Here mediated renders mediatisé, which must

be both the mediation philosophers speak of, the forceful introduction

of a third term into what one would otherwise call an immediate

relation, and also the way something or someone is forcefully placed

into a medium, into the media. Or, more weirdly, the forceful irruption

of a medium in a person or relation between people. In the former case,

since mediation is often assimilated to alienation, a tremendous amount

of metaphysical and even moral consequences seem to follow from

generalized mediation, as separation from the real, the authentic, or

the genuine. In the latter, which could be rendered mediatization, we

are considering separation itself: separation as a cleavage not only

between us but in each of us; as ruined communion and forced

communication; as the taxing propagation of detached images.

To dismantle the Spectacle has usually meant to undo mediation, its

technological or at least material work of representation, in some way;

a good deal has been written about how to do that. Here I would like to

consider the undoing, or at least troubling, of mediatization. It is

notable that Debord structured Society of the Spectacle in a markedly

different manner than his earlier Situationist texts. At first, the

constructed situation was to be

built on the ruins of the spectacle

holding out the promise (to some, a threat to others) of expressive

communion, perhaps of an immediate relation. This construction was up to

the individual or group as creator. In Society of the Spectacle, as

explicated in at the climax of a dense historical narrative, the undoing

of the reign of representation is a strictly political affair, the

business of the workers’ councils. Here I, too, will invoke history: the

decades that it has taken some to become unsure that workers’ councils

could be the unbinding of spectacular mediatization (and so spectacular

society) or, more generally, that political solutions will unbind

political problems without setting the cycle of recuperation back into

motion. We who feel this way are at an impasse.

Debord also wrote of the Spectacle

the unification it achieves is nothing but an official language of

universal separation.

More recently Giorgio Agamben stepped forward to amplify Debord on this

point, adding:

Today... it is clear that the spectacle is language, the very

communicativity or linguistic being of humans ... in the spectacle our

own linguistic nature comes back to us inverted.

There are at least two ways to understand this statement. One is that it

is a clarification, because the Spectacle has always been Language. The

other is that it is written to register a historical shift, in the sense

that something has happened in or to the Spectacle in the course of the

decades between 1967 and 1989. It could also just be a provocation. In

any case, for those committed to talk of Spectacle and disruption of

Spectacle to pass over to this interpretation would mean apprehending

the political impasse (impossibility of situations, absence of councils)

as something that unfolds in our speech.

Indeed, the principal form this impasse takes today is the frustration

or anxiety about language, usually in the background of our speech (most

apparent in those conversations not governed by margarine-words). The

impasse is manifest in the borderline nonsensical primitivist allegation

that language is the first ideology, a crude translation of the idea of

Spectacle as mediation, both as explicit claim (rare), and reference or

implicit awareness (common). In these uses of the idea of Spectacle,

what is principally accessed is its aiming-at-the-totality, which is how

Language earns its capital L. We come to such an idea, as Debord perhaps

did with images, by first aiming at the totality, all of it. We come to

the anxiety, the primitivists to their refusal, by asking how to cross

it all out. Here is an example, less hysterical than most, again from

bĂŠdan:

All discourse consists of nothing but an endless series of affirmations

no more insightful than remarking that water is wet, phrased in more or

less interesting and more or less roundabout ways. The rest are lies.

Aiming-at-the-totality, we get what I’ve denominated Language. The

endless series of affirmations (yes, yes, yes...) suggests for me a

representational language caught in its tautology, as margarine-words

wait to be affirmed (code words or slogans to be said yes to) or are

offered as ways of being said yes to (passwords), as images are produced

in a way completely determined by the medium in which they anticipate

circulation. Expressing ourselves with such words or such images may or

may not be mediation, but it is certainly mediatization.

As I have noted, the most common attempted escape from margarine-words,

mutant speech (and the less common one, acid-words), leads to a staging

of this anxiety (as incomprehension or hostility from readers or

listeners, as the speaker or writer’s own anxiety before the risk of

meaninglessness). From the point of view of Language, these escape

attempts are the incorrect way to play the game and will always register

as wrong moves, or morally improper gestures (lies). Those who adopt

this point of view, bureaucrats or not, would push us back to the stale

comforts of small talk or private exchanges with our intimates, those

little spaces we suppose we control—and this fantasy of control over

private life, true only for a few, is precisely meant to remind us that

public or political space is completely covered, altogether occupied, by

an impenetrable web of images, representations, or... words. When they

arise unbidden we are to recognize, not words, but the web, the medium.

Suppose resistance is possible. What does the undoing of the Spectacle

mean when one considers that the Spectacle “is” language, is Language?

First option: one could hazard decentering an idea and practice of

Language tied first of all to nationalism, to a standardized grammar,

secondly to a familiar, largely unconscious cultural conservatism (“the

old language is good, the new language is bad”), and third, these two

wrapped up in a mediatized dissemination of standard terms and usages.

Decentering it, we no longer have Language but languages—not just in the

sense of the thousands of world languages but also as a congeries of

language-games, speech genres, little discourses and narratives within

any given language. The idea or representation of Language breaks down

into languages, but languages themselves splinter into dialects, slangs,

argots, and so on. This is the sense of the project of accelerated

fragmentation set up in Cabal, Argot: if we are convinced that

in-group/out-group dichotomies are the tension that will tear society

apart. Disparate groups who do not understand each other are destined to

become separate

then we see that their advocacy of difficult argument is also a kind of

test, a test of who understands (gets it, the joke or reference) and who

does not—the real-time, in-person formation of the inand out-groups. And

so, understandably,

we choose to associate with, or support, particular factions, particular

groups, or particular persons. By always taking the side of those within

our in-group, we repudiate the representation of the social order that

maintains capital, the state, and its technics.

First option, then: the groupuscles and their cant.

Second option: one could save the workers’ councils strategy by

rendering them as communications councils, working on the premise that

language is for communication, and trying to do it right. This is the

solution of Society of the Spectacle, but also of an article in

Internationale Situationniste 8, “All the King’s Men” (the title,

incidentally, being a reference to Caroll):

In-group languages—those of informal groupings of young people; those

that contemporary avant-garde currents develop for their internal use as

they grope to define themselves; those that in previous eras were

conveyed by way of objective poetic production, such as trobar clus and

dolce stil nuovo—are more or less successful efforts to attain a direct,

transparent communication, mutual recognition, mutual accord. But such

efforts have been confined to small groups that were isolated in one way

or another. The events and celebrations they created had to remain

within the most narrow limits. One of the tasks of revolution is to

federate such poetic “soviets” or communication councils in order to

initiate a direct communication everywhere that will no longer need to

resort to the enemy’s communication network (that is, to the language of

power) and will thus be able to transform the world according to its

desire.

To the question: how do workers’ councils undo spectacular

representation? the answer is: because they are communications councils,

poetic soviets. They federate the very groups that the cabalists want

separate and create a kind of communicational dual power. This idea is

also legible in Mohammed Khayati’s “Captive Words,” published in

Internationale Situationniste 10:

It is thus essential that we forge our own language, the language of

real life, against the ideological language of power, the terrain of

justification of all the categories of the old world. From now on we

must prevent the falsification or recuperation of our theories.

It is not clear how this is is to be done other than through the process

of fragmentation-federation suggested by the anonymous author of “All

the King’s Men.” Khayati concludes by calling for a Situationist

dictionary, a linguistic federation tool,

a sort of code book enabling one to decipher the news and rend the

ideological veils that cover reality. We will give possible translations

that will enable people to grasp the different aspects of the society of

the spectacle, and show how the slightest signs and indications

contribute to maintaining it. In a sense it will be a bilingual

dictionary, since each word has an “ideological” meaning for power and a

real meaning that we think corresponds to real life in the present

historical phase.

Second option: the councils and their dictionary.

Third option: one might consider unmediatized life or activity somehow

beyond Language or Language games. The Spectacle is Language, Language

is the Spectacle, insofar as our speech and our writing are bound to

this representational form. Part of that is being forced to speak,

expected to confess, and desiring it ourselves too—endlessly botched

silence. Language rises unbidden... at the incitement of a power

relation that demands your participation. We are still thinking about a

mode of relating here—what is called, and is, and is not, representation

and communication. But the Spectacle is not Language because language is

representational and informational; the Spectacle is Language as

representational and informational. Forced communication, excluded

communion, botched, endlessly botched, silence.

Interestingly, some version of this approach is also legible in the two

aforementioned Situationist essays. If communications councils are their

major theme, this is their minor theme. Khayati discusses détournement

in a way that anticipates the cabalists:

The critique of the dominant language, the détournement of it, is going

to become a permanent practice of the new revolutionary theory.

[...]

Détournement, which Lautréamont called plagiarism, confirms the thesis,

long demonstrated by modern art, that words are insubordinate, that it

is impossible for power to totally recuperate created meanings, to fi x

an existing meaning once and for all.

And this dĂ©tournement is itself possible because of the “insubordination

of words”, which Khayati ties to poetry—not poetry as we know it, but an

abolished poetry:

Modern poetry (experimental, permutational, spatialist, surrealist or

neodadaist) is the antithesis of poetry, it is the artistic project

recuperated by power. It abolishes poetry without realizing it, living

off its own continual self-destruction.

The author of “All the Kings’ Men” proposes the other available meaning

of poetry; in fact, the entire piece is in the main about another way to

grasp poetry:

What is poetry if not the revolutionary moment of language, inseparable

as such from the revolutionary moments of history and from the history

of personal life?

[...]

poetry must be understood as direct communication within reality and as

real alteration of this reality. It is liberated language, language

recovering its richness, language breaking its rigid significations and

simultaneously embracing words and music, cries and gestures, painting

and mathematics, facts and acts.

There is, again, the warning against what is known as poetry:

One thing we can be sure of is that fake, officially tolerated poetry is

no longer the poetic adventure of its era. Thus, whereas surrealism in

the heyday of its assault against the oppressive order of culture and

daily life could appropriately define its arsenal as “poetry without

poems if necessary,” for the SI it is now a matter of a poetry

necessarily without poems.

[...]

Realizing poetry means nothing less than simultaneously and inseparably

creating events and their language.

And how is that to be done? Again, fragmentation-federation... But what

concerns me more here is that these texts come close to the position

that, not poetry as we know it, but something importantly akin to it,

what I called poesy above, what a writer in bĂŠdan calls lying, is a kind

of primordial activity that can be tapped into or unleashed as the

creation of

events and their language.

In a society like ours we do this through détournement, understood as a

critical, destructive engagement with bureaucratic language or the

language of power, a

language that cannot and need not be confirmed by any previous or

supracritical reference

The other, corrosive, side of acid-words. Not acid as hallucinatory

creativity, but as corrosive, destructive nonsense on the way to

silence.

Third option: [someone(?)] and their silence.

What I have written here concerns language, then, but only sometimes as

Spectacle, as Language. Sometimes one is bound to spectacular Language:

In analyzing the spectacle we are obliged to a certain extent to use the

spectacle’s own language, in the sense that we have to operate on the

methodological terrain of the society that expresses itself in the

spectacle

wrote Debord. Fortunately there are other things to do than analyze! If

I were to remain in the language of Spectacle, I would say that, yes,

one can sometimes unbind spectacular representation (and my sense of how

that can be done, acid-words, is indeed closer to a constructed

situation than to workers’ councils). But, unbinding representation,

beyond Language, we do not move beyond language as such. Here we must

face our collective anxiety about language. It will still arise

unbidden, incited by stranger forces than our human power games. Even in

our silence we participate in the semiosis at work in nature. And nature

has its own far more ominous silences to which we are not invited. It is

possible (which is not to say that it is probable) to use language in a

ludic manner; it is also possible to get used by language, to get played

by it or be in its play in a way that has nothing to do with being

represented or symbolized or representing or symbolizing. Something of

that sort was always at work in poesy. And this reciprocal use is

related to what the concept of Spectacle intends; in fact, it seems to

me to be its sheer possibility (that representation or symbolization

presupposes some other kind of language-play, another usage, as work

presupposes play or non-work generally).

Read Robert Duncan as he writes about an available shift in attitude,

the change from the feeling that poetic form is given to or imposed upon

experience—transforming matter into content—to the feeling that poetic

form is found in experience—that content is discovered in matter. The

line of such poetry is not free in the sense of being arbitrary but free

in its search and self-creation, having the care and tension (attention)

almost of the ominous...

Everything I have for the sake of convenience called Language,

everything we have (out of what is now almost habit) called Spectacle,

corresponds perhaps to the first feeling, which disturbs matter

endlessly. It translates the matter of speech (poesy) into a

communicable and informational form, botching communion, ruining

silence. If it were only a genre, a game to opt into, a dream from which

we could still awaken... or turn the page on to see what is next in the

anthology... By contrast, the feeling that the form is found in

experience, and content in matter, allows for the care and tension that

are needed to make and share acid-words. Part of their operation is to

destroy Language, but this is not what they are for. They are not for

anything. This is the freedom of the line sensed by some poets, and also

what is also ominous in acid-words: in their play they do not deny or

elude silence.

For words are not thoughts we have but ideas in things, and the poet

must attend not to what he means to say but to what what he says means.

—To turn away from those who, in a doubly hostile gesture, did not care

that levy wrote, and later demanded of him to explain what he meant. So

you hide, take acid-words... (It is pleasant to imagine Duncan

whispering sweetly in levy’s ear, calming him momentarily, a kindly

apparition in the course of the trip. To remind him he took acid so as

not to have to take acid.)

It remains to ask who is capable of saying they are poets, and why. But

as that is something to discuss elsewhere, I will return for the

destructive fun of it to talking about anarchists.

There is no reason to bother with saying you are an anarchist or talking

to others if you are not seeking another relation to the world, to life,

to thinking, and to language. In this essay I have been especially

concerned with the relation to language, but all of these relations are

implicated, are at stake. The other relation that we are seeking

involves a paradox: we are so concerned with ending the relation we do

have with world, life, thinking, and language that in the undoing of the

other term we are brought to consider the possibility that the relation

itself is impossible. I mean that in some sense we cease to think that

there is a World at all, that Life can become a pernicious concept, that

Thinking is revealed as not being ours or for us. Following this

treacherous path it may turn out that there is simply nothing to be said

about language itself, about Language. We are left with this strange

idea of crossed-out Language instead of a theory or concept of language.

And yet we find many who speak about language in general, assimilating

it to Language. They have not earned the fullness of our attention. They

would do better to listen than to speak—to attend, that is, to the

speech practices of those around them, and eventually to their own

words, just as he who says he hates poetry or music is best invited to

read or listen and not to further discussion.

That is to say, if a word or phrase is not taken to the limit where it

is (at least in passing) shown to be devoid of sense or purchase, then

we will remain beholden to a liberal, or relativist, or pluralist

sensibility, the hope for better margarine-words or an unmarked and

universal ordinary language that all can share in equally. Mana-words

sometimes go to the limit, but usually in cabalistic settings.

Acid-words always go to the limit: to discover or invent them is to stop

repeating, to repeat with a difference, to risk nonsense; and to arrive

at nonsense is to approach silence or, often enough, to become silent.

And silence is beyond difference and repetition.

A word is not necessarily the unit through which we encounter language.

A phrase or an entire discourse could bring us a happy insight as well.

However, word is the word I’ve retained for the insight-catalyst through

most of this writing; I think of each one as a shard, a fragment of an

impossible Totality, the nothingness of Language. After that happy

insight dawns, the discourse, the phrases, and, yes, a little word will

each remind you of its own plenitude. Fortunately, such memorabilia are

all that remains after acid-words do their delicate or grisly work. No

hoary nihilist theory of language will appear to conveniently repeat to

you what you already silently suspected: that sense is the most fragile

matter, a fleeting purchase. However, as a silent accompaniment to the

discourse, the phrases, and the little word, maybe there is this

nihilist idea of what language is not, that Language is not, witness to

its dissolution, along with world, life, and thought.

[1] For context on the discussion, see the zines

The Broken Teapot

,

Accounting for Ourselves

, and

Burning the Bridges They Are Building

[2] See “Operation Margarine” in Mythologies. I have modified the

translation. For example, I thought that Order did not need to be

qualified by Established.

[3] See the discussion online, or in the zine

Anarchism and the English Language/ English and the Anarchists’ Language

[4] McKenzie Wark calls this “low theory.” See his The Beach Beneath the

Street, and my comments in

“Ways in And Ways Out of the Situationist Labyrinth,”

The Anvil Review 4.