1994, The Making of Political Identities PDF
1994, The Making of Political Identities PDF
1994, The Making of Political Identities PDF
LUlTE PROI.OIiEE
c
Visual
The Making of
Political Identities
b Title
Edited by
Emesto Laclau
a
Editor
PHRONESIS
A series from Verso edited by
Emesto Laclau and ChantalMoufJe
There is today wide agreement that the left-wing project
is in crisis. New antagonisms have emerged - not only in
advanced capitalist societies but also in the Eastern bloc
and in the Third World - that require the reformulation
of the socialist ideal in terms of an extension and
deepening
of
democracy.
However,
serious
dis
Phronesis
The Making of
Political Identities
Edited by
ERNESTO LACLAU
VERSO
London New York
Verso
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
Contents
VIi
Acknowledgements
Introduction (Ernesto Laclau)
PART
11
Slavoj Z iiek
3
40
76
Rodolphe Gaschi
4
1 03
Claudia Hilb
PART II
1 15
Aletta]. Norval
6
138
Glenn Bowman
7
171
VI
CONTENTS
ZoEtan Szankay
10
205
233
Bobby Sayyid
Notes on Contributors
Index
264
287
289
Acknowledgements
vii
Introduction
Few people would today question that w e are living a t the epicentre o f a major
historical mutation. The sense of the change, however, is difficult to
determine, and one wonders to what extent the problems found in defining it
are not in themselves major indicators of what is changing.In a certain sense,
giving an external account of the mutation is rather simple. It amounts to
something like this: the end of the Cold War has also been the end of the
globalizing ideologies that had dominated the political arena since
1 945 .
These ideologies, however, have not been replaced by others that play the
same structural function; instead, their collapse has been accompanied by a
general decline of ideological politics. The discourse of both camps in the
Cold War has been, in this sense, a last version of the political ideology of
modernity: that is, the attempt to legitimate one's own ideology by presenting
it as a fulfilment of a universal task (whatever that might be). In a post-Cold
War world, on the contrary, we are witnessing a proliferation of particularistic
political identities, none of which tries to ground its legitimacy and its action in
a mission predetermined by universal history - whether that be the mission of
a universal class, or the notion of a privileged race, or an abstract principle.
Quite the opposite. Any kind of universal grounding is contemplated with
deep suspicion.
Two points are especially worth making in connection with this change.
The first is that the crisis of universalism does not simply rule the latter out of
existence, but opens the way to the very tangible emergence of its void, of what
we could call
INTRODUCTION
I N T R O DU C T I O N
from that of the destructuration of the social identities that the conflict would
bring about. For if all social conflict were, necessarily, to provoke a certain
destructuration of social identities, and if a conflict-free situation were, now,
incompatible with any form of society, it would follow that any social identity
would necessarily entail, as one of its dimensions, construction, and not simply
recognition. The key term for understanding this process of construction is
the psychoanalytic category of
at the root of any identity: one needs to identifY with something because there
is an originary and insurmountable lack of identity. In a variety of ways, all the
contributions to this volume address this process.
an
essays of this volume, one approves of the Law because it is Law, not because
it is rational. In a situation of radical disorganization there is a need for
an
order, and its actual contents become a secondary consideration. This means
that, between the ability of a certain order to become a principle of
identification and the actual contents of that order, there is no necessary link.
This, as we will see, has considerable consequences for the understanding of
the functioning of political logics.
The same conclusion we reached regarding the relationship identity/
identification is obtained if we concentrate on the political dimension of social
identities. AsI have argued elsewhere, our time period is one of an increasing
awareness of the political character embedded in the institution of all social
identity. The social world presents itself to us, primarily, as a sedimented
ensemble of social practices accepted at face value, without questioning the
founding acts of their institution. If the social world, however, is not entirely
defined in terms of repetitive, sedimented practices, it is because the social
always overflows the institutionalized frameworks of 'society', and because
social antagonisms show the inherent contingency of those frameworks. Thus
a dimension of construction and creation is inherent in all social practice. The
latter do not involve only repetition, but also reconstlUction.
Now, the clUcial question is how to conceive this constructive moment
which exceeds the repetitive possibilities opened by a sedimented social
framework. Does the latter provide the criteria to carry out acts of social inno
vation? If this were the case, if, that is to say, the solution of all social problems
were an algorithmic solution provided by the social itself, sedimented social
practices would have as something inherent to themselves the principle of
their own transformations. But if this were not the case, if historical innovation
I N T R O DU C T I O N
were
radical innovation,
and history could not appeal to any underlying logic or cunning of reason to
explain social change. Radical innovation, however, means radical
institution,
political'.
latter cannot appeal to anything in the social order that would operate as its
ground (otherwise it would not be radical), the act of institution can only have
its foundation in itself. Now, isn't this self-founding character (which is, as we
have seen, constitutive of the political as opposed to sedimented social
practices), not precisely the same as that of'identification' (as opposed to mere
identity)? If this is so, all political identity requires the
visibility
of the acts of
I N T R O DU C T I O N
universal values and opens the way to various kinds of xenophobic exclusiv
ism? That this is a real possibility is convincing enough, if only by taking a
general look over the current international scene. But I do not think that these
are the only alternatives. For the very emergence of highly particularistic
identities means that the particular groups will have to coexist with other
groups in larger communities, and this coexistence will be impossible without
the assertion of values that transcend the identities of all of them. The
defence, for instance, of the right of national minorities to self-determination
involves the assertion of a universal principle grounded in universal values.
These are not the values of a 'universal' group, as was the case with the
universalism of the past but, rather, of a universality that is the very result of
particularism. It is, in this sense, far more democratic. Whether this new
relationship between universality and particularism - grounded in the notion
of rights - will prevail or, on the contrary, be submerged by rampant xeno
phobia, is something that cannot be predicted. But, clearly, it is something
worth fighting for.
My last remark concerns also the question of the democratic possibilities
opened by the emergence of new particularisms. Let me go back to my
previous argument concerning the constitutive split of all political identity. On
the one hand, any political order is a concrete form of organization of the
community; on the other, it incarnates, against radical disorganization, the
principle of order and organization as such. Now, if the split between these
two dimensions is constitutive, does this not mean that no ultimate order of the
community is achievable, and that we will only have a succession of failed
attempts at reaching that impossible aim? Again, this is true in one sense, but
its consequences are not necessarily negative: because in the case that the split
could be superseded, this would only mean that society would have reached its
true order, and that all dissent would thereupon have come to an end.
Obviously no social division or democratic competition between groups is
possible in such conditions, since the very condition of democracy is that there
is an insurmountable gap between what the social groups attempt to achieve
and their abilities to succeed in such attempts. It is only if there is a plurality of
political forces substituting for each other in power - as the attempt to
hegemonize the very principle of 'order' and 'organization' - that democracy
is possible. Whether the proliferation of political identities in the contempor
ary world will lead to a deepening of the logic inherent in the democratic
process, or whether it will lead, as some predict, to an implosion of the social
and to a radically deregulated society that will create the terrain for authori
tarian solutions, remains to be seen. But, whatever the outcome, this is the
question that sets the agenda for democratic politics in the decades to come.
This volume has its origin in a workshop on 'Identities and Political Identifi
cation', which took place in]anuary 1989, in the Department of Government,
INTR ODU C T I O N
I N T R O DU C T I O N
INTRODUCTI O N
Bobby Sayyid, in 'Sign 0' Times: Kaffirs and Infidels Fighting the Ninth
Crusade', attempts to link Islamic revivalism to the general discussion
concerning the relationship modernity/post-modernity. He claims there is a
close link between modernity, as a discourse of closure, and the dominant
position of the West and tries to link various aspects of the post-modern
critique to the political experience of Third World countries.
PART I
======
====
It was in Buchel in September 1910. The visit of the devil lay still far away in
the future. Adrian Leverkiihn took his friend Serenus Zeitblom for a walk.
The conversation turned around the relationship between the archaic and the
revolutionary in music. At some point Zeitblam started the following
exchange:
'It would be tragic,' I said, 'if unfruitfulness should be ever the result of freedom.
But there is always the hope of the release of the productive powers, for the sake of
which freedom is achieved.' 'True,' he responded. 'And she does for a while
achieve what she promised. But freedom is of course another word for subjectivity,
and some fine day she does not hold out any longer, some time or other she despairs
of the possibility of being creative out of herself and seeks shelter and security in the
objective. Freedom always inclines to dialectical reversals. She realizes herself very
soon in constraint, fulfils itself in the subordination to law, rule, coercion, system
but to fulfil herself therein does not mean that she therefore ceases to be freedom.'
'In your opinion,' I laughed: 'So far as she knows. But actually, she is no longer
freedom as little as dictatorship born out of revolution is still freedom.'
'Are you sure of it?' he asked. 'But anyhow that is talking politics. In art, at least, the
subjective and the objective intertwine to the point of being indistinguishable, one
proceeds from the other and takes the character of the other, the subjective
precipitates as objective and by genius is again awakened to spontaneity,
"dynamized", as we say; it speaks all at once the language of the subjective. The
musical conventions today destroyed were not always so objective, so objectively
imposed. They were crystallizations of living experiences and, as such, long
performed an office of vital importance: the task of organization. Organization is
everything. Without it, there is nothing, least of all, art. And it was aesthetic
subjectivity that took on the task, it undertook to organize the work out of itself, in
freedom.'
'You are thinking of Beethoven.'1
11
12
T H E M A K I N G O F P O L I T I C A L IDEN T I T I E S
This sequence contains all the points relevant for our argument: (i) the
identification of freedom with the subject; (ii) the idea of freedom as not only
unable to provide its own forms of self-determination ('she despairs of the
possibility of being creative'), but as searching for such determination in
something external to itself - a 'something' which will operate as both 'shel
ter' and source of 'security'; (iii) the principle of organization as the realiz
ation of freedom. If freedom can only be realized through its alienation to an
external content, thereby providing the determination that freedom lacks,
and if such a content is the principle of organization, the latter can neither be
something merely objective nor, for that matter, merely subjective. Why? Be
cause the principle of organization is the point of crystallization of a tension,
of an undecidable alternative between subject and object; it expresses itself
through the objective and can only manage to do so by its dialectical reversal.
Not surprisingly, the exploration of this tension will lead us to the very centre
of the problematic of the subject - which, as we will see, is precisely the
subject as the subjea o/the lack. The starting point of the analysis, then, will be
to consider these three oppositions: freedom/identity; subjectivity/
objectivity; organization and its lack.
M I NDI N G THE G A P
13
Second relation: the contraposition between the subjeaive and the objeaive
Mann presents this relation in terms of'dialectical reversals'.It is clear why: if
subjectivity, as such, is indeterminacy, there is no possibility that we can derive
from it any determinate content. Determination can only be the result of the
'alienation' of subjectivity, of its becoming the opposite of itself. There is a
subtle movement of significations on which the very meaning of the relation
between the subjective and the objective depends. Let us assume for a
moment that we are in the field of 'determinate negation' in the Hegelian
sense: in tl1at case indeterminacy would be superseded by a specific content,
by a concrete determination. Thus we would conclude that indeterminacy is
indeterminacy-for-the-determination; determination would be hegemonic
and indeterminacy would be only one of its internal moments. So, let us
modifY the assumption: let us suppose that by 'dialectical reversal' we do not
understand an indeterminacy that just anticipates its overcoming by specific
forms of determination, but, rather, a passage from the indeterminate to the
determination as such - a certain indifference or distance of the indeterminate
vis-a-vis the forms of determination that supersede it.In that case the relation
between the indeterminate and the determinate, between the subjective and
the objective, will be dramatically different: there will never be real
supersession, nor peace, between the two. The subjective will only acquire a
content by alienating itself in an objectivity which is its opposite (though tIlls,
as we will later see, is what is involved with the notion of
identification,
as
different from mere identity). But the objective cannot be reduced to its
specific content either, as it only functions as a surface for identification.
Indeed, given that the latter is not a
to assume
otherwise would lead right back to the hypothesis of a determinate negation tIlls concrete content will represent the opposite of subjective indeterminacy.
That is, it will represent the principle of determinability as such.In saying this,
it becomes clear that what is at stake in Thomas Mann's'dialectical reversals'
is not a determinate freedom which realizes itself in a determinate content, but
[freedom]
14
this response, the first being that the centrality o f the principle o f organization
is derived from the staunch assertion: without organization 'there is nothing'.
For even though Leverkiihn is speaking about art - in spite of his tantalizing
hint about politics - Hobbes would not have presented differently his
opposition between Leviathan and the state of nature. The decisive point is
that this 'nothing', set in opposition to 'organization', is not the nothing of a
logical impossibility that would simply collapse into the nonexistent: it is a real
nothing, an empty place that 'organization' would come to fill. What makes
that 'nothing' possible? The answer is: the subject, as freedom and
indeterminacy. This leads us to the second dimension. We have seen that
dialectical reversals imply a freedom only able to realize itself through its
identification with something that is its opposite - that is, with an objectivity
that can only fulfil its identificatory role as far as it accomplishes the alienation
of the subject. But in that case, why is it that freedom does not simply annul
itself through this act of alienation? Why is it 'still freedom'?
A preliminary
will be a set of proposals for social organization; but, on the other, as they will
appear as the symmetrically opposed alternative to the possibility of
'nothingness', they would incarnate the very possibility of a social organization
- that is, the principle of social organization as such. If we draw the point out to
its full conclusion, what we have here, then, is that the lack (that is,
indeterminacy) of the subject will constitute the object of identification as split
object.
The ultimate incompatibility of the two poles of the 'dialectical reversal' is
thus maintained and reproduced throughout all its stages. The structure of
the identificatory act preserves, without superseding, the constitutive
nothingness of the subject; and the representation of the latter takes place
through the subversion of the surface of identification. Moreover, the
alienating character of the act of identification is also maintained, in so far as
there is no supersession of the subject/object duality. Two basic conse
quences follow:
(1) If the objective 'fills' my originary lack, this filling can only take place in
so far as what is objective is external to me. Through the act of filling my
MINDI N G T H E G A P
15
lack, the obj ective does not lose its externality; it is not assimilated to an
identity that was already mine. On the contrary, its alien character is precisely
what allows it to function as a filler. Its 'magic' filling can operate because the
subject is originary lack of being. But if the subject is originary and
ineradicable lack, any identification will have to represent, as well, the lack
its elf. This can only be done by reproducing the external character of that
with which the subject identifies itself, that is, its incommensurability
vis-a-vis itself. It is because of this that the acceptance of the Law - that is,
the principle of organization as opposed to 'nothingness' - is the acceptance
of the Law because it is Law, not because it is rational. If the acceptance of
the Law had resulted from its rationality, in that case, the Law would be a
prolongation of the subject as a positive identity and could not fulfil its filling
role. But if the Law can fulfil t.is role, it necessarily follows that this role has
to be its own justification, and that the latter cannot be granted by any a priori
tribunal of reason.
(2) The filling function requires an empty place , and the latter is, to some
extent, indifferent to the content of the filling, though this filling function has
to be incarnated in some concrete contents, whatever those contents might be.
This is the originary split constitutive of all representation, to which we
referred before. Now, this means that between the filling function and the
concrete content that actualizes it, there is a constitutive incommensurability.
This incommensurability would only be eliminated if a concrete content qua
concrete could exhaust and become identical with the filling function. But in
that case, we would be back to the reabsorption of the indeterminate within the
determinate , and the radical character of the opposition between 'organiz
ation' and 'nothingness' would have been lost. So let us return to our previous
example. Suppose somebody is confronted with a deep anomie situation what would be required would be the introduction of an order, the concrete
contents of which would become quite secondary. Thomas Mann perceived
this clearly. In his Lotte in Weimar, one of the characters describes the
successive occupation of the city by the French and the Prussians at the end of
the Napoleonic period:
W e peered through the curtains a t the tumult i n the streets, w e heard th e crashing
gunfire and the braying of horns. The fighting soon passed from the streets to the
park and presently beyond the city limits. The enemy, alas, won his accustomed
victory. And actually, against our wills, it seemed to us like a triumph of order over
rebellion - a childish and foolish rebellion, as the event had proved. 'Order and
quiet are good - no matter what one owes them.' We had to provide for the billeting
of the French troops, and the town was straightaway burdened to the utmost limit of
its capacity. Not only heavy but long was the burden laid upon it. Still, there was
peace; tlle streets were open till sundown, and the citizen might go about his
business under the oppressive protection of the victors.2
16
T HE M A K IN G O F P O L I T I C A L IDENT I T IES
17
18
T HE M A KIN G O F P O L I T I C A L IDE N T I T I E S
power could not b e absolute.) But from this, i t would follow that a situation of
absolute power must be one where the concept of power entirely loses its
meaning. A cause qua cause can only exist in its effects; a cause is nothing but
the sequence of its effects, the latter being part of the cause's identity. If an
individual or group had absolute power in society, this would mean - as we
have seen - that the other groups would have no other identity than the effects
deriving from that power and, as a result, they would also be part of the identity
of the dominant group. A feudal lord, for instance, is feudal lord only in so far
as there are serfs; and in the hypothetical case that the identity of the serfs is
exhausted in their relationship with the lord, it is evident that both lord and
serfs would be internal positions or differentiations within a unique identity,
and that no relation of power could exist between the two. Whatever decision
the lord takes as a result of his status, it will express not only his identity but
also t.hat of the serf.
That is, the 'society effect' can only take place in so far as power is
eliminated. But this also shows clearly that certain conditions must be met in
order that a relation of power exists: there has to be a conflict of wills in which
one of them would prevail. And yet, as we know, the very possibility of a
conflict requires the partial efficacy of the conflicting forces (for, in order to
resist a dominant power there has to be a point in society where the dominated
forces can organize and initiate their resistance). This means that the very
condition of existence of power is that it is not absolute. It is only if Power is
impossible that actual powers can exist in the social terrain. But if there is a
plurality of powers, then the 'society effect' is also impossible. For, as we have
seen, the society effect is the constitution and representation of the social
totality as a coherent object resulting from the combination of orderly effects
that unfold from a unique centre of power. To put this point differently: if the
very condition of actual powers is conflict, and conflict presupposes the
irreducibility of the social to a unique source of effects, there would have to be
a limit to the representability of the social- since representability presupposes
compatibility - and, as a consequence, no society effect.
Is not this logical conclusion, however, a bit excessive? Can we purely and
simply just do away with the 'society effect'? Let us consider the matter
carefully. What would such a 'doing away' logically imply? Clearly, that the
forces in conflict would be unable to hegemonize the social totality, and they
would thus be limited to their own particularities. But that limitation would
not necessarily close them in on themselves, for if a force is threatened by
another force external to it, neither of the two forces could be fully constituted.
As a result, they could not close themselves within their own being. Only by
going beyond themselves - only by realizing their own being in terms of a
'society effect' that transcends their own particularities - could those
particularities become fully constituted. This transcendence, as we have seen,
would involve the elimination of power. But the important point is precisely
M INDING TH E
GAP
19
that, as power makes that transcendence impossible, the society effect does
not simply disappear: it remains present as that which is absent, as the empty
place which prevents the full being of each of the opposing forces being
achieved. The reality of power constructs the irreality ofsociety as a structural
lack accompanying and distorting all social identities.
This becomes clearer if we consider another dimension closely associated
with the conceptualization of power; namely, the one connected to the
relationship between power and legitimacy. 4 What is the theoretical possibility
of such a distinction? Ifby power we just understand the ability of producing a
society effect, the distinction would be impossible. For to distinguish between
legitimacy and power involves the possibility that an actual system of power is
illegitimate. But if the totality of 'social effects' can be referred to power as its
sole source, there would be no place in society from which to put that power
into question. Let us not forget that the initial theory of power was a
theological one: it dealt with the omnipotence of God as creator of the world.
It is clear that if God were the only source of all created things, there would be
no way in which his power, or even a part of the actions in which that power
would be expressed, could be illegitimate. Power and legitimacy would be one
and the same. In fact, it would not even enter as a question whether God's
power would be legitimate, because God Himself would represent absolute
goodness. To assert otherwise would be to erect a tribunal to judge God's
actions that would have to be independent of Him. God's power is legitimate
because it is His power. If the question of legitimacy were not to be reduced,
even in those early theological discussions, to that of power per se, it is because
of the problem of the existence of evil in the world and the resulting possibility
that man acts in a way that is illegitimate in God's eyes. (This poses, of course,
the well-known theological problem of how, if God is both omnipotent and the
expression of absolute goodness, He allows for the existence of evil in the
world.) But the important point for our discussion is that this disjunction
between power and legitimacy raised the question that was to become central
in the modem theorization of politics: what are the sources oflegitimacy once
there are 'social effects' that conflict with each other and that cannot be
referred back to a single generating force?
While God operated as a source oflegitimacy external to the world, the gap
between power and legitimacy could conceptually be contained - more or less
- within manageable limits. But when, in modem times, the search began for a
Source of legitimacy from which to judge the world, and yet one that was,
however, internal to the world, the aporias implicit in the very terms of the
question became fully visible. For if legitimacy qua legitimacy were not
endowed with power, it would have had to create its own power; but in that
case it would itself be mere power - mere contingency - and could only
ground its claims in the power that it could obtain. As in the theological case,
we find the concept of legitimacy indistinguishable from power, with the
20
T H E M A K I N G O F P O L I T I C A L IDE N T I T I E S
difference that there was now a power that could always be reversed.
Machiavelli happily accepted these conclusions - in as much as they grounded
legitimacy both in power and in what concerns the contingent character of that
power. But even theories that attempted to legitimate absolute power - as did
Hobbes's - accepted a purely secular perspective and a unidirectional relation
of causality; power was the root of legitimacy, albeit with the reservations that
we will consider momentarily.
The problem, however, is this: to what extent could we say that a legitimacy
purely derivative from power remains legitimate? Is not a factually based
legitimacy a contradictory concept, one that entirely does away with the
distinction between fact and value? At this point we are struck by the structural
parallelism between the duality 'power/society effect' and the duality
'power/legitimacy' . Our conclusion concerning the first was that a fully
fledged 'society effect' was impossible as far as there is power; but that, on the
other hand, power logically
requires
absent, as the place of a structural lack. In the present case we have concluded
that power makes impossible a fully fledged legitimacy. Should we conclude as
well, then, that power requires its other - legitimacy - as absent filler of its
impossible fullness? A brief consideration of Hobbes will help clarify matters .
The logical conclusions Hobbes drew, which follow directly from a secula
rized conception of power, entail a rigour never reached before him and few
times after. In asking the question, 'Is there any hope of having an ordered
society quite apart from power relations?', Hobbes's answer, as is well known,
was emphatically negative. Civil society, left to itself, can only reproduce the
chaos of the state of nature. But having said that, would it be possible to
institute an absolute power that could generate a 'society effect' ? Hobbes
thought that it was possible; and he invoked the social covenant as a way to
achieve it. But there are two consequences that necessarily follow from this
way of addressing the problem. The first is that, as in all absolute power,
including the case of God in medieval theology, the distinction between power
and legitimacy cannot emerge . It is not the case that there is only a relation of
causality between power and legitimacy; it is, rather, that power and legitimacy
are one and the same . To call a power illegitimate would presuppose another
social order whose content would be the basis to judge the existing power. But
if outside power there were only the chaos of the state of nature, then that basis
would simply not exist. The only way in which a power could, thereby, become
illegitimate would be if it were incapable of guaranteeing the life and security
of the subjects - that is, if it ceased to be the basis of a viable Commonwealth.
This would mean that power would have to be, at the very least, partially
j ustified by an instance external to itself; if it were incapable of providing that
guarantee of life and security, it would cease to be legitimate. Clearly, then,
external to itself.
The split between power and the condition of its legitimacy would have a dual
M I NDI N G T H E G A P
21
because that guarantee of power was to be both the necessary and sufficient
whatever political order exists would be legitimate not as a result of the value
of its own contents, but due to its ability to incarnate the abstract principle of
social order as such.
merely concrete,
loses its ability to incarnate the general function; that is, when it shows itself as
mere, unjustified p ower. The crisis of a system of power, therefore, consists in
the disarticulation of its internal dimensions, each of which runs wild and
deVelops its own internal logic, once the latter is not limited in its effects by
their precise location within the model of the Hobbesian Commonwealth.
It is worthwhile unknotting this model and following the wild logic of its
liberated dimensions, for this exercise will lead us direcdy to the question of
the subj ect. In order to do so, we do not need to move an inch from the
grammar of Hobbes's theory. What is shown in the crisis of a system of power
is that the general function is no longer attached to the concrete s ocial
organization that has ensured it thus far . But what happens in that case? Is it
this threat that presents the social order as something which is present
through its absence, as structural lack. And as this absent social order acquires
22
MINDING T H E G A P
23
[B] oth schools meet in their common basic dogma; just ends can be obtained by
justified means, justified means used for just ends. Natural law attempts, by the
justness of the ends to 'justifY' the means, positive law to 'guarantee' the justness of
the ends through the justification of the means. This antinomy would prove
24
T H E M A K I N G O F P O L I T I C A L I DE N T I T IES
insoluble if the common dogmatic assumption were false, if justified means, on the
one hand, and just ends, on the other, were in irreconcilable conflict.s
It is this latter hypothesis that Benj amin's whole critique of violence tries to
explore . Putting aside the realm of ends, Benj amin poses the question of the
'justification of certain means that constitute violence', and takes as his
starting point the distinction between sanctioned and unsanctioned violence.
The latter pres ents an ambiguity, noticed by B enj amin, which is crucial for
our argument: to
in their concreteness? Certainly not - or at least, not only. Instead, what is put
into question is the principle of legality as such:
[Olne might perhaps consider the surprising possibility that the law's interest in a
monopoly of violence vis-a-vis individuals is not explained by the intention of
preserving legal ends but, rather, by that of preserving the law itself; that violence,
when not in the hands of the law threatens it not by the ends that it may pursue but
by its mere existence outside the law. The same may be more drastically suggested
if one reflects how often the figure of the 'great' criminal, however repellant his
ends may have been, has aroused the secret admiration of the public. This cannot
result from his deed, but only from the violence to which it bears witness. In this
case, therefore, the violence of which present-day law is seeking in all areas of
activity to deprive the individual appears really threatening, and arouses even in
defeat the sympathy of the masses against law.6
Now, here we are on the same terrain as in Hobbes: as something ' outside',
the law is a real alternative threatening concrete legal ends . The latter are
constitutively split because - beyond their concreteness - they incarnate the
principle of 'lawfulness' or 'legality' as such. But this means that between
means and ends an insurmountable caesura has been introduced. If the ends, in
their concreteness, were the only thing that counted, the means would be
transparent and the entirety subordinated to the ends . If, on the contrary, the
legality of the means is what is at stake, the ends would become indeterminate,
but within the concrete limits established by the means. But if legal means are
subverted in their concreteness because they incarnate the principle of
lawfulness as such, a more radical possibility emerges: a politics of pure
mediacy which, by its passage through concrete, and transient, means and
ends, attempts to enact or to subvert legality as such. The whole distinction by
Benjamin between law-making and law-preserving attempts to show the
constitutive character of this possibility, its inherence in any legal system.
Benj amin illustrates his argument about pure mediacy with two examples :
language, and the distinction in S orel between political and proletarian strike.
Let us concentrate on the latter. A political strike is entirely dominated by
particularistic aims . It tries to abolish concrete forms of state power, not state
power as such. The proletarian strike, on the other hand, does not attempt to
M I NDI N G T H E G A P
2S
s ubs titute one form of power from another or one form of legal organization
from a different one, and so on; but, whatever are its concrete aims, it tries to
put into question the very principle of legality and state organization.
In contrast to this political general strike (which incidentally seems to have been
summed up by the abortive German revolution), the proletarian general strike sets
its elf the sole task of destroying state power. It 'nullifies all the ideological
consequences of every possible social policy; its partisans see even the most popular
reforms as bourgeois' . . . While the first form ofinterruption ofwork is violent since
it causes only an external modification of labour conditions, the second, as pure
means, is non-violent. For it takes place not in readiness to resume work following
external concessions and this or that modification to working conditions, but in
determination to resume only a wholly transformed work, no longer enforced by the
state, an upheaval that this kind of strike not so much causes as consummates. For
this reason, the first of these undertakings is law-making, but the second
anarchistic.7
This, however, immediately raises a problem: to what extent is the proletarian
strike an actually possible historical event? And if it is actual, under what
conditions? For a politics of pure violence, of pure mediacy, is, strictly
speaking, directed against nothing; however, if it is going to succeed, it
requires s ome content. Benj amin, in the above quotation, seems to point to
such a content: the determination to resume 'only a wholly transformed work' .
Let us remember that what was at stake in both law imposition and law
violation was not only the content of a particular law but the principle of
lawfulness as such. S o , if the proletarian strike is directed against the latter, its
consummation can only be a post-legal history, a history that breaks with the
dialectics imposition/violation. Benj amin's text seems to point in this
direction when he speaks of the emergence and reversal of the various legal
systems as dominated by the dialectical law of their succession, and when he
thinks of the overthrow of legal state power by the proletarian strike as an
actual event which is the beginning of a new history. This looks like a rather
SOciety. S orel' s . support of the aims of the proletariat resulted not so much
from his approval of those aims, but from the revolutionary will which was
T HE M A K I N G OF P O L I T I C A L IDENT I T IES
26
case, the general strike is not so much an actual event, as a historical horizon that
gives sense and direction to the particular struggles and prevents their closure
within their own concreteness . The counterposition political strike/proletarian
strike is not so much the opposition of two types of event, as two dimensions
which, in different prop ortions, are combined in any particular struggle (they
are the metaphorical embodiment of the constitutive split of all social identity) .
The difference b etween S orel and B enj amin can be reduced to the following
point: while for B enj amin the elimination oflegal and State violence is an event
which closes a historical cycle and opens a new one, for Sorel it is a dimension
constitutive of all p olitical experience - it is for this reason that a politics of pure
mediacy can be formulated more in S orelian than in Benjaminian terms . This
becomes even clearer if we turn to Werner Hamacher's analysis of Benj amin' s
text. s In his attempt to radicalize the pure mediacy of the Critique o/ Violence,
Hamacher is led to blurring the separation between political and proletarian
strikes :
[F] or cognitive purposes, any strike must take place in the border region between
political and anarchist general strikes, between negotiation or, rather, extor tion and
acts of positing new law on the one hand, and the pure violence of deposition on the
other. For cognitive purposes, there can be no more a pure anarchism than there can
be absolute afformatives . Afformatives can have unforeseen effects, precisely insofar
as they 'strike' the cognition directed toward them with powerlessness. The more the
event of afformation becomes possible and thus unpredictable in its effects for
constative or thetic consciousness, the less the question of its actuality becomes
cognitively decidable. Pure violence 'shows' itself precisely
appears
as such.
in tile
Hamacher links pure violence, as an act not ofposing but of deposing, to what he
calls affonnatives, which are the condition of any performative act. They are not
acts separated from the performatives per se, but are, in a special way, internal to
the latter:
[A] fformative, or pure, violence is a ' condition' for any instrumental, performative
violence, and, at tile same time, a condition which suspends their fulfilment in
M I NDI N G T H E G A P
27
p rin ciple . But while afformations d o not belong t o the class o f acts - that is, t o the
class of positing or founding operations - they are , nevertheless, never simply
outside the sphere of acts or without relation to that sphere. The fact that
afformations allow something to happen without making it happen has a dual
significance: first, that they let this thing enter into the realm of positings, from
which they themselves are excluded; and, second, that they are not what shows up in
the realm of positings, so that the field of phenomenality, as the field of positive
manifestation, can only indicate the effects of the afformative as ellipses, p auses,
lO
interruptions, displacements, etc., but can never contain or include them.
That is, pure violence, pure deposing, cannot be performative and can never
acquire, accordingly, the character of an independent event. But this leaves us
with a constitutive split that can never be overcome: we will combat violence,
as such, through its incarnation in a concrete system of violence, but the
moment of pure deposing of violence never arrives . The destruction of a
system of power can only mean the construction of a different power. There is
going to be an ineradicable asymmetry in all social identity: the forces attempt
ing to depose violence are going to be hopelessly inadequate to carry out the
task that they assume. The pure deposing circulates among bodies which have
an unbridgeable distance from it. Paraphrasing Lacan, we could speak of 'a
subject supposed to liberate' . And we would find ourselves again with the
place of the subj ect as the place of a constitutive lack. If the pure deposing - a
violence as pure mediacy (a non-violent violence because it is not directed
against any particular obj ect) - were possible as an independent act, that
would mean, then, the death of the subj ect b ecause the duality subject!obj ect
would have been entirely eliminated. But if the relation posing/deposing is
one of mutual contamination, then pure deposing can only inhabit the histori
cal acts of the posing/deposing as that which is absent, as something required
by the structure of the act, but, at the same time, as something that is made
impossible by that very structure. The relation political strike/proletarian
archi
meanings : inception and domination. It is the fusion between the two, with the
T H E M A K I N G O F P O L I T I C A L IDE N T I T I E S
28
concealment
The alliance between the notions of inception and domination is possible only once
the metaphysics ofthe causes is constituted. Once it is understood that phenomena as a
whole are knowable from the viewpoint of causality, then it can be said that a true
cause is only that which begins its action 'and never ceases to begin it', that is,
a cause that also commands. In this way Heidegger links the fate of the concept of
archi to the constitution of the metaphysics of causes. 1 2
Now this causalist explanation - which is the first step in the subordination of
inception to domination - is linked to the paradigmatic character, which the
fabrication of tools or works of art is going to assume in the explanation of any
kind of change or movement. As far as the distinction between things that have
the origin of their movement in themselves and those moved by another is
concerned, the latter are the model that is going to be metaphorically extended
to the understanding ofthe former. Ifthe efficient cause takes precedence, the
final cause, the
telos
dominated
by its
telos.
The teleocratic frame of reference applies to action to the extent that action is still
seen as becoming: magistrates 'move' the city because they are themselves 'moved'
by the idea that is its end. This is why architecture is the paradigmatic art: the
anticipation of end through which Aristotle comprehends the origin is observed
most clearly in construction . . . . How, then, does archi dominate? In anticipating
telos Y
The tum towards a total concealment of the distinction between presencing
and presence - between inception and domination - is not complete in
[W]e glimpse how the reversal of history sets in which will place first a divine, then a
human constructor, in the position of origin. What anticipates onto-theological and
M I NDI N G T H E G A P
29
onto- anthropological doctrines, in which the origin figures as the predicate of one
entity, is the novel concept - if not the word - archi in Aristotle. !4
A first hardening of the subordination of inception to domination takes place
with the transition from the Greek
arch! to the
not a neutral translation by Cicero from one language to the other, but one
that reinforces the dimension of ruling
dependentiae in
presence
in an entirely
Pantocrator.
sufficient reason, by which reason rules even over God. With this transition
from an ontological to a logical principle, the latter becomes a law of the
mind, and assumes a function of universal representation grounded in
human subjectivity. Thus it becomes a subj ective rule for ' enframing' things .
According to Heidegger, this hardening of the dimension of domination that
sanctions the concealment of Being as inception, finds its highest point in
contemporary technology.
The deconstruction of Western metaphysics is conceived by Heidegger as
the attempt to undo this hardening and to restore the lost dimension of
inception. It is this restoration which makes visible the ontological difference
between Being and beings as a temporal difference. This leads to a different
type of origin, what Heidegger calls
Ursprung
the important point for our argument is that the possibility of access to this
more radical origin - which shows itself as temporal difference and thus
splits the unity of the principle, depends on a passage through nothingnes s .
A s Schiirmann cogently asserts :
Phuein has no history, no destiny. But this is not to say that it is atemporal. If it
were, how could acting ever be kata phusin, following the coming about of
presence? The temporality of this coming-about may be understood through the
corresponding notion of nothingness. The 'original', i.e., an epochal beginning, is
a rise out of ontic nothingness, out of all those (possible) entities that remain
absent for an age. The 'originary' is a rise out of ontological nothingness, out of the
pull towards absence that permeates presencing to its very heart. The presencing
absencing is originary time: both approaching (;1ngang) and departing (;1bgang);
genesis and pthora, rising and declining; being and not being. The mutual
T H E M A K I N G O F P O L I T I C A L IDE N T I T I E S
30
diffirentia specifica.
would not be accessible at all, for reasons Heidegger discusses at the b e gin
ning of Sein
being which presents itself would also be, to its very roots, mere possibility,
and would show, beyond its ontic specificity, Being as such. Possibility, as op
posite to pure presence, temporalizes Being and splits, from its very ground, all
identity. Presencing
( Ursprung)
ontic, are irremediably split, but this has a double consequence : the first is that
the ontic can never be closed in itself; the second, that the ontological can only
show itself through the ontic. The s ame movement creating the split, con
demns its two sides (as in all splits) to mutual dependence. Being cannot in
habit a 'beyond' all actual beings, because in that case, it would only be one
more being. Being shows itself in the entities as that which they are lacking and
as that which d erives from their ontological status as mere possibility. B eing
and nothingness, presence and absence, are the mutually required terms of a
ground constitutively split by difference.
This allows us to link Heidegger's argument with our previous discussions
- though moving in a direction which Heidegger did not take and of which,
most likely, he would not have approved . As we have seen, the split between
political and proletarian strike is, for S orel, ineradicable, because any concrete
struggle will put into question both an actual system of violence and the prin
ciple ofviolence as such . But now, if pure violence, violence as such, cannot be
something which has an actual existence of its own, the 'beyond violence '
cannot be an actual event either. The impossible, the 'beyond violence', would
certainly eliminate the split: in a fully reconciled society we would have total
and undisturbed presence, absolute domination by a pure principium. But if
violence is constitutive, it becomes the nothingness which shows the character
of mere possibility of itself and of that which it opposes. It is this effect of un
concealment that splits the opposing forces between their ' ontic' contents and
the character of mere possibility - that is, inception, pure Being - of those
contents. In the s ame way, we have seen Hobbes's state of nature as a
'nothingness' which splits the identity of the order imposed by the ruler: on
the one hand, tlle ruler imposes a particular order; on the other, and as the
alternative to this p articular order is chaos (nothingness), it has also to incar
nate order as such, whose indifference to the particularity of its contents likens
M I NDI N G T H E G A P
31
it to pure B eing. Heidegger's ontological difference clears the way to think the
various structural dimensions of this constitutive split of all identity.
But now, is it not precisely this subj ect that we have found in our various
explorations - the subject of the lack of being - which is made possible by this
difference? This is not the subj ect of onto-theology or onto-anthropology (a
cogito, an ousia conceived as mere presence) , but exactly the opposite : a subject
whose lack of b eing is the precondition for its access to Being.
Other who
when I look at it, looks also at itself through me and in me. It sees itself in the
place that I occupy in it. 1 8
All imaginary identifications cons tituting the ego can only be assumed if
ratified by the Other as symbolic referent. Here we have an ego, then, that
while misrecognizing the Law, nevertheless must submit to it. The symbolic
id e ntification involves the interplay of signifiers and tlle structure of
intersubj ective relations that is dominated by the Law: proper names ,
syntactic rules of language - and the assumption of the place of the Other as
the third term which sanctions truth and guarantees stability. What we thus
have is an operation of alienation and internalization: a subj ect is alienated in
32
M I NDI N G TH E G A P
33
of power relations . Failure will trigger new acts of identification - new 'partial
covenants', as referenced in our discussion on Hobbes - which attempt
(vainly) to master those destructuring effects . It is in these interruptions that
the s ubj ect of lack will emerge and disrupt that imaginary-symbolic universe.
This co nstitutive duality between the lack (as the domain - or non-place - of
the s ub j ect) and the structure or Law (as an objective system of differences as
id entities) is the terrain where identification takes place as a 'dialectical
!
r eversal' between the two. 2
The dynamic relation between lack and structure is shown by several logics
of Lacanian theory: (a) the logic of suture; (b) the logic of repression; and
(c) the logic of the subject. The logic of suture focuses on the point of
maximum tension ('point of suture') in the relation between lack (subject) and
structure (obj ect) , as the place ofleast resistance. It involves the articulation of
th e signifier which, in circulating beneath the discursive chain, acts as a
'stand-in' for the lack, and thus later appears as an element of the structure
(for example, Death, S exuality) . But this operation is misrecognized and, as it
is represented through a stand-in, the lack cancels itself out. This is why there
is a permanent and alternating movement whereby the lack is rej ected and
invoked, articulated and annulled, included and excluded. In this way the lack
triggers the metonymic chain in an endless process of differentiation. This is
the process that determines the appearance of the successor in the series of
natural numbers (n +
the work of Frege . Here the lack is articulated as a unity in so far as the zero
names the lack, and is counted as a unity, that is, as
as an element beneath the series of numbers which fixes and produces the
The zero thus comprises three logical moments : (i) the zero as lack: the
non-concept, the Real, the blank; (ii) the zero as a number: as a stand-in
concept of the impossible which evokes and annuls the lack; (iii) the zero
number as
We could say, similarly, that there are signifiers occupying this point of
suture in a particular political field. Let us take the case of the policy of
disappearances put into effect by many Latin American dictatorships. The
signifier
'desaparecidos'
various discursive threads are knotted. On the one hand, the authorities tend
to deny the existence of any
desaparecidos:
organiz ations, and so on. Then again, there are times when the government
o ffi cials may assume responsibility but try to minimize it along the lines that
the se disappearances are inevitable 'consequences' of war, exc e sses, abuses,
an d so forth. As a result of these two operations, these desaparecidos inhabit a
34
T H E M A K I N G O F P O L I T I C A L IDENT I T I E S
space where they are neither dead nor alive; they can reappear, they can also
be killed. Their death and their life is suspended, deferred. And by means of
this operation fear is installed into that context: the
desaparecidos point to
the
existence of another space, a space of suspension, which is both part of, and
excluded from, the realm of ' society' , and, in this way, it becomes necessary to
Vorstellung Representanz.
Vorstellung Representanz
follow the
same logic as the subject vis -a.-vis the structure or the Law-as -Other. On the
one hand, the subj ect is excluded from the field of the Other : the subj ect 'is'
lack - that is, pure indeterminacy which cannot b e reduced to the structure or
constituted discursively. On the other hand, the subj ect is counted also as
unity in the field of the Other, by means of the signifier of identity, resulting
from the process of identification. This is the fictional 'self' and the subj ect of
the roond. 2 6 Finally, this dual articulation and the exteriority/interiority of the
relation b etween the subj ect and the Other establishes both the unconscious
('the core of our b eing') and the subj ect as an excess of the enondation
as a cut
in the chain, as the permanent possibility of one more signifier operating from
within the chain, as a stand-in for the subj ect of lack Y Through this stand-in
the subject of lack is inscribed in the text, but only as a residue, via, for
example, the loss of a signifier (parapraxis) and certain 'particles' Oike the 'not'
in denegation) , and so on. 2 8 The subj ect, then, appears and disappears in the
interstices of the structure, by way of, at least, a 'pair of signifiers', one of
which is eclipsed by the ascendancy and return of the other. This triggers the
movement of the chain: a signifier represents the subject for another signifier.
The movement is founded in a process of permanent differentiation in so far
as the signifier fails and constantly defers in representing the subj ect. This is
also why the subject oflack is an 'active or productive' impossibility rather than
M I ND I N G T H E G A P
35
a Pantocrator, as principium of the cosmic order as a whole, the need for His
pre sence cannot be eradicated - the unicity of the principium remains as a
re quire ment for society not to dissolve into the chaos of the state of nature .
as
36
T H E MA K I N G O F P O L I T I C A L IDE N T I T I E S
This explains the need for a ruler whose omnipotence should reproduce, in
a secularized version, as many as possible of the divine attributes . But a
secularized God is different from God
in God the ruling function and the contents which actualize the latter c annot
properly be differentiated, secular rulers have to justifY themselves by proving
themselves capable of properly fulfilling the ruling function. There is, in this
way, an initial split between the empty place of a function which is not
necessarily linked to any particular content, and the plurality of the contents
which can actualize it.
Modern political theory has been, to a large extent, the development and
deepening of this initial split. Democracy, in the modern sense, is going to be
the institution of a space whose social function has had to emancipate itself
from any concrete content, precisely because, as we have seen,
any content is
judge the
something not possible in the case of God. The fissure through which this
judgement can operate is minimal in the case of Hobbes (those ruled c annot
be the s ource of the social order, and their protagonism is only required when
the ordering function of the ruler is not fulfilled) , but it is already there and its
widening will open the way to the discourses of modern democracy. While
previous forms of s ocial organization led to the concealment of this difference
by presenting concrete forms of political organization as the only possible ones
that fulfil the function of political organization as such, modern democracy
makes that difference fully visible.
But it would be a mistake to think that the ordering function is linked to the
idea of an order which has to be
maintained and
M I NDI N G T H E G A P
37
si gnifi ers o f the lack, o f the absent fullness, have t o be constantly produced if
politi cs - as different from sedimented social forms - is going to be possible .
Politics presupposes the - peaceful or violent - competition between social
forc e s an d the essential instability of the relation between ruling order and
ruling function. Terms such as 'the unity of the people', the 'welfore of the
country',
politically
agents have can only result from precarious and transient forms of
identification. It is easy to see why. If the relation between the ordering
function and the actual order is going to be always an unstable one, this is only
possible in so far as the identity of the political agents will change by means of
successive acts of identification; acts that will sustain, modify, resist or reject
that concrete order - an identification that will always ultimately fail to achieve
a fully fledged identity.
If we maintained - which we do not - that the fullness of society is
something that can finally be achieved (be it the communist society, the
harmonic organic society, or whatever) , we would imply that, in this order, the
agents will finally achieve their true identity. There is no need and no place for
identification in this perspective, and there is no longer a place for political
ordering, due to the radical elimination of all splitting and decentring. This
elimination would be equivalent to the ' death of the subject' , given that it
presupposes the abolition of the distinction between subject and obj ect.
Neither do we want to suggest, however, that the subj ect can be reduced to an
effect of a non-subj ective process that constitutes the identities of the political
agents. The latter would be more in line with those types of analyses
concerned simply with the study of relative subject positions in social
networks, disciplinary techniques, hierarchies, and so on; that is, the relative
subj ect positions that empower, denigrate, subordinate, exclude. This is only
part of the story since it does not contemplate the interruptions and
dislocations through which the subj ect will emerge and will disrupt the
imaginary-symbolic universe.
If, on the contrary, the split between ordering and order is constitutive, the
subj ect, as the subj ect of lack and identification, cannot be superseded by any
fully fledged identity, whether of an obj ectivist or a transcendental character.
In that sense, the death of the subj ect and the unstable character of all identity
are conditions of that management of the incompletion of society that we call
politics.
38
T H E M A K I N G O F P O L I T I C A L IDE N T I T I E S
Notes
1. Thomas Mann, Dr Faustus (London: Penguin, 1 96 8) pp . 1 84-5 .
2. Thomas Mann, Lotte in Weimar (London: Penguin, 1 9(8), pp. 1 3 0-3 l .
3 . Ibid., p. 1 3 8 .
4 . We have profited i n this section from the work ofT6rben Dyrberg, Power and the Subjea:A
Presuppositionless Conception o/Power (Ph.D. thesis, University of Essex, 1 989).
5 . W. Benjamin, Refleaions, Essays, Aphorisms, Autobiographical Writings, trans. Edmund
Jephcott (New York: Schocken Books) p. 278.
6. Ibid., p . 28 l .
7 . Ibid., p. 29 1 .
8. W . Hamacher, 'Afformative Strike', Cardozo Law Review, vol. 1 3 , no.4, December 1 9 9 1 ,
pp . 1 1 33-57.
9. Ibid., pp. 1 1 54-7.
1 0. Ibid., p. 1 1 3 9 n. 1 2 .
1 1 . Reiner Schiirmann, Heidegger; O n Being and Aaing: From Principles to Anarchy, trans.
Christine-Marie Gros (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1 990) especially pp. 97-1 54.
12. Ibid., p . 99.
1 3 . Ibid ., pp . l 03-4.
14. Ibid., p. 1 05 .
1 5 . Ibid., pp. 141-2 .
1 6 . For Freud identification, the endless processes o f identification involve the transformation
of the ego; or, as he writes, 'the character of the Ego is a precipitate of abandoned object-cathexes
and . . . it contains the history of those object-choices . . . accepted or resisted . . .' (Sigmund
Freud, 'The Ego and the Id', The Standard Edition [SE) o/ the Complete Psychological Works 0/
Sigmund Freud, trans. James Strachey in collaboration with Anna Freud, and with Alix StIachey
and Alan Tyson [London: Hogarth Press, 1 923] Volume XIX, p. 29) . We should remember that
for Freud the ego is produced rather than always being there: 'a unity comparable to the ego
cannot exist in the individual from the start; the ego has to be developed . . . so there must be
something added to auto-erotism - a new psychical action in order to bring about narcissism'
(Freud, 'On Narcissism: an Introduction,' SE, 1 9 1 4, Volume XIV, p. 77) .
1 7. Ideal formations are created by projective processes; i.e. they are thrown 'outside' to be
recuperated by means of identification. In this process, therefore, a certain outside is created as
projection of the inside. The ego ideal functions as a source of introjection, whereas the Ideal ego
functions as a source of projection. The latter is a function of the imaginary.
1 8 . ]. Lacan, 'La Identificaci6n', in Imago: Revista de Psicoandlisis, Psiquiatria y Psicologia
(Buenos Aires, 1 979) p . 66.
1 9. ].L. Borges, 'The Golem', Seleaed Poems. 1 923-1 967, edited with introduction and notes
by Norman Di Giovanni, trans. John Hollander (Harmondsworth: Penguin), p. 127.
20. Borges, 'The Golem', p . 127.
21. That is, there is a decentred and incomplete structure (a relatively stable terrain of
meaning) that in- and ex-eludes moments of subversion. The structure is organized around the
gaps that disorganize it. There is production of meaning because something is lost and something
else occupies its place, and this is what makes possible differential relations between signifiers and
the production of a signified. The lack enables productivity and multiplicity of meaning, the play
of signification, overdetermination, and it also triggers determination. But the lack will always
escape this demand for presence and it will be eternally postponed.
22. Of course, this logic on its own cannot define the limits of the social. Other logics are in
operation and are articulated to this one in several ways. For instance, the logic of equivalences
defines the antagonistic other, many times in very vague terms, and in this way contributes to the
installing of fear among the population since anyone can cross the limit: nobody is certain where
the limit lies.
23. We could think of, for instance, the elassical Freudian example of parapraxis: his forgetting
of the name of the painter of the Orvieto fresco, 'Signorelli'. His forgetting caused Freud an 'inner
torment' and only after a few days could he come up with two names: 'Botticelli and Boltraffio'.
When he finally remembered the name 'Signorelli', he attempted to explain the parapraxis by
examining the overdetermined character of the forgotten signifier. Freud's analysis weaves a
-
39
chain o f signifiers: Bosnia, Herzegovina, Traffoi. These are the 'metonymic ruins' of other
rejected signifiers of impossibility: death, the 'Herr' of sexuality. Freud concluded that, by means
of condensation and displacement, this signifier became a substitute for something else,
'some-Thing' that crossed the bar of signification and which Freud would link to Death and
Sexuality. TIlls lost something was rejected from the chain but remained within it via the
distortion of that chain ('The Psycho-pathology ofEveryday Life', SE, 1901, Volume III, p. 332).
24. Jacques Lacan, The Four Fundamental Concepts ofPyscho-Analysis, edited by Jacques-Alain
Miller, trans. Alan Sheridan (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1 977) p. 2 1 9 .
2 5 . Ibid., p. 2 1 8 .
2 6 . This does not mean that the distance between the self and the Other disappears. Quite the
contrary; the Other is external to the unity of the ego (of the narcissistic contract) in so far as the
Other exists in the tri-dimensional spaciality of the ego, where there is an inside and an outside.
27. Discontinuity is the form in which the unconscious appears. For Lacan, what strikes us
from the phenomena of the unconscious is 'the sense of impediment to be found in all of them.
Impediment, failure, split . . . . What occurs, what is produced, in this gap, is presented as the
disclJVety [ of psychoanalysis] .' The Four Fundamental Concepts, p. 25. These moments of rupture of
meaning 'mark and re-mark the text' and leave traces (ibid.). The formations of the unconscious,
in this context, are the traces that appear and disappear: they are produced in the (symbolic) order
but point at something which is outside its signifying dialectic.
28. This is not a split subject that is secondary to a primary unity. The subject emerges as a split
subject and therefore is non-subject before this moment.
29. Lacan, 'La Identificaciou', p. 6 1 .
30. Philippe Lacoue-Labarthe, 'Transcendence Ends in Politics', Typography: Mimesis,
Philosophy, Politics (Cambridge, Mass . : Harvard University Press, 1 989) p. 300 .
====
========
Reader's Digest is that a choice is an act which retroactively grounds its own
reasons. Between the causal chain of reasons provided by knowledge (S 2 , in
Lacanian mathemes) and the act of choice (that is, the decision that by way of
S I),
leap that cannot be accounted fo r by the preceding chain. 1 Let us recall what is
friend tries to convince the hero to leave his sexual parmer by way of
enumerating the latter's weak points; yet, unknowingly, he thereby provides
reasons for continued loyalty, that is, his very counter- arguments function as
arguments for commitment
This gap between reasons and their effect is the very foundation of what we
call transference, the transferential relationship, epitomized by love . Even our
sense of common decency finds it repulsive to enumerate the reasons we love
somebody: the moment I can say 'I love this person for the following
reasons . . . ', it is clear beyond any doubt that this is not love prop erly
speaking.3 In the case of true love, apropos of some feature which is in itself
negative, that is, which offers itself as reason against love, we say 'For this ve ry
reason I love this p erson even more ! ' Le trait unaire, the unitary feature which
triggers love, is always an
I D E NT I T Y A ND I T S VI C I S S I TUDE S
41
This circle within which we are determined by reasons, but only by those
whi ch, retroactively, we recognize as such, i s what Hegel has in mind when he
talks about the 'positing of presuppositions'. The same retroactive logic is at
work in Kant's philosophy, in the guise of what, in the Anglo-Saxon literature
4
on Kant, is usually referred to as the ' Incorporation Thesis ' . There is always
an element of autonomous ' spontaneity' which pertains to the subj ect, making
him irreducible to a link in the causal chain. True, one can conceive of the
subject as submitted to th e chain of causes which determine his or her conduct
in accordance with 'pathological' interests; and, indeed, therein consists the
wager of utilitarianism (since the subject's conduct is wholly determined by
se e king the maximum of pleasure and the minimum of pain, it would be
possible to govern the subject, to predict his or her steps, by controlling the
external conditions which influence his or her decisions) . But what eludes
utilitarianism is precisely the element of , spontaneity' (in the sense of German
Idealism) - the very opposite of the everyday meaning of ' spontaneity', that is,
surrendering oneself to the immediacy of emotional impulses, and so on.
According to German Idealism, when we act 'spontaneously' in the everyday
m e aning of the word, we are not free from, but prisoners of, our immediate
nature, determined by the causal link which chains us to the external world.
True spontaneity, on the contrary, is characterized by the moment of
reflexivity; reasons ultimately count only in so far as I 'incorporate' them,
' accept them as mine' - in other words, the determination of the subj ect by the
other is always the subj ect's self-determination. A decision is thus simul
taneously dependent on, and independent of, its conditions : it 'independendy'
posits its own dependence. In this precise sense, the subj ect in German
Idealism is always the subj ect of self-consciousness: any immediate reference
to my nature ('What can I do, I was made like this ! ') is false; my relationship to
the impulses in me is always a mediated one, that is, my impulses determine
me only in so far as I recognize them, which is why I am fully responsible for
them. 5
Another way to exemplifY this logic of 'positing the presuppositions ' is the
spontaneous ideological narrativization of our experience and activity:
whatever we do, we always situate it in a larger symbolic context charged with
conferring meaning upon our acts . A S erbian fighting the Muslim Albanians
and Bosnians in today's ex-Yugoslavia conceives of their fight as the last act in
the centuries-old defence of Christian Europe against Turkish penetration;
the Bolsheviks conceived of the October Revolution as the continuation and
Successful conclusion of all previous radical popular uprisings from Spartacus
in ancient Rome to the Jacobins in the French Revolution (this narrativization
is tacidy assumed even by some critics of Bolshevism who, for example, speak
of the ' Stalinist Thermidor') ; the Khmer Rouge in Cambodia or S endero
Luminoso in Peru conceive of their movement as a return to the old glory of an
ancient empire (the Inca empire in Peru, the old Khmer kingdom in
42
T H E M A K I NG O F P O L I T I C A L IDE N T I T I E S
Cambodia) ; and so on. The Hegelian point t o be made i s that such narratives
are always retroactive reconstructions for which we are in some way
responsible; they are never simple given facts. We can never refer to them as a
found condition, context or presupposition of our activity precisely because as
presuppositions such narratives are always-already 'posited' by us. Tradition
is tradition in so far as we constitute it as such.
These paradoxes enable us to specifY the nature of 'self-consciousness' in
GermanIdealism. In his critical remarks on Hegel, Lacan as a rule equates
self-consciousness with self-transparency, dismissing it as the most blatant
case of a philosophical illusion bent on denying the subject's constitutive
decentring. However, 'self-consciousness' in German Idealism has nothing
whatsoever to do with any kind of transparent self-identity of the subject; it is
rather another name for what Lacan himself has in mind when he points out
how every desire is by definition the 'desire of a desire'. The subject never
simply finds in itself a multitude of desires; he or she always entertains towards
them a reflected relationship. By way of actual desiring, the subject implicitly
answers the question, 'which of your desires do you desire (have you
chosen)?' 6 As we have already seen apropos of Kant, self-consciousness is
positively founded upon the non-transparency of the subject to itself: the
Kantian transcendental apperception (that is, the self-consciousness of pure
I) is possible only in so far as I am unattainable to myself in my noumenal
dimension, qua the 'Thing which thinks'. 7
There is, of course, a point at which this circular 'positing of the
presuppositions' reaches a deadlock - the key to which is provided by tlle
Lacanian logic of the non-all
[pas-tliutV
that was not previously posited'; that is, although, for every
particular
je ne sais
qu a i. In
Gender Trouble,
real,
the
Judith Butler
demonstrates how the difference between sex and gender - the difference
between a biological fact and a cultural-symbolic construction (which, a
decade ago, was widely used by feminists in order to show that 'anatomy is not
destiny', that is, that 'woman' as a cultural product is not determined by her
biological status) can never be unambiguously fixed or presupposed as a
positive fact. It is always-already 'posited': how we draw the line separating
'culture' from 'nature' is always determined by a specific cultural context.
This cultural overdetermination of the dividing line between gender and sex
should not, however, push us into accepting the Foucauldian notion of sex as
the effect of 'sexuality' (the heterogeneous texture of discursive practices), for
what gets lost is, thereby, precisely the deadlock of the real. 9 Here we see the
IDE N T I T Y A ND I T S VI C I S S I T U D E S
43
thin, but crucial, line that separates Lacan from 'deconstruction': by granting
the opposition between nature and culture as always-already culturally
overdetermined, that is, that no particular element can be isolated as 'pure
nature ' , does not mean that ' everything is culture ' . 'Nature' qua Real remains
the unfathomable X that resists cultural ' gentrification' . Or, to put it another
way: the Lacanian Real is the gap which separates the Particular from the
Universal, the gap that prevents us from completing the gesture of
universalization, blocking our jump from the premiss (that every particular
ele ment is P) , to the conclusion (that all elements are P) .
Consequently there is no logic of Prohibition involved in the notion of the
Real qua the imp ossible -nonsymbolizable . In Lacan, the Real is not
surreptitiously consecrated, envisioned as the domain of the inviolable . When
Lacan defines the ' rock of castration' as real, this in no way implies that
castration is excepted from the discursive field as
kind of untouchable
sacrifice. Every demarcation between the Symbolic and the Real, every
exclusion of the Real qua the prohibited-inviolable, is a symbolic act pat
excellence. S uch an inversion of impossibility into prohibition-exclusion occults
the inhetent deadlock of the Real. In other words, Lacan's strategy is to prevent
any tabooing of the Real; one can 'touch the real' only by applying oneself to its
symbolization, up to the very failure of this endeavour. In Kant's
Pure Reason,
Critique of
the only proofs that there are Things beyond phenomena are
paralogisms - inconsistencies
of .
. . (such as the
'dotting of the i', the tautological gesture of the Master-S ignifier that
cons titutes the entity in question as One . Here we see the asymmetry be
tween positing and presupposing: the positing ofpresuppositions chances upon its
limit in the 'feminine ' non-all; what eludes it is the real; whereas the enumeration
of the presuppositions of the posited content is made into a closed series by means of
the 'masculine ' petformative.
Hegel endeavours to resolve this impasse of positing the presuppositions
44
But the
moment we grasp that the 'identity' of an entity consists of the cluster of its
differential features, we pass from identity to difference . The social identity of
a person X, for example, is composed of the cluster of its social mandates
which are all by definition differential: a person is 'father' only in relation to
'mother' and 'son'; in another relation, he is hims elf 'son', and so on. Here is
the crucial passage from Hegel's
Logic in which
Father is the other of son, and son the other of father, and each only is as this other
of the other; and at the same time, the one determination only is, in relation to the
other . . . The father also has an existence of his own apart from the son
relationship; but then he is not father but simply man . . . Opposites, therefore,
contain contradiction in so far as they are, in the same respect, negatively related to
one another or sublate each other and are indifferent to one another. \3
The inattentive reader may easily miss the key accent of this passage, the
feature which belies the standard notion of the Hegelian contradiction.
' Contradiction' does
not take place between 'father' and ' son' (here, we have a
45
case of simple opposition between two co-dependent terms) ; but neither does
it turn on the fact that in one relation (to my son) I am 'father' and in another
(to my own father) I am myself 'son', that is, I am 'simultaneously father and
son'. If this were all there were to the Hegelian contradiction, Hegel would
effectively be guilty of logical confusion, since it is clear that I cannot be both
in the same respect. The last phrase in the quoted passage from Hegel's Logic
locates the contradiction clearly
'contradiction' desig
n ates the antagonistic relationship between what I am 'for the others ' - my
pure 'being-for-himself' and the signifYing feature which represents him for
the others ; in Lacanian terms : between S and S I . More precisely, 'contra
diction' means that it is my very alienation in the symbolic mandate, in S I ,
which retroactively makes S (the void that eludes the hold o f the mandate) out
of my brute reality. I am not only 'father', not only this particular
determination; but beyond these symbolic mandates, I am nothing but the
void that eludes them. As such, I am their own retroactive product.14 It is the
very symbolic representation in the differential network which evacuates my
'pathological' content; that is, which makes out of S , the substantial fullness of
the 'pathological' subj ect, the barred S, the void of pure self-relating.
What I am ' for the others ' is condensed in the signifier which then
represents me for other signifiers (for the 'son' I am 'father', and so on) .
Outside of my relations to the others I am nothing. I am only the cluster of
these relations (or as Marx would have said : 'the human essence is the entirety
of social relations ') , but this very 'nothing' is the nothing of pure self-relating:
I am only what I am for the others , yet simultaneously I am the one who
form of my relating to the other. Or, to put it in the terms of Lac an's scheme of
discours e : 1 5
We must be careful not to miss the logic of this passing of opposition into
contradiction: it has nothing to do with coincidence or co-dependence of the
opp osites, with one pole passing into its opposite, and so forth. Let us take the
case of man and woman: one can endlessly vary the motif of their
co-dependence (each is only as the other of the other, its being is mediated by
the being of its opposite, and so on) , but as long as we continue to set this
46
as 'truncated man' . Here the relationship of the two poles ceases to be sym
metrical, since man stands for the genus itself, whereas woman stands for
specific difference as such. (Or, to put it in the language of structural linguis
tics : we enter contradiction proper when one of the terms of the opposition
starts to function as 'marked', and the other as 'non-marked') .
Consequently, we only pass from opposition to contradiction through the
logic of what Hegel called 'oppositional determination ' : when the universal,
common ground, of the two opposites ' encounters itself' in its oppositional
determination, that is, in one of the terms of the opposition. Let us recall
Marx's
Capital,
Grundrisse;
here, production
16
Great D iaato r
identity:
The
Hynkel
47
Hynkel, while the barber runs down the street, as if persecuted by the
multiplied echoes of his own voice, as if running away from his own shadow.
Therein lies a deeper insight than might at first seem: the Jewish barber in
The
Great Dictator is not depicted primarily as aJew, but rather as the epitome of ' a
little man who wants t o live his modest, peaceful everyday life outside o f
p olitical turmoil' ; whereas Nazism i s precisely the enraged reverse of this
'little man', erupting when its customary world is thrown off the rails . In the
the film plays the role of the victim and at the same time the idyllic counterpart
of 'Tomania'? It is Germany, which emb odies at the same time an
'Austerlic' -Austria, the small wine- growing country of happy innocent people
living together like a large family. In short, it is the land of 'fascism with a
human face ' Y The fact that the same music (the Prelude to Wagner's
Lohengrin)
made here is that this statement is probably true: in all likelihood, Gorbachov
'really' did want only to improve the existing system; however, and
notwithstanding his intentions, his acts set in motion a process which
48
T H E M A K I N G OF P O L I T IC A L IDE N T I T I E S
transformed the system from top t o bottom. The 'truth' resided i n what not
only Gorbachov's distrustful critics took to be, but also what Gorbachov
himself took to be, a mere external form.
'Essence' , thus conceived, remains an empty determination whose ad
equacy can be tested only by verifYing the extent to which it is expressed,
rendered manifest, in the external form. We thus obtain the subsequent
couple 'form/matter' in which the relationship is inverted. Form ceases to be a
passive expression-effect, behind which one has to look for some hidden 'true
essence', and becomes instead the agency which individuates the otherwise
passive-formless matter, conferring on it some particular determination. In
other words, the moment we become aware of how the entire determinated
ness of the essence resides in its form, essence, conceived abstractly from its
form, changes into a formless substratum of the form; that is , into
matter.
As
Hegel concisely puts it: the moment of determination and the moment of
subsistence thereby fall apart, are posited as distinct; where a thing is
concerned, 'matter' is the passive moment of subsistence (its substantial
substratum-ground) , whereas 'form' is what provides for its specific determi
nation, what makes this thing what it is .
The dialectic which hampers this seemingly straight opposition is not
limited to the fact that we never encounter 'pure' matter devoid of any form
(the clay out of which a pot is made must already possess properties which
make it appropriate for some form and not for another - for a pot, not for a
needle, for example) , so that 'pure' formless matter passes into its opposite,
into an empty form-receptacle bereft of any concrete, positive, substantial
determination, and vice versa, of course. But what Hegel has in mind here is
something more radical: the inherent contradiction of the notion of form
which designates both the principle of universalization and the principle of
individuation. Form is what makes out of some formless matter a particular,
determinate, thing (say, a cup out of clay) ; but it is at the same time the abstract
Universal, common to different things (paper cups, glass cups, china cups and
metal cups are all 'cups' on account of their commonfimn) . The only way out
of this deadlock is to conceive matter not as s omething passive-formless, but
as something which already in itself possesses an inherent structure, that is,
something which stands opposite form and, at the same time, is furnished with
its own
content.
position of inner essence and externally imposed form, one has to keep in
mind that the couple content/form (or, more pointedly, content as such) is just another
name for the tautological relationship by which form is related to itself. For what is
'content' if not, precisely,formed matter? One can thus define 'form' as the way
some content is actualized, realized, in matter (by means of the latter's
adequate formation) : 'the same content' - the story of Caesar's murder, for
example - can be told in different forms , from Plutarch's historiographical
report, through Shakespeare's play, to a Hollywood movie. Alternatively, one
49
can define form as the universality which unites the multitude of diverse con
tents (the form of the classical detective novel, for example, functions as the
s keleton of codified genre rules which set a common seal on the works of
authors as different as Agatha Christie, E . S . Gardner, and so on) . In other
wo rds, and in so far as matter stands for the abstract Other of the form, 'con
tent' is the way matter is mediated by form, and inversely, ' form' is the way
content finds its expression in matter. In both cases, the relationship content!
form, in contrast to the relationship matterlform, is
tautological:
'content' is
Logic.
the level of notion, that is, essence is the simple in-itself of the notion, of the
substantial determination of an entity. The next step literally brings about the
into its two constitutive moments that are thus 'posited' as such; that is to say,
explicated, but in the mode of externality, that is, as external, indifferent to
each other: the moment of subsistence (matter qua substratum) and the
moment of determination (form) . A substratum acquires determination when
a form is predicated to it. The third step, finally, renders manifest the ternary
structure of mediation, the distinguishing mark of syllogism, with form as its
middle term.
Logic;
it is as if we can truly
15 0 years,
other things, this subdivision anticipates both the young Marx's critique of
Hegel and the concept of overdetermination which was develop ed by
Althusser precisely as an alternative to the allegedly Hegelian notion of
' expressive causality' .
Formal ground repeats the tautological gesture of the immediate reference
to 'tru e essence' : it does not add any new content to the phenomenon to b e
explained, i t j u s t translates, transposes, the found empirical content into the
form of ground. To comprehend this process , one need only recall how
doctors sometimes respond when we describe our symptoms : 'Aha, clearly a
case of . . . ' . What then follows is a long, incomprehensible Latin term which
simply translates the content of our complaints into medicalese, adding no
new knowledge. Psychoanalytic theory itself offers one of the clearest
so
T H E M A K I N G O F P O L I T I C A L IDE N T I T I E S
examples o f what Hegel has i n mind with 'formal ground', i n the way it
sometimes uses the notion of death-drive . Explaining the so-called 'negative
therapeutic reaction' (more generally, of the phenomena of aggressivity,
destructive rage, war, and so on) by invoking
that only confers upon the same empirical content the universal form of law:
people kill each other because they are driven to it by the death-drive. The
principal target of Hegel himself is here a certain simplified version of
Newtonian physics : this stone is heavy - why? On account of the force of
gravity, and so on. But the bountiful sneers in Hegel's comments on formal
ground should not blind us to its positive side for the necessary, constitutive,
function of this formal gesture of converting contingent content that was
simply found into the form of ground. It is easy to deride the tautological
emptiness of this gesture, but Hegel's point lies elsewhere : by means of its very
formal character, this gesture renders possible the search for the real ground .
Formal causality qua empty gesture opens up the field of the analysis of
content, as with Marx's
Capital,
grasp conceptually
the
themselves assume again sensible form, the very sensible world is redoubled :
a s if, b y the side o f o u r ordinary sensible world, there exists another world of
'spiritual materiality' (of ether qua fine stuff, and so on) . Why are Hegel's
IDEN T I T Y A ND I T S VI C I S S I T UDES
S1
not possible since 'all places are already taken' . If, however, space is empty, no
contact, no interaction can occur between two bodies separated by space since
no force can be transmitted via pure void. From this paradox, Kant drew the
conclusion that space is possible only if sustained by ' ether' qua all-pervasive,
all-penetrating world-stuff which is practically the same as space itself
hypostatically conceived: an all-present element which is space itself, which
continuously fills it out and is as such the medium of the interaction of all other
'ordinary' positive forces and/or obj ects in space. This is what Hegel has in
mind apropos of the 'topsy-turvy world' : Kant solves the opposition of empty
space and the objects filling it out by way of presupposing a 'matter' which is its
opposite, that is, thoroughly transparent, homogeneous and continuous similar to primitive religions with their notion of the Supra-sensible as an
etherial-material B eyond . (The need for this hypothesis evaporates, of course,
as soon as one accepts the post-Newtonian notion of non-homogeneous
space/I
Consequently, formal ground is followed by real ground : the difference
between ground and grounded ceases to be purely formal. It is displaced into
content itself and is conceived as the distinction between two of its
constituents; in the very content of the phenomenon to be explained, one has
to isolate some moment and to conceive of it as the 'ground' of all other
moments which thereby appear as what is ' grounded'. In traditional Marxism,
for example, the so-called 'economical basis' (that is, the structure of the
process of production), is the moment that, notwithstanding the incon
veniences of the notorious 'last instance', determines all other moments
(Political and ideological superstructure) . Here , of course, the question
emerges immediately: Why this moment and not some other? That is to say, as
so on as we isolate s ome moment from the whole and conceive of it as its
'ground' , we must also take into account the way ground itself is determined
by the totality of relations within which it functions as ground: ' ground' can
conditions . In short, we can only ever answer the question 'Why this moment
and not some other? ' through the detailed analysis of the entire network of
relations between the ground and the grounded. And that explains why it is
T H E M A K I N G OF P O L I T I C A L I DENT I T I E S
52
precisely this element o f the network that plays the role o f ground; for what is
thus accomplished is the step to the next, final, modality of ground, in order to
complete the ground. It is crucial to grasp the precise nature of Hegel's
accomplishment: he does not put forward another, even 'deeper' supra
Ground which would ground the ground itself; he simply grounds the ground
in the totality of its relations to the grounded content. In this precise sense,
complete ground is the unity of formal and real ground : it is the real ground
whose grounding relationship to the remaining content is again grounded. But
in what is it grounded? In itself; that is, in the totality ofits relations to the grounded.
The ground grounds the grounded, but this grounding role must itself be
grounded in the relationship of the ground to the grounded. Thus, we again
arrive at the tautology (the moment of formal ground), but not at the empty
tautology, as in the case of formal ground. Now, the tautology contains the
moment of contradiction in the precise above-mentioned Hegelian sense. It
designates the identity of the Whole with its 'oppositional determination' : the
identity of a moment of the Whole - the real ground - with the Whole itself.
In Reading Capital, 22 Louis Althusser sought to illuminate the epistemologi
cal break of Marxism by means of a new concept of causality, that of 'over
determination'. Rather than posing an oppositional determination, he held
that the very determining instance is overdetermined by the total network of
relations within which it plays the determining role. Althusser contrasted this
notion of causality to that of both mechanical transitive causality (the linear
chain of causes and effects whose paradigmatic case is classical, pre
Einsteinian physics) and expressive causality (the inner essence which ex
presses itself in the multitude of its forms-of-appearance) . 'Expressive cau
sality', of course, targets Hegel in whose philosophy the same spiritual essence
zeitgeist allegedly expresses itself at the different levels of society; for ex
ample, in religion as Protestantism, in politics as the liberation of civil society
from the chains of medieval corporatism, in law as the rule of private property
and the emergence of free individuals as its bearers. This triad of expressive
transitive- overdeterminant causality parallels the Lacanian triad Imaginary
Real-Symbolic. Expressive causality belongs to the level of the Imaginary; it
designates the logic of an identical imago which leaves its imprint at different
levels ofmaterial content. Overdetermination implies a symbolic totality, since
such retroactive determination of the ground by the totality of the grounded is
possible only within a symbolic universe. And, finally, transitive causality
designates the senseless collisions of the real. Today, in the midst of ecological
catastrophe, it is especially important that we conceive this catastrophe as a
meaningless real tusche; that is, that we do not 'read meanings into things', as is
done by those who interpret the ecological crisis as a 'deeper sign' of
punishment for our merciless exploitation of nature, and so on. (Suffice it to
recall the theories on the homology between the soul's inner world and the
outer world of the universe which are again fashionable within the so-called
-
I DENT I T Y A N D I T S VI C I S S I T UDES
53
54
T H E M A K I N G O F P O LIT I C AL IDE N T I T I E S
by
more radical than they appear. They concern, above all, the radically
anti-evolutionary character of Hegel's philosophy, as exemplified in the
notional couple
and
that
(ii) actuality itself, in the sense of external, immediate, 'raw' obj ectivity which
is still opposed to subj ective mediation, which is not yet internalized, rendered
conscious . In this sense, the 'in-itself' is actuality in so far as it has not yet
reached its Notion.
The simultaneous reading of these two aspects undermines the usual idea
of dialectical progress as a gradual realization of the object's inner potentials,
as its spontaneous self-development. Hegel is here quite outspoken and
explicit: the inner potentials of the self-development of an obj ect and the
pressure exerted on it by an external force are
two parts of the same conjunction. In other words, the potentiality of the obj ect
must also be present in its external actuality, under the form of heteronomous
coercion. For example (and the example here comes from Hegel himself) , to
say that a pupil at the beginning of the process of education is somebody who
potentially knows, somebody who, in the course of his development, will
realize his or her creative potentials,
inner potentials
must be present from the very beginning in external actuality as the authority
of the Master who exerts pressure upon his or her pupil. Today, one can add
to this the sadly-famous case of the working class qua revolutionary subj ect: to
affirm that the working class is 'in itself' , potentially, a revolutionary subj ect,
equals the assertion that this potentiality must already be actualized in the
Party which knows in advance about the revolutionary mission and therefore
exerts pressure upon the working class, guiding it towards the realization of its
potential. Thus the 'leading role' of the Party is legitimized, that is, its right to
'educate' the working class in accordance with its potential, to 'implant' in this
class its historical mission, and so forth.
55
We can see, now, why Hegel is as far as is possible from the evolutionist
no tion of the progressive development of in-itself into for-itself: the category
of 'in -itself' is stricdy correlative to 'for us', that is, for some consciousness
external to the thing-in-itself. To say that a clump of clay is 'in itself' a pot
me ans the same thing as saying that this pot is already present in the mind of
the craftsman who will impose the form of pot on the clay. The current way of
saying 'under the right conditions the pupil will realize his or her potential' is
thus deceptive. When, for example, in excuse for the pupil's foilure to realize
his potential, we insist that 'he would have realized it, if only the conditions
had been right', we thereby commit an error of cynicism worthy of Brecht's
famous lines from the Threepenny Opera: 'We would be good instead of being
so rude, if only the circumstances were not of this kind ! ' For Hegel, then,
external circumstances are not an impediment to realizing inner potentials,
but on the contrary the very arena in which the true nature ofthese inner potentials
is to be tested. But are such potentials true potentials or just vain illusions about
what might have happened? Or, to put it in Spinozian terms, 'positing
reflection' observes things as they are in their eternal essence, sub specie
aeternitatis, whereas 'external reflection' observes them sub specie durationis, in
their dependence on a series of contingent external circumstances . Here
everything hinges on how Hegel overcomes ' external reflection' . If his aim
were simply to reduce the externality of contingent conditions to the
self-mediation of the inner essence-ground (the usual notion of 'Hegel's
idealism'), then Hegel's philosophy would truly be a mere 'dynamized
Spinozism'. But what does Hegel actually do?
Let us approach this problem via Lacan: in what precise sense can we
maintain that Lacan of the late forties and early fifties was a Hegelian? In order
to get a clear idea of his Hegelianism, it is sufficient to take a closer look at how
he conceives of the analyst's 'passivity' in the psychoanalytical cure . Since 'the
actual is rational', the analyst does not have to force her interpretations upon
the analysand; all she has to do is clear the way for the analysand to arrive at his
own truth by means of a mere punctuation of his speech. This is what Hegel
has in mind when he speaks of the 'cunning of reason' : the analyst does not
seek to undermine the analysand's self-deceit, his attitude of the 'Beautiful
Soul', by direcdy confronting him with the 'true state of things', but rather by
giving him a free rein, of removing all obstacles that may serve as an excuse,
thus compelling him to reveal 'the stuff he is actually made of' . In this precise
sense 'the actual is rational'. And our - that is, the Hegelian philosopher's trust in the inherent rationality of the actual means dlat actuality provides the
only testing ground for the reasonableness of the subject's claims. Or, to put it
slighdy differendy, the moment the subject is bereft of external obstacles
which can be blamed for his failure, his subj ective position will collapse on
ac count of its inherent inauthenticity. What we have here is a kind of cynicized
He ideggerianism: since the object is in itself inconsistent, since what allows it
56
T H E M A K I N G O F P O L I T I C A L IDE N T I T I E S
57
affect the existence of the obj ect in question; and, more to the point, when a
thin g 'reaches its notion', what impact does this have on its existence? To
clarifY this question, let us recall an example confirming Lacan's thesis that
Marxis m is not a 'world view'; 29 namely, the idea that the proletariat becomes
an actual revolutionary subject by way of integrating the knowledge of its
3D
histori cal role . Historical materialism, dlen, is not a neutral 'objective
knowledge' of historical development, since it is an act of self-knowledge of a
historical subj ect - an act that, as such, implies the proletarian subj ective
position. In other words, the 'knowledge' proper to historical materialism is
self-referential; it changes its 'object' . Indeed, it is only via the act of
knowledge that the object becomes what it truly 'is'. So, the rise of
'class-consciousness' produces the effect in the existence of its 'obj ect' (the
proletariat) by way of changing it into an actual revolutionary subject. Is it not
the same with psychoanalysis? Doesn't the interpretation of a symptom
constitute a direct intervention of the Symbolic in the Real; doesn't it offer an
example of how the word can affect the Real of the symptom? And, on the
other hand, doesn't such an efficacy of the Symbolic presuppose entities
whose existence literally hinges on a certain non -knowledge? For, the moment
knowledge is assumed (through interpretation), existence disintegrates. Here,
existence is not one of the predicates of a Thing, but designates the way the
Thing relates to its predicates; or, rather, the way the Thing is related to itselfby
means of (drro ugh the detour of) its predicates-properties. 3 ! When a
proletarian becomes aware of his or her 'historical role', none of their aaual
predicates change. What changes is just the way he or she relates to them, and
this change in the relationship to predicates radically affects their existence.
To designate this awareness of 'historical role', traditional Marxism makes
use of the Hegelian couple 'in -itself/ for-itself' . Hence, by way of arriving at
its 'class-consciousness', the proletariat changes from a 'class-in-itself' to a
'class-for-itself'. The dialectic at work here is that of a foiled encounter: the
passage to 'for itself', to the Notion, involves the loss of existence. Nowhere is
this failed encounter more obvious than in a passionate love affair: its 'in itself'
OCcurs when I simply yield to the passion, unaware ofwhat is happening to me;
afterwards, when the affair is over, aufkehoben in my recollection, it becomes
'for itself' - I retroactively become aware of what I had, of what I lost. This
awareness ofwhat I lost gives birth to the fantasy of the impossible conjunction
of being and knowledge ('if only I would have known how happy I was . . .').
B ut is the Hegelian 'in-and-for-itself [An-und-Fuer-sich] , really such an
impo ssible conjunction, the fantasy of a moment when I am happy and I know
it? Is it not rather the unmasking of the illusion of the 'external reflection' that
still pertains to 'for-itself; that is, to the illusion that, in the past, I actually was
happy without knowing it? Is it not precisely the insight into how 'happiness' by
definition comes to be, retroactively, by means of the experience of its loss?
This illusion of the external reflection can be further exemplified by Billy
S8
T H E M A K I N G O F P O L I T I C A L IDEN T I T IES
Bathgate, the film based on E.L. Doctorow's novel. The film is fundamentally
a failed version of the novel and the impression it arouses is that what we see is
a pale, distorted reflection of its, far superior, literary source. There is,
however, an unpleasant surprise in store for those who, after seeing the film,
set about to read the novel: the novel is far closer to the insipid happy end
(wherein, Billy pockets the hidden wealth of Dutch Schultz). Moreover,
numerous delicate details that the spectator unacquainted with the novel
experiences as fragments happily not lost in the impoverishing process of
transposition to cinema - fragments that miraculously survived the shipwreck
-actually tum out to be added by the scriptwriter. In short, the 'superior' novel
evoked by the film's failure is not the pre-existent actual novel upon which the
film is based, but a retroactive chimera aroused by the film itself. 32
S9
circ umstance? Let us take another example: renaissance, that is, the redis
cove ry ('rebirth') of antiquity which exerted a crucial influence on the break
with the medieval way of life in the fifteenth century. The first, obvious
exp lan ation is that the influence of the newly discovered antique tradition
bro ught about the dissolution of the medieval 'paradigm' . Here, however, a
question immediately arises: why did antiquity begin to exert its influence at
precisely that moment and not earlier or later? The answer that offers itself, of
course, is that due to the dissolution of medieval social links, a new 'zeitgeist'
emerged which made us responsive to antiquity - something must have
changed in 'us' so that we became able to perceive antiquity not as a pagan
kingdom of sin but as the model to be adopted. That's all very well, but we still
remain locked in a vicious circle, since this new 'zeitgeist' itself took shape
precisely through the discovery of antique texts as well as fragments of
classical architecture and sculpture . In a way, everything was already there, in
the external circumstances; the new 'zeitgeist' formed itself through the
influence of antiquity which enabled renaissance thought to shatter the
medieval chains . And yet, for this influence of antiquity to be felt, the new
'zeitgeist' must already have been active . The only way out of this impasse is
thus the intervention, at a certain point, of a tautological gesture : the new
'zeitgeist' had to constitute itselfby literally presupposing itselfin its exteriority , in
its external conditions (in antiquity) . In other words, it was not sufficient for
the new 'zeitgeist' retroactively to posit these external conditions (the antique
tradition) as 'its own', it had to (presup)pose itself as already-present in these
conditions . Or, to put it directly, the return to external conditions (to antiquity) had
to coincide with the return to thefoundation, to the 'thing itself', to the ground. (This
is precisely how the 'renaissance' conceived itself: as the return to the Greek
and Roman foundations of our Western civilization.) We do not, as a
consequence, have an inner ground, the actualization of which depends on
external circumstance . Instead, the external relation of presupposing (ground
presupposes conditions and vice versa) is surpassed in a pure tautological
gesture by means of which the thingpresupposes itself. This tautological gesture
is 'empty' in the precise sense that it does not contribute anything new; it only
retroactively ascertains that tlle thing in question is already present in its
conditions, that is, that the totality of these conditions is the actuality of the
thing. Such an empty gesture provides us with the most elementary definition
of the symbolic act.
Here we see the fundamental paradox of'rediscovering tradition' at work in
the constitution of national identity: a nation finds its sense of self-identity by
means of such a tautological gesture, that is, by way of discovering itself as
alre ady present in its tradition. Consequently, the mechanism of the
'r ediscovery of national tradition' cannot be reduced to the 'positing of
p res uppositions' in the sense of the retroactive positing of conditions as 'ours'.
The point is rather that, in the very act of returning to its (external) conditions,
60
T H E M A K I N G O F P O L I T I C A L I D ENT I T IES
the (national) thing returns to itself, the return to conditions is experienced as the
'return to our true roots'.
61
of the fascinating presence of the shark is precisely to block any further inquiry
into the social meaning (social mediation) of those phenomena that arouse
fear in the common man. But to say that the murderous shark 'symbolizes' the
above-mentioned series of fears is to say both too much and not enough at the
same time. It does not symbolize them, since it literally annuls them by
o ccupying itself the place of the obj ect of fear. It is therefore 'more' than a
symb ol; it becomes the feared 'thing itself'. Yet, the shark is decidedly less
than a symbol, since it does not point towards the symbolized content but
rather blocks access to it, renders it invisible. In this way, it is homologous with
the anti -Semitic figure of the Jew: 'Jew' is the explanation offered by
anti-Semitism for the multiple fears experienced by the 'common man' in an
epoch of dissolving social links (inflation, unemployment, corruption, moral
degradation); behind all these phenomena lies the invisible hand of the 'Jewish
plot' . However, the crucial point here, again, is that the designation 'Jew' does
not add any new content: the entire content is already present in the external
conditions (crisis, moral degeneration, and so on); the name 'Jew' is only the
supplementary feature which accomplishes a kind of transubstantiation,
changing all these elements into so many manifestations of the same ground,
the 'Jewish plot'. Paraphrasing the joke on socialism, one could say that
anti-Semitism takes from the economy, unemployment and inflation; from
politics, parliamentary corruption and intrigue; from morality, its own
degeneration; from art, 'incomprehensible' avant-gardism; and from the Jew,
the name. This name enables us to recognize behind the multitude of external
conditions the activity of the same ground.
Here we also find at work the dialectic of contingency and necessity. As to
their content, they fully coincide (in both cases, the only positive content is the
series of conditions that form part of our actual life-experience: economic
crisis, political chaos, the dissolution of ethical links, and so on) ; the passage of
contingency into necessity is an act of purely formal conversion, the gesture of
adding a name which confers upon the contingent series the mark of necessity,
thereby transforming it into the expression of some hidden ground (the
'J ewish plot') . This is also how later - at the very end of the 'logic of essence'
we pass from absolute necessity to freedom. To comprehend properly this
passage, one has to renounce thoroughly the standard notion of 'freedom as
comprehended necessity' (after getting rid of the illusions of free will, one can
r ec ognize and freely accept one's place in the network of causes and their
effects) . But Hegel's point, on the contrary, is that it is only the subjea 's (free) aa
of 'dotting the i' which retroactively instals necessity, so that the very act by means
ofwhich the subject recognizes (and thus constitutes) necessity is the supreme
act of freedom and, as such, the self-suppression of necessity. Voila pourquoi
Hegel n 'est pas spinoziste: on account of this tautological gesture of retroactive
p erfo rmativity. So 'performativity' in no way designates the power of freely
'c re ating' the designated content ('words mean what we want them to mean',
62
and so forth) ; the ' quilting' only structures the material which i s found,
externally imposed. The act of naming is 'performative' only and precisely in
so far as it is always-already part ofthe definition ofthe signified content.35
This is how Hegel resolves the deadlock of positing and external reflection,
the vicious circle of positing the presuppositions and of enumerating the
presuppositions of the posited content: by means of the tautological
return-upon-itself of the thing in its very external presuppositions . And the
same tautological gesture is already at work in Kant's analytic of pure reason:
the synthesis of the multitude of sensations in the representation of the object
which belongs to 'reality' implies an empty surplus, that is, the positing of an X
as the unknown substratum of the perceived phenomenal sensations . S uffice
it to quote Findlay's precise formulation:
[W]e always refer appearances to a Transcendental Object, an X, of which we,
however, know nothing, but which is nonetheless the objective correlate of the
sYnthetic acts inseparable from thinking self-consciousness. The Transcendental
Object, thus conceived, can be called a Noumenon or thing of thought
[Gedankending) . But the reference to such a thing of thought does not, strictly
speaking, use the categories, but is something like an empty synthetic gesture in which
nothing objective is really put before US.36
This X, this unrepresentable surplus which adds itself to the series of sensible
features, is precisely the 'thing-of-thought [Gedankending) ' : it bears witness to
the fact that the obj ect's unity does not reside within it, but is the result of the
subject's synthetic activity. (As with Hegel, where the act offormal conversion
IDE N T I T Y A ND I T S VI C I S S I TUDE S
63
64
T H E M A K I N G O F P O L I T I C A L IDE N T I T I E S
IDE N T I T Y A ND I T S VI C I S S I T UDE S
6S
epis te mological version is only that, in the first case, contingency is part of
this re ality itself, whereas in the second case, reality is wholly determined by
neces sity. In contrast to both these versions, Hegel affirms the basic thesis of
sp eculative idealism: the process of knowledge (that is, our comprehending
the obj ect) is not something external to the obj ect but inherently determines
its status. As Kant puts it, the conditions of possibility of our experience are
als o the conditions of possibility of the objects of experience. In other words,
while contingency does express the incompleteness of our knowledge, this
incompleteness also ontologically defines the object of knowledge itself. It bears wit
ness to the fact that the object itself is not yet ontologically 'realized', fully
actual. The merely epistemological status of contingency is thus invalidated,
without us falling back into ontological naivety: behind the appearance of
contingency there is no hidden, not-yet-known necessity, but only the necess
ity ofthe very appearance that, behind supeificial contingency, there is an underlying
substantial necessity. And this is similar to the case of anti-Semitism, where
the ultimate appearance is the very appearance of the underlying necessity,
that is, the appearance that, behind the series of actual features (unemploy
ment, moral disintegration, and so on), there is the hidden necessity of the
'J ewish plot' . Therein consists the Hegelian inversion of 'external' into 'ab
solute' reflection : in external reflection, appearance is the elusive surface
concealing its hidden necessity, whereas in absolute reflection, appearance is
the appearance of this very (unknown) Necessity behind contingency. Or, to
make use of an even more 'Hegelian' speculative formulation, if contingency
is an appearance concealing some hidden necessity, then this necessity is
stricto sensu an appearance of itself.
This inherent antagonism of the relationship between contingency and
necessity offers an exemplary case of the Hegelian triad: first the 'naive'
ontological conception which locates the difference in things themselves
(some events are in themselves contingent, others necessary), and then the
attitude of 'external reflection' which conceives of this difference as purely
epistemological, that is, dependent upon the incompleteness of our know
ledge (we experience as 'contingent' an event when the complete causal
chain that produced it remains beyond our grasp) . But what, then, what ex
actly would be the third choice - other than the seemingly exhaustive one
between ontology and epistemology? Answer: the very relationship between
possibility (qua subjective seizing of actuality) and actuality (qua the object of con
ceptual seizing) . Here we find, tllen, that both contingency and necessity are
c ate gories which express the dialectical unity of the actual and possible.
They are to be distinguished only in so far as contingency designates this
unity conceived in the mode of subjectivity, of the 'absolute unrest' of be
C oming, of the split between subject and object, and 'necessity' of this same
C ontent conceived in the mode of obj ectivity, of determinate being, of the
identity of subj ect and object, of the rest of the Result. 42 In short, we are
66
again at the category o f pure formal conversion, the change concerns only the
modality of form:
This absolute unrest of the becoming of these two detenninations is contingency. But
just because each immediately turns into its opposite, equally in this other it
simply unites with itself, and this identity of both, of one in the other, is necessity.43
67
not this ambiguity again the way sexual difference is inscribed into the very
core of Hegel's logic ?
68
T H E M A K I N G O F P O L I T I C A L IDE N T I T I E S
pressure on us in the guise of the 'voice of conscience' : when I offer the usual
excuses ('I did all that was possible, there was no choice'), the superego-voice
keeps gnawing at me, 'No, you could have done more ! ' This is what Kant has
in mind when he insists that freedom is actual already as possibility: when I
gave way to pathological impulses and did not carry out my duty, the actuality
of my freedom is attested to by my awareness of how I could have acted
otherwise. 48 This is also what Hegel aims at when maintaining that the actual
[das Wirkliche] is not the same as that which simply exists [das Bestehende] : my
conscience pricks me when my act (of giving way to pathological impulses) was
not 'actual', did not express my true moral nature - this difference exerts
pressure on me in the guise of 'conscience' .
One can discern the same logic behind the recent revival o f the conspiracy
theory (Oliver Stone's JFK) : who was behind Kennedy's murder? The
ideological cathexis of this revival is clear: Kennedy's murder acquired such
traumatic dimensions retroactively, from the later experience of the Vietnam
War, of the Nixon administration's cynical corruption, and of the revolt of the
sixties that opened up the gap between the young generation and the
establishment. This later experience transformed Kennedy into a person who,
had he remained alive , would have spared us Vietnam, the gap separating the
sixties generation from the establishment, and so on. (What the conspiracy
theory 'represses', of course, is the painful fact of Kennedy's impotence:
Kennedy himself would not have been able to prevent the emergence of this
gap.) The conspiracy theory thus keeps alive the dream of another America,
different from the one we came to know in the seventies and eighties. 49
Hegel's position with regard to the relationship of possibility and actuality is
thus very refined and precise: possibility is simultaneously less and more than
what its notion implies . Conceived in its abstract opposition to actuality, it is a
'mere possibility' and, as such, coincides with its opposite, impossibility. On
another level, however, possibility already possesses a certain actuality in its
very capacity ofpossibility, which is why any further demand for its actualization
is superfluous . In this sense, Hegel points out that the idea of freedom realizes
itself through a series of failures : every particular attempt to realize freedom
may fail; from its point of view, freedom remains an empty possibility - but the
very continuous striving of freedom to realize itself bears witness to its
'actuality', that is, to the fact that freedom is not a 'mere notion', but manifests
a tendency that pertains to the very essence of reality. On the other hand, the
supreme case of 'mere possibility' is the Hegelian 'abstract universal'. What
we have in mind here is the well-known paradox of the relationship between
universal judgement and judgement of existence in the classical Aristotelian
syllogism: judgement of existence implies the existence of its subject, whereas
universal judgement can also be true even if its subject does not exist, since it
concerns only the notion of the subject. If, for example, one says 'At least one
man is (or: some men are) mortal', this judgement is true only if at least one
I D E N T I T Y AND I T S VI C I S S I T U D E S
69
man exists . If, on the contrary, one says 'A unicorn has only one horn', this
ju dgement remains true even if there are no unicorns, since it concerns solely
th e immanent determination of the notion of ' unicorn'. Far from its relevance
bein g limited to pure theoretical ruminations, this gap between the universal
an d the particular has palpable material effects - in politics , for example.
According to the results of a public- opinion poll in the autumn of 1991, in the
choice between Bush and a non-specified Democratic candidate, the
non-specified Democrat would win easily. However, in the choice between
Bush and any concrete, individual Democrat, provided with face and name
(Kerrey, Cuomo , or whatever), Bush would have an easy win. In short, the
Democrat in general wins over Bush, whereas Bush wins over any concrete
Democrat. To the misfortune of the Democrats, there is no 'Democrat in
general'. 50
The status of possibility, while different from that of actuality, is thus not
simply deficient with regard to it. Rather, possibility, as such, exerts actual eJftcts
which disappear as soon as it 'aaualizes ' itself S uch a ' short-circuit' between
possibility and actuality is at work in the Lacanian notion of ' symbolic
castration' : the so-called 'castration-anxiety' cannot be reduced to the
psychological fact that, upon perceiving the absence of the penis in woman,
,
man becomes afraid that 'he also might lose it . 5 1 Rather, ' castration anxiety'
designates the precise moment at which the possibility of castration takes
precedence over its actuality, that is, the moment at which the very possibility
of castration, its mere threat, produces actual effects in our psychic economy.
This threat, as it were, 'castrates' us, branding us with an irreducible loss . And
it is this same 'short-circuit' between possibility and actuality which defines
the very notion of power: power is
aaually
father loses control and displays his full power (starts to shout, to beat a child) ,
symbolic pact at work in their struggle enables them to stop before the actual
p hysical destruction and to accept the possibility of victory as its actuality. In
this sense, too, then, the Master's potential threat is far worse than his or her
of Panop tic on: the fact that the Other - the gaze in the central observing tower
70
Notes
1. Perspicuous theologians know very well this paradox of a decision that retroactively posits
its own reasons: of course there are good reasons to believe in Jesus Christ,
2. It was the same with Ronald Reagan's presidency: the more liberal j ournalists enumerated
his slips of tongue and other foux pas, the more they (unknowingly) strengthened his popularity
reasons against functioned as reasons for. As to Reagan's 'teflon presidency', see Joan Copjec,
'The unervmoegender Other: Hysteria and Democracy in America', New Formations, 1 4 (London:
Routledge
1 99 1 ) . On another level, an exemplary case of this gap separating S I from S2 (i. e . , the
act of decision from the chain of knowledge) is provided by the institution of jury. The jury
performs the formal act of decision, it delivers the verdict of'guilt' or 'innocence'; then it is up to
the judge to ground this decision in knowledge, to translate it into an appropriate punishment.
Why can't these two instances coincide, i . e . why can't the j udge himself decide the verdict? Is he
not better qualified than an average citizen? Why is it repulsive to our sense of justice to leave the
decision to the judge? For Hegel, the jury embodies the principle of free subj ectivity: the crucial
fact about the jury is that it comprises a group of citizens who allegedly are peers of the accused
and who are selected by a lottery system - they stand for 'anybody' . The point is that I can be
j udge d only by my equals, not by a superior agency speaking in the name of some inaccessible
Knowledge beyond my reach and comprehension. At the same time, the jury implies an aspect of
contingency which suspends the principle of sufficient ground. If the concern of justice were only
to be the correct application of law, it would be far more appropriate for the judge to decide on
guilt or innocence. By entrusting the j ury with the verdict, the moment of uncertainty is preserve d;
up to the end we cannot be sure what the judgment will be, so its actual pronouncement always
affects us as a surprise .
3 . The paradox, of course, consists precisely i n the fact that, there i s nothing behind the series
of positive, observable fe atures: the status of that mysterious je ne sais quoi which makes me fall in
love is ultimately that of a pure semblance. This way, we can see how a 'sincere' feeling is
necessarily based upon an illusion (I am 'really', 'sincerely', in love only in so far as I believe in your
secret agalma; i. e . in so far as I believe that there is something behind the series of observable
features) .
4. As for this 'Incorporation Thesis', see Henry E. Allison's Kant's Theory of Freedom
(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 1 990) .
5 . The adverse procedure i s also false, that is, the attribution of personal responsibility and
guilt which relieves us of the task ofprobing into the concrete circumstances of the act in question.
Suffice it to recall the moral-majority practice of attributing a moral character to the higher crime
rate among Mrican Americans ('criminal dispositions', 'moral insensitivity', etc. ) : this attribution
precludes any analysis of the concrete social, economic and political conditions of Afiican
Americans.
6. When we desire X, we always identifY ourselves with a certain self-image ('ideal ego') of
ourselves as desiring X. For example, when we are enraptured by an old melodrama and are
moved to tears by the events on the screen, we do not do it immediately; we first identifY ourselves
with the image of a 'naive' viewer moved to tears by this type of film. In this precise sense, our
ideal-ego image is our symptom; it is the tool by means of which we organize our desire : the subject
desires by means of his or her ego-symptom. What we have here is thus another example of the
Hegelian rhetorical inversion in Lacan : we can identifY with the other's desire since our desire as
such is already the desire of the other (in all its meanings: our desire is a desire to be desired by the
ID E NTI T Y A ND I TS VI C I S S ITUD E S
71
other, i.e. a desire for another's desire; what we experience as our innennost desire is structured
by the decentred Other; etc) . In order to desire, the subject has to identify with the desire of the
other.
7. The ultimate proof of how this reflectivity of desire that constitutes 'self-consciousness'
not o nly has Ilothingwhatsoever to do with the subj ect's self-transparency but is its very opposite;
i.e., involves the subject's radical splitting, which is provided by the paradoxes of love -hate . The
Hollywood publicity-machinery used to describe Erich von Stroheim who, in the thirties and for
ties, regularly played sadistic Gennan officers, as 'a man you'll love to hate' ; to 'love to hate' some
body means that this person fits perfectly the scapegoat role of attracting our hatred. At the
opposite end of the spectrum, the JemmeJatale in the noir universe is clearly a woman one 'hates to
love' : we know she means evil; it is against our will that we are forced to love hel , and we hate
ourselves and her for it. This hate-love clearly registers a certain radical split within ourselves, the
split between the side of US that cannot resist love and the side which finds this love abominable.
On the other hand, tautological cases of this reflectivity of love-hate are no less paradoxical.
When, for example, I say to somebody that I 'hate to hate you', this again point.> towards a splitting:
I really love you, but for certain reasons I am forced to hate you, and I hate myself for it. Even the
positive tautology 'love to love' conceals its opposite : when I use it, it must usually be read as 'I
(would) love to love you . . . (but I cannot any more) '; i.e., as expressing a willingness to go on,
although the thing is already over. In short, when a husband or a wife tells his or her conjugal
partner 'I love to love you', one can be sure that divorse is round the comer.
8. As to this logic of the 'non-all', see Slavoj ZEek, For They Know Not What They Do
(London: Verso 1 99 1), especially Chapter 3 .
9. S e e Judith Butler, Gender Trouble (New York: Routledge, 1 990), the hitherto most radical
attempt to demonstrate how every 'presupposed' support of sexual difference (in biology, in sym
bolic order, etc.) is ultimately a contingent, retroactive perfonnative effect; that is, it is already
'posited'. One is tempted to summarize its result in the ironic conclusion that women are men
masked as women, and men are women who escape into manhood to conceal their own feminin
ity. As long as Butler unfolds the impasses of the standard ways to substantiate sexual difference,
one can only admire her ingenuity; problems arise in the last, 'programmatic' palt of the book,
which unfolds a positive project of an unbounded performative game of constructing multiple
subject-positions which subvert every fixed identity. What is lost thereby is the dimension desig
nated by the very title of the book - gender trouble: the fact that sexuality is defined by a constitutive
'trouble', a traumatic deadlock, and that every performative fonnation is nothing but an endeav
our to patch up this trauma. What one has to accomplish here is therefore a simple self-reflexive
reversal of the negative into the positive: there is always trouble with gender. Why? Because gender
as such is a response to a Jundamental 'trouble ': 'normal' sexual difference constitutes itself in an
attempt to avoid an impasse.
10. Jacques Lacan, Le siminaire, livreXX: Encore (paris: Editions du Seuil, 1 975) p. 8 5 . Conse
quently, Lacan's statement that 'there is no sexual relationship' does not contain a hidden nor
mativity, an implicit norm of 'mature' heterosexuality impossible to attain - in the eyes of which
tlJe subject is always, by definition, guilty. Quite the contrary, Lacan's point is that in the domain
of sexuality, it is not possible toformulate any norm that should guide us with a legitimate claim to univer
sal validity. Every attempt to fonnulate such a norm is a secondar; endeavour to mend an 'original'
impasse . In other words, Lacan does not fall into the trap of invoking a cruel superego agency that
'knows' the subject is not able to meet its demands (thereby branding the subject's very being with
a constitutive guilt) . The relationship of the Lacanian subj ect to the symbolic Law is not a relation
ship to an agency whose demand tlJe subject can never fully satisfy. Such a relationship to the
OtlJer of the Law, usually associated with the God of the Old Testament or with tlJe Jansenist Dieu
obscur, implies that tlle Other knows what it wants from us and tlJat it is only we who cannot discern
tlJe Other's inscrutable will . With Lacan, however, the Other oJthe Law itselfdoes not know what it
Wants.
1 1 . For a detailed reading of the Hegelian logic of reflection, see Slavoj Zek, The Sublime
Books 1 989) Chapter 6 .
1 2. Therein consists the crucial weakness o f Robert Pippin's Hegel's Idealism (Cambridge :
Cambridge University Press, 1 988), a book that otherwise announces a new epoch in Hegelian
studie s. Its fundamental intention is not only to reaffirm tlJe continued relevance of Hegel's dia
lectic al logic, against the prevalent 'historicist' approach (which dismisses Hegel's 'metaphysics' -
72
T H E M A K I N G O F P O L I T I C A L I D E NT I T I E S
read: dialectical logic - a s a hopelessly outdated mastodon, and argues instead that the only thing
'still alive' in Hegel is to be found in the concrete socio-historical analyses of the Phenomenology,
Philosophy oj Right, Aesthetics, etc.), but demonstrates, also, how the only way to grasp this
relevance leads back through to Kant. For even though Hegel's position in no way entails a
regression to the 'precritical' metaphysical ontology of the Absolute, it remains thoroughly
confined to the Kantian criticism: Hegel's speculative idealism is Kantian criticism brought to a
close. In this sense, Pippin's project deserves full support. And yet, Pippin fails at the crucial
place: in his treatment of the logic of reflection. The final result of his analysis is that we are
ultimately condemned to the antinomy of positing and external reflection, and, as a result, he
repudiates 'determining reflection' as an empty metaphoric formula, a failed attempt to break out
of this antinomy.
1 3 . Hegel's Science oJLogic (Atlantic Highlands : Humanities Press International, 1 989) p. 441 .
Since our concern here is limited to the paradoxical structure of the notion of contradiction, we
leave aside the difference between difference and opposition, i.e. the mediating role of opposition
between difference and contradiction.
14. Hegel's choice of example - father, the symbolic function par excellence is, of course, no
way accidental or neutral. It was already Thomas Aquinas who evoked paternity when arguing
that in order to survive, we must accept another's word for things we ourselves do not witness : 'if
man refused to believe anything unless he knew it himself, then it would be quite impossible to live
in this world. How could a person live, if he did not believe someone? How could he even accept
the fact that a certain man is his father?' (The Pocket Thomas [New York: Washington Square Press,
1960] p. 286) . This, in contrast to maternity (as pointed out by Freud in his Moses and
Monotheism), establishes paternity, from the very outset, as a matter of belief, i.e. a symbolic fact.
As such, the Name-of-the-Father exerts its authority only against the background of trusting the
Other's word.
1 5 . And what about the fourth term of the Lacanian algebra, a? The object small a designates
precisely the endeavour to procure for the subject a positive support of his being beyond the
signifYing representation: by way of the fantasy-relation to a, the subject (is) acquires an imaginary
sense of his 'fullness of being', of what he 'truly is' independently of what he is for others, i.e.
notwithstanding his place in the intersubjective symbolic network.
16. Marx's Grundrisse, selected and edited by David McLellan (London: Macmillan, 1 980)
p. 99.
17. Was Chaplin aware of the irony of the fact that Austria, Hitler's first victim, was from 1934
(i.e., from Dolfuss's right-wing coup) a proto-Fascist corporatist state? And does not the same
hold for The Sound oj Music in which the force opposed to Fascism assumes the form of
self-sufficient Austrian provincialism, i.e. in which the politico-ideological struggle between
Fascism and democracy is ultimately reduced to the struggle between two Fascisms, the one
overtly barbarian and the one which still maintains a 'human face'?
18. So whatever ex-Communists do, they are lost: if they behave aggressively, they display
their true nature; if they behave properly and follow democratic rules, they are even more
dangerous since they conceal their true nature.
19. The science-fiction film Hidden provides, in its very naivety, one of the most poignant
mises-en-scene of such a materialization of a notional relationship: everyday life goes on in today's
California, until the main character puts on special green glasses and sees the true state of things the ideological injunctions, invisible to the ordinary, conscious gaze, i.e. the inscriptions 'do this,
buy that . . .' which bombard the subject from all around. The fantasy of the film thus provides us
with glasses which literally enable us to 'see ideology' qua voluntary servitude, to perceive the
hidden injunctions we follow when we experience ourselves as free individuals. The 'enor' of the
film, of course, is to hypothesize the ordinary material existence of ideological injunctions: their
status is actually that of pure symbolic relations - it is only their effects which have material
existence. (In other words, Hidden realizes in a slightly modified form the classical Enlightenment
fantasy of ideology as the plot of the clerical caste which, in the interests of those in power,
consciously deceives people.)
20. See J,N. Findlay, Kant and the Transcendental Object (Oxford: Clarendon Press 1 9 8 1)
pp. 26 1-7 .
2 1 . What we must bear in mind here is that Kant is compelled to hypothesize the existence of
ether by the fundamental fantasmatic frame of his philosophy, namely the logic of 'real
-
I D E N T I T Y A N D I T S VI C I S S I T U D E S
73
opposition'; ether is thus deduced as the necessary positive opposite of the 'ordinary'
ponderable-compressible-cohesible-exhaustible stuff.
22. S ee Louis Althusser et al., Reading Capital (London: New Left Books, 1 970) pp. 1 8 6-9.
23. This point was first made by Beatrice Longuenesse in her excellent Hegel et la critique de la
mitaphysique (paris: Vrin, 198 1).
24. See Pierre Macherey, Hegel ou Spinoza? (Paris: Maspero, 1 975).
25. Karl Marx, 'Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte', in Karl Marx, Frederick Engels,
Collected Works, Volume 11 (London: Lawrence and Wishart, 1 979) p. 1 0 3 .
26. I n his reference t o the Hegelian 'Beautiful Soul', Lacan makes a deeply significant mistake
by condensing two different 'figures of consciousness'. He speaks of the Beautiful Soul who, in the
name of her Law oJthe Heart, rebels against the injustices of the world (see, for example, Ecrits:A
Selection, translated by A. Sheridan [London: Tavistock, 1 977] p. 80) . With Hegel, however, the
'Beautiful Soul' and the 'Law of the Heart' are two quite distinct figures: the first designates the
hysterical attitude of deploring the wicked ways of the world while actively participating in their
reproduction (Lacan is quite justified to apply it to Dora, Freud's exemplary case of hysteria) . The
'Law of the Heart and the Frenzy of Self-Conceit', on the other hand, clearly refer to a psychotic
attitude, i.e . , to a self-proclaimed Saviour who imagines his inner Law to be the Law of everybody
and is therefore compelled, in order to explain why the 'world' (his social environs) is not following
his precepts, to resort to paranoiac constructions - to some plot of dark forces (like the
Enlightened rebel who blames the reactionary clergy's propagating of superstitions for the failure
of his efforts to win the support of the people) . Lacan's slip is all the more mysterious for the fact
that this difference between the Beautiful Soul and the Law of the Heart can be formulated
perfectly by means of the categories elaborated by Lacan himself: the hysterical Beautiful Soul
clearly locates itself within the big Other, it functions as a demand to the Other within an
intersubjective field; whereas the psychotic, clinging to the Law of one's Heart, involves precisely
a rejection, a suspension, ofwhat Hegel referred to as the 'spiritual substance'.
27. See I. Kant, The Critique oj Pure Reason, trans. Norman Kemp Smith (New York: St.
Martin's Press, 1 965) A, 584-603 .
28. Existence in the sense of empirical reality is thus the very opposite of the Lacanian Real:
precisely in so far as God does not 'exist' qua part of experiential, empirical reality, He belongs to
the Real.
29. Jacques Lacan, Le siminaire, livreXX: Encore (Paris : Editions du Seuil, 1 975) p. 3 2 .
30. This point was articulated in all its philosophical weight b y Georg Lukacs i n his History and
Class Consciousness (London: NLB 1 969).
3 1 . That Kant himself already had a premonition of this link between existence and
self-relating is attested to by the fact that in the Critique oJPure Reason he conferred on dynamical
synthesis (which concerns also existence, not only predicates) regulative character.
3 2 . The role offantasy in perversion and in neurosis offers an exemplary case ofthis passage of
in-itself into for-itself at work in the psychoanalytic clinic. A pervert immediately 'lives' hislher
fantasy, stages it, which is why he or she does not entertain towards it a 'reflected' relationship.
Slhe does not relate towards it qua fantasy. In Hegelian terms: fantasy is not 'posited' as such, it is
simply his or her in-itself. The fantasy of a hysteric, on the other hand, is also a perverse fantasy,
but the difference consists not only in the fact that a hysteric relates to it in a reflected, 'mediated',
way vulgari eloquentia but that he or she 'only fantasizes about what a pervert is actually doing'.
The crucial point is that, within the hysterical economy, fantasy acquires a different function,
becomes part of a delicate intersubjective game; by means of fantasy, a hysteric conceals his or her
anxiety, while at the same time offering it as a lure to the other for whom the hysterical theatre is
staged.
33. This exchangeability could be further exemplified by the ambiguity as to the precise causal
status of trauma in psychoanalytic theory: on the one hand, one is fully justified in isolating the
'original trauma' as the ultimate ground which triggered the chain-reaction the final result of
which is the pathological formation (the symptom); on the other hand, in order for event X to
function as 'traumatic' in the first place, the subject's symbolic universe has had (already) to have
been structured in a certain way.
34. See Fredric Jameson, 'Reification and Utopia in Mass Culture', in Signatures oJthe Visible
(New York: Routledge, 1 9 9 1 ) .
3 5 . I n this precise sense Lacan conceives Master-Signifier a s an 'empty' signifier, a signifier
-
74
without signified: an empty container which rearranges the previously given content. The signifier
jew' does not add any new signified - all its positive signified content is derived from the
previously given elements which have nothing whatsoever to do with Jews as such. It just
'converts' them into an expression of Jewishness qua ground. One of the consequences to be
drawn from it is that, in endeavouring to provide an answer to the question 'Why precisely were
Jews picked out to play the scapegoat-role in anti-Semitic ideology?', we might easily succumb to
the very trap of anti-Semitism, looking for some mysterious feature in them that, as it were,
predestined them for that role: the fact thatJews were chosen for the role of the jew' ultimately is
contingent. As is pointed out by the well-known anti-anti-Semitic joke: jews and cyclists are
responsible for all our troubles. Why cyclists? WHY JEWS ?'
36. Findlay, Kant and the Transcendental Objea, p . 1 S7.
37. Ibid., p. 1.
3S. Here we must be attentive to how a simple symmetrical inversion brings about an
asymmetrical, irreversible, non-specular result. That is to say, when the statement 'the Jew is
exploitative, intriguing, dirty, lascivious . . . ' is reversed into 'he is exploitative, intriguing, dirty,
lascivious . . . because he is Jewish', we do not state the same content in another way. S omething
new is produced thereby, the objetpetit a, that which is 'in Jew more than the Jew himself' and on
account of which the Jew is what he phenomenally is. This is what the Hegelian 'return of the
thing to itself in its conditions' amounts to: the thing returns to itself when we recognize in its
conditions (properties) the eftects of a transcendent Ground.
3 9 . As to this exception, see Monique David-Menard, Lafolie dans la raison pure (Paris: Vrin,
1 99 1) pp. 1 54-5 .
40. Kant, Critique ofPure Reason, B, 1 99.
4 1 . Ibid., B, 223.
42. This irreducible antagonism of being and becoming thus also provides the matrix for
Hegel's solution of the Kantian enigma of the Thing-in-itself: the Thing-in-itselfis in the modality
I D E N T I T Y A N D I T S VI C I S S I T U D E S
7S
revealed to the Spirit in the backwards-gaze of its Er-Innerung, inwardizing memory, are the
scattered skulls of the past 'figures of consciousness'. The worn-out Hegelian formula according
to which the Result, in its abstraction from the path leading to it, is a corpse, has to be inverted
onc e again: this 'path' itself is punctuated by scattered skulls.
47. Is not the computer-generated virtual reality an exemplary case of reality conceived
through the detour of its virtualization, i.e. of a reality wholly generated from its conditions of
possibility?
48 . Suffice it to recall here Kant's reflections on the meaning of the French Revolution: the
very belief in the possibility of a free rational social order, attested to by the enthusiastic response of
the enlightened public to the French Revolution, witnesses to the aauality of freedom, of a
tendency towards freedom as an anthropological fact. See I. Kant, The Conj!ia of the Faculties
(Lincoln and London: University of Nebraska Press, 1 992) p . 1 5 3 .
49. This, o f course, i s a leftist reading of the Kennedy murder conspiracy theory; the reverse of
it is that the trauma of Kennedy's death expresses a conservative longing for an authority which is
not an imposture; or, to quote one of the commentaries on the anniversary of the Vietnam War:
'Somewhere within the generation now taking power, Vietnam may have installed the suspicion
that leadership and authority are a fraud. That view may have subtle stunting effects upon moral
growth. If sons don't learn to become fathers, a nation may breed politicians who behave less like
full-grown leaders than like inadequate siblings, stepbrothers with problems of their own.'
Against this background, it is easy to discern in the Kennedy myth the belief that he was the last
'full-grown leader', the last figure of authority which was not a fraud.
50. Another exemplary case of this paradoxical nature of the relationship between possible and
actual is Senator Edward Kennedy's candidacy for presidential nomination in 1 980: as long as his
candidacy was still in the air, all polls showed him easily winning over any Democratic rival; yet the
moment he publicly announced his decision to run for the nomination, his popularity plummeted.
5 1 . What this notion of feminine castration ultimately amounts to is a variation on the
notorious old Greek sophism, 'What you don't have, you have lost; you don't have horns, so you
have lost them. ' To avoid the conclusion that this sophism could be dismissed as inconsequential
false reasoning - that is, to get a presentiment of the existential anxiety that may pertain to its logic
- suffice it to recall the Wolf-Man, Freud's Russian analysand, who was suffering from a
hypochondriacal idie fixe. He complained that he was the victim of a nasal injury caused by
electrolysis; however, when the thorough dermatological examinations established that absolutely
nothing was wrong with his nose, this triggered an unbearable anxiety in him: 'Having been told
that nothing could be done for his nose because nothing was wrong with it, he felt unable to go on
living in what he considered his irreparably mutilated state' (Muriel Gardiner, The Wolf-Man and
Sigmund Freud [HatIDondsworth: Penguin, 1 973) p. 287) . The logic is here exactly the same as
that of the old Greek sophism: ifyou do not have horns, you lost them; if nothing can be done, then
the loss is irreparable. Within the Lacanian perspective, of course, this sophism points towards the
fundamental feature of a structuralldifferential order: the unbearable absolute lack emerges at
the very point when the lack itself is lacking.
52. As to this potentiality that pertains to the very actuality of power, see ZiZek, For They Know
Not What They Do, Chapter 5 .
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77
difference between its Self and what it intuitively apprehends; just as it is Subject,
so also it is substance, and hence it is itself Spirit just because and in so far as it is this
movement.2
As Hegel has argued in his analysis of tragedy in the chapter 'Religion in the
Form of Art', the very exclusiveness of the two principles or powers of the
upper and the nether law that are in conflict in tragedy results from the ethical
substance's actualization in limiting self-consciousness. In the downfall of the
two heroes who incarnate this same substance in particular but opposite ways,
both being thus equally right and wrong, the 'unitary being of Zeus (der
ein/ache Zeus)', prevails in whom Apollo and the Erynnies become reconciled. 3
In short, what bursts forth at the moment when that which is in a relation of
antithetical opposition manifests itself as the same as its opposite is the idea of
the whole as the truth of the finite and antithetical moments. Yet this
reconciling yes, or the Notion of Spirit, is onry intuitively apprehended in the
sphere of religion. Moreover, religious consciousness, or the ethical, moral
and cultural substance of a people in the mode of self-consciousness,
continues to apprehend its spirit in the form of representation (Vorstellung) . Of
religious consciousness, Hegel remarks :
This unity of essence and the Self having been implicitly achieved, consciousness,
too, still has this picture-thought [Vorstellung] of its reconciliation, but as picture
thought. It obtains satisfaction by externally attaching to its pure negativity the
positive meaning of the unity of itself with the essential Being; its satisfaction thus
itself remains burdened with the antithesis of a beyond.4
Affirmative reconciliation, the yes between the extremes, will only be fully
realized in a sphere beyond representation, that is, in the figureless sphere
of absolute knowing, in which thought itself has become its own 'figure'. In
absolute knowing, the yes that simply burst forth in the sphere of religion
develops into the self-affirmingyes of the Notion (Begriff), into an affirmation
that is no longer separated from what is affirmed. Here, in the Notion, the
unpredictable, and at the limit, improbable surge of the yes as a response to
those moments and movements that are still other to the Spirit has turned into
the affirmative response of the Spirit to itself. Rather than a response to the
Other, the Notion recognizes itself not only in the elements and movements of
the Spirit, but as that movement itself. With this, even the eruption of the
re sounding yes toward the end of 'Religion' , appears in fact to have been
anticipated and calculated in advance by the yes of the Notion in which all
rel ation to Other has become relation to self in absolute identity. In the
absolute yes of the Notion, the burst, in all its abruptness and suddenness of
the yes, has become contingent, and hence necessary.
How is one to respond to Hegel's all-inclusiveyes; a yes, that by sublating up
to the finite event of its eruption, has also forgone its nature as a response?
78
More precisely, how i s one to relate to ayes that i s not only all-encompassing
but, by virtue of its all-inclusiveness, seems no longer in need of any response?
Moreover, how is one to handle, in general, a Hegel whose uniqueness
consists in having attempted to demonstrate that all finitude sublates itself, and
that, in so doing, the reconcilingyes - the yes between the extremes - is nothing
but the self-sublating suddenness with which each of the extremes erupts into
a relation of Otherness to self? Evidently, whatever such a response may prove
to be, in order that it be a response - both responsive and responsible - it must
respond to the absolute yes. Yet, to make such a response, one must first read
and hear Hegel to the end - to the eruption of the resoundingyes. There can
be no responsible debate with Hegel without the recognition that all the
Hegelian developments take place in view of, and are always already
predetermined by, the telos of absolute knowing or the Notion; that is, by the
thought of a figureless and non-representational thinking in which thought
can sayyes to itself in a mode in which even saying is no longer different from
what is said. In other words, any genuine response to Hegel must say yes - and
not in the mode of parrot-like repetitive affirmation - to the call to Other by
the speculative yes itself which, as the event of the positive assimilation of all
Otherness, addresses itself as a whole to Other. The yes of genuine response
is, at its most elementary, a yes to the very singularity of the Hegelian
enterprise, to the call to sayyes to it in its all-embracing affirmation of self and
Other in absolute identity. But such a response, precisely because it is
presupposed and requested by theyes of Hegel's thought, falls out of its range
and power. For while the responding yes comes to meet the demand for
recognition, it necessarily escapes what it thus lets come into its own: the
speculative yes. Indeed, any genuine response to the Hegelian yes implies not
only that it be formulated in its most powerful and demanding articulation - as
exemplified at the end of Phenomenology o/Spirit and within the entirety of the
Greater Logic (rather than in disembodied or decapitated versions) - but also
that it resist corresponding to the demand and the call of the all-encompassing
yes. For the yes must stand up to the demand to respond to the speculative yes
in all its affirmative power; but it must also stand it up. That is, at the very
moment it meets the speculative yes, it must fail to keep the appointment. Only
thus is it a genuine response.
On the last page of Glas - in the Genet column that faces the exposition of
Hegel's developments on the family - Derrida evokes the Nietzschean
moment or instant of'the vast and boundless . . . Yes (das ungeheure unbegrenzte
Ja) ' from Zarathustra.5 Although this yes ' common to you and me' appears in a
column that accompanies another one largely celebrating the assimilative
power of the Hegelian system in the mode of a doubling and contradictory
band, or double bind) , it does not stand in a simple relation of contradiction to
the Hegelian reconciling and speculative yes. By contrast, 'the vast and
boundless . . . Yes ', is ayes to speculative thought, that at the same time gives it
Y E S A B S O L U T E L Y : U N L I K E A NY WRI T I N G P E N
79
and its Other the slip. It 'sneaks away' in its response, precisely because it is both
a respo nse in the strict sense (that is, from the affirmative account of all
O therness) and the doubling band in which Genet is largely shown to disband,
br eak up and reject what Hegel had wrapped up in the tight bands of the
speculative bond. In 'la, ou tefoux-bond', an interview given some time after the
publication of Gtas, Derrida remarks thus :
Beyond the indefatigable contradiction of the double bind, an affirmative, innocent,
intact, cheerful difference must in the end [bien) come to give the slip, escape in one
leap, and sign in laughing what it lets happen and pass by in a double band. Standing
up the contradiction ofthe double bind in one blow, and having it suddenly no longer
out with the double band. This is, what I love, this stand-up [faux-bond] . . . [For in
spite ofthe ineluctable nature ofthe double band) it is necessary [ilfaut) - an altogether
other it is necessary that somehow the double band not be the last word. Otherwise it
all would come to a stop . . 6
-
This affirmative difference is ayes that, as the title ofthe interview suggests, not
only 'stands up' and rebuffs the speculative yes, but also rebuffs the inescapable
questioning ofit that, as its Other, cannot fail to accompany it. For although this
yes sneaks away from the speculative bond and its negating other, it also affirms
it, letting it unfold (from it) in a double procession. This yes, then, to Hegel (and
to what in Hegel, or outside him, fails to fall in line with his yes-saying), is also a
yes to what Derrida calls 'the neither-swallowed -nor-rejected, what remains in
the throat as Other, neither-taken-in-nor-expelled' . 7 A response that lives up
to its concept, and hence must be responsive to an invitation to respond, can only
take its possibility from what in the Other remains open to an Other. This
openness - which is the place of the Other - is not the other of the speculative
yes. The latter, as Gtas shows, is always taken in as that which cannot be taken in
'off the beat', so to speak. The openness from which a response becomes
possible - possible only as always unpredictable, incalculable and improbable
can only be thefaux-bond in the Other itself; that, which in the Other, stands up
its (his or her) self oridentity and gives it the slip . For this openness, a response is
responsible, and to it, it responds, responsibly. The speculative yes permits no
yes to its elf but a preprogrammed and repetitive yes that cannot be the yes of a
response. What is excluded by the system, what claims to be the excluded Other,
the non -identical, is what it is only in secret harmony, in an inextricable double
bind with the system. Blindly it affirms what it negates; surreptitiously it mimics
the speculative yes-saying. Theyes that gives the reconcilingyes and its Other
the slip, as we have said - and, only thus, meets the condition under which a
genuine response and encounter can take place - is consequently no longer the
yes of truth. The faux-bond, the yes that makes the speculative yes stand up,
betrays itself, it stands itselfup, which means it lacks truth, strays from its truth even so
- in betraying itself and becoming after all, in spite of the consciousness or
80
representation o f the one who responds o r hears, a n exact response, punctual and
true - it keeps the appointment. 8
At the end of Glas, then, an 'other end'9 is affirmed, that of ayes that responds
to, and is thus different from the speculative yes that it addresses, but which it
runs the risk of becoming as it arrives to meet the latter.
The foregoing developments about a responsive and responsible yes to
Hegelian affirmation synoptically describe the problematic of deconstruction.
And even though Derrida's writings from Glas onward cannot
simply
be
responses to texts.
its
Other
must,
for structural
must
Aufhebung: ' it is most similar to it' , nearly, almost identical, he writes . 10 Indeed,
the very concern with Other, in deconstruction (and speculative thought) ,
does not only expose deconstruction to the risk of being mistaken for, covered
up, and recovered by speculative dialectics, but also explains why it itself is
never safe from the possibility of effectively sliding back into a speculative
reappropriation of the Other. If this is so, it is not merely because in giving a
philosophical account of deconstruction, Derrida or his interpreters (myself
included) may themselves have resorted to Hegelian categories and moves
that ultimately fall short of capturing the very 'radicality' of deconstruction. In
contrast to these empirical considerations , there remains the essential risk of
failing genuinely to respond to the call by the Otller which renders a genuine
response possible at all. Indeed, in the same way as the place of the Other in a
text or work of thought is nothing but a referential vector, a gesturing, pointing
toward and calling upon the Other - one tllat cannot avoid determining itself
as for-itself, and hence must give itself a self, or identity, a genuine response
that is at first nothing but a yes-saying to the Other as Other - it cannot
altogether escape the risk of saying yes to itself, and hence opening the
annulation of its own identity. Now, the very 'fact' that a response can always
81
slip from a repetitive yes to, in our case, a philosophy of absolute identity or a
s elf-po sitioning responding I; or, the very 'fact' that such a slippage comes
with the possibility itself of managing a place for the Other and of responsibly
r esp onding to the Other, is, of course, no excuse for overlooking the
differ ence in question. Indeed, the very 'fact' that deconstruction, on
occasion , has all the allures of dialectical thought is no licence to identifY
them. However, utterly irresponsive, if not irresponsible, is the claim that the
Derridean approach to the Hegelian yes of reconciliation would systematically
overlook the Hegelian character of its own way of responding. The levelling of
difference between the two yeses and between each yes and itselfwould mean
nothing less than to do injustice to both Hegel and Derrida.
Rather than opposing it, what deconstruction sets forth in response to the
speculative yes is thus a yes to what in Hegel remains as an address to Other;
one on whose confirming response the very possibility of closure depends, but
which also infinitely transcends it. The speculative, affirmative, reconcilingyes
of Hegelian thought, is the yes of absolute knowing, of the Notion or Concept,
of absolute identity. From his early writings to those of the Greater Logic, Hegel
has conceived of the unity achieved in the absolute as 'the unity of
differentiatedness and non-differentiatedness, or the identity of identity and
non-identity' . The concept of this unity is, as Hegel notes, to 'be regarded as
the first, purest, that is, most abstract definition of the absolute', one that will
ultimately have to make room for 'more specific and richer definitions of it' . 1 1
Indeed, the unity achieved in the absolute a s Spirit - the richest and final
conceptualization of absolute identity - is a unity in which all external
conditions that may have seemed necessary to conceive it show themselves not
only to be the instances in which the Absolute is present, in that they sublate
themselves by themselves, but also as the Other in which the Absolute relates to
itself. The Absolute, in relating to the Other, consequendy relates to itself.
The absolute identity and equality with itself achieved by Spirit is thus that of
self-relation and relation to Other, as that in which self also relates to itself.
As self-consciousness, the absolute achieves absolute identity, which is also
the all-inclusive One or totality Y
Considering the fact that the term 'identity' has most recendy become a
common, if not hackneyed term often used without further qualification in
many contexts (especially in discourses more or less loosely derivative upon
psychoanalysis and sociology), it is necessary at this point to recall, briefly, the
meaning of 'identity' in philosophy. The logical and philosophical concept of
identity designates the relation in which any object (or any obj ective realm as
well) stands all by itself to itself Identity, thus linked in elemental fashion to
the thought of the singular, is a predicate that serves to distinguish one thing
from another of the same kind. Since identity pertains, here, to mere being
its elf, it applies to any object as obj ect, however protean or erratic it may prove
to be. Although logical identity (that is, where a thing is identical with itself and
82
Kant's insight (that the unity characteristic of obj ectivity must in the last resort
be retraceable to the unity that the thinking subj ect has of itself) also reveals a
meaning of identity that is, formally, thoroughly different from the logical
identity constitutive of things . This meaning of identity, which applies
exclusively to the consciousness of the thinking subj ect, has motivated idealist
philosophers, in the wake of Kantian thought, to experiment, in Dieter
Henrich's words, 'first with the subj ect as principle of identity, and then with
the meaning of identity that had been attributed to the subj ect, even without
connection to self-consciousness, thus disregarding the Kantian fundamental
distinctions' Y In question is S chelling's philosophy of identity. Taking
Spinoza as a model, S chelling's philosophy indeed conceives of the Absolute
as the One, wherein nature and spirit, necessity and freedom, Being and
intellectual intuition, are identical. Absolute identity, beyond and removed
from the problematic of both substance and subj ect, names here the universe
itself. Although the young Hegel sympathizes with Schelling's attempt to
transcend in his philosophy of identity the limits of Fichte's subj ective
idealism, as early as the Phenomenology ofSpirit he criticizes Fichte's concept of
identity and the Absolute for their abstraction. By recasting the Absolute in
terms of Spirit (that is, as a relational identity of self-consciousness in which
absolute subj ectivity and
its
subj ect and substanc e - difficulties that have haunted the history of
philosophy from Parmenides to Schelling. 14 But to comprehend correctly
what deconstruction achieves with respect to abs olute identity, it is crucial that
the latter be understood on its own terms, and not as (or mixed with) concepts
Y E S A B S O L U T E L Y : U N L I K E A N Y WR I T I N G P EN
83
in which self and Other have been successfully reconciled - of Spirit as the
Yes between the extremes - all possible assessment on how the deconstructive
yes relates to the identity of Spirit, on the difference and similarity b etween
deconstruction and speculative dialectic, and especially on the 'status' of the
de constructive yes itself (and hence, on the specific kind of heterogeneity from
which it proceeds), is simply out of question.
And yet, in this essay, I shall not engage in a systematic elaboration on the
speculative concept of identity as it emerges from the chapter of Phenomen
ology
ofLogic.
Greater Logic,
limit myself here. Indeed, rather than being Hegel's last word on identity, the
explicit thematization ofidentity in Science ofLogic as a reflective determination
is a critical and speculative evaluation of it. It only paves the way for the
considerably richer understanding of it as the absolute identity of Spirit. To
take Hegel's treatment of identity as a reflective determination for Hegel's
positive theory of identity, is not only to get his theory of identity wrong, but to
misconstrue the whole of the Hegelian philosophical enterprise in the first
place.
I
With this in mind, I want to tum to Hegel's treatment of the question of
identity in Book II of Science ofLogic, entitled 'The Doctrine of Essence' . In the
Science ofLogic,
84
In the Notion, or the absolute Idea, the idea that has itself for its object, all
the possible logical determinations of that one and same Notion - as being,
as essence, and finally as Notion, that is, as including itself - have been sub
lated, overcome and preserved. Since all these determinations of the Notion
are figures of thinking, Hegel can claim to have shown how, with the absol
ute Idea, thinking engenders itself and becomes its own ground, the absolute
ground of thinking.
The Science ofLogic divides in two parts : 'The Objective Logic', and 'Sub
jective Logic or the Doctrine of the Notion'. The first part, which contains
the development of the categories and the reflective determinations of think
ing up to the point where the concept of the Notion begins to imppse itself,
further comprises the two books on 'The Doctrine of Being', and 'The
Doctrine of Essence' . Compared to these first two books that make up ob
j ective logic, the subjective logic represents the true exposition of the logic of
the free Notion, or absolute Idea, that is, of logic as a formal ontology. Now,
the speculative unfolding of reflection occurs right after the exposition of the
doctrine of being; in other words, as part of the developments that ultimately
will give rise to the idea of the Notion. The dialectical exposition of the
problem of reflection is entirely mediated by its relation to the doctrine of
being, and is intelligible only on the basis of the continual cross-references
to that preceding realm. But in addition, it must be read in terms of what will
issue from, and thus limit, the sphere of reflection - that is, the Notion, or
the unfolded positive totality of all determinations of thought itself. It is not
possible to broach here the difficult question of how exactly the Logic of
being and the Logic of Essence (in which reflection is discussed) relate. The
Y E S A B S O L U T E L Y : U N L I K E ANY WR I T I N G P E N
8S
follo wing schematic outline of what both parts and both books seek to achieve,
an d how they relate, must suffice .
In the logic ofbeing, Hegel can be said t o have rehearsed the great systems
transcendental aesthetics, that is, of obj ectifying thought and the traditional logic
(SL,
389) . This truth follows upon the negation of the immediate presence of being
as b eing's eternal past: to ti en einai. The doctrine of essence, consequently,
amounts to a reinterpretation by Hegel of the various historical metaphysics of
transcendental analytics.
mundus intelligibilis,
reflection over and against the phenomenal world, irreconcilably distinct from
it. The point that Hegel makes in the 'Logic of Essence' , is that essence, as an
internal negation of the whole sphere of b eing, lacks the stability that it
promised. Although the negation by essence of b eing allows b eing to turn
upon itself- to reflect itself- essence, for its part, fails to reflect itself, and thus
to achieve the foothold in itself that would have made the intelligible the
deciding truth of b eing. Essence remains unable to comprehend itself. As a
result, the movement characteristic of this part of the GreaterLogic is bound to
reintroduce the immediacy of b eing. But, since the immediate that is thus
reinstituted is the immediacy of the b eing of essence, it reappears on a higher
level. The relapse in question, indeed, opens up the new sphere of the
Concept, or Notion. Hegel writes : 'The movement of essence is in general the
becoming of the Notion' (SL, 526). The logic of the Notion corresponds to a
re cast version of Kant's transcendental dialeaics, since it radically exceeds
Kant's limitation of the idea to a merely regulative role . Differently put, the
Hegelian Concept or Notion, that is, the major category of the subj ective
lOgic, is nothing but the expounded transcendental unity of apperception - the
originary unity that Kant had acknowledged as having to accompany all
synthesis of the manifold. In this part of the logic, then, Hegel surmounts the
r efle ctive dualism of b eing and essence, being and appearance, that
characterized Part I. In the absolute reflection of the Notion, thinking thinks
86
Selbstbe
Logic
Science oj
already
(SL, 3 9 1) .
about not from the outside of Being, but by being itself. Hegel holds that
essence in 'its self-movement is reflection'
(SL, 3 99) .
Schein,
(SL, 3 93).
within itself'.
87
shines o r shows
Greater Logic.
refleaion', he
Th ere are three aspects to this movement of reflection and they need to b e
distinguished: (i) that reflection takes place within the sphere of essence;
(ii) that it coincides with the establishment of an Other to essence in the sphere
of essence itself; and (iii) that this establishment is nothing but the shining, or
showing of essence in that very sphere. C onsequently, essence as reflection is
the whole itself, including itself as its own moment. But although the positing
in essence's shining within itself of an Other in opposition to self and the
self-positing of self are identical movements , reflection, because it opens the
difference of the Other in the totality of essence, is als o negation. However,
this very negativity of reflection that results from the showing-in-itself of
essence - a showing supposed to establish the identity of essence - is illusory
as well, Hegel holds . In any case, reflection, negativity (or Otherness) and
identity, are found i.n profound unison in the sphere in question. This difficult
synthesis needs some further clarification.
What remains of b eing in the sphere of essence - illusory b eing
illusory being of an Other, but is illusory b eing per se, the
essence its elf' , b ecause
told
(SL,
illusory being of
3 98) . The equality of essence with its elf is, thus, speculatively
speaking, identical with the negativity of essence since it is the relation to the
Other (the non-being of b eing) ; that is, it is the relation to essence's illusory
being. In the sphere under consideration, reflection of an Other and
self-reflection are identical. Hegel writes: ' The movement of reflection . . . is
the other as the
negation'
(SL,
negation in itself,
being's s elf-negation, in which b eing returns into itself, and consequently has
become essence - the Other to which reflection relates is only an illusory
Other, since it is an Other that negates itself as Other. Reflection amounts to a
movement in which a relation to an Other is achieved, but this Other is itself
characterized by reflection in that it is negation in itself and of itself. Therefore
Hegel can claim that reflection is s elf-related negation, that is, a negation of
negation, and can conclude his analysis of the movement of reflection with the
fo llOwing formula: ' C onsequently, bec oming in essence, its reflective move
ment, is the movement ofnothing to nothing, and so back to itself' (SL, 400) . But if
it is true that reflection in the sphere of essence knows the Other exclusively as
the Other of essence, that is, as illusory being, essence is also its own negation
b ecause in shining within itself it shows to have this Other within itself. In
Hegel's words, reflection is an 'interchange of the negative with itself'
(SL,
88
T H E M A K I N G O F P O L I T I C A L I D E NT I T I E S
89
not a distinct moment of it' (SL, 4 1 2) . 'Essential identity' is thus 'in general the
same as essence' (SL, 41 1-12) . But this identity of essence, which is reflection
in its entirety, achieves its equality-with -self not through 'a restoration ofitself
from another', but in 'this pure origination from and within itself' (SL, 4 1 1).
In other words, essential identity, by knowing no Other and relation-to
Other, is nothing in itself but Otherness sublated, or simple negativity of
being-in-itself. But since this identity 'contains nothing of its other but only
its elf, that is, in so far as it is absolute identity with itself', it is also 'in its own self
ab s olute non-identity', Hegel concludes (SL, 4 1 3) . It follows from this that
the idea of a coincidence which accomplishes its concept only if it is the
coincidence with self and Other must develop further. This happens through
the various modes that reflection takes on in the sphere of essence, and which
can, in view of the foregoing developments on reflection, be described as an
illusory dialectic, but a dialectic, notwithstanding, of self and other. This
dialectic comes to an end with the emergence from the sphere of essence and
reflection, of the ground (Grund) . In it, reflection as pure mediation has made
room for the real mediation ofthe ground with itself and thus for an identity in
which essence has returned from its non-being into positing itself. But
ultimately, the dialectic of identity that arises with essential identity comes
only to a rest in the full mediation of self and Other in the Notion. Hegel writes:
'truth is complete only in the unity of identity with difference, and hence consists
only in this unity' (SL, 4 1 4) .
One must not lose sight o f the fact that the 'Logic o f Essence' i s not only a
debate, then, about reflective, as opposed to and as distinct from the
objectifYing, thinking deliberated throughout the 'Logic of Being'. Essence is
nothing but the 'pure, absolute diffirence' (SL, 4 1 3 ) which is also being sublated
in itself. Therefore essence is tied up from the start with thinking the unity of
identity and difference. The 'Logic of Essence' comes to a halt, indeed, after
the two modes of thinking (that is, of being and essence) have been united in
the Notion. Only in the Notion does Hegel believe he has achieved both a
logically and ontologically satisfactory reconciliation between the relation-to
self and relation -to-Other demanded in the name of reflection.
With the unfolding of the initially abstract notion of absolute reflection, the
re sults of mediation become, of course, more concrete. It now becomes
equally evident that the various specific forms that reflection takes on fail to
achieve unity. This failure, constitutive ofreflection as analysed in the realm of
ess ence, thus calls for its sublation in the speculative movements of the Notion
by which absolute identity finally comes into its own. This essential failure of
i d entity in the sphere of reflection is a consequence of the reflective mode by
Whi ch it is supposed to be brought about. The illegitimacy of tearing what
H egel says about identity and its relation to reflection from its context, and
heralding these statements as the final truth of the Hegelian concept of
i d entity, likewise follows. If the increasingly more concrete forms of reflection
90
is
only in
In positing reflection, an Other is posited, but since this posited Other relates
to itself as sublated Other (it is only posited) , 'the equality of reflection is
completely preserved' (SL, 406). It is as if nothing h ad happened (except for
putting into place the formal relations constitutive of reflection-into-self).
Now, in determining reflection, such determination, by positing reflection,
becomes united with external reflection. External reflection, as Hegel has
previously shown, starts from something immediately given. It is thus
presupposing (voraussetzende) reflection. Whatever determinations are posited
'by external reflection in the immediate are to that extent external to the latter'
(SL, 403). It stands over against its own starting point. But, says Hegel, a
closer consideration reveals that it is 'a positing of the inunediate, which
consequently becomes the negative or the determinate' ; hence, 'this immedi
ate from which it seemed to start as from something alien, is only in this its
beginning' (SL, 403-4) . In exterior reflection, the immediate tlnt is
presupposed thus becomes determined as the Other of reflection. Therefore
Hegel can conclude : 'the externality of reflection over against the immediate is
sublated; its positing in which it negates itself is the union of itself with its
Y E S A B S O L U T E L Y : UN L I K E A N Y WRI T I N G P E N
91
negative, with the immediate, and this union is the immediacy of es sence
itself' (SL, 404) . This return to positing reflection in exterior reflec tion is thus
not a simple return. By being the immanent reflection of the immed ia te that it
at first presupposed, reflection has become determined by this very imm edi
ate , whereas the immediate itself has become fully transparent to reflectio n. I n
this unity of positing and exterior reflection, the latter has become an 'ab solute
presupposing, that is, the repelling of reflection from itself, or the positing of
the determinatedness as determinatedness ofitself' (SL, 406) . Simply put, in the
unity in question, the exteriority of reflection makes reflection coil upon itself,
whereas positing becomes determination of reflection by itself. Being posited,
in other words, now means being reflectively determined. 'Positedness is thus
a determination of reflection' (SL, 406) Hegel writes. The relation to other
characteristics of positing has turned into relation to reflectedness-into-self.
In determining reflection, reflection is equal to itself. Or differently put, with
determinate reflection 'essence is determinate essence, or it is an essentiality'
(SL, 409) . It has persistence, since it is no longer unequal to itself. In
determinate reflection, reflection has achieved a unity with itself and its other
which, compared to all previous forms of transitional determination, is stable
s elf-determination.
However, this stability of determining reflection does not last. It disinte
grates instantly into refleaive determinations. Indeed, although essence is
infinite return-into-self, a movement of absolute self-mediation through
distinct moments, essence as essence can achieve this unity with self in Other
only by shining 'into these its moments which consequently are themselves
determinations reflected into themselves' (SL, 409) . Consequently, the
essentialities, or reflective determinations, into which determining reflection
divides 'appear as free essentialities floating in the void without attracting or
repelling one another. In them, the determinateness has established and
infinitely fixed itself through relation-to-itself' (SL, 403). The stable essence
has thus fallen apart into determinations that have lost all commerce with one
another. And Hegel can conclude that in determining reflection, reflection
has become exterior to itself, beside itself (ausser sich gekommene Reflexion) .
Indeed, 'the equality of essence with itself has perished in the negation, which
is the dominant factor', of determining reflection.
Identity is the first of these reflective determinations into which the unity
an d equality with self and Other diffracts. The others are difference,
contradiction and ground. As a reflective determination, identity marks the
fixation of the stability sought by determining reflection into relation-to-self.
It thematizes the determinate's bending 'back [of] its reflection-into-other
into reflection-into-self' (SL, 407) . Remembering that, as stated earlier,
es sence, reflection-into-self, is the first moment of its shining into itself (as
H egel remarks : 'Essence is atfirst simple self-relation, pure identity. This is its
determination, but as such it is rather the absence of any determination' (SL,
92
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93
with
In the 'Logic of Essence ' , this idea of totality and absolute identity, in which
identity and reflection are sublated, starts off with the reflective determination
of the ground which therefore is also the end of determining reflection. But
this idea gains full concretion in the notion of Actuality ( Wirklichkeit) in which
the fundamental contradictions of reflection are welded into a successful kind
of identity. This last stage in the process of the sublation of reflection and
the becoming of the all-encompassing and absolute identity corresponds to
the end of objective logic. It makes the transition to the logic of the Notion
the richest category of dialectical thinking. If Hegel speaks of absolute re
flection and identity in this final part of the
Greater Logic, he
clearly refers to
II
Having argued that deconstruction's response to speculative thought is a
response to the strong concept of identity, it is now necessary to say a word
about the deconstructive 'operation' on identity itself. First, however, it has to
be established, and in no uncertain terms, that deconstruction is not a critique
of identity in the name of the non-identical. Undoubtedly, Derrida has , at
times, made recourse to the concept of non-identity to describe the limits of
identity. In 'Before the Law', for example, he speaks of the 'non-identity in
itself' of the sense or destination of a text such as Kafka's parable, whose
'personal identity' - 'the identity with itself of a bequeathed corpus ' - passes
on nothing but 'non-identity with itself'; yet, the identity of Kafka's text that
'does not tell or describe anything but itself as text', is not, Derrida charges,
achieved
94
text guards itself, maintains itself - like the law, speaking only o f itself, that is
to say, of its non-identity with itself [II ne parle que de lui-mime,
non-identiti a SOt] .
mais alors de sa
Kafka's parable 'Before the Law' can be said to close upon itself, it is in
non-identity. But the statement of such non-identity comes with a conditional
claus e : lfthe text can be said to speak only of itself,
its non -identity with itself. If one uses a language akin to that of speculative
thought to describe what happens in Kafka's parable, that of which this text
speaks when it is said to speak only of itself, it must then invariably be cast in
terms of non-identity. The reference to non-identity is clearly a tribute paid to
a particular way of phrasing the fact that a text such as Kafka's guards and
maintains itself. The non -identity that a deconstructive reading of a text such
as 'Before the Law' points to, however, shares only the name with the
speculative concept of non-identity. Indeed deconstruction does not obj ect to
the idea of an all-encompassing identity on the basis that such a concept does
not come without remainders . Since all identifYing thinking, as well as the
thinking of absolute identity, considers what it is to be identified (or taken up
into the all-embracing and identical whole) from the perspective of identity,
such thought, its critics claim, looks away from the 'what of the to be
identified' as not identical. Ineluctable non-identity, they hold, is the
remainder that drops through the otherwise tight nets of identifYing, or
speculative thought.
Adorno, from such a position, has opposed Hegelian thought and its
attempt to conceptualize the relation of identity between subject and object as
the identity of identity and non-identity. To counter identifYing thought, he
has suggested to start off by thinking of the non-identity of identity and
non-identity. Yet, as Ute Guzzoni has convincingly shown, any attempt to
think toward a thinking that would no longer be guided by the principle of
identity must acknowledge that Adorno's concept of the non-identical is
essentially something other than what Hegel designates by that term. Guzzoni
remarks:
Although Hegelian dialectic lives, undoubtedly, from the tension between identity
and non-identity, identity has never here tile meaning of something that is simply in
opposition to the identical, precisely because of the tension in question.20
Indeed, the non-identical in Hegel is a
moment,
its
other -
of the
identical - and is
viewed as constituted from the start (in the same way as the identical) by the
95
finite things, or entirely at the end as a postulate that proceeds from an absolute
finitude, how could he have come up with the idea to demand that philosophy
deduce his writing pen?24
Apart from the fact that such items as those to which Krug refers are trivial
(Hegel challenges Krug to confront, by contrast, the organization of a dog or
cat, the life of a rose, the individuality of a Moses or Alexander), they are not
even characterized, strictly speaking, by independence, singularity, or finite
being. As Hegel's emphasis on thinking the organization, the life and the
individuality of things, animals or persons demonstrates, singular items have
an independent singularity and are philosophically significant only on the
basis of what makes them intelligible in the first place. Yet, with this, they are,
for Hegel, always already, moments of the absolute as the unity of the
intelligible. In short, if anything can make absolute identity tremble, it is
certainly not the non-identical in the Hegelian sense, nor, as is now to be seen,
in the sense that Adorno gives to this term.
For Adorno, 'the non-identical negates identity, it is something negative
compared to the identical, that is, something that refuses to be identified, and
to be taken together with Other in a cornmon unity . . . insofar as it is always
96
more than what i t could have in common with Other'. 25 I n other words, the
non-identical in Adorno's sense is never a moment, and, as Guzzoni has
argued, 'Adorno's dialectic is a dialectic without moments, as it were, precisely
because for him the non-identical is not sublated in the movement of an
all-embracing and all penetrating whole. ' 26 The starting point for his
conception of the non-identical lies with the assumption that every object that
is encountered, whether in the mode of experience or conceptualization,
harbours a kernel resistant to experience and thought. Guzzoni notes that 'for
Adorno what is, is there first before Other - the thinking subject - can direct
itself upon it' P The non-identical, in Adorno's sense, escapes identifYing
thought and absolute identification, because, in essence, it has an altogether
different ontological character, and is heterogeneous to experience, thought
and conceptual arrangement. This remainder would, in principle, have to be
distinguished from what Hegel calls immediacy, or mere being. The latter
does not escape the logic of the concept; it is, on the contrary, its first moment.
As Hegel recalls toward the end of the Greater Logic,
at each stage of its further determination . . . [the universal] raises the entire mass of
its preceding content, and by its dialectical advance it not only does not lose
anything or leave anything behind, but carries along with it all it has gained, and
inwardly enriches and consolidates itself.28
Not only does the idealizing process by which absolute identity enriches itself
have no remainder, but to speak of a remainder to the process as a whole is
nonsensical, since the Absolute is sublated remainder, the remaining totality
of all remains. What Adorno calls the non-identical, and which is said to be
heterogeneous and incommensurable to the concept, would here be radically
different from what Hegel terms the immediate, or simple, being. Yet, such a
non-identical, which precedes the speculative logic of identity and non
identity as the heterogeneous and incommensurable, is ultimately without
relation to the Concept. To the Concept and absolute identity, it is an
insignificant non-identical which has no bearing whatsoever on the process
through which the Absolute achieves completion in absolute identity.
Whereas Hegel's 'immediate' (mere being, sensible immediacy) is part of the
whole, the non-identical in Adorno's sense remains outside speculative
identity, occupying the place that the latter has assigned to the meaningless.
Indeed, in its utter exteriority to absolute identity, the non-identical lacks up
to the negativity of the most minute moment. But by slipping through the
so-called meshes of totalizing thought, this non-identity (which is thus clearly
understood to be non-relational, and hence of the order of substance)
acquires no enabling status, however ephemeral, with respect to such thought.
Neither does it make that thought possible by escaping it, nor does it represent
the limit of absolute identity. It is, strictly speaking, meaningless. But the
meaningless is, as we have said, determined as such by speculative thought.
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97
any
A remainder such as the one in question resists the meanings of both the
id entical and the non-identical, and cannot be questioned within their
98
remaining is
itinerary which would lead from its beginning to its end and back again, nor does
its movement admit of any center. Because it is structurally liberated from any
living meaning, it is always possible that it means nothing at all or that it has
no
decidable meaning. There is no end to its parodying play with meaning, grafted
here and there, b eyond any contextual body of finite code.32
remaining is
99
'anterior' to
notyet the space where the large questions of the origin of negation, of
yes
the
also
by it. The singularity of the yes of response is not that of the raw singularity that
K.rug's writing pen is supposed to exemplify, as opposed to what sort of pen it
is, how it is constructed, who fabricated it, and so forth. It is intelligible, but of
1 00
Notes
1. G.W.F. Hegel, Phenomenology ofSpirit, trans. A.V. Miller (New York: Oxford University
Press, 1979) p. 409 .
2. Ibid. , p. 477.
3. Ibid., p. 448.
4. Ibid., p . 478.
5 . Jacques Derrida, Glas, trans. J.P. Leavey and R. Rand (Lincoln: University of Nebraska
Press, 1986) p. 291.
6. Jacques Derrida, 'la, ou Ie faux-bond', Digraphe, 11 (1977) p. 1 1 1 [bracketed remarks, RGJ .
7. Ibid., p. 94.
8 . Ibid., p . 88.
9. Ibid., p . IOO.
10. Jacques Derrida, Dissemination, trans. B. Johnson (Chicago: University of Chicago Press,
1981) p. 248.
1 1 . G.W.F. Hegel, Science of Logic, trans. A.V. Miller (New York: Humanities Press, 1969)
p. 74. Hereafter abbreviated in the text as SL.
12. For a more detailed account of absolute identity and, in particular, of how it is different
from Schelling's conception of the absolute, see Dieter Henrich, 'Andersheit und Absolutheit des
Geistes. Sieben Schritte auf dem Wege von Schelling zu Hegel', in Selbstverhaltnisse (Stuttgart:
Rec1am, 1982) pp. 142-72.
1 3 . Dieter Henrich, ' ''Identitiit" - Begriffe, Probleme, Grenzen', in ldentitiit, Poetik und
Hermeneutik, VIII, edited by O. Marquard and K. Stierle (Munich: Fink, 1979) p. 13 8.
14. Ibid., p . 13 8.
1 5 . Jean Hyppolite, Logique et Existence (paris: Presses Universitaires de France, 1953) p. 221.
16. Such a distinction, however, encounters some difficulties that arise from Hegel's
inconsistent use of the term 'absolute reflection' in Science ofLogic. It signifies 'the domain of the
Notion', i.e. 'the region offree infinitude and truth' (SL, 673), and is therefore sometimes called
'infinite reflection-into-self' (SL, 5 80) . But absolute reflection, at times, also simply means
'reflection as such' (SL, 622), or ' abstract reflection' (SL, 499).
17. Yet, it is precisely on such a misconception of Hegel's treatment of identity in the Greater
Logic that Slavoj ZiZek bases what he deems to be a refutation of the deconstructive approach to
absolute identity. In 'The Wanton Identity', a chapter from For Th ey Know Not What Th ey Do.
Enjoyment as a Political Faaor (London: Verso, 1 99 1), he seeks to formulate 'a Hegelian criticism
of Derrida', as well as 'a symptomatic impasse of the Derridean reading of Hegel' . Not only does
this project presuppose the reductionist interpretation of Hegel alluded to, but it looks for its
evidence not in Derrida's writings themselves, but in secondary sources. In a gesture reminiscent
of Habermas's recourse, in The Philosophical Discourse of Modernity, to Jonathan Culler's
interpretation of deconstructive thought and of his monological discourse of which Heinz
1 01
Kimmerle notes that in it 'the Other does not truly appear as Other, but only as supplier of
additional reasonable arguments' (Heinz Kimmerle, 'Ist Derridas Denken Ursprungsphilo
s ophie? Zu Habermas' Deutung der philosophischen " Postmoderne" , in Die F!age nach dem
Su bjekt, edited by M. Frank, et al. [Frankfurt/Main: Suhrkamp, 1988] p. 275) , ZiZek uses my
The Tain of the Mirror as the primary (if not sole) source for his understanding of D errida's
thinking. (R. G3SChe, The Tain ofthe Mirror: Derrida and the Philosophy ofReflectIOn [Cambridge,
Mass. : Harvard University Press, 1 986] .) In the piece in question, he claims that 'although the
Derridean reading misses the crucial dimension of Hegelian dialectics, the very form of its
criticism of Hegel is often uncannily "Hegelian" '. First, then, Derrida (not to mention myself) is
dead wrong about Hegelian dialectics because he has a common-sensical and non-sensically
simplified version of absolute identity, one that resumes 'worn-out textbook platitudes'. While
pretending to crack many a hard nut, nuts too hard 'to crac even for those followers of Hegel
who remain fascinated by the "power of the Negative" ' , Zizek opposes a nondoxical, if not
exotic, interpretation of Hegelian identity to such a simplistic and academic rendering of this
important issue. This more Hegelian version of Hegelian identity takes off in Zizek's own
words, from 'the fact that identity as such is a "reflective determination", an inverted
presentation of its opposite'. Paying little attention to the minimal conditions of reasoning
spelledvout in Hegel's discussion of the law of identity in the very chapters of the Greater Logic to
which Zizek turns in order to make his point, he takes Hegel's discussion of identity in 'Logic of
Essence' for the latter's definite and final conception, thus creating the deceptive impression
that Hegel's concept of identity is always already bereft of its absolute telos. With this
thoroughly botched-up notion of identity, Zizek tries to argue that all Derridean attempts to 'set
free heterogeneity from the constraints of identity' are pointless and self-defeating, since all
such heterogeneities are always only inverted Others of identity itself. They have, consequently,
always already 'been taken into account' by it. Without bothering in the least to explain how it is
still possible, to begin with, that after having radically overcome all the misguided text-book
platitudes about absolute identity as the One, or whole, as well as the 'notorious formulas' that
define identity as the identity of identity and non-identity, he can still speak of relations of
opposition, of inversions between identity and its Others, and especially of a coincidence of
identity with its space of inscription, Zizek limits all possible Otherness with respect to identity
to Otherness in opposition to identity, and hence to the Other of identity. S econd, all the while
Derrida is said to be wrong about Hegel's understanding of identity, and profoundly misled in
thinking that a space of conditions of possibility and impossibility 'exterior' to absolute identity
can be made out, Zizek also claims that the Derridean approach 'systematically overlooks the
Hegelian character of its own basic operation' . The problem, according to ZiZek, is that Den-ida
'is . . . thoroughly "Hegelian" '. Indeed, he asserts that what Derrida supposedly unearthed
'through the hard work of deconstructive reading' as conditions of possibility and impossibility,
is nothing other than the ' empty place of its [identity's, R. G.] "inscription" ', with which identity,
in a movement of reversal, coincides. Consequently, what is wrong with deconstruction is that it
'seems unable to accomplish . . . the step' of recognizing that there is no escape from the logic of
binary opposition. Rather than joyfully espousing the dialectic of opposition and inversion as an
iron law, as ZiZek does, deconstruction fools itself by b elieving in the possibility that the limits of
dialectical mediation can be thought. This is the delusion of deconstruction that ZiZek has set
out to unground. For the champion of dialectics, any such attempt falls flat on its face in that it
merely confirms the logic of opposition that it sought to delimit. It is here that the high price for
having overlooked the dynamics of Hegel's critical treatment of identity, and especially its retake
in a non-representational mode toward the end of Phenomenology, or in Science ofLogic, become
evident. It is a price indicative of the extent to which, in Zizek's theory of identity,
sociopsychological and psychoanalytical concepts of identity have become mixed up with its
philosophical concept. The sphere beyond representation is, indeed, that vof thinking. If
thinking, as philosophical thinking, is the thinking of limits, then the step that Zizek's cheerful
embrace of the logic of opposition is unable to accomplish is the step toward philosophical
thinking.
18. Jacques Derrida, 'Before the Law', Acts ofLiterature, edited by D. Attridge (New York:
Routledge, 1992) p. 2 1 1 .
1 9. Ibid.
20. Ute Guzzoni, ldentitat oder nicht. Zur kritischen Theorie der Ontologie (Freiburg: Alber,
102
T H E M A K I N G O F P O L I T I C A L I D E NT I T I E S
1981) p . 45; bracketed remarks, RG. For an excellent discussion of what Hegel calls 'moment', see
pp. 38-41.
2 1 . Ibid., p. 45 .
22. G.W.F. Hegel, 'Wie der gemeine Menschenverstand die Philosophie nehme, dargestellt
an den Werken des Herrn Krug', Werke in zwanzig Bant/en, Volume 2 (Frankfurt/Main:
Suhrkamp, 1970), p. 194.
23 . Ibid., p. 196.
24. Ibid., p. 195 .
25. Guzzoni, ldentitiit oder nicht, p. 105 .
26. Ibid., p. 39.
27. Ibid., pp. 44-5 .
28. Hegel, Science ofLogic, p. 840.
29. Jacques Derrida, 'Ulysses Gramophone: Hear Say Yes in Joyce',Aas ofLiterature, p. 291.
30. Derrida, Dissemination, p. 261.
3 1 . Jacques Derrida, Spurs: Nietzsche 's Styles, trans. B. Harlow (Chicago: University of
Chicago Press, 1978) p . 127.
32. Ibid., pp. 131-3, modified translation (RG).
33. Ibid., p. 133 .
34. Derrida, 'Ulysses Gramophone', p. 298.
======
4 ======
Our epoch, as is well known, has presented us with a poisoned gift for the
handling of our perplexities. It appears that modern political thought
constantly struggles with tlle paradoxical structure of its questions, as if
modernity itself - or more precisely, democratic modernity - were perma
nently inscribing it5 interrogations in the tension of a contradictory formu
lation, and in such a way that it simply cannot answer them. This article will try
once more to probe these perplexities . A first version was drafted on the
occasion of a conference on the relationship between liberty and equality.
There I had intended to tackle head-on tlle theme of my particular session,
'How should equality be conceived between liberty and egalitarianism?', but
whenever I focused on a strategy to follow, I suddenly had to face an
unexpected fact: I imagined I was tl1inking about equality, though in reality I
was tlunking of librty. I started from their j oint possibility but found myself
thinking of their impossible conjunction. I was discovering for myself the
various paradoxical conundrums toward which this question inevitably led.
Making a virtue of necessity, I then set out to make my difficulties into the
object of my investigation, in th e hope that tllis would also allow me to probe a
paradox which seemed to me irreducible. I was not unaware that there was
something extremely banal in the statement of this paradox, but I b elieved and still believe - that in and through it we can find the keys to many
contemporary debates.
The Paradox
It seems banal to insist on the paradoxical relation of liberty to equality.
Certainly, we have a rich legacy of texts (some of them already classics) which
have illunlinated this tension. Isaiah Berlin's 'Two Concepts of Liberty' is one
1 03
1 04
o f the prime references: few texts have stated so clearly that liberty and
equality (and justice, and order) are equally basic principles, and that to
coexist they have to limit each other. ! 'No', Berlin would say to de
Tocqueville, a maximum of liberty is not compatible with a maximum of
equality; 'that we cannot have everything is a necessary, not a contingent,
truth'. 2 Human ends are many and they come into conflict: this fits the tragic
condition of human life. But it also fits human freedom. And yet, can we be
satisfied with an answer that poses this necessary limitation in terms of values?
Is this value conflict, even for Berlin, not perhaps a distinctively modern
problem, derived from a world in which values are ascribed, not to a
transcendent order, but to the individual?3 May we not therefore ask in what
way these tentatively related principles are inscribed in the very horizon of
political modernity so that they appear as limits of each other?
Paul de Man once referred to Rousseau's Social Contraa as an 'allegory of
illegibility', a figure that deconstructs the very thing it figures; for in the ille
gibility of the contract the paradoxes upon which modern democracy is con
structed become visible.4 In what follows, I shall try to approach this
illegibility from the point of view of the difficulty which modern political
theory has in combining the two terms - liberty and equality - terms which
modernity has placed on its horizon of legitimacy. The idea that a truth
peculiar to modernity becomes visible in the contradictory combination of
liberty and equality is thus the starting point of this survey, whose three steps
may be briefly summarized with the following three questions : (i) If we
conceptualize liberty as individual liberty, can we conceive equality as
anything other than a limit to liberty? (ii) If we conceive liberty as individual
liberty, so that we concern ourselves with the liberal individual, are we
recognizing a truth of that individual? And if so, what is this truth that emerges
through the liberty-bearing individual? Finally, (iii) how can we conceptualize,
at one and the same time, both this truth of the liberal individual and the
construction of equality as the limit of liberty? For perhaps the liberal
individual only becomes legible on the horizon of an equality that figures its
own limit; perhaps equality is the form in which community presents itself
within modernity. I want to say yes to both those formulations . The rest of this
essay will explore why that must be the case.
Let us reframe the first question in the following way: can liberty be
conceived politically as an individual attribute if its limit is not thought
together with this property ofliberty? Or, to repeat the previous formulation: if
we conceive liberty as individual liberty, can we conceive equality as anything
other than a limit to liberty? In the conjunction of liberty and equality,
modernity brings human coexistence into play; and, indeed, that is how we
may speak of conceiving liberty politically. Already in the formulation 'equal
liberty for all', which appears in classical descriptions of the state of nature,
equal liberty appears to mark the need to institute political society, or to
institute liberty, politically. In the state of nature, liberty is equal because it is
E QU A L I T Y AT T H E L I M I T O F L I B E RTY
1 05
unlimited, and because it is unlimited its expansion leads to war and the
en dangering of liberty. But liberty may be limited by the mediation of Natural
Law, as it is in Locke: reason, in agreement with Natural Law, teaches that
since everyone is equal and independent they should not harm one another;
therefore I can do anything - but only anything which I also allow to my
equals .s On the other hand, liberty may also be limited by reason of fear. In
Hob bes, for example, liberty is unlimited in the state of nature, and only a pact
among equals whereby they submit to a third force can limit it for the purposes
of security. Or in Rousseau, the re-establishment of natural equality may
require a pact in which natural liberty, being incapable of sustaining equality,
has to transmute into conventional liberty. The same natural right of all to
unlimited liberty appears to demand in every case the political institution of
liberty that is at once guaranteed and limited by rivalry through the pact among
equals. Without ignoring the differences between Hobbes and Rousseau, I
want simply to emphasize here that the political institution ofindividual liberty
entails the institution of equality - of the community of equals - as its limit.
Only a state of total harmony, where unlimited liberty would go together with
unfailing equality, would be able to escape this situation.
But a state of natural and lasting harmony could never explain the necessity
of passing from the state of nature to the political institution of the community;
if the pact is necessary it is because such harmony is always destroyed. 'Any
doctrine of the state of nature and the social contract, ' Pierre Manent rightly
insists, 'necessarily has a Hobbesian element.' 6 I would add that this moment
of conflict appears at the limit both of an individual principle ofliberty and of a
social principle of equality. The pact signals the impossibility of natural
harmony: it is necessary because there is conflict; it is possible because it is
inscribed as limit, because it inscribes equality as limit.7
For the moment, let us stay with the idea that, in establishing individual
liberty and equality on its horizon, modernity does so in such a way that the
one appears as the limit of the other. It simultaneously combines an individual
natural principle (liberty) and a shared natural condition (equality) . So far I
have taken it for granted that liberty, as an individual attribute, is a specifically
modern conception, or at least that modernity can be read, among other ways,
as establishing the principle of an individual who bears individual liberty as a
right. Modernity has been defined precisely as the shift from one teleological
order - which assigns duties and locations to an individual who is supposed to
fit into this transcending order by means of virtue - to another order whose
essential moral category is not duty but right. This new order has replaced the
notion of end with that of principle, which in turn coincides with the
individual.s Or as Daniel Bell puts it:
The fundamental assessment of modernity, the thread that has run through
Western civilization since the sixteenth century, is that the social unit of society is
not the group, the guild, the tribe, or the city, but the person. The Western ideal was
the autonomous man who, in b ecoming self-determining, would achieve freedom.9
1 06
T H E M A K I N G O F P O L I T I C A L I D E NT I T I E S
Political modernity and the individual go hand i n hand, and the rights-bearing
individual emerges in the space opened up by a political order which leaves the
question of legitimacy without a substantive answer. This symbolic shift
involves a break with any given meaning, with the naturalness of a tradition .
'The modern age,' writesJean-Luc Nancy, 'was access to meaning qua will to
produce meaning, whereas the age of antiquity had acceded to meaning qua
disposition of the world.' IO Political modernity - that which bears 1 776 and
1 789 as its inaugural dates - inscribes free and equal individuals on its horizon
of legitimacy. But it hardly seems necessary to dwell on this point; I think there
is sufficient agreement about it, both among those who hold by the negative
liberty peculiar to this modern individual, and among those who, while
criticizing the reduction of the idea of liberty to an individual attribute
vis-a-vis political power, nevertheless recognize that this image is the one that
modernity projects of itself. To put it somewhat differently: the libert-y
bearing modern individual is not a natural figure but is politically instituted by
democratic modernity; we may consider the anthropological premisses
underlying this individual to be true or false, but even if we consider them to
be false we cannot deny that in some way they signal a truth of our
contemporary society.
This brings us to the second question. How can we say that these
anthropological premisses of the liberal individual signal a truth if, at the same
time, we base ourselves on the historicity of the modern conception of the
individual? It seems to me that this question may be approached in two ways.
First, we may think that in its historicity the establishment of the rights
bearing individual on the horizon of modernity helps to force that same
individual to extend its rights and to assert its prerogatives. According to this
view, then, the individual is an invention of the modernity that has imposed
itself as our contemporary reality and, in this realm of the individual, there is a
fundamental truth that we might call epochal: the individual as self
realization, as self-production, emerges as the centre of the modern world.
This self-understanding of modernity - that of an individual producing its
world - may be read in an optimistic or a pessimistic key. The optimistic
version grasps this self-understanding as an inescapable and incontrovertible
fact, makes it the starting point for thought about the political problems of our
age, and therefore bases its conception of liberty and equality upon the fact of
the individual. Among contemporary thinkers, we might again mention Isaiah
Berlin and John Rawls who, though otherwise quite distinct, resemble each
other in their suggestive treatment of this problem. Unlike Nozick, l l for
example, neitl1er denies the historical character of the individual from which
they start. The more pessimistic attitude to this self-understanding of
modernity as self-production of the individual, and one much more critical
with regard to its future, considers that the erection of the individual into an
unconditioned centre is essentially a loss and, at times, an almost monstrous
E QU A L I T Y AT T H E L I M I T O F L I B E R T Y
107
1 08
every order and every identity, its non-naturalness, its lack o f an ultimate
foundation. But there is another side to this truth: the lack of an ultimate foun
dation cannot be reduced to mere facticity; any order, any society has to face
up to the question of its origin and legitimacy. The lack of an ultimate foun
dation does not do away with the question, nor does it answer it. Rather, it
instals the question as a question, rendering it manifest. And what is heard in
this question is the enigma of an institution which does not allow itself to be
reduced to empirical existence or to transcendence - the enigma of a form of
human coexistence which is not welded together outside human beings but
which does transcend them and is not identical with their immediate
existence.
What is it in human coexistence, then, that takes shape this side of
transcendence and the other side of immanence? What is the truth that reveals
itself to us in its historicity? Answer: what modernity makes visible to us is the
enigma of institution displayed in the dual movement of the institution of an
institutor, the advent of an actor, the acquisition of freedom by a free being.
The individual arrives, and arrives as producer of itself and of its world.
Modernity is the flashing of the limit; it is display of the limit of the institution
and the instituted. Hannah Arendt, who is justifiably often considered anti- or
pre-modem, is perhaps more than that. At the end of the preface to her
Between Past and Future, in which the gap between the two is described as the
space where liberty appears, she asserts that as the thread of tradition
weakened and finally snapped,
the gap between past and future ceased to be a condition peculiar only to the activity
of thought and restricted as an experience to those few who made thinking their
primary business. It became a tangible reality and perplexity for all; that is, it
became a fact of political relevance. [Modernity displays the limit: 1 the gap becomes
a fact of political relevance .
16
From this rift - within this limit - emerges the figure of the individual, at once
institutor and instituted. Modernity establishes individual liberty and equality
on its horizon, and it does so in such a way that the one appears as limit of the
other. For it supports the enigma of institution, of community, over free and
equal human beings; and there, in its figuration of free and equal human
beings, it shelters both indeterminacy and permanence, individual and
community, motion and stability.
Within the conception of the liberty-bearing individual, community is given
in the figure of equality. The modem, liberty-bearing individual is inscribed
in community through the limit of his or her liberty, through equality. The
individual appears as an instituting of community, so that equality stands out
as a limit to the liberty of the individual. If to think politics is to think
coexistence, we can say that it is in and through this limit that politics is
E QU A L I T Y AT T H E L I M I T O F L I B E RTY
1 09
thinkable within the world of the liberal individual. On the other hand, if we
must think of the individual as
maniftstation of coexistence;
emerging
as well from
hidden from us the movement whereby the political is instituted in this form of
singularity; clearly then, individual liberty must be thought together with its
limit - it must be thought together with the equality that inscribes singularized
liberty as a partition or division between human beings. If the community as
coexistence has to appear desubstantivized and fragmented in singularity that is, as always incapable of being represented as essence or transcendence
it will be able to appear only as a limit of dle individual and of individual liberty.
Individual liberty is an irreducible break in the (non-substantial) web of
community. And community - in the figure of equality - becomes, at once, the
space of irruption and limit, at once the condition of possibility and the
condition of impossibility for the deployment of liberty. Plurality - and what
term other than plurality would express an equality that does not cancel
singularity? - cannot be represented except as limit. It is the temporal flashing
of liberty which irrupts and interrupts the space of equality. It is equality, the
stage-presentation of plurality, which never ceases to constitute itself as limit.
The institution of the political in the realm of the liberal individual is
thinkable - no, politics in the realm ofthe liberal individual is thinkable - only if
the erection ofliberty as an individual attribute is understood as a break on the
ground of a desubstantivized community, as that which only irrupts
among
limit figured by the other or others. Perhaps not necessarily taking 'man as
evil' , but certainly taking as a given thought focused on limits, does seem to be
a condition for thinking politics in the realm of the individual. 1 7 To return to
Nozick, it seems to me that the irresolvable difficulties blocking the path in
state from individual liberty, politics from the individual, and of making
community a product. What Nozick finds impossible is to pass from individual
to community through an extension of the individual; what is inaccessible is
thought of the collective which is not at the same time thought of the limit.
IS
110
E QU A L I T Y AT T H E L I M I T O F L I B E RTY
111
which always presents itself in men and women a s among fellow-humans; that
is, it always presents itself as a singularization of a shared condition.
Notes
1. Isaiah Berlin, 'Two Concepts of Liberty' , in Four Essays on Liberty (Oxford: OUP, 1 969) .
2. Ibid., p. 1 7 0 .
3 . 'In other words, i t seems t o m e that the issue o f individual freedom had not clearly
emerged at this stage [in ancient Greece] . . . ; the central value attached to it may, perhaps . . .
be the late product of a capitalist civilization, an element in a network of values that includes
such notions as personal rights, civil liberties, the sanctity of the individual personality, the im
portance of privacy, personal relations and the like'. Berlin, 'Introduction' to ibid., p. xli.
4. Paul de Man, Allegories oJReading: Figural Language in Rousseau, Nietzsche, Rilke and Proust
(New Haven: Yale University Press, 1 979), ch. 1 1 . Although it is in Rousseau that this illegibility
is inscribed with the greatest force at each point in the text, I agree withJ.-P. Dupuy that 'nearly all
the great thinkers of modernity have given us two opposing and disconnected visions of the
individual, whose articulation within their work has posed serious problems for them'.
('L'Individu liberal, cet inconnn: d' Adam Smith 11 Friedrich Hayek', inJohn Rawls, ed., Individu
etjustice sociale [Paris: 1 988] p. 75.) As Dupuy also points out, this duality coincides with the one
identified by Gauchet in modem conceptions of equality: M. Gauchet, 'L'Ecole 11 l'ecole
d'elle-meme', Le Dibat, 37, November 1 985 .
5. C.B. Macpherson has shown how the limitations based on equality that Locke sets to the
natural right to property-are overcome with the introduction of money. I think that, far from
solving the question, Locke here explicitly reintroduces the duality to which Dupuy refers (see
n. 4 above). The Political Theory oJPossessive Individualism (Oxford: OUP, 1 962), esp. pp. 203-20.
6 . P. Manent, Histoire intellectuelle du libiralisme (Paris: 1 9 87). In my view, one of the sub
lime formulations of this passage is that which Leo Strauss offers in his comments on Carl
Sclnnitt's 'concept of the political': 'Hobbes differs from full-grown liberalism only by what he
regards as the obstacle against which the liberal ideal of civilization is to be established in a
determined fight: the obstacle is not corrupt institutions or the ill will of a ruling stratum, but
man's natural malice. Hobbes established liberalism in an illiberal world against the (sit venia
verbo) illiberal nature of man, whereas his successors, ignoring their presuppositions and goals,
trust in the original goodness of human nature . . .'. Strauss, 'Comments on Carl Sclnnitt's Der
Begriff des Politischen' , in Carl Schmitt, The Concept oj the Political, trans. and notes by George
Schwab, with comments by Leo Strauss (New Bruns\vick: Rutgers University Press, 1 976)
pp. 89-90.
7. It is true that equality, in its institution as limit, may absorb or cancel individual liberty: that
is, absorb it into the General Will , through cancellation of the particular interest and fusion within
a single will . Or it may be an equality of submission to the only free one, the Leviathan. It is also
true that individual liberty may be conceived in some other way than as limited by equality, in an
effort to break the modern inheritance from Natural Law. It may be conceived, for instance, as
limited not by an original equality but by a constitutive difference or irreducible otherness, as in
Carl Sclnnitt. Or it may be unlimited - and for that very reason, incapable of being articulated
politically as in a number of modern ultraliberal writers. But I shall return to this later.
8. See Leo Strauss, Political Philosophy: Six Essays, edited with introduction by Hilail Gildin
(Indianapolis: Pegasus, 1 975), and also, of course, his Natural Right and History (Chicago:
University of Chicago Press, 1 965) esp. ch. 5a.
9. Daniel Bell, The Cultural Contradictions oj Capitalism, 2nd edn (London: Heinemann
Educational, 1 979) p. 1 6 .
1 0 . Jean-Luc Nancy, L 'Oubli de la philosophie (paris: Galilee, 1986) p . 39.
1 1 . Nozick begins his Anarchy, State and Utopia (New York: Basic Books, 1974) by affirming
the following: 'Individuals have rights, and there are things no person or group may do to them
(without violating their rights)' (p. ix) . I shall return below to the inescapable problems that seem
to face Nozick as a result of certain theoretical-historical anachronisms.
-
1 12
1 2 . I agree with Albrecht Wellmer when he says that for communitarian theorists, 'the
anthropological premisses of individualist conceptions are profoundly false and have not proved
true in any sense within modem bourgeois society'. (Wellmer, 'Modeles de la liberte dans Ie
monde moderne', Critique, 5 05-506, JunelJuly 1 989, p . 5 1 0 .) This 'pessimistic' view of the
modem individual often leads to the theme of a 'return' to the natural law of antiquity, to
Machiavelli, to the republican tradition, and so on.
1 3 . Jean Luc Nancy, L 'Experience de la liberte (p aris : Galilee, 1988) p. 20.
1 4. Claude Lefort, Essais sur Iepolitique (XlXe-XXe siMes) (paris: Seuil, 1986) p . 25.
15. I take this expression from Lefort, ibid. , p . 5 1 . My whole development of this point is
deeply indebted to the work of Lefort. With regard to this self-assignation of a right which
enunciates itself as prior to its enunciation, see also the lecture by Jacques Derrida published
under the title Otobiographies: l'enseignement de Nietzsche et la politique du nom propre (paris: Galilee,
1984) : 'In signing, the people says, and does what it says it does, but by deferring it through its
representatives whose signature is fully legitimized only by the signature, therefore after the
event: henceforth I have the right to sign, and in fact I will already have had it because I was able to
give it to myself. . . . There was no signatory, dejure, before the text of the Declaration, which itself
remains the producer and guarantor of its own signature. Through this fabulous event, through
this fable which implies traces and is in reality possible only because a present does not
correspond to itself, a signature gives itself a name' (pp. 22-3 ) .
1 6 . Hannah Arendt, Between Past and Future (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1 977) p . 1 4. I t may
seem contradictory that Hannah Arendt is located amongst those who see in the modem
individual an 'almost monstrous' aberration of the human condition (see above) and amongst
those who read in the break of modernity the mise-en-scene of a formerly invisible truth. This dual
location is not fortuitous; it reflects the ambivalent, or even contradictory, position with regard to
modernity that runs throughout Arendt's work.
17. Leo Strauss's well-known accusation against Schmitt in the above-mentioned commen
tary on 'the concept of the political' is precisely that, in failing to propose a substantive definition
of 'the natural', Schmitt remains immersed in liberal thought and its characteristic inability to
escape from a polemical definition of its concepts. Personally, I consider that it is here - where
Schmitt shows himself to be an eminently modem thinker - that his greatest interest lies for
political thought.
1 8 . The first difficulty is to justify the process of appropriation according to the right of the first
occupier - given that, for this process to be legitimate, there must always exist the possibility that
others will appropriate similar goods. As Locke already knew, this makes illegitimate the
appropriation of the last piece of ground or the last good (since it would leave other people without
an equal possibility), and logically this should also apply to the next-to-Iast appropriation, and so
on, until one returns to the first. Finding this problem impossible to solve, Nozick eventually
appeals to the status quo . The second difficulty is with the theoretical legitimacy (within Nozick's
framework) of passing from the ultra-minimal to the minimal state - that is, from voluntary to
obligatory association. Here the break implied by the obligation of submitting to the state appears
unjustifiable on the basis ofNozick's premisses.
19. This is what Sioterdijk affirms: 'anonymity . . . is becoming the great open space of cynical
deviation. The modern cynic is unintegrated and non-social.' Quoted and translated from the
French edition: P. Sioterdijk, Critique o/ Cynical Reason, trans. Michael Eldred (Minneapolis:
University of Minnesota Press, 1 987).
20. Friedrich Nietzsche, 'How the "Real World" At Last Became a Myth', Twilight o/the Idols
(Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1 968) section IV, p. 4 1 . Emphases in the original.
PART II
======
======
[I] f 'it i s a long time since there were so many grounds for hoping that everything
will turn out well ' , at the same time 'there have never been so many reasons for us to
fear that, if everything went wrong, the catastrophe would be final'.
V A C L A V H A VE L !
1 15
116
exercise a destructive hold over society. W e are not yet, and might not for
some time to come, be in what may properly be called a 'post-apartheid'
situation. The latter would require a break with the more general logics of
apartheid, and this is not easily effected.
not of a
partial, cyclical nature, and therefore not simply a regular feature of the
capitalist system. Rather, it is regarded as a generalized, highly overdeter
mined
organic crisis
collapse of hegemony in both the political and economic spheres . With respect
to the second criterion - wherein the nature of the system is deemed to be in
crisis - closer scrutiny reveals remarkable differences : the crisis has been
depicted as a crisis of the apartheid system, or of the system of racial domination,
or of racial capitalism, or of a specific
Most of these accounts, while rich in historical and empirical detail, seemed
to be marred by an inability to provide a consistent theoretical principle of
reading. This could be ascribed to a number of factors, of which I would like to
consider two. First, as I have indicated, any attempt to come to terms with the
nature of the crisis is complicated by the fact that the character of the system
considered to be in crisis is the subject of a particularly acute conflict of
interpretations . In this sense, accounts of the crisis have tended to reproduce
problems inherent in the theoretical traditions utilized in the analysis of the
117
nature of social division in South Africa. These problems are not specific to
explanations of the crisis, but are the effects of the broader theoretical
traditions from which they are drawn.
S econd, it has to be said that there is often a serious omission in these
accounts having to do with the absence of investigating and theorizing the
phenomenon of crisis as such. For what is it that one refers to when one speaks
of a crisis? S ome have depicted a situation of crisis as an extraordinary or
abnormal situation, characterized by acute tension, great uncertainty, an
element of surprise or a feeling that a watershed has been reached. But what I
want to suggest is that the element of uncertainty has a specific importance for
our discussion, for it marks a context that is defined by its own undecidability,
a turning-point, as it were - but one where the outcome is not predetermined.5
One could say that the situation of crisis marks an undecidable terrain, one that
accounts not only for the immediate eruptions of antagonisms and the
attempts of the forces of resistance to turn events in their favour, but also
marks the terrain in which persistent efforts will be made to conserve and
defend the existing order of things. 6
Many of the accounts based on a Gramscian perspective have highlighted
one or more of these aspects. Yet, the notion of crisis as such, as well as the
relation between the event of crisis (and the discursive responses to it) , have
not been addressed.7 In most cases Gramsci is cited as an authority on organic
crisis, without any further discussion of the matter at hand. This is obviously
not a satisfactory way of proceeding, since the process of citation covers over a
silence in the meta-discourse at this point. While a proliferation of
explanations of the crisis is offered, these explanations remain of the order of
enumeration, listing symptoms and effects of the crisis, but being unable to
construct a coherence between them on the grounds of a theoretical narrative.
One of the commentators, Murray, has addressed the radical insufficiency of
explanation by enumeration, arguing that the 'inventory of observable
symptoms' (for him, meagre growth-rates, recession, bankruptcies, un
employment and so forth) merely signifies the 'physiognomy of the organic
crisis', and that ' . . . a catalogue of social indicators cannot substitute a
rigorous analysis of the anatomical nature of the crisis'. 8
While agreeing with the sentiment (that a listing of indicators cannot fulfil
the function of providing an explanation), I would differ from Murray by
offering a possible solution based on a distinction other than the one proposed
between the general appearance or 'physiognomy' of the crisis and a deeper
structural or 'anatomical' analysis. The reason a different set of distinctions is
necessary is because it is not only the theorization of the crisis, but the manner
in which one thinks about the nature of the system that becomes relevant. At
this point, then, it is necessary to turn to the question of the logic of apartheid
discourse, though it might immediately be asked whether, ifby focusing on the
logic of the apartheid discourse, the question at stake is not prejudged. In
118
It has been argued by Sayer that the revolution in Prague could be seen as a
revolution against modernity in so far as it was based on a rej ection of the
totalizing representations (of categories such as class, nation and so forth)
fostered by modernity. II He argues, furthermore and precisely in the context
of modernity, that the revolutions of 1 9 8 9 are not to be considered as a 'return
to the fold of "the West" [as] hailed by politicians from Thatcher to Bush, but
[as] something quite new: a "post-modern revolution" . . . ' 12
In a recent response, commenting on Derrida's article in Critical Inquiry,
Fynsk addresses a series of very similar issues with regard to the relation
between apartheid and 'the West', u In so doing, he opens up space for
discussion around the analytic ways one may come to terms with the
phenomenon of apartheid or to think through and imagine the nature of a
post-apartheid society. Fynsk's argument leads to the heart of the question at
stake: namely the logic of the discourse of apartheid. He suggests that the
existence of apartheid raises significant questions for Western political
thought in that it speaks to something already existing in the political discourse
of the West. 1 4 The resonance between apartheid and certain European
discourses on race, he argues, 'speaks the essence of a racism that is Western
in its provenance and final form' . 1 5 Apartheid, in this account, is an exemplary
discourse in two senses: first, because it is 'the most racist of racisms'; it is
racism par excellence; and second, because the very form this racism takes
exemplifies an extreme identitary logic, at least inasmuch as it can portray
itself, in its essence, as 'self-sufficient, separate, intact, independent',
identical to itself, and uncontaminated by any relation to alterity. 1 6 It is this
aspect of the apartheid discourse that contains the seeds of the problem to be
located at the heart of the discourse of Western metaphysics, and it is here that
S O C I A L AM B I G U I T Y A N D A P A R T H E I D
119
its wider importance lies. While I will not pursue the question o f essentiality
and its relation to Western metaphysics at length, some remarks in this
respect, nevertheless, are crucial for an understanding of the nature and
character of apartheid discourse.
In brief, then, the argument is one that attempts to link apartheid to ' a
certain European discourse on race' - as well as to the wider domain of
Western metaphysics - by drawing out the logic inherent in its construction.
This is what I have called the identitary logic: the logic ofwhat is involved in the
process of identity construction, in its broadest sense, wherein the impossi
bility of bridging the gap between identification and the reaching of a fully
fledged identity, is denied. Against such an identitary logic, the possibility of
developing a more democratic logic of identity construction, one that
recognizes the peculiar logic of a 'never-sutured identity', will be held out.
Identitary logic, I would suggest, is precisely what Sayer is referring to in his
discussion of the totalizing representations of modernity - and it is also where
much of Derrida's critique of Western metaphysics is aimedY What is
important at this point is to draw out the political implications for thinking the
logic of apartheid discourse from within this terrain of theoretical critique.
In this respect, there are two issues which are of particular relevance and
which deserve more detailed comment. The first concerns the way in which
apartheid has constituted itself as a discourse; and here it is impOliant to look
at its relation to otherness . 18 The second concerns the more mundane (but
nevertheless crucial) question as to whether it is at all possible to delimit the
'essence' of apartheid. These two questions come together for me in
discussions of the logic of apartheid.
Let us start with the latter of the two, namely whether it is possible and
desirable to delimit the 'essence' of apartheid discourse. It is here that I would
like to return to Derrida's intervention :md to Fynsk's response. In a text
accompanying an art exhibition destined to find its place in a post-apartheid
society, Derrida states that apartheid can be thought of as a system of marks
that outlines space in order to 'assign forced residence or closed offborders'. 19
Though these themes, particularly around the notion of place and the borders
drawn to assign people to their rightful 'locations', will be taken up later, the
particular point Derrida wants to make, however, concludes with the following
statement: 'It [apartheid] does not discern, it discriminates. , 2o
'It does not discern, it discriminates.' Most commentators on apartheid
society would agree with this description without any hesitation. And in that
sense, the undeniably discriminatory and repressive nature of apartheid is
directly affirmed as its essence . However, as I have indicated, the nature of
apartheid has been the object of long and bitter contestation, not least since
the very determination of its essence has prefigured, in some way, the
appropriate response to it. The specificity of characterizations of apartheid
society is therefore of essential importance, for it is in and through them that
120
T H E M A K I N G OF P O L I T I C A L I D E N T I T I E S
the division o f social and political spaces and the emergence o f antagonisms
are accounted for. The extent to which the widely divergent literature on
S outh African history and politics has displayed an inattention to questions
such as the delimitation of apartheid from other social practices, its
periodization and so forth, is all the more curious in this light. Its 'essential'
nature has been portrayed by some as racial, while others have contended that
the racial definition is a mere facade for more profound class differentials .
Even the more sophisticated attempts to think the nature of apartheid in terms
of an interrelation between race and class have been less than successful in
their endeavours to construct coherent theoretical accounts .21 The prolifer
ation of discourses on apartheid does not therefore necessarily indicate an
increasing understanding of this phenomenon. On the contrary, 'apartheid'
may have b ecome so naturalized, what we mean by it so obvious, that it has
become an empty signifier, signifying everything and yet nothing.22
There is
understanding of apartheid, for in the context of the organic crisis of the past
decade, the more recent prospects of a negotiated settlement, and the
dismantling of apartheid itself, the question as to the 'nature' of ' the system' is
raised once more . In the midst of discussions on the form of post-apartheid
society, the need for a retroactive understanding of apartheid, and the division
of the social accompanying it, have emerged with renewed urgency. It is in this
sense that I would argue that the nature and history of apartheid discourse can
best be understood in and through an investigation of the precise manner in
which it has drawn political frontiers .23 However, the possibility of thinking
the division of the social in terms of political frontiers emerges only once social
division is no longer thought of as determined by a pre-existing obj ective
space. Two possibilities are therefore logically ruled out. The first is a
situation in which social division is theorized with reference to an empirical
distribution of individuals in the process of production. The s econd is where
social division is thought to correspond to pre- existing political units such as,
for instance, the nation-state . Thinking social division in terms of political
frontiers thus becomes increasingly important in situations where the politi
cal identities, emerging as a result of the division of the social, do not cor
respond naturalistically to predesignated elements, but can clearly b e seen to
emerge as a result of a particular proj ect's attempt to construct social and
political identities in a specific manner. Political and social identities, on this
reading, are subject to political contestation and construction.
Here is the claim I want to advance in terms of this process of identity
construction: that all identity is constituted through an
externalization
of the
S O C I A L AMB I G U I T Y A N D A P A R T H E I D
121
122
123
T H E M A K I N G OF P O L I T I C A L I D E N T I T I E S
124
discriminatory or a discerning one; i t i s both one and the other, and yet not
reducible to either. This characteristic is what makes it unrealistic to analyse
apartheid discourse in terms of its overt classificatory logics : for the latter do
not succeed in capturing the ambiguity and undecidability inherent in, and at
the heart of, the discourse of apartheid - an ambiguity characteristic, not only
of apartheid discourse, but of modernity itself.
Borders . . .
One way in which the production of, and shifts in, divisions may be traced is
via an investigation of the formation of and changes in state strategies
pertaining to the ' drawing of borders'.36 One aspect of apartheid that has
S O C I A L A M B I G U I TY A N D A P A RT H E I D
125
always made it more contentious than other forms of racism has been the fact
that it dared allow itself to become sedimented in visible form. It declared
its elf to the world; it created internal boundaries and fostered the birth of new
states, the so-called 'homelands'. Apartheid, in so far as it not only spoke its
racism, but also physically manifested itself, called forth contestations around
those very boundaries. The eighties, in this respect, witnessed one of the most
successful resistance proj ects to the legitimacy of those boundaries in a variety
of forms . With the benefit of hindsight it is possible to regard the 1 980s as the
decade in which an ever more extensive challenge to those boundaries
occurred .
Indeed, i t could well be argued that one of the most significant conse
quences of resistance struggles has been the effective putting into question of
a fundamental form in which these boundaries have become sedimented : the
division between the 'homelands' and 'white' S outh Africa. The beginnings of
the 'ending' of apartheid, if regarded as a historically specific discourse, can be
traced back to the 1 970s . In 1 979 the Rhikhoto case caused a stir in S outh
Africa for it declared the permanent right of a S ection 10 worker to reside in
what was considered to be white urban space. The occupation of this space
continued to be central to the whole terrain of contestation between the state
and the resistance movements in the eighties .
Urban space . . .
After the events of 1 976, the position of urban Africans became one of the
main issues on the state's reform agenda.37 Having begun to think ofincluding
the so-called coloureds and Indians within a tricameral parliament, the issue
of African political participation remained to be addressed. Avoiding a direct
confrontation with the problem, the state opted for a series of reforms
following from the recommendations of the Wiehahn and Riekert Com
missions of Inquiry.38 With regard to the settled urban black population,
Riekert proposed a distinction to be introduced between what became known
as the privileged 'urban insiders' and the 'rural outsiders ' . The rationale
behind this distinction was to facilitate the incorporation of the urban insiders
by offering them a number of previously unavailable concessions - including
permanent leasehold and home-ownership schemes, and a relaxation of
restrictions on occupational and geographical mobility - while simultaneously
tightening the controls and mechanisms of exclusion governing the presence
of temporary contract and surplus labour.39 In this way, urban areas could be
'cleared of "idlers and undesirables", the "illegals", and those without
ac commodation and employment' .40
The split between urban insiders and rural outsiders was at the heart of a
new urbanization strategy which replaced direct controls of labour movement
and migration with a more insidious, indirect means of control. In place of the
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THE M A K I N G OF P O L I T I C A L I D E N T I T I E S
notorious pass laws, Riekert proposed t o manage the urban black population
by regulating access to housing and employment, thereby hoping to shift p art
of the responsibility for the control of urban migration on to employers who
faced increasingly severe punitive sanctions in case they engaged in 'unlawful'
employment practices . Employers thus became part of an indirect policing
system. This strategy differed from traditional apartheid policy in so far as it
recognized, for the first time, the rights of a limited group of Africans to reside
permanently in the cities. However, as was clearly stated in the Report, the
inquiry would, in addressing the problem of manpower utilization, remain
'within the framework of certain parameters which were taken as given' .4 1 In
short, this meant the retention of the basic principle that Africans should
exercise their political rights outside 'white' S outh Africa in the so-called
homelands . It was, moreover, assumed that Africans would continue to live in
segregated areas. The tentative inclusion of segments of the African
population thus clearly stayed within the boundaries of traditional apartheid
structures, not putting into question the distinction between 'white South
Africa' and 'the homelands' where Africans were supposed to exercise their
political rights .
This attempt at economic co-optation of the urban insiders, whose position
was improved at the expense of the outsiders, has to be seen in the light of
broader changes in official discourse. One of the most important elements of
these changes was the increasing emphasis on a depoliticized 'free-encerprise'
system as a solution to many of S outh Africa's problems and conflicts . In the
logic of this discourse, markets and the economy were presented as governed
by their own 'laws'.42 The Riekert strategy clearly fitted into this wider
emphasis by removing any obstacles to the exploitation of so-called market
forces, as well as by trying to depoliticize the remaining measures of control.
While the emphasis on free enterprise involved, on the one hand, a much
closer co-operation between the state and big business, it simultaneously
necessitated the construction of a black 'middle class', 'with a stake in the
,
system .43 In this way it facilitated the delimitation of a space in which an
(emasculated) 'blackness' could exist legitimately within the boundaries of
'white' South Africa.
The success of the Riekert strategy depended on its ability to maintain a
clear insider-outsider distinction, and in this respect its economic viability
and political legitimacy were of the utmost importance. A series of factors,
however, worked against the maintenance of this distinction, as well as against
the logic underpinning it - against, that is to say, the division between the
homelands and white South Africa. As a result of its acceptance of the
homeland-white South Mrica division, the Riekert Commission could not
address changes in the reproductive economy which undermined the very
possibility of making any clear-cut distinction between the urban and the rural
African workforce. One of the most salient changes taking place at the time
127
was the rapid growth of an urban population in the homelands which was de
pendent on metropolitan employment. The homelands thus no longer oper
ated simply as ' dumping-grounds' for the 'surplus' population not needed in
the central economy. The fast-developing sector of cross-border commuters,
according to de Klerk, presented an anomaly for the traditional apartheid div
ision assumed to be in existence by Riekert. 44 It also reflected a new regional
stabilization of the African labour supply in which there was a de facto incor
poration of parts of the homelands population into certain ('white') suburban
peripheries (with the exception of Durban and Pretoria)45 and deconcen
tration points .46 Furthermore, the Riekert Commission did not take into ac
count the ever-growing rural poverty in the homelands which contributed to
the massive increase in movement from the countryside to the cities . Neither
did it address the resultant mushrooming of peri-urban squatter areas .47 Both
of these sectors - the cross-border commuters and the squatter populations carried the potential of undercutting the maintenance of an insider-outsider
distinction. They represent what Bauman would call indeterminate ele
ments,48 not fitting into any of the official apartheid categories, and therefore
producing endless problems in terms of its reproduction.
By early 198 1 the state had introduced significant changes in its policy
which reinforced the processes outlined above. Moving away from industrial
decentralization - a policy aimed at the relocation of industries close to
homeland borders, and thus based on the premiss of the homeland-white
South Africa division - P. W. Botha introduced a new regional development
plan at the Good Hope Conference. This plan, appropriately described as
consisting of a 'soft borders approach', argued that development planning
should take place within regions which were free of constraints imposed by
'political' borders .49 As Cobbet and others have argued, this broke down
apartheid's division of labour and replaced it with regional sub-economies,
which were to form tlle basis of the construction of new local and regional
authorities from the mid- 1 980s. The fact that the constitutional dispensation
based on the homelands-white S outh Africa division was inadequate was also
admitted. Simon Brandt of the Department of Finance stated that:
the constitutional planning which revolved around the creation of separate national
states, was accompanied by a refusal to accept the regional pattern of development
brought on by spontaneous economic forces [sic] , and by active measures aimed at
creating a viable economic base for each of the intended national states. 50
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T H E M A K I N G O F P O L I T I C A L I D E NT I T I E S
foilure
inevitability
impossibility
of total
homelands. 55
The third set of resistances was located in the African townships. The
recommendations of the Riekert Commission came in the wake of an
emerging local government crisis manifesting itself, inter alia, in a prolifer
ation of community-based grassroots movements which were to become
united, by 1983, under the banner of the United Democratic Front.56 The
articulation of local township grievances into a broader anti-apartheid dis
course served further to undermine the very logic upon which the social div
ision of apartheid was relying. It exposed the co-optation, most forcibly by
focusing on the unaddressed problem of political representation for the Afri
can population at a national level, and rej ected all attempts to get the African
population to participate in their own oppression. As a result of the growing
militant and unified opposition, it became increasingly difficult for the state
to hold on to, and utilize, its discourse - which was still premissed on a di
chotomization of political and social spaces.
As is clear from the foregoing discussion, this dichotomization could only
be perpetuated by an increasingly complex construction of strategies of
inclusion and exclusion. There are many examples of this growing, and
129
Rather than trying to keep Africans out of white -designated urban areas, the state is
currently attempting to maintain control through a combination of selective
allocation of resources to bolster conservative elites and vigilante forces, and the
repression of democratic community organisations .59
By the mid- to late 1 980s, in the context of the State of Emergency, there
was a proliferation of 'enemies' of the state; and it became almost impossible
to maintain clear and consistent lines of inclusion and exclusion. In this
context, it is interesting to look at what happened at this point with respect to
the portrayal of violence on television. Posel argues that one of the main
intentions in the depiction of violence had been to contest representations of
township violence as a people's war, 'a mass-based struggle, with an articulate
and democratic leadership and a clear programme and strategy'. 60 The state,
in its interventions, fell back on the 'agitator' theory: 'external' elements, such
as the ANC and the SACP, were said to have 'infiltrated' the otherwise calm
townships, and sparked off mindless and destructive violence. The violence,
nevertheless, was not portrayed in simple black-white terms. As Posel
remarks, while the discourse on violence played on long-standing 'white' fears
of the 'black mob', it simultaneously had to override any crude racial
depictions, for the whole of the transformist strategy depended upon the
state's ability to co-opt support from 'moderate blacks' - excluding 'radicals'
and 'communists' - whilst simultaneously selling the idea of 'power-sharing'
to the white population. 6 1
To orderly urbanization . . .
In the face of this developing crisis, the state abandoned any attempt at
implementing the Riekert influx controls. In April 1 986, the pass system was
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T H E M A K I N G OF P O L I T I C A L I D E N T I T I E S
scrapped i n its entirety, and influx control was replaced with a policy of
'planned or orderly urbanization'. In short, this involved a shift away from
direct prohibitions over movement, residence and employment, to the use of
indirect ones (notably regionally differentiated financial penalties and positive
incentives, such as tax reliefs and the waiving of health standards in places of
employment to influence settlement patterns) .62 This method of control ove r
urbanization was said to be 'positive', since it allowed for the 'use of market
forces, subsidies and development' to encourage people 'to settle in certain
suitable areas rather than forbidding them to move to urban areas'. 63 And yet,
the racially 'neutral' and indirect character of the measures, however, did not
mean that all direct controls were given up . Indeed, even more insidious
controls were, and have been, utilized. An example of this is the controlling of
housing on the basis of legislation dealing with health and trespass laws.
Nevertheless, a certain opening up of the situation, and modification of the
insider-outsider distinction has occurred with the acceptance of differen
tiated accommodation. A far greater urban population was now legally
resident in what was formerly 'white' South Africa. However, they were to be
more differentiated in terms of housing, services and living conditions.
The orderly urbanization strategy no longer relied on the homeland-white
South Africa distinction. Instead it was now linked to a new regional industrial
dispersal strategy that aimed at a relocation of industrial activities away from
metropolitan areas to ' deconcentration' points. S outh Africa as a whole was
divided into nine development regions which cut across homeland borders in
some cases, and which formed the basis of the framework for a variety of state
institutions (such as the Development Bank, the Regional Development
Advisory Committees and so on) . 64 In its turn, from 1 985 onward, each
development region incorporated certain metropolitan regions which were
governed by Regional S ervices Councils (RSCs). In this sense, the orderly
urbanization strategy formed part of a larger series of incentives by the state to
contain the deepening crisis by trying to depoliticize the provision of services,
and to introduce a measure of political legitimacy at the local state level. The
Black Local Authorities, which had all but collapsed, were given represen
tation on the RS Cs together with 'white' municipalities, the latter of which
were funded by taxation on business turnovers, wages and salaries. (This, it
was hoped, would act as a disincentive for the employment of more Africans in
the metropolitan areas, directing it to the de concentration areas where the
standards of acceptable housing were lowered, and the requirements in terms
of health and safety provisions waived.) Thus, the RS Cs did on a political level
what the Development Regions did on an economic one : they cut across the
'white' South Africa-homeland borders.
These strategies, forming part of the second wave of state reforms, followed
in the wake of the rejection of other methods of control by the black
community. They constituted a complete rejection of the notion that the
131
132
today. The crux o f Bauman's argument i s that the modern proj ect o f cultural
unity - of which apartheid could be said to be the example and to which is
closely linked the ambitions of the national state - produces the conditions of
its own unfulfilment.67 This, we could argue, is the condition of modernity .
Bauman proposes that we think of modernity, then, as a time when 'order . . .
is a matter of thought, of concern . . . a practice aware of itself'. 6 8 Bauman,
moreover, points out that the very notion of order can only become central in
so far as the problem of order appears . Our world is thus shaped, he argues, by
'the suspicion of brittleness and fragility of the artificial man-made islands of
order among the sea of chaos',69 and our existence is modern in so far as it
contains the alternatives of order and chaos.
Here the argument takes an interesting turn, for Bauman proposes that the
struggle for order is not a struggle against chaos. Rather it is a struggle against
ambiguity and the miasma of the indeterminate and the undecided; it is a
struggle against indefinability and incoherence. It is in this sense that the
statement that the modern state produces the conditions of its own
unfulfilment must be understood. As Bauman points out, it is the modern
practice of the state to exterminate ambivalence: 'to define precisely - and to
eliminate everything that could not or would not be precisely defined' . 70 While
the state needs chaos to go on creating order, the element of indeterminacy is
that which has the possibility of radically undercutting the logic of the state.
Crisis Revisited
For Bauman, then, the indeterminate has a subversive potential precisely
because it undermines the very logic of identity upon which the order--chaos
polarity is found. Indeterminacy resists reduction to either of the categories,
and thus subverts the very principle upon which oppositionality and, as others
might argue, the whole of Western metaphysics is based. This brings me to
possible ways in which one may begin to think through, both theoretically, as
well as politically, the current crisis in South Africa. I have argued that the very
logic of apartheid is based, not upon an either-or form, but on what could be
called a 'both-and one' . This, I have tried to elaborate earlier, is precisely the
reason why it has been so difficult to think the nature of apartheid: for while
the 'both-and' logic on one level defies the logic of identity upon which
apartheid rests so heavily, it reinforces it on another. Thus, the both-and
logic, on the one hand, defies identitary thinking exactly because it refuses to
be reducible to a single identity. And yet, on the other hand, the logic of
identity is not radically put into question by its both-and nature. This is so
because it still remains within the very logic of apartheid discourse itself. In
fact, it is precisely why the discourse has been so powerful in its constructio n
of social and political identities. To take up Bauman's point in this respect,
133
134
T H E M A K I N G OF P O L I T I C A L I D E N T I T I E S
Notes
1 . Quoted in Derek Sayer, Capitalism andModemity. An excursus on Marx and Weber (London:
Routledge, 1991) p. ix.
2. Ibid., p. viii .
3. For some of the more influential interpretations of the crisis, see: C. Charney, 'The
National Party, 1 982-1 985 : A Class Alliance in Crisis', in W.G. James (ed), The State ofApartheid
(Boulder, Colorado: Lynne Riener, 1 987), pp. 5-3 6; Stanley B . Greenberg, Legitimating the
Illegitimate. State Markets and Resistance in South Africa (Berkeley: University of California Press,
1 987); M. Morris and V. Padayachee, 'Hegemonic Projects, Accumulation Strategies and State
Reform Policy in South Africa', Labour, Capital and Society, 22(1), 1989 pp. 65- 1 09; M. Murray,
SOt/th Africa: Time ofAgony, Time ofDestiny (London: Verso, 1 987); and John Saul and Stephen
Gelb, The Crisis in South Africa (USA: Zed Books, 1 986).
4. My remarks here refer to the decades-long controversy in the literature on South Africa as
to the appropriate mode of analysis. For a general overview ofthe debate, see Harold Wolpe, Race,
Class, and the Apartheid State (London: James Currey, 1 988), and D. Posel, 'Rethinking the
"Race-Class Debate" in South African Historiography', Social Dynamics, 9(1), 1983, pp . 50-66.
5. The notion of 'undecidability' used here draws on the work of Jacques Derrida,
particularly as it is developed in his Edmund Husserl's 'Origin of Geometry: An IntroductIOn ', trans.
with preface and afterword by John P. Leavey (Nebraska: University of Nebraska Press, 1 978);
and as well, his Dissemination, trans. BarbaraJohnson (Chicago: Chicago University Press, 1 972).
As well, I am using ' undecidability' as it has been developed in Rodolphe Gascls seminal
analysis of the notion of infrastructural undecidability, The Tain of the Mirror, Derrida and the
Philosophy of Reflection (London: Harvard University Press, 1 986). The argument has been
developed in a more political context by Laclau, in his New Reflections on the Revolution ofOur Time
(London: Verso, 1 990) pp . 1 72ff.
6. Roger Simon, Gmmsci 's Political Thought (London: Lawrence & Wishart, 1 982) pp . 37-8.
7. It is necessary to retain an analytical distiIlction between the event of the crisis, and the
discursive articulation of that event as a crisis. Theoretically, this involves a logic of articulation
premissed on the notion that there is no necessary logic creating a correspondence between the
'experience' of a radical rupture and the interpretation of that rupture as a crisis. Thus, it is held
(i) tllat a rupture may be articulated such that it does not appear as a crisis, and (ii) an
interpretation or construction of a crisis may take more than one form, depending on the
135
parti cular discursive horizon dislocated by the rupture. A fuller discussion of the conditions of
pos sib ility for theorizing this may be found in Laclau, New Reflections, pp. 40--4 1 .
8. Murray, South Africa, p. 432.
9. Jacques Derrida, 'Racism's Last Word', Critical Inquiry, 1 985, p . 292, n. 12.
10. Z. Bauman, ModerniO' andAmbivalence (Oxford: Polity Press) p. 1.
1 1 . Sayer, Capitalism andModerniO', p . ix .
12. Ibid. , p . xi .
1 3. Chris Fynsk, 'Apartheid, Word and History', Boundary 2, XVI (2), 1989, p p . 1-12.
14. Ibid. , pp. 1-2.
15. Derrida argues in 'Racism's Last Word' that apartheid may be regarded as 'the first
"delivery of arms" , the first product of European exportation' ( p . 295) . Throughout this text,
references are made concerning a possible relation b etween apartheid and the 'West' .
16. Fynsk, 'Apartheid', p. 7.
17. Derrida's critique of Westem metaphysics, a s developed over the last three decades, may
be read as involving a theoretical 'critique' of the attempts in philosophy to present itself as
grounded in 'totalizing' meta-narratives. S e e Jacques Derrida, Of Grammatology (Baltimore:
Johns Hopkins University Press, 1 974) .
18. The notion of the co-constitutiviO' of a discourse is taken from Foucault's work on the
simultaneity of the development of certain epistemes and the construction of their objects of
analysis. See Michel Foucault, Madness and Civilization (London: Tavistock Publications, 1 967) .
19. Derrida, 'Racism's Last Word', p. 29 1 .
20. Ibid., p . 292.
21. S ee for example Harold Wolpe, Race, Class and theApartheid State, and Posel, Rethinking the
p. xxx.
27. Michel Foucault, 'Nietzsche, Genealogy, History', in D.F. Bouchard, ed., MicheIFoucault:
Language, Countermemory, Practice (New York: Cornell University Press, 1 977) p. 1 62.
28. A s quoted i n V . Descombes, Modern French Philosophy (Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press, 1 980) pp. 1 3 8-9 .
2 9 . Liberal historians have been castigated b y 'neo -Marxists' in debates o n South African
historiography for silencing the black population by denying them a voice in history. S e e S . Marks,
'Towards a People's History of South Africa? Recent Developments in the Historiography of
South Africa', in R. Samuel, ed., People's History and Socialist Theory (London: Routledge 1 9 8 1)
pp. 297-3 08. The attempt here is, rather, to show how the production of political frontiers has
created the conditions under which it became possible to exclude the 'other'.
136
T H E M A K I N G OF P O L I T I C A L I D E N T I T I E S
3 0 . S e e in particular, A. Gramsci, Seleaions from the Prison Notebooks (London: Lawr ence &
Wishart, 1 971) pp. 5 8-9.
3 1 . A. Mapheto, 'The Violence. A View from the Ground', Work in Progress, 69, 1 990, p. 6.
32. Ibid.
3 3 . F.w. de Klerk, 'Walk Through the Door and Let Us Talk', The Independent (UK)
'
2 February 1 990.
34. Ibid.
3 5 . F.W. de Klerk, 'Politicians Can Work Out New South Africa but They Can't Make It
Work', The Sunday Times (SA), 3 February 1 9 9 1 .
3 6 . The notion o f strategy utilized here follows that b y Glazer, in s o far a s i t i s based o n the
primacy of the political and does not presume a coherent and single strategy developed in a
conscious fashion by the state . Rather, it is argued that emerging strategies result from a series
of intra-state struggles - struggles between state and civil society - and, as well, from antagon
isms developed between the state and the radical forces of resistance. See Daryl Glaser, 'A
Periodisation of South Africa's Industrial Dispersal Policies', in R. Tomlinson and M. Add
leson, eds, Regional Restructuring under Apartheid: Urban and Regional Policies in Contemporary
South Africa Uohannesburg: Ravan Press, 1 987) pp. 2 8-54, esp. pp. 48ff.
37. The following discussion of what has been termed the first and second 'waves' of refonn
draws heavily on the various aspects of regional reform strategies as elaborated in the seminal
work of Cobbet et al., Glaser, and Hindson. While I am in full agreement with the emphasis on
the primacy of the political found in most of these articles, I would argue that the moment of the
political and its relation to the crisis remain under-theorized in these works. See W. Cobbe t
D. Glasser, D. Hindson and M. Swilling, 'A Critical Analysis of the South African State's
Reform Strategies in the 1 980s', in P. Frankel, M. Pines, and M. Swillin g, eds, State, Resistance
and Change in South AJrica (London: Croom Helm, 1 988) pp. 1 9-5 1 ; Glaser, 'A Periodisation',
and D. Hindson, 'Orderly Urbanisation and Influx Control: from Territorial Apartheid to Re
gional Spatial Ordering in South Africa', in Tomlinson and Addleson, Regional Restructuring.
3 8 . See Wiehahn (chairperson), Report oj the Commission ojEnquiry into Labour Legislation,
Republic of South Africa (pretoria: Government Printer, [R.P. 47/1 979]); and Riekert (chair
person), Report oJthe Commission at the Inquiry into Legislation Affiaing the Utilisation oJManpower
(Excluding Legislation Administered by the Departments oj Labour and Mines), Republic of South
Africa (pretoria: Government Printer, [R.P. 3 2/1979]).
39. As cited in Murray, South Africa, p. 65.
40. Ibid., p. 150.
41. See A. Ashforth, ' On the "Native Question": A Reading of the Grand Tradition of
Commissions of lnquiry into the "Native Question" in Twentieth-Century South Africa', Ph.D .
thesis, Trinity College, Oxford, 1 987, p. 305.
42. Ibid., p. 3 1 5 .
43 . For a detailed summary o f the various important moments i n the changes between the
state and organizations operating in civil society, see Michael Mann, 'The Giant Stirs: South
African Business in the Age of Reform', in Frankel et al., State, Resistance and Cha/lge,
pp. 52-86.
44. F. de Klerk, 'Some Recent Trends in Bophutatswana: Commuters and Restructuring in
Education', South African Research Service, ed., South AJrican Review II (Johannesburg: Ravan
Press, 1 984) p. 27 1 .
45 . S e e Cobbet e t al., A Critical Analysis ojSA State's Reforms, p. 22.
46. Hindson, Orderly Urbanisation, p. 104. Glaser summarizes the distinction between de
centralization and deconcentration in the following manner: 'Decentralisation is the term use d
to describe traditional dispersal policy, the aim of which was to foster bantustan economie s. It
entailed the attempt to induce industry to locate in remote border areas. Deconcentratio n re fers
to the policy of encouraging industrial dispersal mainly on the outer peripheries of the metrO
politan centres' (Glaser, Periodisation, p. 53).
47. Hindson, Orderly Urbanisation, p. 104.
48. Bauman, 'Modernity and Ambivalence', Theory, Culture and Society, 7 (2-3) , 1 99 0 ,
p. 148.
49. Cobbet et al ., A CtiticalAnalysis oJSA State's Reforms, p. 27.
50. S . Brandt, 'Die Wisselwerking Tussen Ekonomiese en Konstitusionele Hervormings in
,
137
Sui d Afrik a', paper delivered to the Conference of the Political Science Association of South
Africa, Rand Afrikaans University, 198 1 , p. 6 .
5 1 . Brandt, 'Wisselwerking', p. 1 6 .
52. The possibility of publicly questioning the political viability of th e homelands became a
rath er moot point after the release of Nelson Mandela, though it has occurred in a context in
which the role played by 'traditional leaders' in the restructuring of South Mrica was placed
squarely on the agenda of the 'progressive' movements.
53 . Hindson, Orderly Urbanisation, p. 86.
54. Ibid.
55 . Ibid, p. 87.
56. For a detailed discussion of the crisis of local government, see ]. Grest, 'The Crisis of
Local Government in South Mrica', in Frankel et al., State, Resistance and C/:Iange, pp. 87-1 1 6 .
57. For a discussion of the National S ecurity Management System, of which the Joint
Management Centres form a part, see D. Geldenhuys and H. Kotze, 'Aspects of Political
Decision-Making in South Mrica', Politikon, 10 (1), 1 983, pp. 33-45 ; and]. Selfe, 'South Mrica's
National Management System', in Jacklyn Cock and Laurie Nathan, eds, War and Society. The
Militarisation ofSouth Africa (Cape Town: David Phillip, 1 989) pp. 149-58.
58. The WHAM strategy is discussed in some detail in M. Swilling, 'Whamming the
Radicals', Weekly Mail (SA), 20-26 May, 1988, p . 1 5 .
59. A. Boraine, 'The Militarisation of Urban Controls : The Security Management System in
Mamelodi, 1 986-1988', in Cock and Nathan, eds, War and Society, p. 173.
60. D. Posel, 'A "Battlefield of Perceptions" : State Discourses on Political Violence,
1 9 85-1988', in Cock and Nathan, eds, War and Society, pp. 262-74.
6 1 . Ibid., p. 273.
62. Hindson, Orderly Urbanisation, p. 89.
63 . President's Council Report as quoted in Hindson, Orderly Urbanisation, p. 89.
64. Hindson, Orderly Urbanisation, p . 93.
65 . Ibid., p. 88.
66. Cobbet et al., A CriticalAnalysis ofSA State's Reforms, p. 20.
67. Bauman, 'Modernity and Ambivalence', p. 163.
68. Ibid.
69. Ibid., p. 1 64.
70. Ibid., p. 1 65 .
7 1 . Ibid.
72. Ibid., p. 2.
73 . See in particular Lac1au's remarks on this point, New Rif/ectlons, p . 43.
=======
6 =======
Mahmoud Darwish's poem 'We Travel Like Other People' opens with 'We
travel like other people, but we return to nowhere.' It closes:
We have a country ofwords. Speak speak so I
can put my road
on the stone of a stone.
We have a country of words . Speak speak so we
may know
the end of this travel. 1
139
Darwish refers to in the final lines of his poem is, I contend, made difficult by
the different senses of what it means to be Palestinian engendered by more
than forty years of dislocation and dispersion. Issues of tactics as well as of
identity are foregrounded by this diversity. Questions must be asked not only
about whether the 'roads' laid by various Palestinian communities will be
recognized by other communities as routes to a place they too would recognize
as Palestine, but also about whether the members of these various communi
ties will recognize each other as allies or as antagonists if, and when, a
Palestinian state is re-established.
The war of 1 948 gave birth to the State of Israel, scattering indigenous
Palestinians throughout most of the world's countries.4 The 1 949 armistice,
which fixed the borders of the territories taken by Israel in the war, left 73 per
cent of what had been Mandate Palestine within the borders of the new Israeli
state, and 7 1 1 , 000 (82.6 per cent) of the 8 6 1 ,000 Palestinian Arabs who had
lived on that expropriated territory in exile outside its borders.5 The war of
June 1 967 resulted in the rest of what had been Mandate Palestine falling
under the control of Israel, with another 200,000 Palestinians (20 per cent of
the total population of Gaza and the West Bank - many refugeed for the
second time in less than twenty years) being forced to flee the territory. Most
of the 2,880,000 Palestinians living outside of Israeli control as of 1 986 trace
their banishment back to those moments at which they, their parents or their
grandparents were forced to flee their houses and lands.6
Additionally, there are approximately 2,040,000 Palestinians living within
the territories occupied by Israel, and these, too, have witnessed the loss of
their homeland even though they still reside on the territory that was once
Palestine. The situation of Palestinians living in Israel (within the borders set
in 1 949) and in the Occupied Territories (the West Bank, Gaza and the Golan
Heights, all taken in 1 967) is effectively also one of exile. The intensive
dislocations and disruptions which have taken place with the setting up and
'defending' of the Israeli socio-political order (3 86 villages were destroyed in
1 948 alone, and subsequent developments have led to the mass relocation of
populations, effective destruction of agricultural communities by forcing wage
labour on peasants, and ever-escalating expropriations of lands for military
and settlement building) have led Palestinians 'inside', like those 'outside', to
perceive the territory which is the locus of their identity as mutilated and
stolen. The fact that these people, technically, still live on the land that was
Palestine in no way refutes their assertions that they are exiled from their
homeland. For 'homeland' is itself a term already constituted within
nationalist discourse; it is the place where the nationalist imagines his or her
identity becoming fully realized. A domain wherein Palestinian identity is
denied cannot be considered the Palestinians' homeland, even if it were the
very same ground on which they imagine the future Palestinian nation will be
built.
140
'A
1 41
set out in texts . For the act of reading a newspaper or a novel does not
automatically interpellate the reader within the subj ect positions they proffer;
the text, and its positions, are obj ects to be interpreted, and, as Bourdieu has
vari ously demonstrated, 1 0 the positions one takes in relation to various social
texts are influenced by a wide range of factors. It seems likely that, in situations
like those discussed by Anderson, there is already in play in the reader an
identity which enables him or her to recognize the appropriateness to personal
experience of subj ect positions within a text. 1 1
The reader does not, i n other words, 'find' a national identity through
imagining a simultaneity of thousands (or millions) of others who are reading
the same text at the same time. Instead, a national identity is constituted by
discovering a set of concerns he or she 'recognizes' as his or her own within a
text or texts . Through identification with the position set out in such
discourse, the reader is carried out of the isolation of individual experience
into a collective phenomenon which the discourse articulates in national
terms. This re-evaluation of Anderson's theorization of the process of
imagining community not only shifts attention from commodity form (that of
the novel or newspaper) to the narrative content enveloped within those forms,
but also emphasizes the relationship between text and audience through
which the text plays a role in fixing the identity of its reader. The reader, in
assenting to that identification, comes to see the text (form and content) as
signifYing a community of which the reader can imagine his or her self a part.
This reassessment also enables one to move beyond texts per se into the wider
analysis of discourse in which all cultural artefacts become, in effect, social
texts providing fields for identification.
The recognition that national identity is a discursive production impels the
analyst of nationhood and nationalism to examine the process of articulation
through which elements of everyday experience come to connote the presence
of a thing which is never actually evidenced in full, that is, the national entity.
Whether this national entity is made up of those persons one imagines are
one's fellow nationals (as with Anderson's imagined community) or is actually
something even more nebulous - the 'Nation' itself - its most distinguishing
characteristic is that it appears to be signified by its parts and is never
perceivable as a whole. This, Anderson points out with reference to the
imaginary aspect of community: 'the members of even the smallest nation', he
writes, 'will never know most of their fellow-members, meet them, or even
hear of them, yet in the minds of each lives the image of their communion' . 12
Z izek, elaborating on the fantasy of 'the Nation', writes that the nation thus
appears as what gives plenitude and vivacity to our life, and yet the only way we can
determine it is by resorting to different versions of an empty tautology: all we can say
about it is, ultimately, that the Thing is 'itself', 'the real Thing', 'what it is really all
about', and so on . . . the only consistent answer is that the Thing is present in that
1 42
elusive entity called 'our way o f life'. All w e can d o i s enumerate disconnected
fragments of the way our community organizes its feasts, its rituals of mating, its
initiation ceremonies - in short, all the details by which is made visible the unique
way a community organizes its enjoyment. 13
Both the national community and the nation itself will be imagined,
consequently, by an abstraction of images of a 'way of life' from one's
experiences of the persons and practices one has come to know or has come to
imagine one knows (whether through personal acquaintance or through the
imagination of familiarity that comes through the various media) . These
images are then proj ected on to the generalizing screen of the 'national
imaginary' as fetishes of the nation which stand in for the thing itself.
The national entity is, then, signified synecdochically (the whole being
designated by one or more of its parts) . In an instance where the character of
the whole is not known, this is problematic in a way it is not when, for instance,
the knowledge of the nature of a boat makes the designation 'sail' clear. People
coming to imagine the entirety of a national community through their
familiarity with a small sector of its members or conceiving the character of the
nation through an extension of their knowledge of localized customs will find
themselves severely at odds with otllers who construct their images of the
national community and nation on the grounds of their experiences of entirely
different groups with entirely different customs. Clearly, of course, the
members of these different communities have knowledge of each other
through the various media which extend the borders of the imagined
community beyond the knowable community, but, as I have noted above, the
positions they take up regarding the narratives presented in those media will
depend on their experiences of their own milieu and of persons, or powers,
which are seen to impinge on those milieu from a place they interpret as an
'outside'.
This problem of imagining the nation is foregrounded in instances like that
of the Palestinians in which the national community is scattered through a
multitude of very different milieus . Thus, as I will demonstrate below in the
cases of Edward S aid, Fawaz Turki and Raja Shehadeh, the imaginings of
Palestine by Palestinians located within the various sites of the diaspora
(respectively New York, Beirut and Ramallah in the Israeli-occupied West
Bank) will differ substantially, and may lead Palestinians from one domain to
see those from another as foreigners, or even as enemies. However, such
dissonance is also likely to occur within established communities and nations.
A nation or social order that is fixed or 'real' is as much a discursive construct
as one that is dislocated, disassembled or fantastic. In the former instance,
however, the nation is taken as a given and voices that could deny its
realization are muted or marked as criminal, alien or insane . Such hegemoniz
ation effects a general common sense acceptance of the nation in the
'A
C O UN T R Y O F W O RD S '
1 43
I t can b e said that the 'national field' of discursivity operates with the nation
occurring against the backdrop of the nation (indeed, the political is generally
seen to be either intra-national or inter-national), they are not p erceived as
putting into question the actuality of that entity (indeed, a threat to the nation,
either from inside or outside, actually offers substantive support to its reality).
Debate may occur as to who is part of the nation and who is its enemy, but such
debate, within which maj or conflicts between differing modes of interpre
tation and identification are played out, rarely throws into question the
existence of the nation. This is in large p art because in a heterogeneous social
field, with multiple foci of conflict and consensus, a situation of what Laclau
and Mouffe refer to as a 'total equivalence', where the discursive space of
society 'strictly divide rs] into two camps', rarely occurs . IS (Civil wars and
revolutions, in which diverse antagonisms are mobilized around a single set of
oppositions, are exceptions , but even here the defence of the real nation is the
slogan under which both sides of the conflict fight.) The hegemonic discourse
of the nation, like any mythology, makes the cultural - that is, the arbitrary and
fashioned - appear natural and fixed in the order of things .
Where the nation is taken as a given, national identity serves as a backdrop
to the various identities adopted within the context of the national community.
Antagonism is perceived (if it is perceived at all) as threatening subsidiary
identities rather than the national identity which engulfs them. Thus, in the
example given by Laclau and Mouffe of a peasant prevented from being a
peasant because a landowner is expelling him from his land, antagonism is
,
perceived with reference to the identity 'peasant . 1 6 A rhetoric of national
ri ghts may well come into play in the articulation of the conflict between
peasant and landlord, but the conflict remains one between peasant and
landlord, and not between non-national and national. (Although, as in
Anderson's previous example where colonial officials were trained by the
imperial bureaucracy only to be denied the opportunity of acting as civil
servants in the Empire, the blocking of one identity by antagonism can give
ris e to struggles to constitute new identities which may undermine acceptance
of the hegemonic discourse.) In established nations, lands are also dispos
sessed, employment curtailed or cut off, educational opportunities denied and
persons unjustly incarcerated, but such events are discursively articulated as
the consequences of either the operations of capital, the greed of landowners or
businesspersons, the injustices of demographic settlement or localized racist
practices, the incorrect interpretation of law by inept or corrupt officials, and
so forth. S uch agencies may be seen to impede the full realization of the
1 44
T H E M A K I N G O F P O L I T I C A L I D E NT I T I E S
national ideality, but these are discrete faults within the national order
rather
than antagonisms which challenge that order. Only in rare instances when the
hegemonic hold of the concept of national identity has lost its grip on portions
of the population are such events seen as signs of a denial of the national
identity to those who suffer them.
The 'nation' in the discourse of an established national entity is an
imprecise and effectively nebulous mythological concept which is, becaus e of
that imprecision, open to appropriation by all of its readers. In other words, the
concept of the nation retains its grip on the imaginary of its population
precisely by remaining unfixed . In this way, a wide range of persons and
collectivities can identify themselves as constituent parts of it without havin g
the issue of defining what impedes its realization becomes salient. 1 8 Perso ns
who conceive of themselves as nationals without a nation (like those who feel
their national identity is endangered) will interpret all manifestations of
antagonism effecting their ' subsidiary' identities as symptomatic of the denial
nation. Within Israel and its Occupied Territories
to them of their
'A
C O UN T R Y O F W O R D S '
1 45
146
THE M A K I N G OF P O L I T I C A L I D E N T I T I E S
'A
C O UNTRY O F W O RD S '
147
As Laclau and Mouffe indicate, any representation o f the nation i s 'at the
same time a fiction and a principle organizing actual social relations'. 24 The
envisioning by the nationalist of who it is who makes up the imagined
community of which that person conceives himself or herself a part
determines the political means mobilized in the struggle to realize the national
rights of that community. The relative isolation of the various worldwide
Palestinian communities means that in a very real sense each fights for a
particular portion of the Palestinian population by means that are seen as
appropriate to countering the threat to that particular portion. Unlike in
established nations, where the struggles of parts of the population are
subsumed within a national framework by the operations of a hegemonic
ideology, in unrealized nations like 'Palestine' there are few, if any,
mechanisms that can effectively serve to translate all the particular struggles
25
into manifestations of a single global battle for nationhood. Consequently,
until the time of the
intifada and,
present day, each Palestinian community has seen its p articular situation as
'Palestinian'. It has consequently disallowed or ignored the 'Palestinian'
character of other groups' struggles. Often, instead of seeing other Pales
tinians as 'like' themselves, Palestinians in particular milieus have seen the
efforts of other groups as undermining or threatening their own 'Palestinian'
interests. Thus, ironically, as the internecine struggles between guerrilla
organizations and the conflicts between Palestinians on the 'inside' and the
'outside' have shown, Palestinians can play the role of antagonists to other
Palestinians.
In the following pages I will examine a triptych of Palestinian self-portraits
which variously elaborate the meaning of Palestinian identity in the pre
148
The Disinherited
Fawaz Turki states in the first pages of
in Haifa, Turki left at an age that ensured his childhood memories would
come from squalid Beirut refugee camps where he was raised rather than from
the Palestinian city from which his family was driven. The 'Palestine' he did
not remember was, however, ever-present in the murmurings of olde r
The moths would gather around the kerosene lamps and the men would mumble
between verses ' Ya leil, ya aein' ('My night, my mind - they have fused'). It is a
typical Palestinian night, Palestinian mind. And we would know we were together in
a transplanted village that once was on the road to Jaffa, that once was in the north of
Haifa, that once was close to Lydda. (TD, 45)
Such obsessive re-creation of the past is not unusual in persons who have
been brutally separated from their previous ways of life. Peter Loizos'
The
villagers driven from their lands by the Turkish invasion, and Peter Marris, in
loss of a loved one. 2 7 For Palestinian peasants, who made up 'the overwhelm
ing maj ority of those in the camps', 2 8 village life had provided the frame of
reference for all experience, and the loss of that frame effectively led to the
disintegration not only of their world but of their conceptions of self as well.
Thus Rosemary S ayigh, who has done extensive work within the Lebanese
camps, writes :
The village - with its special arrangements o f houses and orchards, its open
meeting places, its burial ground, its collective identity - was built into the
personality of each individual villager to a degree that made separation like an
obliteration of the self. In describing their first years as refugees, camp Palestinians
use metaphors like 'death', 'paralysis', 'burial', 'non-existence', etc . . . Thirty
years after the uprooting, the older generation still moums .29
.
This kind of nostalgia does not, however, provide a foundation for national
identity, since in large part the collectivities being imagined in the villagers'
reminiscences are their own obliterated village communities (which were,
whenever possible, demographically reconstituted in the new settings of the
camps) .
Fawaz Turki and his generation did not learn what it was to be Palestinian
from these nostalgic fantasies. Instead, their identity was forged out of the
149
To the Palestinian, the young Palestinian, living and growing up in Arab society, the
Israeli was the enemy in the mathematical matrix; we never saw him, lived under his
yoke, or, for many of us, remembered him. Living in a refugee camp and going
hungry, we felt that [wWle] the causes of our problem were abstract, the causes of its
perpetuation were real. (TD, 53) .30
Just as the enemy is given the features of the particular tormentors of the
camp P alestinians, so too the population of the imagined 'land' of Palestine
becomes those who share the camp Palestinians' experiences of b eing
'Palestinian' rather than all those who are descended from persons who lived
in Palestine. Since these experiences are based on poverty and exploitation
rather than on national characteristics, this population, at first, is seen to be
made up of all Arabs who suffer under the unjust leadership of reactionary
Arab states - ' The revolution is Palestinian in its origin and Arab in its
extension' (TD,
liberation of [all] men and women . . . Palestine is not a struggle that involves only
Palestinians. It is Everyman . . . . [We are] confronting the whole mosaic or racist
mythology in the West and in Israel that essentially claim[s] that certain races are
inherently cowardly, inferior, backward, and incapable of responding to the fierce
exigencies that press on the human spirit. (TD, 1 76)
The P alestinians created by camp life in the ghurba (exile or dispersion)
grew up with no links to a past and with few non -oppressive connections to the
present. The experience turned a number of them, like Turki, into
150
T H E M A K I N G O F P O L I T I C A L I D E NT I T I E S
1 948 catastrophe, were not, like the peasantry, hurled into a vacuum but
From the mid-nineteenth century onwards, the urban elite o f Palestine had
established settlements throughout the Middle
Americas . Here their children could have cosmopolitan educations and they
themselves could escape the Ottoman draft, British taxation and the
The bourgeoisie of the ghurba have always been socially and economically
This world, unlike that of the camp Palestinians or that of the Palestinian s of
Israel and the O ccupied Territories, is one in which individuals, alon e o r
' A C O UN T R Y O F W O R D S '
151
of P al estinian families and friends are not constantly rehearsed in daily life but
Intimate mementoes of a past irrevocably lost circulate among us, like the
genealogies and fables severed from their original locale, the rituals of speech and
custom. Much reproduced, enlarged, thematized, embroidered and passed
around, they are strands in the web of affiliations we Palestinians use to tie ourselves
to our identity and to each other. (LS, 1 4)
This ' Palestine', embodied
one considers the role played by the antagonist in the activity of defining
identity, S aid's work can be seen to be continuous with the context out of
which it emerges. If, as is suggested, the core of identity for the displaced
bourgeoisie is memory and its mementoes, then the chief enemy of their form
of national identity is the corrosive impact of time and misinformation. Years
and miles bring about a gradual blurring and smearing of the contours of a
1S2
exemplifies this : a series of ten essays, all describing the mechanisms by wh ich
Palestinian history and the Palestinian people have been and are b e i ng
misrepres ented, leads up to a long piece entitled ' A Profile of the Palestinian
People' which ' sets the record straight' by describing in detail the subject
distorted by the previously discussed discourses on Palestine and Palestinians.
To be sure, no single Palestinian can be said to feel what most other Palestinians
feel: ours has been too various and scattered a fate for that sort of correspondence.
But there is no doubt that we do in fact form a community, if at heart a community
built on suffering and exile . . . . We endure the difficulties of dispersion without
being forced (or able) to struggle to change our circumstances . . . . Miscellaneous,
the spaces here and there in our midst include but do not comprehend the past; they
represent building without overall purpose, around an uncharted and only partially
surveyed territory. Without a centre. Atonal. (LS, 5-6, 129)
There is little room in such a presentation for the revolutionary international
ist programme of a Turki or the stolid solidarity in suffering evident in the
people described by S hehadeh. S aid's 'Palestinian' is a composite of the
Palestinians he knows, and these are persons who, caught in the web of exile
amid the anomic milieus of the late capitalist world, find occasional but brief
respites from alienation in the celebration of an identity set off against that
world.
Finally, and like most persons caught up in our dynamic but decentred
world, they are people whose identity is always elsewhere and whose
knowledge , like ours, is made up of the central fact that wherever they are it i s
always away from home:
Whatever the claim may be that we make on the world - and certainly on ourselves
as people who have become restless in the fixed place to which we have been
assigned - in fact our truest reality is expressed in the way we cross over from one
place to another . We are migrants and perhaps hybrids in, but not of, any situation
in which we find ourselves. This is the deepest continuity of our lives as a nation in
exile and constantly on the move . . (LS, 1 64) .
.
Thus, although S aid's 'Palestine ' can occasionally be seen in the ' exhilaration
and energy and pleasure . . . [the] cheerfully vulnerable triumph' which
flashes in the eyes of a Palestinian child and reminds the watcher that
' A C O UN T R Y O F W O R D S '
153
' 0vement need not always be either flight or exile', that glimpse is always
Il1
0m entary and epiphanic (LS, 165). This nationhood, sensed in a moment
Il1
lo st by th e time it is recognized, is a ground for redemption, but it is a
e m tion promising integrity to the uprooted individual and not one
r de p
pr o mi s ing, or enabling, the political re -establishment of a fragmented
community.
from each other and have consequently cultivated their respective images of
the Palestinian past, present and future under very different sets of influences.
The situation within the borders of historic Palestine is different because
there a heterogeneous Palestinian population has shared the burden of Israeli
domination. This is not to say that all social groups within these borders have
been influenced in the same ways by the Israeli occupation, but that, since the
territories occupied in
154
th
fixing of images of self and antagonist which can occur in diasporic situ ations.
Palestinians in Israel and the Occupied Territories are less likely to ad opt
as
in
' A C O U N T R Y O F W O RD S '
l SS
156
'A
C O UN T R Y O F W O R D S '
157
community in the face of that threat, but when the struggle against that
antagonism has been concluded there will be other struggles in which allies
in the contemporary struggle may turn against each other.
Thus, in his portrayal of Palestinian women, he suggests that a temporary
co ncurrence of their identities as women and as Palestinians has made them
superb street fighters, but implicit in that description is the idea that if they
succeed in defeating the enemies who have made them recognize that they are
Palestinian women, they are likely to then take on the antagonists who threaten
their being as women per se:
Sometimes I think that those few women who manage to survive this are the
strongest of all samidin and it is they who will finally lead the revolt. They have the
least to lose and no ego to be pampered, hurt, or played on by the Israeli rulers .
You see them fearlessly head demonstrations and shout at soldiers at road blocks.
They have been used to brutal oppression by men from the day they were born,
and the Israeli soldiers are not a new breed of animal to them. (TW, 1 1 5).
I n representing women a s strong allies i n the struggle against occupation,
Shehadeh does not simply subsume their particular identities as women
under the rubric 'Palestinian'. Instead he demonstrates that their resistance
to Israeli soldiers is a particular extension of their antagonism to male
oppression (particularly that of Palestinian males) and, in so doing, suggests
that the strength they gain through struggling against the Israeli state can,
after its defeat, be turned against other, sexist Palestinian, antagonists .43
This recognition of the unfixity of identity is inscribed throughout The
Third Way in a manner not matched either in The Disinherited or After the Last
Sky. Each of the latter two books posits pure and essential identities which
Palestinians must realize if they are to be true to themselves; in Turki's text it
is that of the revolutionary internationalist inalterably opposed to the
machinery of capital while in Said's it is the (finally irrecuperable) ideality of
the Palestinian who existed before Zionism deformed and scattered his or
her identity and stole Palestine . Since, as I have argued above, these
identities are forged in the fire of the contemporary situations of Turki and
Said, they are not universals or vague generalizations but particular exten
sions of specific, context-bound experiences of antagonism. They are
therefore not necessarily identities that other Palestinians, whose experi
ences differ, are able to recognize as their own and take on. S hehadeh's
recognition that the identities that have been melded under the Israeli
occupation are particular manifestations of that situation leaves the future, in
effect, open to the formation of new identities which might not, at the
moment at which he writes, be conceivable . His text does not 'fix' Palestine
and the imagined community which might fill its as yet indeterminable
158
one can even begin t o imagine the boundaries and th e population o f a future
national ground.
an American Jewish writer he claims to 'like a lot' (TW, 85). Robert Stone, his
friend, talks with him about the 'pornographic' relationship to the land of
Israel that the Jews in diaspora developed in their longing to return to it:
When you are exiled from your land . . . you begin, like a pornographer, to think
about it in symbols. You articulate your love for your land, in its absence, and in the
process transform it into something else . . . . [W]hen Jews came to settle here this
century, they saw the land through these symbols. Think of the almost mystical
power that names of places here have for many Zionists . . . . As for what it really
looked like, they tried to transform it into the kinds of landscape they left in
Europe . . . . It is like falling in love with an image of a woman, and then, when
meeting her, being excited not by what is there but by what her image has come to
signify for you. You stare at her, gloating, without really seeing her, let alone loving
her . . . (TW, 86-7)
Shehadeh, subsequently musing on this discussion, realizes that Palestinians,
exiled from their land while still on it, are themselves being placed in such a
'pornographic' relation to that land by the experience of having what they
know and love taken away piece by piece.44 He becomes aware that he is
transforming that with which he, himself, has had an intimate and unarticu
lated relationship into a symbol of what he must j oin with others to consciously
struggle for :
Shehadeh realizes that this 'identification of the land with your people and
through that with yourself'
recognizes that such identification lifts those people out of the isolation
enforced by their earlier and immediate experiences of their private lands,
1 59
making them citizens of a common land - even if that land is one that is forfeit
and must be redeemed:
Before the occupation there was no national symbolism and cohesion specifically
connected with the West Bank . . . . [Now] even Abu- 'Isa, who always thought of
himself and his house as a separate kingdom, is beginning, through the threat of an
Israeli incursion, to extend his horizons. Although I am glad that this is happening
we could not hope to fight off the Israelis without it - I calIDot but allow myself a
moment of anger and regret. I feel deep, deep resentment against this invasion of
my innermost imagery and consciousness by the Israelis (TW,
88).
samidin
may be turning into pornographers - but our love is not forgotten. The
. .
(TW, 89).
1 60
'A
C O UN T R Y O F W O RD S '
1 61
P ales tinian populations out of ' Greater Israel' and into surrounding Arab
co untries was growing.
On 8 December 1987 an Israeli tank transporter swerved to the wrong side
of the road at an Israeli checkpoint in Gaza and flattened a car full of Gazan
workers who were waiting to be cleared to cross into Israel so that they could
go to work in Tel Aviv; four residents of the Jabaliya refugee camp were killed
in the incident. By that time, such an 'accident' could only appear to
Palestinians throughout the territories as a symbol of what seemed like a
general Israeli state policy of exterminating the presence of Palestinians in the
areas under state control. I would argue - and discussions I had with
Palestinians in Jerusalem, Ramallah and Beit S ahour in August 1 9 8 8 confirm
this interpretation - that, at the moment news of the killed Gazan workers
reached them, Muslim and Christian, villager and shopkeeper, revolutionary
and housewife recognized that there was nothing evinced in Israeli activities
towards Palestinians in general that would have prevented it from being any
one of them who was flattened in that car. As news of the workers' deaths
spread throughout the Occupied Territories and Israel, men and women from
all walks of life, whose only common trait was their 'Palestinianness',
recognized their own in the mangled bodies in the car.
I would contend that the intifada was conceived as Palestinian experiences
of Israeli-state antagonism flooded in, filling that iconic moment and creating
what Laclau and Mouffe describe as a situation of'total equivalence' in which,
in the Palestinian instance, the society of Israeli and Palestinian constituted
under occupation 'strictly divide [d] into two camps' .46 However, such a
'spontaneous' response demands more than the manifestation of what is taken
to be genocidal policy; certainly betweem 1 979 and 1 982, when Shehadeh was
writing, enough of a recognition of solidarity forged by oppression existed
throughout the territories to provide the tinder for any of several events to
spark into conflagration. Had Palestinian reception proved appropriate the
assassination attempts on Palestinian mayors in June 1980 and the bombings
by the extremist Israeli Kach movement which accompanied them could have
provided such a spark. A collective recognition of a people's fate at the hands
of a hostile force is not enough to spark active insurrection; there is as well a
need for something to suggest that success resides in active resistance .
Interestingly, in late November 1 987, a successful attack by an external
Palestinian group (the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine - General
Command) had been carried out across the northern border resulting in the
deaths of six Israeli soldiers. This attack (virtually the first successful guerrilla
action across the Lebanon-Israel border since the Israeli invasion of the
Lebanon) served to prove, at a signal moment, that Israeli power was not
invincible. Confidence that Israel was not omnipotent was, furthermore,
augmented by the escape from prison in August of that year by a number of
Islamic Jihad activists who, while successfully avoiding recapture, succeeded
1 62
sumud
Israel) . 48
intifoda called
them to the head of the household, saying: 'We are sorry that you are so poor
that you must work for the enemy, and we have collected from amongst our
selves this food s o that you will no longer have to . ' Such mutual support,
given sincerely as well as ironically, asserted to Palestinians that they could
raelis that until then they b elieved they needed to perpetuate in order to
endure . In s o doing it also institutionalized the boundary between Israel and
Palestine which had been taking form through the period leading up to the
intifoda
1 63
themselves and had seen its role as that of instigating and directing internal
r e sistance, suddenly found itself faced with a people which did not conform to
its image : 'Almost before anyone knew it, a unique way of doing things had
taken hold in the territories along with a new vision of the population as a
self-propelled body that was both leading and waging the struggle against
Israel on its Own . '50 Arafat and the PLO were quick to respond to this
challenge, however, and within days were working
to create the conditions to allow the intifada to continue; they had somehow to
integrate in their own organizational framework the scores of new leaders that were
emerging; they had to bring into play the political programme of the PLO in a way
that would respond to both 'the crowd's sentiments' and the 'new target' the leaders
outside knew had a chance of being achieved considering the changing balance of
power the intifada was bringing about. 5 1
Nonetheless, a s Baumgarten points out, even the P L O had difficulty in
conceiving the difference between the struggle that was taking place within the
territories from that which it deemed appropriate to the 'Palestinian' situation.
Until 7 March
articulating their attempts to discredit the PLO and the internal leadership . 53
Nonetheless, in the period following the advent of the intifada, that uprising
was transforme d from a particular response of a particular Palestinian
community in a specific situation into an icon of Palestinian aspirations
throughout the diaspora. By early March
which constituted the main body of the PLO (Fateh, the Popular Front for the
Liberation of Palestine, the Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine,
and the Palestine Communist Party) had settled their oft-times fratricidal
differences and announced their s olidarity in supporting and maintaining the
intifada.
On
intifada appeared
year later there were celebrations throughout the Palestinian diaspora ('inside'
and 'outside') of the first anniversary of the yet-to-be-established state of
Palestine.
The movement from the moment at which one can conceive oneself as a
1 64
part o f a national community t o that in which the nation i s realized through the
establishment of a state is, however, not only one of struggle against antago nis m
but also one of compromises, sacrifices and the fixing in place of th ose
institutions that will become hegemonic in the future state . It is, in other words,
a process of definition. Palestinians throughout their dispersion were able to see
intifada
initially provided; but as the uprising began, against great odds, to make
progress on its path towards Palestinian statehood within a portion of the
territories occupied by Israel, many Palestinians - both those 'inside' and
'outside' - began to question whether the Palestine those p ersons backing the
United National Leadership of the Uprising were beginning to gain sight of was
actually the promised land to which they aspired. Within the territories,
Hamas 5 4 contested the leadership of the intifada - often by violent means because of UNLU's commitment to a democratic, secular state. On the
'outside ' , various guerrilla factions, with their allegiances to particular refugee
populations outside of the borders of the Israeli state, came to fear that any
settlement which created a state in the Occupied Territories per se would leave
the Palestinians they claimed to represent - many of whom had originally
resided in the territories annexed by Israel in
to the homes from which they had been driven. 55 S ome ofthese groups began to
fight for the interest ofPalestinians 'outside' against the gains being made by the
Palestinians 'inside ' . A telling example ofthis struggle, and its disruptive power,
was the 1 990 attack by the Palestine Liberation Front on a Tel Aviv beach which
succeeded in breaking off negotiations between the US and the PLO.
As the peace talks proceed along their tortuous and impeded way and the
negotiators (of whom Raj a Shehadeh is one) succeed in eking small, but vital,
concessions from the Israeli team, groups inside and outside the territories
come to see that whatever might come out ofthe negotiations is not likely to fulfil
their fantasies of what Palestinian nationhood should mean. The resulting
dissension can only please the Israeli government, since it appears as proof ofits
assertions that the Palestinians are a people who do not deserve a nation;
Palestinians are too 'fractious' , too ' extremist', too 'fundamentalist', and too
'fanatic' to b e allowed to control their own lives , homes and lands. This
Orientalist rhetoric is, of course, an example of what Said and Hitchens term
'blaming the victims ' . It suggests there is an essence of fractiousness which is
inherent within 'Arabs' in general, and Palestinians in particular, whereas in
fact the divided character of the Palestinian people in exile is a product of that
involuntary exile. However, in so far as reality is discursively constructed, such a
rhetoric can succeed in turning many non- Palestinians into advocates of a pax
Israeli, despite the sympathy they have come to feel for Palestinians under
intifada.
' A C O UN T R Y O F W O R D S '
1 65
The slight satisfaction available to Palestinians exiled outside their land can
o nly be found in knowing that there are no final frontiers, there is no last sky.
1 66
Notes
1. Mahmoud Darwish, 'We Travel Like Other People', Victims of a Map (bilingual text in
Arabic and English) trans. Abdullah al-Udhari (London: Al-Saqi Books, 1 984), p. 3 1 .
2 . David McDowall, The Palestinians: Minority Rights Group Report no. 2 4 (London: Minority
Rights Group, 198 7), p. 3 1 .
3 . Edward Said, Afi er the Last Sky: Palestinian Lives (London: Faber and Faber, 1 9 86) p. 5 .
4. See Laurie Brand, Palestinians in theArab World: Institution Building and the Searchfo r Stale
(New York: Columbia University Press, 19 88) . Statistics cited by Brand show that in 1 982, 40 . 5
per cent of Palestinians lived within Israel and other Israeli-occupied territories, while 25 . 1 per
cent were resident in Jordan, 10.4 per cent in Lebanon, 6.4 per cent in Kuwait, 4.8 per cent in
Syria, 7.3 per cent in other Arab countries, 2 . 1 per cent in the United States and 3 . 0 per cent in
other non-Arab countries such as Australia, Germany and Chile (p. 9) .
5. Benny Morris, The Birth ofthe Palestinian Refogee Problem, 1 947-1 949 (Cambridge : Cam
bridge University Press, 1 987) pp. 297-8 .
6. McDowall, The Palestinians, p. 3 1 .
7 . A topographically unbroken landscape can b e shattered b y the representations o f several
groups which may mutually inhabit it and yet envisage themselves as discrete and discontinuous
communities. A striking example of this is set out in Raymond Williams's The Country and the City
where, in discussingJane Austen's rural landscapes, Williams demonstrates that for the agrarian
aristocracy the distances between one country house and the next were seen as unpopulated terri
tories despite the dense inhabitation of those lands by the rural peasantry (R. Williams, The
Country and the City [St Albans: Paladin, 1 975] pp. 1 3 5-5 7) . In this instance, as in that of the
pre-state Zionist declaration that Palestine 'is a land without a people for a people without a land',
it is clear that the recognized population is made up of groups and individuals with whom the
definers see themselves sharing common interests and projects rather than simply a tract ofland.
Armenians and Jews in diaspora, furthermore, engage in frequent religious gatherings in which
they liturgically celebrate themselves as parts of a national entity constituted in eternity and work
ing towards historical reconstitution on the land on which their nations and their religions were
formed. In the absence ofliteral land, 'Israel' and 'Armenia' are figured in a liturgical landscape in
which 'standing on' sacred ground prefigures return to the lost territories. Such persons, engaged
in ritualized reminiscences in spaces which symbolically participate in the territories of Israel or
Armenia, are able to see themselves as parts of worldwide communities of others sharing both
their exile and their projects of recuperation.
8. Benedict Anderson, Imagined Communities: Riffeetions on the Origin and Spread ofNational
ism (Verso: London, 1 9 9 1) pp. 22-36. See also Brian Stock, The Implications ofLiteracy: Written
Language and Models of Interpretation in the Eleventh and Twelfth Centuries (Princeton: Princeton
University Press, 1 9 83) pp. 8 8-92.
9. Ibid., p . 3 5 .
1 0 . S e e Pierre Bourdieu, 'The Production o f Belief: Contribution t o a n Economy o f Symbolic
Goods', Media, Culture and Society, II:3, 1980, pp. 26 1-93, and Distinction: A Social Critique ofthe
Judgement ofTaste, trans. Richard Nice (Cambridge, Mass. : Harvard University Press, 1 984).
1 1 . Anderson's later consideration of the role played in fomenting national identity by the
colonial policy of neither allowing substantial advancement to indigenous officials within the
colonial bureaucracy nor permitting them to serve as officials in areas outside those from whence
they came, supports this assumption (Imagined Communities, pp. 5 6-7). The training of the
apprentice bureaucrat in the ways of the colonial bureaucracy enables him to see himself as an
official of the empire but this identity is subsequently denied by an act of symbolic violence which
prevents him from operating as an imperial officer outside the boundaries of the colony of his
birth. This subject thus is open to recognizing his own impeded situation in the stories of others
who have experienced the same or similar constraints to advancement and is to join with those
with whom this identification identifies him in processes of reimagining or rearticulating identity
processes which, as Anderson points out, give rise to the creation of new, in this case nation alist,
identities.
12. Anderson, Imagined Communities, p . 6.
13. Slavoj ZiZek, 'Eastern Europe's Republics of Gilead', New Left Review 183, Septemb er/
October 1990, pp. 50-62.
' A C O UN T R Y O F W O R D S '
167
14. Theoretical concern with the inscription o f the ideological o n the material can b e traced
from Durkheim and Mauss's Primitive Classification (1901-2), trans. Rodney Needham (London:
Ro ucledge , 1 963) to Duncan's The City as Text: The Politics of Landscape Interpretation in the
Kandyan Kingdom (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1 990) . Trotsky, describing Lenin's
' desir e to unfold the party's programme in the language of power' through, among other things,
the co n s tant issuance of revolutionary decrees, demonstrates how, in the early days of the
revolution, putting markers of the new social order in place was a major project of the Soviet
bure aucracy: 'It was impossible to tell in advance whether we were to stay in power or be
overthrown. And so it was necessary, whatever happened, to make our revolutionary experience as
clear as possible for all men. Others would come, and, with the help of what we had outlined and
begun, would take another step forwards. That was the meaning of the legislative work during the
first p eriod . . . . He [Lenin] was anxious to have as many revolutionary monuments erected as
possible, even if they were of the simplest sort, like busts or memorial tablets to be placed in all the
towns, and, ifit could be managed, in the villages as well, so that what had happened might befixed in
the people's imagination, and leave the deepest possible furrow in memory' (Leon Trotsky, My Lifo: An
Attempt at an Autobiography [Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1 975] pp . 356-7; my emphasis).
1 5 . Ernesto Laclau and Chantal Mouffe, Hegemony and Socialist Strategy: Towards a Radical
Democratic Politics, trans. Winston Moore and Paul Cammack (London: Verso, 1 985) p. 1 2 9 .
16. Ibid., p. 1 2 5 .
1 7 . See further ibid., p. 1 22; and Ernesto Laclau, New Riflections on the Revolution ofOur Time
(London: Verso, 1 990) pp. 89-92.
18. Here o n e finds that the recognition of the 'other' is central to the constitution of any
identity, as Derrida and Staten have indicated in their discussions of the 'constitutive outside' (see
Derrida, OfGrammatology, trans. Gayatri Spivak [Baltimore: Johns Hopkins, 1 976], pp. 3 9-44 ;
and Henry Staten, Wittgenstein and Derrida [Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1 985] pp. 1 6-19).
Moreover, as Laclau and Mouffe have stressed in their elaboration of the concept of antagonism,
alterity in antagonism takes on a threatening role which demands a resistance if identity is to be
maintained (see Laclau and Mouffe, Hegemony and Socialist Strategy, pp . 122-7). The 'nebulous
ness' of national identity in an established nation can be seen to be a result of a passive relation to
the constitutive outside; one is British because one is not French, and to maintain this identity one
need define it no further than to say it is not the same as that of the other. In a situation of
antagonism, on the other hand, one is impelled by the assertion of the power of the antagonist to
attempt to make positive - to define - the position that antagonism attempts to negate.
19. Glenn Bowman, 'Letter from Jerusalem', Middle East International, 299, 1 May 1 987,
p. 20.
20. Laclau and Mouffe, Hegemony and Socialist Strategy, pp. 1 28ff.
2 1 . Bowman, 'Letter from Jerusalem', p. 20.
22. 'Palestine' was constituted as an imaginable entity at the moment of its loss; as such, there
were few explicitly national traditions for its members to carry into exile . As Nels Johnson has
shown in Islam and the Politics of Meaning in Palestinian Nationalism (London: Kegan Paul
International, 1 982) the inter-factional feuding of the political elite of pre - 1 948 Palestine, as well
as the localized interests of the Palestinian peasantry, meant that identity was tied tightly to local,
factional or class interests and not to some idea of national or nationalist solidarity. Resistance to
ZiOnist encroachment was couched in terms either strictly regional (focusing on resistance to land
loss) or broadly international (pan-Islamic or pan-Arabist) by the various groups concerned (see
p. 57 and passim). Consequently there was no pre-existent vehicle that could be mobilized to
cre ate , in the exile, a sense of national simultaneity and a promise of territorial re-establishment
at le ast not in tlle way the Armenian Orthodox liturgy could for the Armenians, or th e way 'that
mixture of folklore, ethical exhortation and nationalist political propaganda that we call the Bible'
could for tlle Jews. (S ee Eugene Kamenka, 'Political Nationalism - The Evolution ofthe Idea', in
Kamenka, ed., Nationalism: The Nature and Evolution of an Idea [Canberra: Australian National
University Press , 1 973] p. 4.)
23 . Raja Shehadeh, The Third Way:AJournal ofLifo in the West Bank (London: Quartet Books,
1 98 2), p . 8. SUlnud is an Arabic term referring to Palestinians under occupation whose identity
derives from their dedication to holding on to their homes and lands by all means available. See
also p . vi.
24. Laclau and Mouffe, Hegemony and Socialist Strategy, p . 1 1 9.
1 68
132.
' A C O UN T R Y O F W O R D S '
1 69
39. See my 'Religion and Political Identity in Beit Sahour', Middle East Report, 1 64-5,
May-August 1 9 90, pp. 5 0-53, and 'Nationalizing the Sacred: Shrines and Shifting Identitie s in
the Israeli-Occupied Territories', Man: The Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute,
XXVIII:3, S eptember 1993, pp. 43 1-60.
40. For an analysis of Israel's unsuccessful attempt to strengthen the ruraVurban divide and
thus weaken Palestinian identity, see Salim Tamari, 'In League with Zion: Israel's Search for a
Native P ill ar', Jou rn al ofPalestine Studies, XIII, 1983, pp . 41-56.
4 1 . I n The Third Way; see in particular pp. 3 0- 3 3 , 96-8.
42. On this point, see Slavoj ZiZek, Looking Awry: An Introduction to Jacques Lacan through
Pop ular Culture (Cambridge, Mass. : MIT Press, 199 1), pp. 213-14.
43 . A similar statement of the recognition that the struggle against Israeli occupation will not
en d the problems of the Palestinians was made to me by a Palestinian leftist in]erusalem in 1 9 8 5 :
'We have two battles t o fight; the first is the war o f national liberation, and after that is the
revolution.'
44. Shehadeh's use of the term 'pornography' suggests that one loses the obj ect of desire in
pursuing an image of that object into which one has actually invested desire. I would stress here
that the issue is not one of the real as opposed to the fantastic (which is Shehadeh's construction)
but instead an issue of the way the 'pornographic' discourse of desire fetishizes the image and
perversely 'fixes' it outside of the historical and political domain in which the object exists.
45. For the centrality of the issue of land, see Geoffrey Aronson, Israel, Palestinians and the
Intifada: Creating Facts on the West Bank (London: Kegan Paul International, 1 990) . The
fore grounding of the land as the field in which all activities characterizing and maintaining
Palestinian lives take place results from the fact that one of the most salient aspects of Israeli
domination is the state's theft of Palestinian lands. The land thus is transformed into an emblem
of Palestinian existence and its theft b ecomes the sign of the Israeli will to efface the Palestinians.
A Beit]a1a woman, talking of her brother's death by heart attack when he heard his property had
been confiscated by Israeli settlers, told me: 'When you see a big healthy man fall over dead in his
prime it is because of land - land is all they have, it is their connection. Land is the issue on the
West Bank.'
46. Laclau and Mouffe, Hegemony and Socialist Strategy, p. 1 29. In the following week, violent
demonstrations, starting in the refugee camps and spreading quickly to the towns, broke out
throughout the territories. This process of polarization and mobilization seems to follow quite
closely that described by Fanon in The Wretched ofthe Earth (Harmondsworth: Penguin 1 967) ; see
especially the effects on the development of revol utionary consciousness ofthe 'hecatombs' of the
slaughtered (p. 56). The particular policies of relatively non-violent resistance successfully
promoted by the United National Leadership of the Uprising differ from the violent strategies
engaged in the opening phases of the Algerian revolt, and this may be a consequence of the way
that in the territories communication (not only that effected by media and telephones but also that
brought about by travel - both voluntary and that forced by taking on employment away from one's
residence) rendered the gap between urban and rural consciousness less abysmal than that which
existed in Algeria.
47. Joe Stork, 'The Significance of Stones: Notes from the S eventh Month', in Zachary
Lockman and] oel Beinin, eds, Intifada: The Palestinian Uprising against Israeli Occupation (Boston:
South End Press, 1 989) pp. 67-79.
48 . On this point, see further: Ze'ev Schiff and Ehud Ya'ari, Intifada: ThePalestinian Uprising
Israel's Third Front (New York: Simon and S chuster, 1 990) pp. 1 8 8-92; and also Aronson, Israel,
Palestinians and the Intifada, pp. 328-32.
49. Aronson, Israel, Palestinians and the Intifada, p. 328.
50. S chiff and Ya'ari, Intifada, p. 1 8 8 .
5 1 . Helga Baumgarten, ' ''Discontented People" and "Outside Agitators": The P L O i n the
Pal estinian Uprising', in Jamal R. Nassar and Roger Heacock, eds, Intifada: Palestine at the
Crossroads (New York: Praeger, 1 990) p. 2 1 8 .
52. Ibid., p. 2 1 0.
53. Ibid., pp. 2 1 9-22.
54. Hamas is the 'Islamic Resistance Movement', an offspring of the fundamentalist 'Society
of the Moslem Brethren' that conceives of Palestine not in national terms but as sacred territory
de dicated as a waqf(religious bequest) to God.
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T H E M A K I N G O F P O L IT I C A L I D E N T I T I E S
5 5 . The 1 948 war led to the expulsion of83 per cent o fth e Palestinian population o fwha t the n
became Israel; any settlement which recovers only the West Bank and Gaza will not, in eve n a
territorial sense, recover the homes of these people and their very numerous descendants.
5 6 . Darwish, 'The Earth is Closing on Us', Viaims ofa Map, p. 1 3 .
======
7 ======
1 71
1 72
1 73
natural 'woman' and theories that argue that female sexuality is determined by
this essence.
Given th ese complexities, though, how can this juxtaposition of contra
dictory moments in the discourses of social movements be analysed? It may be
useful here to refer to a similar problematic in philosophy and deconstruction.
'Essentialism', or, in Derridean terms, the 'metaphysics of presence', has a
complex relation with 'anti-essentialism', or deconstruction. Deconstruction
is positioned vis -a-vis presence as a supplement,4 not as an exterior entity or as
an opponent. Deconstruction only appears to come after presence, and only
appears to be imposed on the text from the outside at the whim of an author.
Deconstruction actually 'takes place', wherever there is something.s There is
no self-conscious author of the critique of presence; in a sense, one always
finds oneself already thrown into position, already engaged in deconstruction.
There is never, then, a 'pure' deconstructive practice that escapes the meta
physics of presence; one finds oneself, inevitably, doing something and, to an
extent, doing its discursive opposite - precisely at the same time.6 Supplemen
tation in the form of deconstruction is possible only because deconstruction is
always already at work in the original foundations ofthe text itself. Without the
possibility of deconstruction, there would be no text whatsoever. Or, to put it
slightly differently, the de constructive 'act' - an apparently intentional initia
tive - is both a profoundly heroic interruption and, because it is always already
'done', a movement without an author, place or time. The deconstruction of
essences is always there and not there , always already present in the origin and
never complete in the end. In a perverse dialectic, the movement of diffirance
simultaneously shows the failure of, and makes possible, the very essentiality
with which it is endlessly intertwined.
Deconstruction shows the impossibility of pure and complete essences, but
never replaces essences; it instead shows that what appear to function as
essences are actually located on the terrain of contingency, rather than the
terrain of necessity. In an infinite invasion/preservation of otherness,
deconstruction and the metaphysics of presence are simultaneously pos
itioned as each entailing the very conditions of impossibility, and yet also the
very conditions of possibility, of each other. In the case of the essentialist and
anti-essentialist moments in the discourses of social movements, these two
moments should be seen not as separate phases, not as 'incorrect/correct'
alternatives , but as supplements, in a manner analogous to the relation
between the metaphysics of presence and that of deconstruction.
One way to describe these identity games is to speak in terms of
essence-claims . From the original moment in which an essence-claim is
made, the essence-claim is already being undone; there never was/never will
be a pure 'blackness', 'woman-ness', and so on. These strategic claims to
essences nevertheless do have important political effects, allowing for
self-naming and other-naming in the mapping out of antagonisms. Claims to
1 74
R A S T A F A R I AS R E S I S TA N C E
1 75
the thing, while matter is accidental; form and matter are analytically divisible .
Indeed, without the possibility of conceiving the form of the thing apart from
matter, there would be no possibility of knowing the essence of the thing; the
thing would remain unknowable and without BeingY Form is eternal
actuality, while matter exists only p otentially, with the non-necessary
possibility of coming to B e . 14
In the
Metaphysics,
alone, but also asserts that there is a prime mover - the only pure actuality, a
pure Being; a form which is prior to all other forms as the efficient and final
cause of all things; a form which is not combined with matter; an essence
unadorned by accidents . The prime mover causes all motion, but is s eparate
from that which it moves and is itself unmoved . 15 A thing, then, is known to the
extent that its essence, rather than its accidents, is ' grasped'. A thing is, in the
true rather than apparent sense, to the extent that it is form rather than matter.
The accidental must be purely external and s econdary to the essential, since,
for Aristotle, without a separate and constant element, Being and knowability
collapse into flux. Pure
eidos,
Since the utterly s elf-sufficient prime mover is pure Being, Aristotle argues
that the highest pursuit of which 'man' is capable is a pursuit that has itself for
its own end; hence, the exertion of the best part of 'man' is reason, in tlle
contemplation of the noble and divine, the realm of pure forms and the prime
mover. This most virtuous practice is a turning away from the world of
appearances towards that which truly is, working against the temptations of the
false goods and lesser pleasures of the material and the bodily, towards,
instead, the cultivation of pure wisdom. Although the contemplative life is not
for the many, since only a few are endowed with higher natures, it is through
this activity that 'man' can attain the highest degree of perfection possible for a
mortal beingY
Now, b orrowing the category o f 'essence' from this philosophical trajectory
opens many different possibilities, particularly in terms of discourse analysis .
Discourses which tend to be organized around similar themes as the
Aristotelian attempt to distinguish between form and matter can be grouped
together under the name ' essentialism' . S ocial practices within these
discourses tend to be shaped by a shared conception of a social identity, and
this identity tends to be considered as fixed, unique, undivided and ahistorical.
This identity also tends to be conceived as that which 'lies beneath' the surface
of multiplicities; the former tends to be recognized as the truth, while the latter
tends to be regarded as mere appearance . 'Essentialist' arguments, in terms of
identity, tend to claim that the 'essence' or true character of an identity has
been concealed through the work of forces which are extemal to that
'essence' : that is , the forces of oppression and domination. A tuming away
from surfaces and appearances towards the recovery of the underlying
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1 77
1 78
mythical origin o f this nation. Diverse peoples became, through this myth,
unified as a single people sharing the collective dream of a spiritual return to
Africa.20 Garveyism shared the single frontier structure and the emphasis on
spiritualism of its predecessors, and added pan-Africanism and the myth of
Ethiopia to the tradition. In the Rastafari 'journey to Jah' , the principles of
these resistances, from the slave revolts to Garveyism, were taken up and
redeployed in a further resistance strategy in Jamaica.
Why was this Jamaican spiritual belief system rearticulated as a resistance
discourse by many young British blacks in the late 1 960s and 1 970s? It is
possible that Rastafari discourse would have remained relatively obscure,
rural- and Jamaican-oriented, and would have never been adopted by young
British blacks, without the articulation of this discourse to alternative black
music, namely reggae. Reggae was originally a fusion of African, traditional
Jamaican, and American rhythm-and-blues music traditions . In the early
1960s, the electrified disc-j ockey sound system displaced acoustic perform
ance, but brought traditional Jamaican music closer to the music favoured by
young blacks in British and American cities. 'Toasting' DJs mixed records
with their own African-inspired verses, adding commentary on contemporary
ghetto experiences to the music. 'Rock steady' and reggae bands soon
followed, reflecting in their music, both in the lyrics and the sound, the crises
in contemporary Jamaica: high unemployment, inflation, food shortages,
widespread poverty, political corruption, strikes, fights, shoot-outs, and
battles with the police. In the massive migrations from the depressed rural
areas to the urban centres, black teenagers made up a maj ority of the migrant
population. Many of these young blacks lived in makeshift shacks and were
unable to find work. Reggae music described their experience, and expressed
their resistance, like other musical forms in a Jamaican tradition which dates
back to the slave revolts .21 Linton KwesiJohnson comments :
[The sounds of reggae] are the sounds of screeching tyres, bottles breaking,
wailing sirens, gunfire, people screaming and shouting, children crying. They
are the sounds of the apocalyptic thunder and earthquake; of chaos and curfews .
The sounds of reggae are the sounds of a society in tile process of
transformation, a society undergoing profound political and historical change. 22
Reggae artists became the most visible Rastafari, giving the belief system a
contemporary form of expression that, in the music of Bob Marley, Peter
Tosh, Burning Spear, Junior Murvin, Leroy Sibbles and others, secured for
Rastafari an international audience.23
Alternative black music, then, became the principal mode of transmission
of Rastafari discourse . The emergence of reggae in Britain followed the
establishment of a separate black entertainment tradition in the 1 950s. The
black dance halls soon gave way to sound systems modelled after their
R A S T A F A R I A S R E S I S T AN C E
1 79
180
Rastafari invested this banal biological fact with a meaning connoting the
privileged status of blackness. Where the black body had been the site of
disciplining and neutralization of difference, it was now redefined as a highly
visible signifier of black pride.
The revaluation of the black body as goodness was coupled with a
revaluation of sensual pleasures . Some of the British Rastafari adopted a
special diet designed to contribute to the strength of the body and to protect it
from harm. As the black spirit had to be cleansed of the destructive effects of
the Babylonian system, so too did the black body need to be cleansed of
Babylonian pollutants . For virtually all believers, the smoking of 'ganja' was
viewed as a spiritual and collective ritual. Illegal drug use among British
youths in general was fairly common in this period, and Jamaican marijuana
was not consumed by the Rastafari alone. Ganja smoking signified deviance,
criminality and perversity,27 like any other illegal drug use. For the Rastafari,
however, this ritual was also perceived as an element in the 'journey to Jah', a
loosening of the insidious grip of the Babylonian system on 'I and 1'. The
privileging of drug use in Rastafari discourse constitutes a rejection of the
traditional subordination of the bodily to the spiritual which is usually found in
both religious and political resistance discourses alike.28
Another example of this revaluation of the black body can be found in
Rastafari representations of sexuality. The heterosexual practices ofRastafari
are highly privileged; the assertion of the goodness of blackness is articulated
to the assertion of the virility of the black male and the representation of the
black woman's fundamental role as a child-bearer. S exual practices, as long as
they do not contradict these principles, are revalued as good in themselves .
Homosexuality, contraception and abortion, however, are usually represented
as taboo.
The Rastafari, then, tended to conceive virtually all of their experiences in
terms which reinforced their particular sense of blackness. They tended not to
experience Rastafari-blackness as one blackness among many, but as the only
true blackness. If a black person expressed anti-Rastafari beliefs, he or she
would be represented as speaking under the influence of Babylon and as being
temporarily misled as to their true identity. Blackness in this context came to
have meaning not with reference to a multiplicity of heterogeneous positions
and discourses, but through the all-embracing single frontier structure of
Rastafari. The productivity of contiguous and overlapping discourses which
contribute to differentiation of blackness, discourses organized around
gender or sexuality, for example, tended to be muted. This singular
Rastafari-blackness was articulated to goodness, and to virtually all good
nesses. A chain of equivalence of unlimited dimensions was established,
essential blackness
embracing the equivalences Rastafari-blackness
goodness
the oppressed people
noble suffering
return to spiritual
origin
Ethiopia
the divinity of Haile S elassie 'I'
a collective identity
=
181
over individualism
black musical and oral expression
cleansed and
strengthened bodies harmony with nature sensuality virility fertility
a divine other-worldly destiny everyday resistances against policing, the
white education system, state institutions, and so on.
The dimensions of the Babylonian conspiracy, the opposed camp in terms
of the singular frontier, were also unlimited, such that it captured virtually all
facets of oppression. For Rastafari, the constitution of identity was not a
matter of a complex play of heterogeneous subject positions, of which
Rastafari-blackness was one among many, but of an increasingly totalizing
identity which did not admit contradictory identities (such as homosexual
blackness or anti-Rastafari blackness) . The return to essence entailed a total
clarification of multiplicity and contradiction in experiences and identities,
such that the social became represented as a simple two-camp system.
However, the informality of Rastafari discourse constitutes, in a sense, a
logic which contradicts these totalizing and essentialist moments. The
conception of a Rastafarian membership, and indeed the very term,
Rastafarianism, are representations which are perhaps more central to
academic observations rather than to non-academic cultural practices. The
discursive effects of Rastafari cannot be limited to a neatly defined empirical
group of people. Hebdige notes the importance of the cross-over between
(white) alternative-to-(white) mainstream music and Rastafari-influenced
reggae. For the white British punks, the 'conviction [and] political bile' of
reggae offered an effective and credible form for their criticism of the vacuous
nature of the white rock scene. Like the mod and skinhead appropriations of
the styles of the West Indian rude boys, white punks borrowed from Rastafari
and reggae to express their distance from the British mainstream.29
Gilroy explicitly criticizes the sociological attempts by writers such as
Cashmore3o to define Rastafari in terms of false and true members according
to a strict definition of core beliefs. He draws attention instead to the 'lines
dividing different levels of commitment' and to the 'broad and diverse use to
which the language and symbols of Rastafari have been pUt' .31 The
'interpretive community' which has been constructed through Rastafari
discourse ' extends beyond Afro-Caribbean people who smoke herb, to old
people, soul boys and girls, some whites and Asians'.32 Gilroy also describes
the complexities of the tensions and cross-overs between different types of
reggae and between Rastafari reggae and soul music.33 The late 1 980s saw
the emergence of the funky dreads like Jazzy B and Soul II S oul, who
produced the most successful juxtaposition of the reggae, soul and dance
music traditions. Other cross-overs are less popular and yet just as
subversive in terms of their interruption of fixed boundaries between
identities, such as performers like 'MC Kinky', a white British woman who
often performs her reggae-ragga-sweet chatting-styled music in white dance
clubs in London.
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182
Chicano/a community than the folks who make up the community. They assign
themselves as the 'good whites' as opposed to the 'bad whites' and are often so busy
telling people of colour what the issues in the Black, Asian , Indian , Latino/a
communities should be that they don't have time to deal with their errant sisters and
brothers in the white community. Which means that people of colour are still left to
deal with what the 'good whites' don't want to . . . racism.34
This is not to say that white writers have nothing to say about black culture,
but that every evaluation of cultural practices should be informed by a
conception that takes as given the inextricability of power and resistance. In
other words - and this is where this Foucauldian notion of power is most
crucial - instead of dismissing the practices of the 'first-generation' black
immigrants in Britain as capitulations to oppressive cultures, Cashmore
should have shown the operation of resistances beneath the surface of these
practices, and should have noted their common-sense aspects.
Hebdige discusses Rastafari in his study of British youth subcultures.36 He
argues that, along with other subcultures, Rastafari constitutes a 'symbolic
,
violation of the social order .3? Subcultures express a 'Refusal' of the social
order through the informal revaluation of mundane obj ects as 'signifiers of
,
difference .38 Hebdige's insights, however, are limited by the basel
superstructure model of politics. Working with the 'subculture theory'
183
1 84
and the colonized. Colonization appeared not a s the brutal war between two
organized camps, but as a natural and humane cultivation of the colonized in
terms of their own true interests : the transformation of a people who lacked
history, culture, religion, and so on. With this concealment of the threat of
subversion, colonization appeared to be a viable project; and with this disci
plinary inclusion of blackness, colonization appeared as legitimate for a large
proportion of the colonizers' population. This organization of consent would
have been impossible if the hegemonic representation of colonization were
structured in terms of a total war.
These disciplinary-representational strategies of the colonization discourse
were only partially successful. As mentioned above, there were several slave
revolts in Jamaica, and resistances were consistently deployed on an everyday
level. Many plantation slaves, for example, thought themselves to be, in their
position at the margins of the 'enlightenment' strategies, superior to their
Europeanized counterparts at the centre of these same strategies .41
The effects of these strategies, especially in terms of the negation of pres
ence to 'native-ness', were nonetheless extensive . Evidence suggests that as
late as the 1960s, a subtle but highly influential system of 'pigment racism'
operated in Jamaica. Hierarchical status valuations of different peoples were
made according to different grades of skin 'shadings', with 'pure' whiteness
being widely valued in hegemonic cultural discourses as superior to all, with
declining values for lesser degrees of whiteness, and the lowest value for
blackness. A pyramid distribution of the population according to socio
economic status could be mapped directly on to an equivalent shadings pyr
amid, again with whiteness corresponding to the highest status . The value of
blackness was denied in many informal ways : there were no black fashion
models, black history celebrations, or black cultural education in the schools .
The black elite tended to value Western education, dress and cultural events
as superior to any indigenous or African counterpart.4Z Any revaluation of
blackness as positive, as having meaning not simply with reference to the
whiteness which it was not, but in terms outside this negation, was positioned
at the margins of the Jamaican social, outside the space of legitimate dis
course. It was not until later in the 1960s that this hegemonic representation of
blackness was fundamentally challenged. The shift towards a popularization
of the representation of blackness as a positive element was marked by the
success of Michael Manley's populism.
The strategies that have been deployed to negate the positivity of 'native'
ness o r blackness i n the colonization discourse can therefore be described a s a
complex of exclusionary and inclusionary strategies. The colonized was at the
same time excluded from the terrain of the colonizer, and, in a highly regu
lated and neutralizing process of 'Westernization', included within that ter
rain. These different strategies are contradictory only in appearance, for their
effects in terms of the negation of 'native' -ness and blackness were consistent.
R A S T A F A R I AS R E S I S T A N C E
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186
THE M A K I N G OF P O L I T I C A L I D E N T I T I E S
Britishness between the 1 8 90s and the 1 940s, decolonization brought about
nothing less than a national identity crisis. With the migration of some of the
former colonials to the metropole, especially the former 'natives' of Asia,
Africa and the Caribbean, as opposed to the 'Europeans' of Canada, Australia
and New Zealand, there was the possibility that these migrants would be
defined in the same terms of the colonial discourse, as the anti-British 'other' .
For the anti-black immigration lobby of the 1 960s, they did become the 'most
visible symptom of the destruction of the "British way oflife" '.52
Finally, the naming of these diverse migrants as 'immigrants' is also highly
problematic. The question of the stage at which this label ought to be removed
is immediately posed; some writers insist on using increasingly absurd terms,
such as 'second-' and 'third-generation immigrants'. The term 'immigrant'
makes sense only with reference to a fixed frontier which is crossed by a
particular element, moving from an outside to an inside. Although the frontier
in this case may appear to be naturally fixed, its fixity cannot be taken for
granted. If the colonized played the role of the supplement during the imperial
era - as the addition which was needed to complete the inside, that against
which the inside achieved its insidedness - then this apparently outside
element was always in the inside as its condition of possibility. If, for example,
the labour of slaves or colonized workers of African origin originally provided
the capital for the development of various British socio-economic sectors, and
then the direct descendants of these peoples migrate to the metropole, tllis
movement 'can fairly be described as movement within a system, rather than
the entry of an outside element into an inside.
The status of these peoples as immigrants, outsiders coming into an inside,
was in fact constituted retroactively in a strategic deployment of frontiers. The
sense that they were already elements within a system, migrating within that
system, was explicitly recognized in the immigration laws of the 1 950s.
Migrants from the colonies had only to prove that they were subjects of the
British Empire and, as holders of British passports, had no special visa or entry
requirements. There were no distinctions between returning administrators
of English descent and migrants of Asian and African descent. Laws had to be
passed to legitimate the practice of keeping entry statistics concerning the
movement of the Asian and African peoples.
In the context of decolonization, waves of violent racism in British inner
cities, and the development of immigration lobbies in parliament, these
peoples became British subj ects witll a difference.53 The 1 962 Common
wealth Immigrant Act normalized the racist perception that these peoples
should not have the same rights as other migrants. Based on the wholly
unsubstantiated argument tllat 'coloured' Commonwealth immigration levels
were excessive, entry of these specific peoples was restricted according to
employment categories.54 In 1965 the Labour government reversed its
previous stand and renewed the 1 962 Act, arguing that fewer numbers of
187
1 88
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189
1 90
1 91
1 92
It was only through the strategy of turning to a radically other (from the
European point of view) discursive universe that the moral and spiritual
bankruptcy of the colonial discourse could be exposed and rejected. Where
the colonial discourse may have previously appeared to accommodate
different blacknesses, the positing of this positive blackness, with its own
tradition, showed the limits and rigidity of the colonial system. Where the
radical division between native blackness and the colonizer had been
concealed by the exclusion/inclusion matrix, resistances such as Rastafari
discourse reinscribed that frontier and, furthermore, organized a collective
crossing of 'the line'. In F anon's terms, the resistance strategy of Rastafari is
1 93
analogous to the general strategy of turning to the 'ways of the nigger' of other
colonized peoples .
When the colonialists . . . realise that these men whom they considered as saved
souls are beginning to fall back into the ways of niggers, the whole system totters.
Every native won over, every native who had taken the pledge not only marks a
failure for the colonial structure when he decides to lose himself and to go back to
his own side, but also stands as a symbol for the uselessness and the shallowness of
all the work that has been accomplished. Each native who goes back over the line is a
condemnation of the methods and of the regime.78
The collective crossing of the line between native blackness and the colonizer
is profoundly threatening to the containment strategies of colonization. From
the basis of this new discursive foundation, further resistances became
possible which would have otherwise been unthinkable.
This turning to another discursive universe is necessarily a turning to a new
'nodal point', a term which, in its centrifugal effects, tends to organize the
meanings of all other terms distributed around itself.79 In the case of the
Rastafari intervention, the conception of blackness as the transhistorical
Ethiopian essence became this new nodal point. Rooted in a tradition of
resistances against what was interpreted as a singular pattern of domination,
the Rastafari identity emerged as the product of strategic repetitions .
Blackness was no longer the not-colonized, but the spirit which united an
entire people across diverse experiences of suffering at the hands of Babylon.
The totalizing and essentialist dimensions of Jamaican Rastafari discourse
make sense in the context of the complex strategies of colonialism. Given the
all-embracing exclusion!assimilatory inclusion matrix of colonial dis.course,
blackness could . only be redefined in terms of a resistance strategy which
radically turned away from the discursive universe of the colonizer. It is in
these terms, as a strategy of interruption of a totalizing discourse of
domination, that the spiritualism, separatism and essentialism of Jamaican
Rastafari discourse should be considered.
As the construction of a positive black identity in Jamaica emerged only
through resistance strategies, the construction of a similar identity in the
British context was also the product of resistances. There is substantial
evidence that the migrants from the colonized Caribbean to Britain in the
195 Os thought of themselves first and foremost not in terms of broad collective
categories, but in terms of Caribbean village and sub -national regional
identities . Even the category 'West Indian' appears to have been more
important to white British researchers than to the peoples themselves.
National identities were opposed to one another, such as the self-identified
division between Jamaicans and Trinidadians .80
These migrants also did not think of themselves as a united people
1 94
R A S T A F A R I AS R E S I S T A N C E
1 9S
Combined with the polarizing effects of Powellism and the popular panic
regarding black immigration, the impact of the militant movements was
enormous. Not only did many more people see themselves as 'black', and see
blackness as a positive identity. They also increasingly accepted the
conception that the diverse experiences of oppression for blacks were the
results of a single transhistorical oppression - racism - and that white
Britishness was inherently and essentially based on the domination of
blackness; that the social was therefore divided between two fundamental
camps, blackness versus white-Britishness; and that the liberation of
blackness could only be won with the total defeat of the white-British order.
Previously disparate individuals experienced a collective identification
process not dissimilar to the 'coming out' process of gay identification. One
Wolverhampton nurse commented,
Each day I'm getting more aware of the tact that I'm black because of the situations
that one comes up against . . . therefore you try to find out your background, and the
customs of your ancestors. 8 7
1 96
R A S TA F A R I A S R E S I S T A N C E
1 97
and balanced policies', 'race relations', or ' equal opportunity in the market
place' systems. Rastafari, as well as other radical black discourses, instead
rej ected assimilatory compromise and named both exclusion and inclusion
through assimilation as racism.
In other words, it is by placing the identification strategies which are
deployed by Rastafari in the context of the fragmenting effects of racist
discourse that the essentialism of these strategies can be evaluated. In
Lacanian terms, identification is a transformational process, in which an
image reflected at a distance, on some other surface, is accepted as a
representation of the ego. The ego is not already an 'inside' space relating to
this 'outside' image, for the acceptance and internalization of the image is
constitutive of the ego as such. The strategic character of identification cannot
be overestimated. The Lacanian text, 'The Mirror Stage' (a text central to
contemporary psychoanalytic discussions on identification) ,90 is permeated
with strategic terminology.
The image reflected from the other surface is accepted as a reflection of the
ego not just because of its content, but more importantly, because of its form
(Ecrits, 2) . Identification provides a sense of a bounded identity which
functions as an 'armour' (Eerits, 4) in terms of the rigidity and fixity that it
offers. Without identification, the construction of the ' defences of the ego'
,
(Eerits, 5) would not be possible. Lacan also states that the formation of the '!
through identification is symbolized in dreams of a 'fortress' in which the
subj ect searches in vain for a 'lofty, remote inner castle' (Eerits, 5).
Now, although Lacan emphasizes the alienating effects of identification effects that result from the fact that the image of the ego remains irreducibly
other such that identification is at the same time mis-identification - he also
insists on the fundamental character of this process. Without the conception
of the ego's identity as bounded and fixed, there would be no foundational
,
reference for the '! which the subj ect has not yet spoken.91 The construction
of identity involves an impossible idealization which always fails to obtain the
substantiality and permanence that is promised by the image; it is, neverthe
less, the only effective response to the fragmentary effects of oppression. To
paraphrase Lacan, the motivation for such an identification derives from a
sense of a lack of identity in the current juncture, and an anticipation of a fully
formed identity in the future (Eerits, 4) .
For young British blacks in the late 1 960s and 1970s, the juxtaposition of
the fragmentary effects of racism with the promise of a return to a positive
black identity in black militant discourse heightened this fundamental sense of
an identity crisis, the distance between the sense of one's identity in the
present as lacking unity, and the promise of completion in an anticipated
identity. Politicized by black militant discourse, and already aware of the
representational bankruptcy of popular British discourses vis-a-vis blackness,
the imaginary that could posit a 'solution' - albeit a temporary and imperfect
1 98
1 99
formed by the technologies and identities of the present. This is something that was
care, or at least I didn't care, whether there was any black in the Union Jack. Now
200
both each other's limit, and each other's condition o f possibility. The latter
moment does not erase the work of the essentialist moment but opens up the
possibilities for more local and more complex strategies . Finally, neither
moment appears in a pure form but, inevitably, as always intertwined with
each other in various degrees .
As is the case with all social movements, the evaluation of the Rastafari
movement should not proceed according to predetermined conceptions of
politics. Its separatist and spiritual characteristics should not be used to
legitimate its categorization as a form of escapism. Rastafari can be instead
evaluated as a resistance strategy, and can be located within a tradition of
similar resistances which became effective at a certain juncture in the British
context. The effects of essentialist discourses cannot be predicted in
abstraction. Given the complexities of domination, the strategic construction
of identities through essence-claims has both a central role - and a highly
ambiguous legacy - in the organization of resistances.
Notes
1. The tenn 'new times' is taken from a series of articles published in Marxism Today and
coll ected in Stuart Hall and Martin Jacques, eds, New Times: The Changing Face ofPolitics in the
1 990s (London: Verso, 1 990) .
2. Their statements are published in L. Appignanesi and S. Maitland, eds, The Rushdie File
(London: Fourth Estate, 1 989), pp. 1 3 7--41 and 175-7.
3. I have taken the conception of 'two moments' in the logics of the new social movements'
discourses from Stuart Hall's comments on the diversity of black resistances. 'New Ethnicities',
Black Film/British Cinema, lCA Documents 7 (London: Institute of the Contemporary Arts, 1 9 88)
pp. 27-3 1 . Hall differentiates between struggles around the relations of representation and
struggles around the politics of representation. A similar distinction between essentialist and
anti -essentialist moments in the discourse of the lesbian and gay movement can be found in
]. Weeks, Sex, Politics and Society (London: Longman, 1 98 1 ) pp. 282-8, and his Sexuality
(London: Ellis Horwood, 1 9 8 6) pp. 69-8 8 . Judith Butler offers a slightly different distinction in
tenns of the women's movement and representation: in the first moment, universal categories
such as 'women' and 'the patriarchy' are used uncritically, and demands are made for equal
representation in the hegemonic representational system as if the latter had no effect on the
constitution of the represented subject. In the second moment, the exclusionary effects of these
universal categories - the ways that their deployment depends on the exclusion of non-white,
non-European women - are shown, and representation is no longer regarded as a neutral process.
See her Gender Trouble (London: Routledge, 1 990) pp. 1-6.
4. On the (non-)concept of supplementarity as one of the 'infrastructures' of deconstruction,
see J. Denida, Speech and Phenomena (Evanston: Northwestern University Press, 1 973)
pp. 88-1 04, and OfGrammatology (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins, 1 976) pp. 1 41--64; R. Gasch!!, The
Tain of the Mirror (London: Harvard University Press, 1 986) pp. 205-l2; and H. Staten,
Wittgenstein andDerrida (Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1 985) pp. 1 1 1-60.
5. ]. Derrida, 'A Letter to a Japanese Friend', in D. Wood and R. Bernasconi, eds, Derrida
and Diffirance (Evanston: Northwestern University Press, 1 988) p. 4.
6. G. Spivak, 'Translator's Preface', in Derrida, 0fGrammatology, p. lxxviii .
7. This approach is opposed to that of Diana Fuss, who argues that the political value of an
essentialist strategy dep ends on the subject position from which the strategy is deployed. She
argues that the essentialist strategies of a hegemonic group can further domination, while those
RASTAFARI AS RESISTANCE
201
deployed by a subordinate group can have subversive effects. Essentially Speaking: Feminism,
Nature and Dijfil'ence (London: Routledge, 1 990) p. 32.
8. Aristotle, Metaphysics (London: Heinemann Loeb Classical Library, 1 9 3 8) III, vi, 1 , and
III, vi, 9.
9. Ibid., V, viii, 1-3 .
10. Ibid., V, xxx, 1; VI, ii, 1-2; VI, ii, S ; XI, vii , S .
1 1 . Aristotle, The Politics, 1 260a. For Aristotle, this hierarchy in the 'natural' distribution of
rational capacity is itself necessary rather than accidental. The adult male rules over the not yet
fully rational male children and the imperfectly rational females and slaves in the household, and
this rule is supposed to be a necessary part of his development of the virtues required in his role as
a citizen. In this sense, the failure of rationality in females and slaves is necessary to the rationality
of the polis as a whole.
12. Ibid. , VII, viii, 4--5 .
1 3 . Ibid. , VII, xi, 1-6; XII, v, 2-3 .
14. Ibid. , IX, viii , 1 6; XII, v, 2-3 .
1 5 . Ibid. , XII.
16. J. Owens, The Dodrine oJBeing in Aristotelian Metaphysics (Toronto: Pontifical Institute of
Medieval Studies, 1 978) p. 45 ; P. Aubenque, Le probleme de ['etre chez Aristotle (Paris: Presses
universitaires, 1 9 66) p. 5 8 .
1 7 . Aristotle, Nichomachean Ethics (Lovdon: Oxford University Press, 1 925) X, p p . 6-8.
1 8 . E. Cashmore, Rastaman (London: Unwin, 1 983) pp. 1 3-14.
19. Ibid., pp. 1 7-19. And see also L. Barrett, The RastaJarians (London: Heinemann, 1 977)
p. 27.
20. T. Vincent, Black Power and the Garol?)! MllVement (San Francisco: Ramparts, 1 976)
pp. 17-1 9; T. Martin, ' Garvey and Scattered Africa', in J. Harris, ed., Global Dimensions oJthe
AJrican Diaspora (Washington: Harvard University, 1982) p. 245 .
2 1 . Jah Bones, 'Reggae DJing and Jamaica Afro-Lingua', in D. Sutcliffe and A. Wong, eds,
The Language oJBlack Experience (London: Basil Blackwell, 1 985) pp. 52-68.
22. L.Johnson, 'The Reggae Rebellion', New Sociery, I OJune 1976, p. 589.
23 . S . Davis and P. Simon, Reggae International (London: Thames and Hudson, 1 983).
24. P. Gilroy, ThereAin 't No Black in the Union Jack (London: Hutchinson, 1 9 87) pp . 1 64--6 .
25 . These practices have been well documented elsewhere. For more detail, see J. Plummer,
Movement oJJah People (Birmingham: Press Gang, 1 978) ; D. Hebdige, Subculture: The Meaning oj
Sryle (London: Methuen and Co., 1 979); L. Garrison, Black Youth, Rastafo.rzanism and the Identity
Crisis in Britain (London: ACER, 1979); H. Campbell, Rasta and Resistance (London: Hansib,
1985); Greater London Council, RastaJarianism in Greater London (London: GLC, 1984);
Cashmore, Rastaman.
26. Jah Bones, 'Language and Rastafari', in Sutcliffe and Wong, The Language oj Black
Experience, pp. 3 2-7. The conception of a defined Rastafarian membership is problematic; I shall
return to this theme below.
27. Drug use as perverse in Barthes's sense of the term; i.e., the taking pleasure in a practice
not considered 'profitable'. R. Barthes, 'Vocabulary', Polysexualiry: Semiotexte, vol. VI, no. I , 198 1 ,
p. 206.
28. The refusal of the body-to-mind subordination is therefore a refusal of the tradition in
which Aristotle's philosophical discourse is located. The Afrocentric stance ofRastafari discourse
is also a refusal of European ethnocentrism, in which Aristotle's elitist conception of reason
constitutes a founding text. Both of these refusals indicate the extent to which the 'theoretical
framework' and the 'case study' in this essay remain incommensurable.
29. Hebdige, Subculture, p. 63 .
30. Cashmore, Rastaman.
3 1 . Gilroy, ThereAin 't No Black in the Union Jack, p. 1 87.
32. Ibid.
3 3 . Ibid., pp. 187-92.
34. G. Yamato, 'Something About the Subject Makes It Hard to Name', in G. Anzaldua, ed.,
Making Face, Making Soul/Hacienda Caras: Creative and Critical Perspectives By Women oj Colour
(San Francisco, Aunt Lute Foundation Books, 1 990) p. 2 1 .
3 5 . E . Mzika, Outlook, no. 1 3 , summer 1 9 9 1 , pp. 5 0--55 .
202
3 6 . S e e his Subculture.
3 7 . Ibid., p . 1 9 .
3 8 . Ibid., p. 3 .
3 9 . On 'subculture theory', see ]. Clarke e t aI., 'Subcultures, Cultures and Class', i n S . Hall
and T. Jefferson, eds, Resistance Through Rituals (London: Hutchinson, 1 976) pp. 9-74; and
P. C ohen, 'Sub-cultural Conflict and Working Class Community', Working Papers in Cultural
Studies 2, University of Birmingham, 1 972.
40. Subculture, p. 17.
41. E. Lawrence, 'Sociology and Black Pathology', The Empire Strikes Back, Centre for Con
temporary Cultural Studies (London: Hutchinson, 1 982), pp. l OO-l l l .
42. G . Lewis, 'Race Relations in Britain', Race Today, vol. I , no. 3 , July 1 969, p . 80; K . Pryce,
Endless Pressure (Bristol: Bristol Classical Press, 1 985), pp. 5,7; D. Hiro, Black British, White
British (London: Eyre and Spottiswoode, 1 97 1) p. 1 07 ; K. No rris, Jamaica: The Search for Ident
ity (London: Oxford University Press, 1 9 62) pp. 5 8-9, 97-8; L. BalTett, The Rastafarians,
p. 1 74.
43 . F. Shyllon, 'Blacks in Britain', in ]. Harris, ed., Global Dimensions, pp. 170-94; R. Kapo,
A Savage Culture (London: Quartet, 1 9 8 1 ) .
44. Hiro, Black British, White British, p. 4; N . File, Black Settlers in Britain, 1555-1 958
(London: Heinemann, 1 9 8 1).
45. P. Flyer, Staying Power: The History ofBlack People in Britain (London: Pluto, 1 984).
46. Hiro, Black British, White British, p . 5 .
4 7 . Pryce, Endless Pressure, p . 20.
48 . B. Porter, The Lion 's Share: A Short History of British Impen'alism (London: Longman,
1984) p. 3 3 9 .
4 9 . ]. Mackenzie, Propaganda and Empire (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1 9 84)
p. 253 ; B. Schwarz, 'Conservatism, Nationalism and Imperialism', in ]. Donald and S . Hall, eds,
Politics and Ideology (Milton Keynes: Open University Press, 1 98 6), p. 1 66 .
50. Hiro, Black British, White British, p . 3 0 1 ; and Mackenzie, Propaganda and Empire, p . 255 .
5 1 . Mackenzie, ibid., p. 258.
52. E. Lawrence, 'Just Plain Common Sense: The "Roots" of Racism', in The Empire Strikes
Back, p . 47.
5 3 . C. Mullard, Black Britain (London: Allan and Unwin, 1 973) p. 46; S. Hall, 'Racism and
Reaction', in ]. Rex et al., Five Views of Multiracial Britain (London: Commission for Racial
Equality, 1 978) p. 27; Hiro, Black Britain, White Britain, p . l 1 .
54. R. Davison, Black British: Immigrants to England (London: Oxford University, 1 966) p . 1 ;
1 . Katznelson, Black Men, White Cities (London: Oxford University, 1 973); A . Sivanandan, A
Different Hunger (London: Pluto, 1 982) pp. 10, 1 8 .
5 5 . Sivanandan, A Different Hunger, p . 1 7 .
5 6 . About 7,000 Kenyan Asians emigrated t o Britain each year between 1 964 and 1 966, and
there was a 'slight increase in 1 967, as 8,443 entered between January and September. Net
figures for 1 967, however, show a net emigration from Britain of 84,000, even wi.th this in
crease. Hiro, Black British, White British, pp. 224-5.
57. I have discussed Powell's discourse in more detail in 'The Speeches of Enoch Powell',
Essex Papers in Government, no. 66, November 1989.
5 8 . Sivanandan, A Different Hunger, p . 23 .
5 9 . The idea that someone could actually become an iImnigrant - without changing re
sidence - precisely because of race, is used in the film For Q]leen and Country (Martin Stellman,
dir., UK, 1 939). The protagonist, a black British soldier raised in south London, returns home
from tours of duty in the Falklands and Northern Ireland and finds that he cannot obtain a
British passport under the new Thatcherite citizenship legislation.
60. Hall, 'Racism and Reaction', pp. 25-6.
6 1 . An example of this emphasis on assimilation can be found in the case of the deportation
appeal by the Asian-British Pereira family in 1 984. The appeal was successful, but only after a
campaign was mounted in the popular media and by local neighbours in which it was argued
that this family had shown a commitment to Britain and the English way of life, in terms of their
Christianity and their participation in the vill age life with their (white) British neighbours.
(Gilroy, There Ain 't No Black in the Union Jack, pp. 63--4.) This decision implies that cases in
203
which the immigrants retain their non-white-English identities would not be judged in the same
manner.
62. Sivanandan, A Diffirent Hunger, pp. 1 7-18.
63. A s quoted i n Hiro, Black British, White British, p . 229 .
64. S. Hall et aI. , Policing the Crisis (London: Macmillan, 1 978) p. 49; Sivanandan, A Diffirent
Reaction',
67. J. Lambert etal., 'Policellmmigrant Relations: A Critique of the S elect Committee Report',
204
T H E M A K I N G O F P O L I T I C A L I D E N T IT I E S
90. J . Lacan, 'The Mirror Stage as Formative o f the Function of the I as Revealed in
Psychoanalytic Experience', in Bcrits:A Seleaion, trans. Alan Sheridan (London: Tavistock, 1 977)
pp. I-7 (henceforth abbreviated in the text as Berits, followed by the page reference) . The
definition of identification given above is taken from this paper (Berits, 2).
9 1 . J.P. Muller and WJ. Richardson, Lacan and Language (New York: International
Universities Press, 1 982) p. 38.
92. Schwarz, 'Conservatism, Nationalism and Imperialism', Politics and Ideology.
93. Hall, 'New Ethnicities', p. 30.
94. lbid., p. 27.
95. Derrida, O[Grammatology, pp. 44-64.
96. Hall, 'New Ethnicities', p. 28.
97. Ibid., p. 30.
98. Ibid., p. 27.
======
8 ======
206
entire organization o f society. ! So even though w e can say, for example, that
the self-management thesis about 'the disposal of surplus value to direct
producers' might have been utopian, this utopia was nevertheless materialized
in t.he organization of socialist firms - just as the utopia about 'self
management direct democracy' was also materialized in a complex delegate
system; or the idea that 'public self-defence' was materialized in an intricate
web of secret regulations and agencies which already penetrated every cell of
society. Consequently, when the ideology of self-management was presented
as a complete contrast to real-socialist ideology, it simultaneously seized its
basic element (the Party as the guarantor of the system, the struggle for actual
rather than formal freedom, dealing with enemies of the system, and so forth),
and created the possibility of a considerably more effective way to silence the
critics of the system than that postulated by real-socialism. Now, given that the
self-management system was immanently revolutionary and self-critical, it
thus, constantly, changed the system, 'revolutionizing' it with ever new legal
norms - constantly changing the constitution, or continually making good
those deficiencies in the system which had hitherto hindered direct manage
ment by the workers, and so on. But throughout all this activity, the sources of
power (the Party, state organization, secret police) ended up maintaining the
same roles as they would have had in a classical real-socialist system. Precisely
because of this 'revolutionary' nature, the ideology of self-management was
also able to neutralize oppositional critics of the system by stressing how the
ideologists of self-management themselves were combating the same prob
lems . So, for example, the ideology of self-management could counter the
demand for 'anti -bureaucratization' by saying that it too was trying to get rid of
the alienated bureaucratic structure and was fighting for direct workers' rule.
The only really dangerous critics of the self-management system became,
then, those who openly attacked the idea of self-management itself; and they
were singled out as the worst of the enemy within.
The economic crises in the eighties provoked workers' revolts, but the
workers' demands were deeply conservative: they demanded more pay and
better working conditions, but seldom political pluralism or independent
unions . Strikes and meetings were characterized by the lack of any positive
programme of political change: people demanded changes not in the system
itself, but only in the leadership which sought to betray the ideological
foundations of the system (socialism, working-class interests, and so on) . With
the typical old Stalinist understanding that 'the cadres decide all', Yugoslav
workers also wanted 'tlle right people in the right places'. This perspective has
best been explained by the Yugoslav sociologist, Josip Zupanov, who argues
that the basis of the Yugoslav system was the pact between the governing
politocracy and the narrower, manually skilled section of the working class.2
This working class was the real pillar of the establishment. The political
bureaucracy was given total authority in exchange for maintaining the most
T H E C R I S I S O F I D E N T I T Y IN T H E F O R M E R Y U G O S L AV I A 207
minimal subsistence level, with social security and the 'right not to work'; that
is, the right to a (low) standard ofliving, a secure position, and the right not to
have to work terribly hard. The economic crisis meant that the ruling political
bureaucracy was no longer able to meet its obligations under this pact, and
therefore workers' protests could be seen as a desperate appeal to the polito
cracy to keep its part of the deal. The paradoxical features of workers ' protest
- the total absence of demands for democracy and independent unions - are
probably best explained from this perspective. Workers called directly upon
their rightful partner, embodied, from their perspective, in the Party, to pro
vide 'a life worthy of man'. Or, to put it slightly differently: they were looking
for a Master whom they could empower, in return for their being looked after.
Indeed, one of the elements in the rise of S erbian nationalism under Mil
oseviC's leadership has been MiloseviC's capacity to build on this fact and his
ability to recognize himself as the addressee of the workers' demands. And he
has promised that, to the extent that he is given power, he will fulfil his part of
the social pact, in contrast to the corrupt status-quo bureaucracies of the
republics.
The ideology of self-management in Yugoslavia disintegrated in three
stages. The first stage of self-management took place in the sixties and seven
ties when theoreticians centred around the journal Praxis attacked official
ideology in the name of 'proper' (read : critical, creative) Marxism. According
to the Praxis philosophers, the predominant 'statist bureaucratic' conditions in
Yugoslavian society prevented the emergence of 'proper self-management
socialism' . Consequently, they called for a programme to abolish the gulf
between the ideal and the real, with the intention of making the concept of
self-management more realizable and effective. In other words, the oppo
sition criticized the establishment in the name of a purified version of the
establishment's own ideology. The second phase in the disintegration of self
management ideology started at the beginning of the eighties in the form of
'new social movements' . This period was characterized by a process of equal
disintegration of both official and oppositional ideology. The disarticulation of
official discourse showed tllat the establishment was no longer legitimized by
any homogeneous ideological construction, but had come to use a whole series
of heterogeneous, disassociated elements in its ideological discourse . For ex
ample, self-management and social ownership attempted to make contact
with market economics; but as to the demand for independent j ournalism, the
establishment answered in a real-socialist style, that is, that 'the freedom of
the press does not exist anywhere'. Interestingly, a similar disarticulation oc
curred in the opposition: this expressed itself as a pluralist scenario of oppo
sitional subjects (for example, tIle feminist movement, peace movement,
ecology, and so on) which not only questioned the basic socialis t system itself
but, ratIler, questioned the role of the state - all in the name of the struggle for
a civil society. Characterized by ideological heterogeneity and apoliticism, this
208
opposition was not organized into parties but took the form o f a series of
informal movements which exerted pressure on the establishment through
public protest.
The third and final phase in the disintegration of self-management ideology
emerged at the end of the eighties when opposition groups created formal
political parties and declared the power struggle open. This meant that the
establishment, at least in its public statements, also had to abandon its sacred
position and acknowledge the Communist Party as just one of many political
subj ects - one that could lose power at any time . Official ideological discourse
in this period began to abandon self-management and Marxism in favour of
socialism with a capitalist face. Because of ever stronger opposition, official
discourse was forced to fold elements of the opposition's discourse into itself:
thus it began to stress the struggle for human rights, freedom of thought, and a
state based on the rule of law and the market, and so on. But even then its
strength was still preserved because, in spite of the changing disco urse, the
state apparatus, the army, and the secret police simply maintained their old
positions, thus allowing the establishment to continue working in the same
way as it always had done up to that point.
This background allows us to pinpoint the exact moment when the disinte
gration of the ideology of self-management began. The main ideologue of
self-management, Edvard Kardelj ,3 put forward a thesis in the 1 970s about
the importance of the 'plurality of self-management interests' as a crucial
element of a self-management society. This thesis, which at first glance
seemed to be just another empty phrase from the self-management vocabulary
(constantly emphasizing that the worker is the only owner of the means of
production, the only one who can decide about production and surplus; and
that real self-management resolves all alienation and so on) , suddenly pro
ceeded to generate a multitude of interpretations and thus to mark a site of
radical contingency. Why? Because the 'pluralism of self-management inter
ests' could be interpreted as undermining the Party monolith - since, up to
now, Party ideology had never used the concept of pluralism of opinions, ideas
or interests; rather, it had clung to the notion of unity at any price. But as soon
as a pluralism of interests is introduced, tllis unity is challenged; for in reality,
a pluralism of interests equals political pluralism. So an apparently surplus
syntagm became the point at which the system began to fracture, that is to say,
the point where elements, which had until then formed an ideological struc
ture, now achieved independence and began to function as 'floating signifiers'
awaiting new articulation. Thus the struggle for hegemony began, that is, a
struggle for what this concept would include in its series of equivalences.4
Official Party ideology tried in vain to retain the 'pluralism of self
management interests' within its confines; yet even though Kardelj himself
later abandoned the term, already this 'pluralism' had taken on a life of its own,
becoming a trademark of the alternative, opposition movement. Along with
T H E C R I S I S O F I D ENTITY I N T H E F O RMER Y U G O S L A V I A
209
the crumbling of the ideological structure, the struggle over which discourses
would 're-sew' the free-floating disparate elements was now firmly under way.
Although the federal authorities and the army aNA) desperately tried to
preserve Tito 's Yugoslavia, the rhetoric of 'fraternity and unity' and the
slogans of both the revolution and the national liberation war no longer served
as the points of identification that had held the Yugoslav symbolic universe
together for forty years. At the end of the eighties, a new series of, primarily
national, points of identification emerged which totally redefined the terms of
the struggle for ideological hegemony. As a result, we can isolate three blocs
around which various conceptions of the form of a future Yugoslav society
crystallized at the end of the eighties. The most disreputable was the
right-wing populist Serbian bloc with its concept of a unitary state, a strong
party, and a centralized government under Serbian domination. This bloc, in
addition to the Republic of S erbia with its autonomous province ofVojvodina,
included S erbian inhabitants in the province of Kosovo, Montenegro,
members of the Orthodox Church, part of the federal administration and
senior staff of the army, and Serbian inhabitants in other parts of Yugoslavia,
along with S erbian emigrants abroad. Since the Serbian population is
numerically the strongest and Belgrade is simultaneously the capital of the
Republic of S erbia and of Yugoslavia, this bloc had considerable influence in
federal agencies . It is also important to bear in mind that a large proportion of
employees of the federal administration and the military leadership were of
Serbian nationality. This bloc was characterized by economic underdevelop
ment, high unemployment and an ongoing dispute between S erbs and
Albanians in Kosovo. Opposed to this bloc was the Slovene bloc, which was
working towards greater independence of the republics and a pluralist,
multi-party organization of society. Along with both leadership and opposition
in the Republic of Slovenia, this bloc included part of the opposition and a
smaller part of the leadership of Croatia, as well as certain opposition groups
in Bosnia and Herzegovina and in th e province of Kosovo. Characteristic of
this bloc was relative economic success, low levels of unemployment, and
political liberalism in Slovenia. However, this bloc's weakness stemmed from
its small influence on the activities of federal agencies and the army.
In any case, the strongest and the most 'official' was the 'status quo' bloc,
consisting of the army, parts of the federal administration, the secret service,
military industry and the bulk of the leadership of Bosnia and Herzegovina
and Macedonia. This bloc had maintained its position by repression and
wanted to withstand the crisis through cosmetic adjustments, according to the
strategy of 'changing things so that nothing changes'. In its desire to maintain
its position, this bloc stood against both of the other blocs . In principle, it
favoured market economics, although its economy was hopelessly ineffective
- as evidenced by the ossified organization of the army, unwise industrial
proj ects in the republics, and widespread corruption.
210
Nationalism
The national threat became the strongest point of identification on which the
opposition as well as the establishment relied. So, on the one hand, local
establishment figures strengthened their position by stressing their role in
defending the nation against other nations while, on the other hand, part of the
opposition also presented national sovereignty as the main aim of the political
struggle.
Given this scenario, two views of nationalism were, and have remained,
predominant in official Yugoslav politics since the outbreak of national con
flict. The first tried to distinguish 'progressive' nationalism (non-aggressive,
defensive, civil) from 'regressive' nationalism (aggressive, promoting hatred,
directed at the re-establishment of homogeneous national communities) . The
second view stressed that national frictions were simply the means by which
the governing politico-bureaucracy maintained division amongst the nations,
and so prevented people from uniting against the real enemy, namely the
governing bureaucracy. Is it not true that every nation is offered a myth of how
others exploit it in order to disguise how the people themselves exploit ob.\ers?
Such a myth was only an updated variation of the good old Stalinist myth of
honest, innocent working people who are never anti-socialist. Thus in Yugo
slavia we had the myth of the innocent, honest, democratic public which would
never be nationalist - it would only have been manipulated into nationalist
attacks by a corrupt politico-bureaucracy. Just as the 'honest working people'
actually exist only as a mythical reference point for the Party (thereby legiti
mizing its power), so too the myth of an innocent, non-nationalist public only
exists to legitimize the power of the current establishment.
Paradoxically, then, the first step toward real democratic maturity would
be, of necessity, the unconditional recognition of the 'depravity' of the
people. For example, it might be said that 'it's not true the Albanian people
are basically honest and that irredentism is only an idea by which they are
poisoned by manipulators', or that 'it's not true the S erbian people are basi
cally honest and that Greater Serbian nationalism is only an idea by which
manipulators poison the people', and so forth. With this kind of strategic
sentiment, it's not hard to see the transparent delight with which the masses
surrender to the manipulation; nor is it hard to see how they maintain their
most intimate identity through the 'myth of nationalism'. Likewise, Greater
Serbian nationalism, constructed through the myth of a S erbia that wins in
war and loses in peace, is the ideological means by which individuals exppri
ence their innermost, everyday, concrete burdens; it is their way of finding a
scapegoat, which in this case is the Croats. What must be acknowledged here
is that the people cannot be deceived unless they are already structured in
such a way that they want to be deceived. Or, to put it another way, people
themselves articulate a desire for their own deception.
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212
T H E M A K I N G OF P O L I T I C A L I D E N T I T I E S
. . . When we are considering whether the Other will have t o abandon his
language, his convictions, his way of dressing and talking, we would actually like to
know the extent to which he is willing to abandon or not abandon his Other
enjoyment. s
This Other who steals our enjoyment is always the Other in our own interior.
Our hatred of the Other is really the hatred of the part (the surplus) of our own
enjoyment which we find unbearable and cannot acknowledge, and which we
transpose ('proj ect') into the Other via a fantasy of the 'Other's enjoyment' .
The hatred of the Other, in the final analysis, is hatred of one's own
enjoyment. Intolerance of the Others' enjoyment produces fantasies by which
members of particular nations organize their own enjoyment.
S erbian authoritarian populism has produced an entire mythology about
the struggle against internal and external enemies. The primary enemies are
Albanians, who are perceived as threatening to cut off the S erbian auton
omous province of Kosovo and thereby to steal S erbian land and culture. The
second enemy is an alienated bureaucracy which threatens the power of the
people: alienated from the nation, it is said to be devouring the S erbian
national identity from within. The third enemy has become the Croats who,
with their politics of 'genocide', are outlawing the S erbian population from
'historically' S erbian territories in Croatia.
All images of the enemy are based on specific fantasies. In S erbian
mythology, the Albanians are understood as pure Evil, the unimaginable: that
which cannot be subjectivized - beings who cannot be made into people
because they are so radically Other. The S erbs describe their conflict with the
Albanians as a struggle of 'people with non-people' . The second enemy - the
bureaucrat - is presented as a non-S erb, a traitor to his own nation and, as
such, also effeminate. The Croats are portrayed as the heirs of Goebbels, that
is, as brutal Ustashi butchers who torment the suffering S erbian nation - a
nation whose fate is compared to that of Kurds in Iraq. And the Muslims are
named Islamic fundamentalists, extremists who would like to expand their
religion all over the world.
However, along with Albanians, Slovenes have also emerged as the enemies
of S erbian nationalism: they share with the Albanian separatists the wish to
constrict the political hegemony of S erbia. What do we get when we combine
these two enemies? Remember that Albanians are presented as dirty,
fornicating, rapacious, violent, primitive, and so forth, while the Slovenes are
presented as unpatriotic, anti-Yugoslav intellectuals, and as non-productive
merchants who exploit the hard work of the S erbs . If we simply put the two
pictures together, if we add an Albanian to a Slovene, what happens? You get
the Jew, the typical anti-S emitic portrait of the Jew: dirty, fornicating, but at
the same time an intellectual, non-productive, profiteering merchant. 6
Moreover, in S erbian mythology, the enemy is revealed to be both rapacious
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213
and impotent. Just as English conservatives describe the threat to Britain from
immigrants (especially blacks) as 'the rape of the English race' , ? so the S erbs
portray Albanians as rapists of the S erbian nation, who steal the S erbian
national identity in order to instal their own culture. Reinforcing this figure of
rape are allegations about actual attempts by Albanians to rape S erbian girls .
But what is important here is that the rape is always only an attempted - that is
to say, failed - rape. A picture of the enemy thus takes shape as an Albanian
who tries to rape S erbian girls but is actually unable to do so. This portrayal is
based on the fantasy of the enemy's impotence - the enemy tries to attack, to
rape, but is confounded, is impotent, in absolute contrast to the macho S erb .
The mythology of the new S erbian populism constantly stresses the
difference between real men - workers, men of the people - and bureaucrats.
In this mythology, the bureaucrat is portrayed as both a middle-class feudal
master and a kid-gloved capitalist, with top hat and tie, 'clean outside and dirty
within'; in absolute contrast to the worker, the man of the nation, 'dirty on the
outside but pure within' . 8 The essence of the argument is that the bureaucrat
is not a 'real' man: he is effeminate, slug-like, fat; he drinks whisky and eats
pineapples - as opposed to the macho worker, who eats traditional national
food and dresses in workers' dungarees or national costume. Bureaucrats are
not men because of their alienation from tradition and their betrayal of the
heroic S erbian people.
To demonstrate its ties to the nation, then, Serbian populism invokes the
heroic dead - not just their names, but their actual bodies . In the new S erbian
populist mythology, current fighters for S erbian sovereignty are constantly
compared to the Serbian heroes who fought the Turks six hundred years ago.
Bones play a special role in this dramatic identification with the heroic past.
Serbian populism has rediscovered the old Orthodox custom by which the
mortal remains of a ruler are carried through all the monasteries of the country
before burial; so the restoration of the real S erbian identity was confirmed in
1 989 by the transfer to Kosovo, after more than six hundred years, of the
bones of the famous S erbian hero, King Lazar, who died in battle with the
Turks . When the old Orthodox ritual of carrying the bones around the
monasteries was reinstituted for Lazar's remains, it designated the new birth
of the S erbian symbolic community. The bones can be seen here in Lacanian
terms as the Real, that 'something more' which designates the symbolic
community of the Serbian nation. Indeed, the national 'Thing' comes out
precisely in the bones. Thus Lazar's bones function as the Real which has
returned - as it always does - to its (rightful) place. Lazar's return to Kosovo
constitutes symbolic confirmation of the 'fact' that Kosovo has always been the
cradle to 'that which is S erbian'.
As Lacan says, race becomes established according to how a particular
discourse preserves the symbolic order. The same can be said of the concept
of a national community: in the case of S erbia, the ridiculous ritual of
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T H E C R I S I S O F I D ENTITY I N T H E F O RM E R YU G O S L A V I A
(iv)
215
directly expressed
bourgeois liberalism,
216
How has the struggle for a new hegemony progressed? Crucial t o this
struggle has been the resurrection of old myths, folk songs and stories
portraying the historical struggle of the S erbian and Montenegrin nations
against the Turks . Symbolic identification with the popular heroes of Serbian
mythology has given the new leadership a special status: not only have they
acquired an aura of sanctity as folk heroes, but this new, sanctified status has
also enabled the leadership to repair the historical damage incurred by the loss
of the battle of Kosovo in which the Serbs were defeated by the Turks in
1 3 89. 12
Through the rearticulation of old myths into official political discourse,
Milosevic constructed new myths that were easy to identifY with, at least in so
far as they replaced the socialist jargon of the bureaucracy. S elf-management
had introduced a specific jargon that transformed businesses into 'organiz
ations of associated labour'; workers into 'direct producers'; and directors into
'individual business organs' . With the aid of a kind of , de mystification' of the
language, self-management could be portrayed as a really direct form of
democracy. The success of the 'anti-bureaucratic revolution' lay in the
recognition that this rhetoric of self-management represented a total
obfuscation of the effective social relations . But, moreover, this 'anti
bureaucratic revolution' was also successful because it replaced self
management rhetoric with a return to the old national myths - so long ignored
in the supranational socialist ideology. For the old epics and heroic songs are
models of effective rhetoric, with their short clear sentences and visionary
stresses; they contrast dramatically with boring political speeches.
As a struggle for hegemony, the struggle for a new rhetoric of the
'anti-bureaucratic revolution' has thus been characterized by the need to
structure the discourse around a newly created reference point. For the
Titoist ideology, the main reference point was the National Liberation
Struggle (NOB), which was simultaneously presented not only as a victory
against the occupier but also as the victory for the socialist revolution. The sort
,
of 'founding word 13 of this discourse was Tito's slogan: 'It is necessary to
maintain fraternity and unity like the pupils of the eyes. ' In the case of the
anti-bureaucratic revolution, the point to which the discourse continually
refers is the moment when, in the Montenegrin town of Zuta Greda, police
truncheon striking miners . MiloseviC's phrase, 'Nobody has the right to beat
the people ! ' gained the status of the 'founding word' . Not only did this motto
become a reference point for all other attempts to stop protest marches by
members of the Serbian and Montenegrin nations, it became above all the
point which restored meaning to the heterogeneous elements of the
anti -bureaucratic discourse in its articulation phase. 'Nobody has the right to
beat the people' literally means the empty phrase 'the people are the only
authority', but its actual significance is that it gives complete legitimacy to all
forms manifest in the 'anti-bureaucratic revolution' . As in all communist
T H E C R I S I S O F I D E N T I T Y IN T H E F O R M E R Y U G O S L A V I A
21 7
proj ects, the people again become the imaginary bearers of the revolution in
whose name the party abrogates power; 14 only this time the struggle is b etween
one communist power and another, or, as an anti-bureaucrat would say : 'real
workers' power against alienated power' .
The key to the success of MiloseviC 's discourse turned on the delicate
balance b etween what he said and what he left unspoken. He knew that the
effect of signification of an ideological discourse is always supported by some
fantasy-frame, by some unspoken fantasy-staging which organizes its econ
omy of enjoyment. To explain this idea we should turn to the theory of French
linguist Oswald Ducrot, especially the distinction that he draws between
presupposition and surmise . IS Presupposition is an integral part of the speech
act; responsibility for it rests upon the speaker, that is, it is the speaker who, by
pronouncing a certain proposition, guarantees its presuppositions. For
example, if ! say 'I promise you : I will avenge your father's death', I assume
hereby a whole network of symbolic, intersubjective relations and my place
within it. I accept as a fact that the father's death was the result of an injustic e ; I
assume that I am in a position to compensate for it, and so on. On the other
hand, the surmise is the place of inscription of the addressee in the
enunciation; that is, it is the addressee who assumes responsibility for it, who
has to derive the surmised content from what was said. The surmise emerges
as an answer to the question that the addressee necessarily poses to him- or
herself: 'Why did the speaker speak that way? Why did the speaker say that? '
The surmise thus concerns the way the addressee must decipher the
signification of what was being said; and hence, that is why the surmise
necessarily touches upon fantasy. In Lacan's graph of desire, fantasy is
specified as an answer to the famous
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THE M A K I N G OF P O L I T I C A L I D E N T I T I E S
liberalism). However, the key t o the success o f his discourse is the delicate
balance between what he has said and what is left unspoken. On the level of
ideological meaning - when Milosevic speaks for the strong, unified
Yugoslavia where all nations will live in equality and brotherhoo d - he
presents his movement as a new, 'counter-bureaucratic revolution', a broad,
democratic populist movement rebelling against the corrupted state -and
party bureaucracy, and an attempt to reinstal Tito's legacy, and so on.
However, behind this programme lies another programme, another
message, which is easily deciphered by his supporters as the answer to the
question 'Why is he telling us this?': Milos eviC' s true aim is to crush the
Albanians by turning them into second-rate citizens . He wants to unify
Yugoslavia under S e rbian domination by abolishing the autonomy of other
republics . He presents the S erbs as the only really sovereign nation in
Yugoslavia, as the only nation capable of assuring state sovereignty, and he
promises to the S erbian masses revenge for the supposed exploitation of
S erbia by the more developed republics of Croatia and Slovenia, and so on.
Thus we find as the surmise of his discourse a bricolage of familiar,
h eterogeneous elements , each of which inflames the desire of the S erbians .
Such elements include the revival of old S e rbian nationalist myths , the
glorification of the Orthodox Church as opposed to the intriguing, anti
S erbian Catholic Church, not to mention the continuation of sexual myths
about 'dirty Albanians' fornicating all the time and raping innocent S erbian
girls - in short, the whole domain of fantasies on which racist enjoyment feeds.
The same can be said of all other successful neo-conservative populist
ideologies: their very success rests upon the distance between ideologicaJ
meaning (the return to the old moral values of the family, of the self-made
man , and s o on) and the level of racist s exual fantasies which, although
unmentioned, function as surmis e and thereby determine the way the
addressee deciphers the signification of ideological statements. But far from
being something deplorable, this very distance is perhaps exactly what marks
the difference b etween neo-conservative populist ideologies , still attached to
democratic space, and s o -called totalitarianism. 'Totalitarianism' - at least in
its radical version - c an be understood as an ideology which operates by stating
directly and openly what other ideologies only imply as a surmise (an example
being Hitler's direct appeal to racist, sexual, and anti - S emitic fantasies) . One
of the usual s elf-designations of extreme-right p oliticians (Le Pen in Franc e,
for example) is precisely that they say openly what others (tlleir fellows of the
moderate right) only allude to between the lines. Milos eviC's populism has
been a hodge-podge of heterogeneous elements; when, at a given moment,
these elements begin to attain indepen dence, fuis hodge-podge starts to
disarticulate itself. At first it seemed as fuough Milosevic hims elf would have
triggered this process. But once other political parties in Serbia began to utter
openly the nationalist fantasy which Milosevic measured only by mood, fue
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219
result was a new, more radical nationalist ideology. Real political pluralism
became the worst enemy of the anti-bureaucratic revolution.
The anti-bureaucratic revolution is in exactly the same relation to 'normal'
self-management socialism as fascism is to 'normal' capitalism. We can
appreciate this parallel by considering good old Marxist dogma and by asking
ourselves: what is fascism? Fascism is the attempt - by means of a radical
revolutionary discourse and with the support of a violent mass movement - to
restore national unity and thus to preserve the existing relations of (capitalist)
production. The key to such fascism is the introduction of a permanent state
of emergency, legitimized by the need to fight some cxternal Enemy - the] ew,
the Communist. Of course, all the anti-capitalist tbunderings against the
'] ewish plutocrat' do not deceive anybody: fascism fights only against the
'excesses' of capitalism; its real enemy is the communist.
Here is where the anti-bureaucratic revolution is precisely homologous to
fascism. No 'anti-bureaucratic' rhetoric can deceive us, since the real cnemies
are not the bureaucrats (that is, the former politocrats - because those who
have shown a timely submission to the new masters survived without diffi
culty) . The real enemies are the forces of democratic pluralism. In order to
take away their popular appeal, these forces must be portrayed as the national
enemy (Albanians, Slovenes, and those Croatians reputed to be genocidal),
just as in fascism the enemy was deceitfully presented in the form of the] ew. It
is a desperate attempt to maintain the existing balance of social p ower by
mobilizing an atmosphere of national menace, a threat to the nation. This is an
old fascist trick; Hitler, too, came to power through deft manipulation of
German national humiliation following World War I. In fact MiloseviC's
favourite metaphor, wherein Serbia and Montenegro are 'two eyes in the same
head', derives from Hitler's speech on the 'Anschluss' of Austria in 1 93 8 .
Milosevic has also, successfully, included i n his discourse the demands
made by the opposition for parliamentary democracy and a multi -party plural
istic political system. Radically nationalist as well as liberal democratic parties
opposed both communism and MiloseviC's populism. They hoped that it
would be precisely their anti-communist stance that would bring them elec
toral victory. But again it was nationalism that won the day for Milosevic; and,
indeed, liberals who failed to incorporate nationalism into their discourse
were the biggest losers in the elections. However, the radical nationalists who
openly stated their nationalist-racist fears also lost because Milosevic
spawned the fear that the victory of the opposition would plunge the country
into economic and political chaos. Thus Milosevic succeeded in promoting
himself as the only guarantor of the unity and prosperity of the S erbian nation.
He succeeded in creating what may have appeared to be a multi-party system
but was instead a system operating under tlle absolute control of the S ocialist
Party. At the same time he articulated the growing discontent of the working
classes by forging a new enemy: the Croats .
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221
distance and constantly denying that it has played any role in generating the
crisis .
Through its 'spontaneous ideology' the JNA experienced itself as Yugo
slavia's pillar, the purest embodiment and guarantor of brotherhood and
unity, 'as a crystal tear', excluded from the struggle of particular interests
characteristic of 'profane Yugoslavia' . If the JNA did not appeal directly to
God, it was nonetheless clear that tlle place the army occupied and
spontaneously experienced was seen as consecrated space; it was a 'sacred
space', witll kinship to the status of the divine right ofkings. Any criticism of its
activities or questioning of its role was labelled as a grave attack, not only on
the JNA, but also (precisely because of its sanctity and its sacred place) as an
'attack on Yugoslavia' .
The claim that attacks on theJNA were attacks on the Yugoslavian nation as
a whole can be read in terms of the slogan: the JNA is 'Yugoslavia in
miniature'. Furthermore, it can be interpreted through Lacan's distinction
between the big Other and the objet petit a, that is, where the JNA is the objet
petit a of Yugoslavia as the great Other self-managing socialist republic: the
symbolic network and a foreign body at its very heart. It is that core which is 'in
Yugoslavia more than Yugoslavia'; a sacred, untouchable place in Yugoslavia's
heart. In this context, the JNA presents two, apparently incompatible, claims
about itself: (i) the JNA is the personified, purest expression of Yugoslav
society - it is society in miniature, a school for self-management, brotherhood
and unity; and (ii) because of its nature, the JNA is not - and cannot be organized on a self-management basis ; rather, it must be organized on the
basis of command lines and on an unconditional performance of commands .
Thus the JNA reveals itself as both internal and external to the fundamental
Yugoslavia - and so, too, the point of the nation's 'extimacy' (Lacan) . This is
precisely how the JNA apparatus has perceived itself in its spontaneous
ideology: as a non-self-management guarantor of self-management, as the
point of exception from the system of self-management, but nonetheless as
the point that holds together this very same system.
Obsessed with portraying itself as 'blameless' in a deviant society, the JNA
has always presented itself as an island of brotherhood and unity, purified of
nationalism, liberalism, technocratism and similar abominations feared by
'those outside'. As such a reservoir of purity, it stresses that every segment of
Yugoslavia has been tainted with nationalism - except the JNA. D espite open
conflicts among various factions and disagreements over development in
Yugoslavia, the JNA still perceives itself as exempt from social antagonism,
occupying a superior position as the unsullied final guarantor of social unity.
Given this perception, we can now formulate why this unblemished view of
themselves is - if we invoke Hegel - a view of the highest Evil. Real Evil, the
real impediment to the stability of Yugoslavia, has not been perpetuated by
particular interests, but by the structuring of the social field itself which has
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prevented divergent socio-political interests and proj ects from being articu
lated and thus from taking part in the democratic struggle. Such divergent
interests have instea d been understood as disintegrative, that is , as threatening
to the cohesion of Yugoslav society. When the JNA took to weapons and force,
first in Slovenia and then in Croatia, its discourse of claiming a need for war
came from the hypothesis that only the JNA could (and does) defend the
integral wholeness of Yugoslavia, preventing national conflicts and so forth .
But behind this level of ideological meaning, the JNNs hypothesis made it
quite clear that the JNA was in fact fighting for socialism. The JNA never did
come to terms with the collapse of socialism in Slovenia and Croatia, but when
it could no longer openly declare these two republics as the enemies of
socialism it declared them secessionist and through that act made the military
intervention legitimate.
How can we interpret the fact that after the war in S lovenia, the JNA openly
went to the side of S erbia in its war over parts of Croatian territory? After the
collapse of s ocialism and the anticipated disintegration of Yugoslavia, the JNA
found itself in a kind of transitional period; it was desperately looking for a new
role, a way to survive. It was precisely at this point that the move over to the
Serbian side offered the JNA a way to give a new meaning to its struggle for
Yugoslavia. Because the connection between the JNA and S e rbia does not
originate from some ' deep' ideological unity and because it does not reflect an
admission by either side of mutual need or co- operation, it is therefore
thoroughly contingent. Nevertheless, this c onnection results from a pragmatic
realization made by both the JNA and S erbia that each can survive only if
united with the other.
In the past the JNA was always suspicious of Milosevic . It criticized his
nationalism becaus e the JNA perceived itself as the supranational guarantee
of p eace in Yugoslavia. But in the wake of the collapse of Yugoslavia, it was
S erbia and its desire to create a Greater S erbia (or a smaller Yugoslavia) that
offere d the only island where the JNA could survive . The JNA sent messages
to the S erbs which (between the lines) read : 'The only way by which you can
realize your desire for a Greater S erbia is to say that you are fighting for
Yugoslavia and then we can fight together. ' For S erbia the acquisition of the
JNA had a very important meaning in its imperialistic war. S erbia presented
the alliance with the JNA as something natural, taking into consideration the
historical S e rbian partiality for the army, their warrior pride and the simple
fact that the maj ority of the officer cadre of the JNA was S erbian. D uring the
'purification' of the JNA of officers of other nationalities, this majority cadre
also considerably helped the JNA to move to the side of S erbia.
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223
openly stressed the need for a 'population policy' that would restrict the right
224
its ideology. Accordingly after joining Demos, the Greens have given
ambiguous statements on the question of abortion: 'not for, not against';
instead, they have accepted the ideology of a 'national threat' and generally
have lost the character of an alternative movement.
Precisely this heterogeneous nature of Demos has reconfirmed the
contingent nature of alliances in the political struggle. In the formation of the
opposition blocs in S lovenia, a struggle for a claim on the ' Green problem' has
taken place between Demos and ZSMS -Liberals. The Greens have had the
status of a new social movement formerly associated with ZSMS ; the
ecological issue has had the character of a citizens ' initiative above party
politics; it has been more a call for a new life style than a political platform. But
when they j oined Demos, the Greens lost their autonomy and became one of
the elements included in the global-national-defence-political proj ect. In a
similar fashion, the ec ological project thus changed its 'colour' from being just
Green: once it was chained to the discourse of national democracy, the
ecology movement was reduced to a marginal element in it. The discourse of
national democracy rearticulated the ecological demand into the demand for
the 'preservation of the culture and the natural heritage of the Slovene nation' .
Ecology was thus inscribed in the ideology of the national threat or the general
war against 'pollution' which threatens the national substance and which
includes everything from polluted nature to 'spiritual pollution' , from
pornography to soulless contemporary man.
Alternative movements (ecologist, feminist, peace, gay, and so on) and
ZSMS had radically transformed the political arena with their demands . They
had stressed the primacy of political over national demands, and their chief
focus had been the struggle for political franchis e . This meant the dismem
berment of the socialist state apparatus and its reconstruction along the lines
of Western democracy. The key contribution of the alternative movements
had been their ability to interpret in a new, fresh way the relationship between
the social and the political. Whereas, as we have s e en, the whole logic of
self-management s ocialism had been based on the negation of the p olitical.
Laclau's observation that in Marxism the political is merely the supplement of
the social, 1 6 is all the more precise with respect to the ideology of self
management. With its idea of immediate democracy and the complete power
of the workers over production and collective leadership, self-management
completely realized the proj ect of subordinating the political to the social.
Interestingly, the first oppositional organizations in the new social move
ments also persisted in affirming the primacy of the social over the political.
They promoted the idea of separating civil society from the state because such
a separation would enable the creation of
T H E C R I S I S O F I D E N T I T Y I N T H E F O RM E R Y U G O S L A V I A
225
precisely with the proclamation of the syntagm 'a bid for power' that the
demands of the new social movements could, and indeed had to, articulate
themselves into a political discourse : thus they became the subject of
parliamentary discussions; and slowly they too were taken up by the discourse
in power.
The whole political scene changed after the elections. In every Yugoslav
republic one could witness the emergence of three blocs: the former
communists (who changed their name to 'socialists' or 'reformers') , the
national right, and the liberals . In every poll, the winning bloc was the one that
had included nationalism in its struggle for hegemony. As we have already
seen, in S erbia (and in Montenegro) this bloc was the communist one ; in
Slovenia, Croatia, Macedonia, and Bosnia and Herzegovina the nationalist
parties also won the elections . However, the s e parties defined themselves in
opposition to communism, and the majority of dlem were right-wing in
political orientation. In both case s tho s e who lost out were the liberals. The
reason for their failure can be located precisely in the fact that they were
unable to articulate nationalism. Even though the liberals had the best political
programme - one that was open to minorities, and was able to articulate the
problems of women and ecology, and above all tried to res olve the economic
difficulties facing a society on its way out of socialism - the voters did not
identifY widl liberal politics becaus e they defined themselves as non -national .
The liberals did not realize that what mattered is not so much the economic
problems as the way these problems are symbolized through ideology. For
example, unemploynlent and poverty are of course hard facts , but what
matters in a political battle is how they are perceived, how they are
symb olically mediated and structure d . An ess ential feature of the ideological
efficiency of the nationalist parties was their ability to subordinate all real
(economic) problems to the problem of national identity: they succeeded in
convincing the voters that a solution to the national question would solve all
other questions as well.
The 'trick' of a successful political discourse is not to offer us direct images
with which to identifY, not to flatter us with an idealized image or an ideal ego,
and not to paint us the way we would like to app ear to ourselves; instead, the
'trick' is to c onstruct a symbolic space, a point of view from which we can
appear likeable to ourselves
such a way that it leaves the space open to be filled out by images of our ideal
ego . In the political discourse of Yugoslavia, it was precisely the national
problem which designated the place ofidentification. Both kinds of nationalist
parties - the communists and the right - succeeded in making the question of
national sovereignty the element which shaped the symbolic space in which
people could recognize themselves . This space was filled not only with images
of hatred of other nations but also with images of the 'happy' future which was
to arrive with national liberation. Liberals who perceived nationalism as an
226
THE M A K I N G O F P O L I T I C A L I D E NT I T I E S
s eries of
in
significance of conception, and so forth, from which it derives the claim that
T H E C R I S I S O F I D E N T I T Y IN T H E F O R M E R Y U G O S L AV I A
22 7
abortion i s murder. But obj ections to abortion b y the moral maj ority in
Slovenia and in Croatia are connected to their claim that abortion poses a
threat to the nation. Linking images of abortion as a crime against humanity to
images of ab ortion as a threat to the nation produces an ideology through
which support for the Slovenes or the Croats becomes synonymous with
opposition to abortion. When the former Croatian opposition writes that 'a
foetus is also Croat', it clearly demonstrates that an opinion about abortion is
also going to be an opinion about the future of the nation.
The production of these kind of fantasies of a national threat must of course
be seen in terms of the political struggle they engender. The strategy is to
transform the internal political threat of totalitarianism into an external
national menace which can only be averted by an increase in the birthrate; in
other words, by limiting the right to abortion. Thus emerges the hypothesis
that to be a good Slovene or a good Croat means primarily to be a goo d Chris
tian, since the national menace can only be averted by adhering to Christian
morals .
In the ideology of national threat, women are pronounced both culprit and
victim. The strongest former opposition party in Croatia, the Croatian
Democratic Community (which then went on to win the elections), has gone
so far in this that it has publicly blamed the tragedy of the Croatian nation on
women, pornography and abortion. 'This trinity murders, or rather hinders,
the birth of little Croats, that " sacred thing which God has given society and
the homeland" . ' The Croatian moral maj ority regard women who have not
given birth to at least four children as 'female exhibitionists' since they have
not fulfilled 'their unique sacred duty' . Women who, for whatever reason,
decide on abortion have been proclaimed murderers and mortal enemies of
the nation, while gynaecologists who have assisted them in this ' murderous
act' are pronounced butchers and traitors . I 7
Women, then, are pronounced guilty; yet a t the same time, they are
depicted as the victims of overly liberal abortion laws. Ideologists of the
post-socialist moral majority take as their starting point the notion that a free
decision about how many children a person will have is an inalienable human
right, and that society is obliged to maintain population policies that enable
people to have the desired number of children. These ideologists believe,
therefore, that a state that prioritizes the right to abortion is refusing its
citizens access to this second right - that of having a desired numb er of
children. Here the real victims are women. IS This fantasy of the woman -as
victim is based on the hypothesis that the woman and the nation share the
same desire : to give birth. If a woman is defined by maternity, then abortion is
an attack on the woman's very essence; but it is also an attack on the essence of
the nation, since the national community, according to this ideology, is
defined by the national maternal wish for an increased population.
The ideologists of the national threat invoke the same logic as that used by
228
T H E C R I S I S O F I D E N T I T Y I N T H E F O RM E R Y U G O S L A V I A
22 9
230
b y name; they did not want t o give the attacker a national connotation. Thus at
the beginning of the war, the aggressors were referred to as 'criminals,
hooligans' , and only much later did they get the name of chetniks or S erbian
nationalists .
The inhuman persecutions of the Muslims by the S erbs reveal, among
other things, the fact that the aggressor is disturbed by the very lack of the
fantasy structure of the homeland with respect to the Muslims. It is as if it
were unbearable for the S erbs that the Muslims do not organize their fanta
sies of the homeland on national ground. This is why the S erbs are desper
ately trying to create the impression of the enemy's national-religious
extremism and are naming the Muslims 'fighters of Jihad', 'green berets ' or
'Islamic fundamentalists' . By torturing the Muslims, the Serbs are actually
trying to provoke Muslim fundamentalism. Thus the primary aim of the
S erbs is to belittle the Muslims' religious identity by ruining their mosques
or by raping young Muslim women. Rape is for Muslim women an especially
horrible crime because their religion strictly forbids any sexual contact
before marriage ; rape, for a young Muslim woman, thus has the meaning of
a symbolic death. If the aim of the war is to destroy the fantasy structure of
the whole population, then the aim of rape - as the aim of any other form of
torture - is to shatter the fantasy structure of the individual. The very
manner in which Muslim women are being raped, the very fact that rape is
seen by the aggressor's soldiers as a kind of ' duty' they have to perform on
the captured woman, reveals the aim of the aggressor to destroy precisely the
fantasy structure of the individual woman in a way that will touch her re
ligious and sexual identity. These attacks aim at dismantling the very frame
through which a Muslim woman perceives the outer world and herself as
consistent; the way she organizes her identity and the identity of her world.
Rape as a form of punishment always aims at humiliating the victim, at ruin
ing her world, so that she will never be the same again and will never per
ceive herself in the same way as she did before . For this purpose, the
aggressors are inventing the most horrible forms of torture, where women
are raped in front of their mothers or fathers, where incest is demanded, and
so on.
If, in the case of the war in Croatia, the aim of tlle aggressor was to destroy
the fantasy structure of the enemy, the obj ective situation in Bosnia and
Herzegovina is just the opposite : here it is the aggressor who, in a violent way,
is forcing the Muslim to forge a fantasy structure of national-religious
identification. The war actually constructs B osnia and Herzegovina as a
homeland; it creates the fantasy dimension necessary so that Muslim soldiers
are willing to die for their own country. This uneasiness with the very lack of
national identification on the side of the Muslims is apparent also in the way
the Western media report the war in Bosnia and Herzegovina. The first thing
that strikes one is the contrast with reporting ab out the
1991
T H E C R I S I S O F I D E N T I T Y I N T H E F O RM E R Y U G O S L AV I A 23 1
we had the standard ideological personification:
instead of providing
on
in
Iraq, the media ultimately reduced the conflict to a quarrel with S addam
Hussein, Evil personified, the outlaw who excluded himself from the civilized
international community. Interestingly, even more than military destruction,
the true aim of the Gulf War was presented as psychological - as the
,
humiliation of Sad dam who had to 'lose face .21 In the case of the Bospian war,
however, and notwithstanding isolated cases of the demonization of the
Serbian president Milosevic, the predominant attitude has been that of the
quasi-anthropological observer: the media outdo one another in giving us
lessons
on
hundreds
of years old
understand the roots of the conflict, one has to know not only the history of
Yugoslavia, but the entire history of the Balkans from medieval time s . In this
conflict, it is therefore not possible simply to take sides, one can only patiently
try to grasp the background of this savage spectacle, alien to our civilized
system of values . . .
Yet this procedure involves an ideological mystification even more cunning
tllan the demonization of Saddam Hussein: for the assumption of the
comfortable attitude of a distant obs erver and the evocation of the allegedly
intricate context of religious and etlmic struggles in the Balkans here enables
the West to shed its responsibility towards the Balkans, that is, to avoid the
bitter truth that, far from simply being an exocentric conflict, the Bosnian war
is a direct result of the failure of the West to grasp the political dynamic of the
disintegration of Yugoslavia.
Notes
1.
See Louis Althusser, 'Ideology and Ideological State AppRratuses', in Lenin and Philosophy
1971).
2 . Josip Zupanov, 'Delavski razred in dru "bena stabilnost" ', Teorija in praksa, 1 1 , 1 9 8 6 ,
p. 1 1 5 3 .
3 . See Edvard Kardelj, Democracy and Socialism, trans. Margot and Bosko Milosavljevic
(London: The Summerfield Press, 1 978) pp. 1 1 5-40.
4. See on this point Emesto Laclau and Chantal Mouffe, Hegemony and Socialist Strategy
(London: Verso, 1 985).
5 . Jacques-Alain Miller, 'Extimitf , unpublished seminar, 1 985-86.
6 . Mladen Dolar, 'Kdo je danes Zid?', Mladina, Ljubljana, 11 March 1 988.
7. Bhikhu Parekh, 'The "New Right" and the Politics of Nationhood', in The New Right
(London: The Runnymede Trust, 1 986).
8 . Ivo Zanic, 'Bukvar "antibirokratske revolucije" ', Start, 30 September 1 9 8 9 .
9 . On the image of enemy in totalitarianism, see Claude Lefort, The Political Forms o/Modem
Society (Cambridge: Polity Press, 1 9 8 6) .
1 0 . Ladau and Mouffe, Hegemony and Socialist Strategy.
1 1 . Emesto Laclau, Politics and Ideology in Marxist Theory (Lon don: Verso, 1 9 7 7) p . 173 .
12. Z anic, 'Bukvar "antibirokratske revolucije" '. The process of exchanging the old leader for
the new, i.e., Tito with Milosevic, was also an exceedingly important element of the new rhetoric.
232
First o f all it should b e stressed that Milosevic never directly referred t o Tito, although he
sometimes used Tito's formulations. At the same time, it is symptomatic of his strategy that he
never directly attacked or criticized Tito, in spite of how the whole anti-bureaucratic project was
aimed at the Titoist ideology and its scheme of federation. It is of interest to note that the
anti -bureaucratic rhetoric exchanged Tito with Milosevic in two contradictory ways. On the one
hand, it was stressed that Milosevic was the only real successor to Tito, a new son of a great leader,
to which the lyrics from a newly composed popular song bear witness: 'Slobodan, proud name,
Tito taught you well.' On the other hand, there is the much stronger thesis whereby MiloseviC's
accession is the only solution to Tito's errors, as the lyrics continue: 'Slobodan, proud name, you
are better for us than Tito.' The apparently contradictory relations are accounted for by the
mythical place Tito still maintains in the eyes of the nation; MiloseviC's project has to be
understood as an apparent continuation, and at the same time an extension, ofTitoism.
1 3 . On the notion of 'founding word', see Jacques Lacan, Le Seminaire, livre III: les psychoses
(paris: S euil, 1 9 8 1 ) p . 3 1 5 .
14. Lefort, The Political Forms ofModern Society.
1 5 . Oswald Ducrot, Le dire et Ie dit (Paris: Minuit, 1986).
1 6. Ernesto Laclau, New Rejleaions on the Revolution of Our Time (London: Verso, 1 990)
pp. 56ff.
17. Dnevnik, Ljubljana, 26 February 1 990.
1 8. Ante VukaSovic, 'Zavaravanje "ena" ', Danas, Zagreb, 3 March 1 990.
19. The thesis about the Judaic nature of the Serbian nation also attempts to substantiate the
image of Albanians as terrorists. Since peaceful demonstrations of Albanians crying 'We want
democracy' are difficult to characterize as classical terrorism, the Serbian media have had to
produce the fantasy of a secret terrorist organization that uses the struggle for democracy only as a
veil. Notably, the Serbs have been calling the Albanians terrorists only since the disintegration of
real-socialism in Eastern Europe; prior to this they had been using the term 'counter-revolutio
nary' . Encapsulating them as terrorists is also much more effective: it tries to create, at a more
worldwide level, the impression that the Serbian struggle against the Albanians means, for
example, the same as the Western struggle against Gaddafi's terrorism or the Jewish struggle
against Arab terrorism, and so on.
20. Elaine Scarry, The Body in Pain: TheMaking and the Unmaking ofthe World (Oxford: Oxford
University Press, 1 985).
2 1 . For an analysis of the media's report on the Gulf War, see S amuel Weber, 'The Media and
the War' , Alphabet City (Toronto) Summer 1991.
=======
9 =======
as well as to begin.
B ENJ A M I N F . H A L L E T
(Boston, 1 848)
(Berlin, 1992)
MARTIN HEIDEGGER
unity itself.
(Freiburg, 1947)
D O N A L D W. W I N N I C O T T
(London, 1 986)
WALTER B E NJ A M I N
" It will be clear from what follows that this chapter, and in particular the remarks concerning
context-retrieval, could not have seen the light of day without the theoretical and practical space of
the GrunerAufbruch; nor, therefore, without the political contact offriends such as Antje Vollmer,
Ralf Fuchs and Bernd Ulrich. Hans Scheulen of Bremen University made an important
contribution to its first version. Finally, I would like to thank Sue Golding for her thorough
conceptual editing and reordering, which served to clarifY many of the essential ideas in this text.
233
234
broad sense, the West. And let u s consider them i n light o f the question: which
of these moments have created a new space, so to sp eak, in the syntax of a
'political nation' - a syntax that resonates with consequences far beyond its
own 'space,?2 This would be tantamount to asking which of these moments
has introduce d a degree of field-changing into the operation of the political
syntax of our late modernity, a paradigm shift perhaps barely discernible, and
yet one that has still crept into a political-historical elucidation of the problems
and oppositional patterns . Or, to ask the question slightly differently: At which
moment have we been able to discern, perhaps with some surprise, a creative
voice for which our political categories (practically all embedded in our
patterns of opposition going back to the nineteenth century) may not have been
suitable?
If we turn our political and historical attention to these questions, we come
up against two such moments that, at first glance, may seem odd having been
put together - even though they made their appearance at almost the same
instance . On the face of it, they involve quite
disparate renewals,
carrying all
the weight of a scarcely retouched actuality. These two renewals have been the
S olidarnosc phenomenon in Poland, and, in the Federal Republic of
Germany, the more modest phenomenon of the Greens. Interestingly, and as
we shall explore in this paper, it has been the latter that has entailed greater
diversity in its effects, expressing and rebuilding a kind of 'threshold' of the
political horizon itself. For what we shall call the ' Green threshold' refers to
that unforeseen locus that, in the late seventies, inserted itself - with a kind of
friction at first hard to identifY - into the pattern of conflict and party politics of
the German as well as (albeit indirectly), the West European political
landscape. At that time, and even tl10ugh it emerged as a party
space making
itself felt at the level of parliament, it did not simply emerge out of a
conglomeration of'th.e ideological development + awareness of the ecological
problem', which is how it was - and still is - largely presente d. Rather, it took
shape out of concrete and often painful political decisions
bitterly contested to the very end, since they had often been negotiated from
opposite sides in the schema dominating political syntax. Suddenly, political
and cultural-political threads were knitted together in a way that would not
have been possible before . We could now advance a step further conceptually,
too, focusing on the term 'political decision'. That term Is used, generally, in
contexts of deliberate strategic-political actions, where well-known alterna
tives are clearly in sight. Within this context, ilie conscious or historically
latent 'we-identities' of those who decide are not at all involved . Now, the
context of the Green threshold (as well as of the space of S olidarnosc) was
quite different: it clearly involved these identities . For the kind of political
historical space that it began to demarcate was a space that opened the site for
something like a new category of party (able to affect the traditional conflict
pattern of the existing political parties and therewith, in lesser and greater
THE GREEN T H R E S H O L D
235
degrees, able to change those traditional schemata). That is to say, its context
was one where a space of politics appears which is both 'conscious' and
'unconscious' at exactly the same time .
What could conceivably be meant, both practically and analytically, by this
reference to the simultaneity of the 'political unconscious'? Or ratl1er (and
more to the point) how could it be that a political unconscious might bear out a
newer, different, concept ilian what had gone before; and, in so bearing, what
might be the importance (if there was one) of the link to Green politics or to
that of Solidamosc? For as we know, this expression, 'political unconscious',
has been a well-oiled but rather vague term. Indeed, when the term has arisen
in the political or social-psychological literature, it is conceived practically
everywhere as a pure 'mode of deficiency' ; that is, exactly in the way it is not
conceived in the Freudian enlargement of the thinkable. For all its
questionable features, Lacan's approach, insisting on the now infamous
statement 'the unconscious is structured as a language', seems to bring us
closer to the heart of the matter. Why? Because what becomes clearer in
re-posing that statement (and others, as we shall note later) is that there is a
peculiar terrain or space, a peculiar 'something', brought to bear when
examining the unity of both a presence and an absence (where neither
represent empty signifiers) . Let us look more closely at iliis matter. When we
talk of a reactive way of being able to think of a unity, as for example with the
'I-self' and ilie 'We-self', we have in mind quite a definite vicious circle.
There is the focal point (let's say, in this example, the 'I-self'), outside of
which remains all the rest (that is, the 'We-self') . For a long time this 'worked'
- at least in the sense of a mutually reinforcing impoverishment of the analytic
ways in which the objectified individual-psychological ego and the sociologi
cally objectified We- Group, with their socio-psychologically 'grounding'
association, were conceived.
Thus, only the rationalistic, certainty-securing modes of determination,
forcibly limiting our experiential dimension, that is, our familiar/uncanny
(heimisch/unheimliche) language-embedded responsiveness, worked together
- and still do work - in a modem world where the 'we-selves' are thought
outside of the 'I-self', and vice versa. (And here it could be said, not without a
touch of irony, iliat the 'organic' ways of conceiving the collective and the ultimately fully rationalist, that is to say, immanent and non-political 'community' were not tied to concrete signifiers but were, instead, abstractly
counter-social and, by tllat measure, doubly reactive.) This rationalist, reactive
way of conceiving the political and the social has also, not surprisingly, another
dimension, in this case focusing around tlle twin problems of avoidance and
assurance. For, without the (in a liberal, and at first sight, clear and univocal)
connection between totalitarianism and the assertion of 'collective identities ',
it would have taken until several decades after the Second World War for the
_ protective and dominant methodological individualism of rational choice
236
ab initio) .
Isn't that so? As if we could have today - or in specific moments of this today
- a 'freer' access to the interplay of the I -selves and we-selves? A kind of move
'daring' to interrupt their assured dichotomization? One that becomes a
threshold -zone, which, in spite of being constantly overstepped by modern,
fully secularized historicity, is
not to
surpassed, being a complement to any horizon? One could say, in fact, that it is
only today that this kind of terrain is even thinkable as a kind of social; that is, a
kind of political social, where the two ultimate and ruthless exclusions made
invisible in modern rational sociality (the one linked with the sovereign reason
of state and the one linked with the ecological - the visible 'social' exclusions
being, presumably, an overlapping effect of both) could and should have the
chance to become politically confrontable? Confrontable from spaces where
the time - and the right - to progress does not exclude the time - and the right
- to begin?
Presumably, nothing is theoretically more important here than to be able,
really, to stumble upon our language-embedded political nature, rather than
to leap, continually, over it. For it is only as political, language-embedded
b eings, that the I-self and the we -selves can be thought together non
reductively. Only thus can we, following both Freud and Heidegger, perceive
how the I -selfis capable of speech only through the presence ofan absence - just
as it is the historical-political presences of absence which make the 'us' (as a
language -emb edded 'we ' and not as an 'us-group ' ; that is, not as the pure
' among us' of a 'we the here presents') capable of both being addressed and
addressing. And yet, today
1 989, as we
know, a 'people ' (a 'we-selves') got the chance to speak in the former GDR,
thereby forcing the ' surrender' of a totalitarian regime that had been as
convinced of its rationality, progressiveness and humanism as it was of its
so-called ' ethic of responsibility' . No other form of this 'collective' ability to
speak so clearly marked the breakthrough from protest to a 'revolutionary'
new claim to sovereignty as did the Leipzig demonstrations, where the
world-famous 'We are the people ! ' suddenly burst forth. Let us now ask our
table-thumping colleagues : Who was it that spoke as 'we' in the streets of
Leipzig and, yes, meddled in 'power' ? What was it, exactly, that spoke there,
23 7
and from where? Can this so -called fact of 'the people' be understood as a
collective action with an underlying, pre-given - that is to say, apolitical or
supposedly neutral - collective identity? Or did it come about through the
'rational choice' of individual demonstrators calculating their interests, who
remained on the lookout for 'free-riders ' ? Or, better yet, was it the textbook
example of ' expressive behaviour' at the margin of the irrational, if not to
mention consensus-oriented 'communicative action', keeping its elf at a
distance from power? If one is not to be too disrespectful of the supp osed facts,
not to mention p ower, all these alternative analyses of social theory, with their
concomitant conceptualization of the 'we -selves', and therewith of'collective'
action, are irritating at best; but, at worst, when the whole problem is
considered, they really do not make much sense at all.
So let us begin again: how is this 'us' to be conceived? Let us say, along with
Lacan, that the 'us' is a political language-embedded being. Well, if this is the
case,
how
tualizing of the 'us' - for shouldn't it matter (and if not, why not?) to remember
that for decades the central sovereignty-message of the GDR regime was :
,
'The people are US ! ?4 That is to say, shouldn't it matter that there is a history to
this language -embedded being? For it has also to be said that on the streets of
Leipzig a (non -self-identical) subj ect, a p olitical 'we' linked to the sovereignty
of the subject - not as a we-group but as a 'language-embedded b eing' emerged, though it was one that emerged in the
reversal
of that historical
also being constructed at roughly this time and 'place', albeit through a
different kind of action from that involved in the creation of the
Green space) .
238
penetrating
of the
Leo Strauss has put it - that is, the question that must count as
239
to assume political contours. We can see this from a recent historical example.
Between the mid -sixties and the end ofthe seventies, starting from a reopened
source of conflict within the political syntax of the historical space of the
United States, a unique dislocation developed within the history of late
modernity. (Its often pacified consequences, but also that to which it gave life,
are still discernible in the early nineties despite the ways in which they are
ideologically concealed.) The most important elements of the 'addressing/
acting we-forms' it implied could not be arranged under any of the
subjectivities; neither as 'class subject' nor as 'subj ect with particular
interests'; neither as 'reactive subj ect' nor as 'subject with authoritarian
identifications', and so forth - that is, arrangements through which social
subjectivity was conceived in the political-sociological thought of recent
modernity as always entailing a temporality of presence or one spatialized in
the tunnel of the 'stream of progress' .
These addressing 'we-forms' - which, despite their perceptible resistance
to the hegemonic political syntax, were quite rapidly assigned in the sixties to
the 'left', or so-called autonomous camps - could certainly not be derived
from structures or functions . Nevertheless, this historic dislocation (Verwer
fung), which at the beginning was also a rej ection (Verwerfung) in the prevailing
objectification and patterns of opposition of modernity, was not at first able to
stimulate social theory. Even the critical and politicized domains of the social
sciences which focused on this historic refusal were not in a position to
experi.ence it as a disruptive challenge to their fundamental schema of
objectification. Since the question of the nature of political things remained
closed, the crucial bearers of action within this dislocation were categorized despite the many discontents connected with it - as a 'sub-class' belonging to
an essentially pre-political socio-historical form of reality, supposedly dis
covered in the first half of the nineteenth century; that is, as ('new') social
mrrvements. Thus, on the one hand, use of the term social movement has
objectified, for more than a hundred years, an impulse layer of social action
inscribed in the 'history of progress', downstream from institutional politics
and spontaneous by nature - a spontaneity which is always represented
pre-politically because it is conceived in terms of a pre-given 'nature of need' .
If, with A. o. Hirschmann, we see in the hegemonic new order of references between (threatening) passions and (rational, society-constituting) interests one of the main founding achievements of the political hegemony where state
and society (as they are 'naturally' for us) come into being together, then it
should also be clear that, in the end, social movements (qua merely 'social')
always have assigned to them an already subaltern space. 6 And though it is a
'movement' space, though indeed it may be 'moving', it can neither appeal to
the political nation nor have an effect upon political syntax itself. Reactive
fascist movements only appear to be an exception, for in essence - and as
institutionalized - they accept remaining fixed in their rule over an irrational
240
T H E M A K I N G OF P O L I T I C A L I D E N T I T I E S
241
threshold itself. On the one hand, we can sense - with the help of this
perception - the so often blurred difference between scientific or ideological
discourse on the 'ecological' (without any possible effect on the concrete
political syntax through which the 'problems ' are elaborated) ; and, on the
other, we can sense a political discourse which, speaking the language of
political democracy, addresses a political nation with the 'ecological' in a way
that affects the political syntax itself. rwe can presume, hereby, that the very
setting of the classical Western European political syntaxes , tied exclusively to
the 'time to progress' and its left-right patterns, are exactly the ones least able
to sense, not to mention to face, the 'real' exclusion marked by the ecological.)
The same is valid for the perception of the space ofSolidarnosc. Here, also, as
we shall see in the following, the (albeit quite different) underlying East
European p olitical syntax had to be opened by 'free' identity-affecting political
decisions, so as to make possible, as well, the breaking of the spell of a 'reason
of state' appearing with the dignity of an ethic of responsibility.
In this way, S olidarnosc itself was thereby able to reopen the question at
issue . l l Where this question is reopened, so too is that of the 'good' ability to
think together the 'I -self' rwinnicott speaks of the 'true self' as 'the placefrom
which to live')12 with that 'we-self' from which we always speak and act when
we do it truly politically; that is, also in the significant, transmitted sense of this
word.
Let us now return again to our ' Green threshold'. If we consider it in the
context described, it first appears to those steeped in the fundamental modes
of modernity (that is, those who conceive the political as socially 'grounded'
and as 'derived') as something like a stumbling-block thresholdY For, closely
regarded, the even course of a political continuity-thinking oblivious to syntax
(for example, those fixed on strategic-instrumental and!or moral solutions - a
course which has become natural), here falls out of step.14 At this point, it is
secondary whether we locate such continuity-thinking within the hegemonic
political sociology of the 'academic community', or amongst the 'self-evident
truths' of hegemonic political discourse itself. It is therefore not really
surprising that the treatment of the threshold in question, and of its effects
beyond its original space - whether within progressive or neo-conservative
political sociology, or in the discourse of more conservative or progressive
bearers of p olitical syntax from the classical parties - at first always amounts to
a levelling of this threshold. Levelling, in this context, means to render the
syntactic break imperceptible, by reducing the reality of that political renewal of
1979 to an addition of general 'ecological' and 'pacifist' contents and/or to
242
refers.
Interestingly, it must be said that remarkably similar to the stumbling
block threshold has been the fate of the political space through which, and
from which, the 'appeal' of S olidarnosc became possible. Here, too, we can
observe how what constitutes ,
in
(frag-wurdig
and
denk-wurdig)
in a specific
of
P olish-Catholic
Christianity,
articulated
by
'anti
243
tactical
negative alliance.
S olidarnosc and the widely isolated dissident 'civic movements' on the one
hand, and the compromised and one-track nature of reform communism, on
the other. The effects of the newly created p olitical space, in this case widely
and really interrupting the underlying p olitical syntax of Middle and East
Europ ean spaces, cannot become visible in this way. This political syntax, in
its (more than one hundred years old) modem form, is marked by a kin d of
dividing line of political identities that can never have the pure spatial clarity of
a left/right dichotomization.
Adam Michnik, for whom the left/right divide makes no sense in the
post-communist countries, describes in the chapters of his
La Deuxieme
one
_ 'our' (that is, Western European) political syntax, as well as by the ways its
244
T H E M A K I N G OF P O L I T I C A L I D E N T I T I E S
Rethinking Opposition
Let us now take a further step in thought and observation. If we come to say
now, with a certain emphasis, that when political sociology, in a broad sense,
thinks that it is working with a concept ('cleavage') universally applicable to all
divisions ofthe social, in reality it is referring to a special nature of polarity; that
is, to the one 'evident' only in strictly immanent positively closed social space.
So this must appear, in the first instance, to most of present-day political
thought as an irrelevant assertion with a displaced emphasis . For why should
we not refer - living as we do in societies where the transcendence-relatedness
245
diffirences:
'Western'
dimensions
market
openness
and 'popular-national'
closure.
To think otherwise,
however, is not just a matter of distorted appearance : it arises from the fact
246
T H E M A K I N G OF P O L I T I C A L I D E N T I T I E S
that the political syntax o f Central and Eastern Europe i s also (fVerlaid by the
West European inner-space contrast often declined in terms of 'left' and
'right' .18
Deceptive too, then, is the common-sense notion that it is possible,
fundamentally, to atta ch a specific external reference (comparable to the one
we have located in the distinctiveness of the Central and East European
political syntax) to the left/right opposition within society (which mainly ' does'
as though there were no state) and to the poles of that opposition. This applies
to the 'war and peace' question: for the social-political left may, for example,
be just as prone to violence at a world level in the struggle against despotism as
it is radical-pacifist within the hegemony of the liberal, evacuating denial of
antagonism. (And the reactive right also has its free-floating forms.) What
does this mean for a sharper awareness of the Central and East European
schema of opposition? Only if 'we' (that is, we 'in' spontaneous Western
political thought, with its conceptualization of the political) are able to resist
our inclination, by now become natural, to read the Central and East
European schema of opposition of the respective political nations, with their
more open antagonism potential and with their conflict lines charged with
multi-dimensional temporality, in terms purely of schema of intra-societal
(and/or 'ideological') patterns of difference - only then will the meaning of the
external reference (or dual character) of this 'other' opposition become
accessible for our whole approach to the question, touching also on the
question of the nature of political things . This dual character applies in all
variants of this other opposition: in some of them (for example, the variant of
' Slavophile-Orthodox' versus 'Westernizing') , it is directly legible from
' outside', without closer knowledge of the history; in others, it is apparent
' only' for tlle Central and East European political-historical consciousness
(and for 'Westerners' with a good knowledge of history .- for example, with
regard to the different versions of the 'populist versus urban' opposition, and
the presence of the dual character within it) .
Historical Excursus
Let us now consider these remarks in the form of an excursus. The Hungarian
historical example shows that the contrast in question is completely false if
'Western' (or 'civilizing') is given a one-dimensional and univocal signifi
cance. For example, in the nepies ('folkish') tradition in Hungary - which,
unlike the narodnik tradition in Russia, was associated not only with
'ideological' but also with political sovereignty-signifiers of a republican type
there is an effective nexus whose historic bearers of meaning and conflict have
had affinities with Hungarian Calvinism, along with its remote milieu of the
Netherlands (and also with the Calvinist political-religious world in Walzer's
247
of
1 800 gave to a country-space occupied by republicans an effectiveness which
shaped the relationship in the United States between liberal society and state,
and republican 'community'. The hegemony weakened by this arrangement
the one created by Hamiltonian federalists and by later party Republicans wagered on an American reproduction of the English social paradigm of state
and economy, defined by the court-space, which already had the compelling
appearance of political rationality and modernity. The unique US victory of
the country-p ole (which, as political signifier, is definable with a distinctive
temporality, not just 'ideologically') is what, until today, has made p ossible the
248
the political division of space, not to mention also why 'there', in the US , the
working class (conceived, on political grounds, as having a pure social
existence) has found no party 'expression' .
This excursus is not meant to suggest an equivalence between the
' awkward' US political syntax and the Central and East European political
syntax pervaded by the different schemata of opposition. Instead it should
clarifY some of our initial questions concerning actual turning points of the
Green threshold and the space of Solidarnosc (albeit within their respective
political syntaxes) . It also allows us to formulate the following questions . First,
once Pocock and others have made visible the latent 'schism' in the (Anglo
S axon-impelled) liberal-progressive tradition, how far does something like an
initial 'threshold zone' of political modernity come to light? S econd, in
surfacing 'as such', why is it that it can be transgressed or 'crossed' but not
transformed into something that has definitively been transgressed? Third, might it
be the case that not only the Federal German ' Green threshold' and the 'space
of Solidarnosc', but the very perceptibility of this initial threshold of political
modernity, be bound up with a reintensification of its latent schism - and, as a
consequence, with a weakening of the 'naturalness' of that (mainly) West
European political syntax of progress which ' does as if' purely internal,
transferential thresholds-free, antagonism-free, differences were alone at
work
within it. Fourth and last, is there not a great deal to suggest that the
249
production,21 would, in the end, be something more than mere repetition. (And
that is quite apart from the fact that, as Laclau shows in New Reflections on the
Revolution of Our Times, repetition without displacement does not exist
politically, nor for that matter iIl any other way.)
In attempting to respond to these questions, I should like to address my
remarks to a scarcely considered, and rather remote, milieu : one that also casts
some light on the fact that all through the 1 980s students in US universities
showed a livelier and more widespread interest in the West German Greens
than did their counterparts in any other country of the 'West' - a highly
curious fact, which, in a few quarters, still remains mysterious and almost
offensive for some 'progressive' German political scientists. In the opening
speech of Clinton's electoral campaign for the US presidency, reference was
repeatedly made to the third of the three terms : 'Opportunity - Responsibility
- Community', though the speaker explicitly distanced himself from 'liberals',
from 'conservatives' and from long-term state regulation of what might fall
into the sphere of the 'community' . In this way, a space of political address was
marked out again and redefined. Ifwe further consider that a prominent figure
committed to an assuredly not 'naturalizable' ecology was chosen as candidate
for the vice-presidency, it is clear that these characteristics mark also a space
closer than any other significant political space in the 'West' to the space (or
'zone') of the Green threshold. The old-new name of what is referred to as the
'Clinton space' is certainly not without interest: it is not called 'New Deal' but
'New Covenant' - which highlights the Protestant/Old Testament p arallel to
the Catholic element in the space of S olidarnosc, and hence also the
developing significance of the intimate connection between the strict,
rationalistically forced, immanent closure of society and its 'capitalist religion'
of self-evident, infinite progress . (This 'proximity' in question is one that is
simultaneously separated by a hard-to-define and even more difficult to
implement 'limit to political promises'. But it also sheds light on something
that the most conscious 'Green sounding' remarks accomplish least of all.)
But within the hegemonic, 'univocalized' West European liberal relation
between 'that which is social' and 'that which is the state', the original,
'political' self-definition of the Greens in 1 979 (in terms of 'grassroots
democracy') was clearly a stopgap that was 'somehow' supposed to express a
distance from the hegemonic political statism. Nevertheless, from the
beginning, but rather subliminally, the discourse of the Greens was able to
speak, breaking through the conservative-progressive order of differences to
the whole of the nation, touching not only on central themes, but also on the
same political-historical conscience. In the later ideologically univocalized
and polarizing attempt to clarifY matters on the wrong side, there was on one
hand (the 'fundamentalists') a classical left-subaltern and autonomous
opposition to the state, with an implicit acceptance of the hegemonic liberal
definition of the sphere of the state; and on the other (the merely pra gmatic
_
250
T H E M A K I N G O F P O LI T I C A L I D E N T I T I E S
251
1789,
new beginning,
break and the emergence ofwhat has been called the Green threshold and the
space of S olidarnosc make politically possible something like a 'European
translation' of the syntactically pres erved American 'communitarian' concept.
Here, ostensibly, the loos ening of the hegemonic and obj ectifying fixation of
the political takes place only in the repeated passage of a 'virtuous circle'.
This means, first, that our setting must b e ' good enough' for our question
(concerning the nature of political things) to b e reopened within it - for only
then will the interruptive character of the Green threshold and the space of
S olidarnosc b ecome
visible.
252
they
p olitical things. This also means, then, that it is in these 'passages' where we
notice the forcedly subaltern and reactive character of the (mainly ideological)
places from where - inside of the non-interrupted-hegemony of modern
political temporality - the attempts were made to reintroduce critically the
problematic of'nature' and of'reason of state' into the politica1.25 Here it is not
only important to perceive the de fado 'marginal' political character of
conservative protection of the environment on the one side, and of
left-emancipatory anarchism with its libertarian variants on the other side.
More crucial is the fact that 'inside' these critical spaces the hegemonic
preliminary decision on wha t 'nature' and 'state' are (on what their temporality
is) is fully accepted . The proof of this acceptance is that what emerges in these
' critical' positions is an antagonism 'contrary' to what appears hegemonically
as 'nature' (that is, the measurable, quantitative nature of natural science) and
as ' state' (that is, the original dimension of contractual and institutional
constraint, set up in a 'natural', need-satisfYing sociabilit<J) . It is in this way that
we see emerging two critical positions, pretending to occupy - ideologically the ' green' and 'libertarian' area. On the one side, a 'critical' ideological
discourse of ' deep ecology', with an ' ecological' fixed to a kind of holistic,
vitalistic nature , involving 'human nature' in the same literal and objective
constraints as the nature of natural science . And, on the other, the simple and
direct state- and constraint-negations of radical 'liberation' and emanci
p ation, fixed in the discourses of direct and grassroots democracy. (Working
with the same kind of sociability of the social, and where, exactly as in the
' classical modern' co-position of state and society, there is no political
language, and so, also, no possible reference to what law can mean in 'polis', in
'res-puplica' or in 'covenant'.)
But the hegemonic effect of modern -European (political) syntax can finally
also be seen in another remarkable fact: namely, that the two above
mentioned ideological spaces for these (subaltern) attempts to reintroduce
critically 'nature' and 'state' in ideological-political discourse are located - as
fragments of a successful, radical dissociation - at the two opposite ' ends' of
the left/right continuum inscribed in the hegemonic syntax. Within a fully
operational ' dissociation' of this kind, it would be absurd to imagine that the
two spaces (which are mostly fixed to 'positions') could have anything at all to
do with each other. The 'noticing' of this hegemonic - dissociating effect
b ecomes theoretically significant if it is a question of perceiving what is
specific in the difficult breaks and identity-aJfocting decisions through which,
around 1 980, the addressing-space of the West German Greens made its first
appearance . (We say ' first' , because there is much to suggest that today, in the
253
a dual form,
first, as
untouched by
forms, however ideologically 'radical' discourses and their actions may be.
These 'double -headed' forces appearing as Greens do not emerge as
marginal only in political terms; they have also geared themselves to the
margins of the respective ideological-political 'camps' as subaltern. Thus they
inevitably remain
254
development (which, after the historic events of the last few years, can b e
abandoned without any political cost and a s part o f the prevailing trend), but
above all of the naturalist-rationalist 'grounding horizon' of the history of our
sociality made free of displacement and events, whose operational space is
thus the (sovereign) space of promise and its 'problem solution'. Indeed, it
becomes a space where, finally, it appears possible to plan even the 'salvation
of the planet'. Because such a moment - a moment touching the nature of
political things - should so acquire, in spite of it all, a moment of playing, it was
not the worst of interpellations when, su.r;prisingly, a Green poster addressed
the people, in 1 990, by saying: 'If you vote for us, you will become rich, happy
and famous. You have our word . The Greens . ' (In fact, in recent Federal
German history this 'you have our word' has received the same significance as
has Bush's 'read my lips' in the United States.) It is curious to note the precise
effect signatures have on messages, particularly in this example . In the
German political space at least, it is only this signature which makes the
political message not preposterous and not aggressive or cynical. "What
constitutes the imposing force of the 'last reason' of modern/rational political
action, the fully secularized space of the absolutist court's raison d'etat, has by
no means disappeared as a result of the emptying of its 'centre'. It has become
a surrounded power-place. The closed circle of those who surround it
(however wide or narrow it may be) may thus imagine that it, as a body
representing The People, is sovereign, in the absolutist sense: that it can
decide according to its present Will. The presence-fixed closedness of this
'amongst-ourselves' (of this entre nous as the French say?7 is what we may call
the fatal misunderstanding of the 'democratic revolution', running through
the new states of the world as 'democracy' . The centrality of the 'court', the
raison d 'etat dimension of that space, has by no means disappeared as a result
of its 'emptying', for it is also a reordered space. The closed circle of its
're-orderers' may thus imagine that, as a sovereign circle, it is 'by itself' . 28
A Provisional Conclusion
This text began as an attempt to trace the emergence of the 'interrupting'
space of the Green threshold, and also (but to a lesser extent) that of
S olidarnosc. Later, as it was being 'updated', several forebodings, present at
the time when I was actually taking part in creating an 'intervening' place (and
discourse) of Gruner Aufbruch within the Federal German Green Party
( 1 987-90) , were confirmed by the subsequent events. This time period probably one of the more decisive moments in the short history of Die Gronen
Aufbruch - came into existence as a bearer of an identity-related discourse: for
it tried to identify and to contest the double-sided 'ideological reoccupation'
of the Green space by a 'fundamentalist' (that is, 'red-green' and 'deep
255
green') party executive . It was , in other words, one that came to represent a
politically more sensitive but, hence also, a more reactive part of the party,
fighting the fundamentalists from a purely pragmatic political place that
blurred completely the contours of the Green threshold itself. (Indeed, this
conflict was about to split
Die Griinen
- and
Aujbruch
already
action -effective .
Only after this proj ect was fully under way did I realize the full significance
of the space of S olidarnosc and the space of 'communitarian' discourse as
linked with - and separated from, in strange ways - the Green threshold. As
was the case with the emergence of the Green threshold in
1 979 - ultimately
against
intellectual and party milieus of the left at that time - so too were
identity-related
maintain
identities : one trying to give to the Griinen the character of a more or less loose
alliance of different social and political forces (so as to allow the emergence of,
and to retain the sense of, strict and radical left-wing identities), and one
proclaiming. that the
(that
forming together a political place from which the great maj orities of the
German society could be addressed and confronted with the 'ecological
cause ' . 29 By focusing in this way on the process of identity formation,
something often lacking in even the best 'sociological' analyses of S olidarnosc
is able to become more visible : namely, the extent to which its very constitution
involved painful, identity-affecting perceptions and decisions . Moreover, this
focus allowed us to achieve 'more' than what an instrumental accounting or
classical progressive alliance of Catholic and secular-enlightened intellectual
currents would have done . This 'more' depended upon the break-up of the
historical and political space fixated on immanence and therefore
_
raison d'etat.
In this respect, too, what became obvious from the beginning was the
256
self-identical social unit for ' collective subj ects ' progressing in the closed
time-tunnel of all historicist settings . This threshold is also a critical one : not
to cross it, that is , to lack the capacity or will to cross it, implies also that it is a
menace. In fact, in this sense of the metaphor, we 'meet' the threshold as a
challenge to our collective self-preservation, as our 'old' collective coherence
has weakened; as our 'system of differences' cannot cope any more with new
dislocations . In this way it implies, in other words , a
demand,
an A nsp ruch .
257
258
I f w e are able t o speak today, i n the context o f action and o f the political,
about a threshold in this transference-sense (which of course can never be
separated completely from its other sense), it is undoubtedly due to the
increased theoretical audibility of the specific effects of the working of
transference and temporal retroactivity (Nachtraglichkeit) in the setting of
Freudian psychoanalysis. This audio-ability is, for its own part, due to the fact
that the scientistic misunderstandings, enclosing this setting in the pure inside
of psychology, are, as a result of multiple events, much less hegemonic than
some decades before. One of these events was the second great interrupting
setting of our century (with respect to temporality and language, to
death -relatedness, to the addressing and addressee identities of all that is said
,
or implied with the '! and the 'we') : the (late) Heideggerian setting of thought
and its loosening, de-grounding workings (which, obviously have nothing to
do with grounding nor of one-gendered ontology) . The space of the Freudian
setting can appear as such - along with the essential help of the admirable
sensitivity of Winnicottian thought and practice - that is, as it appeared from
the beginning: as the event of a unique potential space of co-acting, the
holding and the transference of which can loosen the closed - and so, forward
fleeing - temporality of modern identities, inventing and discovering a space
of free play, a
Spielraum,
phronesis as Gewissen
of the
political conscience?
Notes
1. Walter Benjamin, Collected Works, V, p. 6 1 7 .
2. We prefer the term political syntax a s opposed to that o f political grammar, a s used by
H. Laski, E. Laclau and C. Geertz. Its association with sentence and praedicatio makes both more
perceptible and more time-bound the retroactive effect of its type of order upon the identity of the
articulating (and thus also that of the politically self-articulating) 'We ' . Together with Derrida, we
are thinking here of the 'syntactic/semantic' difference as opposed to the 'form! content' difference.
It also highlights a parallel play with its Greek translation, where syntax means also 'order of
argument', and indeed 'order of battle'.
3 . Clifford Geertz, 'Works and Lives', The Anthropologist as Author (Stanford: Stanford
University Press, 1 988) p. 1 3 8 .
4. Does i t help t o remember that Jacques Lacan, i n the Actes de Bonnevales, said that 'the
word's behaviour appears less as communication than as the founding of the subject in an
essential statement'? And that: 'The behaviour of the word, in so far as the subject wants to ground
himself on it, is of such a kind that if the transmitter is to communicate his message, he must have
259
received it from the receiver, and he completes this by sending out his message in the inverted
form'?
5 . This position strikes us as something whose ultimate basis generally lies in a 'one-way'
political will (of an individual or a group) . There is no room for the two-way, rhetorical element of
addressing-site (Ansprechplatz) within a historical-political space - a site, the hearing dimension
ofwhich is also directed towards a possible common (but not unanimous) decision taking form in
a political controversy.
To put this point differently, it is to say, then, that there is a subterranean nexus linking (i)
Kant's absolute, univocal difference of the ethical realm, radically separate from the political, and
opposed to the realm of the naturally determined - a difference which he desperately saves by
means of the moral 'pure will ' (by definition divorced from experience) - to the hegemony of a
particular, historically and politically distinct West European (and, as we shall see, not simply
'Western') mould; (ii) a kind of sovereignty, only approximately definable as 'centralist', which
accelerates development and has become effective on a planetary scale; and (iii) denial of the
listening (and thus also the historical and power-related) dimension of any 'we-site' involving any
'space of address' - a site, therefore, that cannot be defined purely as strategic-rational because it
is not synonymous with a collective ego whose identity can be established in advance and
independently of language.
The same nexus is at work in the moral-political version of the grounding of the political. It
appears as an alternative to the scientific, obj ectivist 'will to ground', or as a complement to it. It is,
like the objectivist grounding which is historically oriented on 'real' interests, woven into the
background syntax of political modernity. In certain situations, this Kantian type of normative
univocal replacement of the political (also as univocal replacement of the emancipatory in that
which can be 'scientifically demonstrated' to be 'objectively progressive') assumes a certain
importance. Where this happens - for example, in the 'left complement' of the hegemonic
rationality of progress - the 'hearing' dimension of the ' addressing place' from where we speak in
our political language of democracy becomes even less perceptible than in the open,
semi-pragmatist modes of perception of the liberal rationality ofinterests: less perceptible, that is,
to the extent that the 'deafening' exclusiveness and duality - 'norm-oriented politics' versus
'populist, power-oriented politics' - retains a more determining weight, a greater exclusiveness.
Through late-Heideggerian thought, then, the strange but close affinity of Kant's 'moral
medium' with Nietzsche's 'will to power', apparently so remote from morality, becomes clearer in
quite a different horizon. Nothing is more unsupportable for the 'discourse ethics' of Apel and
Habermas - a way of thinking which, located in the Kantian tradition but also driven by the shock
of the first German post-war generation that had to face the consequences of Nazism, insists on
producing a univocal, morally guaranteeing standard for social action.
6. Albert O. Hirschmann, The Passions and the Interests: Political Arguments for Capitalism
Before Its Triumph (Princeton, Guilford: Princeton University Press, 1 977) .
7. See D. W. Winnicott, 'A Discussion on the Aims of War', in his Home is Where We Start
From, essays by D. W. Winnicott, compiled and edited by Clare Winnicott, Ray Sheperd,
Madeleine Davis and D. W. Winnicott (New York: Norton, 1 986) .
8. S e e Jessica Benjamin, Th e Bonds of Love: Psychoanalysis, Feminism, and the Problem of
Domination (New York: Pantheon Books, 1 9 88).
9. See Burke's definition of a political party, where he writes: 'Party is a body of men united,
for promoting by their joint endeavours the national interest, upon some particular principle in
which they are all agreed' (Burke, 'Thoughts on the Causes of the Present Discontent', in Works
[London: Bohn, 1 8 64] , as quoted in B . Parekh and Thomas Pantham, eds, Political Discourse
[London: Sage Publications, 1987]) . It is interesting to note also that as early as 1 843 , Karl
Rosenkranz, articulating the Hegelian Philosophy ofRight for liberal politics, spoke of the modem
'amalgamation of the science of principle with that of interest'. In his understanding, this 'de
facto' amalgamating was rationally upheld through Hegelian philosophy. (See furtller, Die
Hegelsche Rechte, edited by Hermann Liibbe, 1 962.)
10. Herbert Kitschelt, The Logics of Party Formation: Ecological Politics in Belgium and West
Germany (Ithaca, New York: Cornell University Press, 1 98 9) .
1 1 . The compulsiveness o f Max Weber's dichotomy (ethics o f conviction!ethics o f responsi
bility) as a split ethical-moral foundation ofwill in the political realm, is precisely the mark of that
'elimination of the specifically political nature of the victorious practices' of which Laclau speaks.
260
T H E M A K I N G OF P O L I T I C A L I D E N T I T I E S
Interestingly, one also finds that Leo Strauss explicitly connects a 'limit' o f the moral-political (or
rather, the visibility of a limit) with his above-mentioned question, 'What is the nature of political
things?' He writes , 'Insight into the limits of the moral-political sphere as a whole can be expanded
fully only by answering the question of the nature ofpolitical things . ' Leo Strauss, What is Political
Philosophy (New York: The Free Press, 1 95 9 , reprint 1973), p. 94 (emphasis added) . To see a
direct proximity to Nietzsche in this kind of Straussian 'reference to limits', as is often done,
obscures more than it illuminates. In Strauss's commemorative speech on Kurt Riezler there is a
reference to Heidegger in which these 'limits' do not appear as merely 'objective' (that is, in
Nietzsche's terminology, 'psychological'). And in this reference one can detect that Strauss
conceives Heidegger's distance from the ethical as 'will-founding', not simply as an observation of
'limit'. He also ascribes to it a special kind of perceptual dimension, saying: ' Heidegger . . . denies
the possibility of ethics because he feels that there is a revolting disproportion between the idea of
ethics and those phenomena which ethics pretended to articulate . ' (Strauss, p . 246 [emphases
added] .) Here one may ask: is it not out of place in this context to insist on the limits of the
moral-political sphere and on its connection with the nature of political things, if the space of
S olidamosc - as one would gather from most ofits discourses - appears to emerge precisely from
a revaluation of the moral-political sphere? (And is this revaluation not also the theme of many
discourses about the Greens?) How little this is out of place, however, will become clear only if we
also realize that 'ethics of responsibility' and 'ethics of conviction' belong to the same regime of
hegemony (which as the 'political' makes itself invisible) . Nothing is easier, tllen, than to
demonstrate the limits of the one from the terrain of the otller. S trauss's reasoning speaks
precisely against this 'easy' kind of 'demonstration of limits', which in one way or another stems
from knowledge.
This, then, affects the bearer of responsibility/security-guaranteeing itself. Indeed, how little
the effects of the space of S olidamosc depend on simple revaluation of the moral-political sphere
can be seen in its difference from the 'dissident groups' of C entral and Eastem Europe. For all
their merit, tllese groups could not achieve the intenupting political space, and thus remained
confined to opposing the 'ethics of responsibility' and legitimation discourse of the post-Stalinist
reform regimes on the 'same kind' of ground; that is, on that of a pure 'ethics of conviction' .
1 2 . D. W. Winnicott, Human Nature (London: Free Association Books, 1 9 88), p. 162.
13. Of course, it is not a question here of'allocating blame'. In reality, parts of the discourse of
the Greens themselves unavoidably participated, and still participate, in this 'imperceptibility' of
the specific historical 'space', to the benefit of (the well-known fixation on) the addition of general
programmatic points and on 'intrinsically' superior 'moral positions' . But the positive (that is,
non-reactive and democratic) disturbance of our political syntax was , and is, a partly selective and
partly subliminal disturbance of hegemony. On the other hand, the levelling 'stumbling-block
threshold' is that of a working political space of dialogue, which disturbs and partly interrupts in
two chief respects. It disturbs the perception of the political schema of opposition, and thus also in
part, disturbs that of the political synta.x as a quasi-natural or social a priori.
Having said that, then, and despite the pragmatic dimension of the Greens' discourse, it does
not become entirely (restlos) possible to treat the political handling of the 'ecology question' purely
in terms of this environmental ' question'. This too is syntax-affecting, also through the way in
which this subliminal broadening of address reaches beyond the objectively thematic, and an
expansion of democratic-political response (or possibility of response) comes into play. It should
not be lost on tlle reader just how little of this can be grasped in the framework of'communication
theory'.
14. 'Oblivious of syntax' here principally refers to the (also theoretical) fixation on direct
contents - qua strategic-instrumental or moral political solutions - in which the historical
specificity of the b earers of the political articulations and decisions, as well as the schemata of
conflict in which they are emb edded, completely ' disappear' behind these immediate meanings
(that is, behind 'the semantic') .
1 5 . Despite his having taken very clear and distinctive positions on the matter, the extent to
which Michnik is able to shake off a 'campist' view becomes clear when he speaks of the 'rebirtll of
two great traditions of Hungarian history' in relation to the conflict between the League of Free
Democrats and the Hungarian Democratic Forum (the one more 'city-centred' and liberal
libertarian, the other more p opular-Christian with a greater stress on cultural history). The same
applies when he looks at the Russian 'followers of Solzhenitsyn' and the 'followers of Sakharov'
261
(and, therefore, also at the opposition between the camps, even beyond Russia). For Miclmik,
the future chances of democracy for the whole region are bound up with the 'ability of sensible
people in both camps to compromise'. See Adam Miclmik, La Deuxieme Revolution (1 990). For a
general introduction to his work in English, see Adam Michnik, Letters from Prison and Other
Essays, trans. Maya Latynski (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1 985).
1 6. Only on certain points can we invoke this 'totalitarianism' - that is, East European Le
ninism-Stalinism - as the constitutive 'negative reference' of this political syntax of the histori
cal region. In its violent way, this 'totalitarianism' was the first interruption in the 'regional
syntax' wherein the two opposite moments were 'integrated'.
17. Laclau's thought unfolds precisely by taking seriously the 's1!:umbling-block threshold' of
left-wing and Marxist political-theoretical thought, as evidenced in the fact that the antagonisms
of a Peronist populism, introduced into the Argentinean political nation cannot be 'translated'
purely into differences within society. Rather, it is an 'introduction' that also took place as a kind
of 'updating' of the 'Argentinean' conflict configuration between, on the one hand, unitarios as
both Jacobin and liberal-oligarchic party supporters of the relationship produced by the court
victory between the social and state instances under the imperative of 'progress' and 'up-to-date
Europeanization'; and, on the other hand, ftderales as party supporters of an 'American wilful
ness' qua revival of the so-called 'better' tradition of Western Christianity or Western liberty,
with either ultra-montanist or anti-Absolntist signifiers . (And which, in a certain way, is the
'same' conflict configuration as the American one, b etween [the huer] Democrats and Republi
cans, b ut on a terrain much more marked by court-victory and country-weakness, and so much
more exposed to 'corruption', as can be noted in our contempor.ary times.) The (completely
spatial) metaphor of 'closure and opening', used to characteJ;i;ze the opposition between
'popular-nationals' and 'liberals', is thus, as Laclau shows, one of the impossible spatial trans
lations of the political itself - since antagonism, as one of the po.ibilities of directed identity,
cannot be grasped with any code of difference (that presuppoes a spatially closed 'equi
presence') .
18. For this reason, the discourse which criticizes state a11 d power 'in principle' - both
arising from the subalternity of the pure sphere of civil society in the eighteenth century, and the
present-day version that speaks of society assuming the functions of the state - does not know
about the things of which it speaks . Society - as the neutralizing !:(lode of the social in modem
times, accented by freedom and (in Hirschmann's sense) 'exit' is essentially related to the
state. It emerges as a system of difference 'cleansed of antagonism' (which is why, as Laclau
shows, it can never really exist according to its own standard of pmjutivity) , by virtue precisely of
the state-expanding evacuation of that aspect of social-historical identities which is determined
by addressing antagonistic dimensions. Thus, growing efforts to establish pure 'society' (which
tends to 'evacuate' everything incapable of reciprocity) means - ani! demands (heijJt) - growing
statehood (of the hegemonic typ e) . More succinctly put: the more sc>ciety, tl1e more state . But of
course, formalizations of this kind 'topple' into an objectifYing 'setUl1lg'. They 'do as if': as if one
were talking of an already overstepped limit of relations (or lack of relations) between the self in
Winnicott's sense and the 'addressing We' through which we are able to speak and be spoken to .
19. S ee, above all, ]. G. A. Pocock, The Machiavellian Moment.: Florentine Thought and the
Atlantic Republican Tradition (New York: University Press, 1 975); }"irtue, Commerce, and History
(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1 985); and Politics, L12guage and Time (London:
Macmillan, 1 960). Especially in this early book, we come up agAinst yet another feat of Po
cockian Workings. As far as we know, he is the only 'recognized' hl,torian seriously given to the
task of making thinkable, in political history, the Kuhnian differertc e b etween 'normal science'
and 'paradigm-creation'. Among otller things that means he incorpClrates the notion of a discon
tinuous history; i.e., the utterly impossible inside of the history of hegemonic historicism and
thei.r 'movements' (whether of ' longue duree ' or not). This di.scontin\iity points then in two direc
tions: towards the difference of 'higher politics' and 'normal POlilics' as articulated by Bruce
Ackermann (in We the People - Foundations [Cambridge, Massacjl usetts : Harvard University
Press, 1991]) and towards th e Heideggerian 'essential discontinu\jus destiny of being' exactly
seized by Robert Bernasconi in his 'The Fate of Distinction btween Praxis and Poiesis',
Heidegger Studies, Vol. 2, 1986.
20 . Walter Benjamin, The Collected Works, Vol. VI (Frankfurt A.M., 1 9 9 1) p. 100. I owe the
,Jeference (together with a thoughtful illumination of the 'ecological') to MichaeI Jaeger (Berlin).
262
2 1 . See Michael Walzer, The Communitarian Critique o fLiberalism', Political Theory, vol. 1 ,
1 990, pp. 6-23 .
22. The political-historical scene in the USA in the last decade was the most vivid display of
egalitarian 'rights-discourse ' (previously called 'New Social Movements'), which inserted itselfin
an alternative-subaltern manner into the hegemonic discourse o f the Reagan era. As a
round-table of the journal Telos showed in 1 9 8 8 , the self-reference of this 'radical-libertarian'
discourse went hand in hand with an 'actionist' loss of political speech, where purely 'quantitative'
media attention of those 'taking measures' was at the centre of concern. At another level (a level
that only appears to be quite different), much of the violent events of autumn 1992-summer of
1 993 in Germany can be explained by the fact that the hegemonic discours es of the new Federal
Republic (in their 'left' as well as their 'right' variants) were simply not able to address the 'most
shaken' youth identities in the ex-GDR: literally not a single word was to be heard about the
horizons and holding symbolic union of a renewed German 'political nation'. Not surprising,
then, that those who are not spoken to do not themselves usually speak; they 'act'.
23 . This means : only if we can use the historical-political opportunity whereby two causes can
now be addressed and confronted which previously, within the rigid hegemonies of the
classical-modem, West and Central/East European syntaxes, could ever b e addressed and
confronted in the terms of political democracy. These two are the ecological cause - the 'natural
residue' which suddenly concerns us and stares us in the face !sa nous regarde, as is said in French),
and which is not 'dissolving' within the rationality of our economic-scientific action because it
cannot be converted into pure 'nature as raw material'; and the cause of the totalitarian danger
facing the democracy (and the solidarity-bearing political nation and social sphere) - which can
only 'meet up' with us if the modem, self-referring raison d'etat having to pass judgement on the
rationality or irrationality of political action, is suddenly no longer 'good enough', revealing its
potential totalitarian complicity.
There can scarcely be any doubt that in Poland in 1 980 it was General] aruzelski (or the 'reform
communist' Rakowski enjoying broad 'West European' sympathy) who acted in a 'modem,
statesman-like manner', or even 'in the Polish national interest', and not Lech Walesa or Adam
Michnik. For, the crucial point in the 'space ofS olidarnosc' - what turned it into a threshold space
no longer fully 'within' the hegemony by which the distribution of 'modem-rational' and
'emotional-irrational' spaces of political action can be assured - was that a different kind of
' common responsibility' emerged within it, whose 'mode of address' no longer allowed it to be
represented with any effect as reactive-'fundamentalist' behaviour. This space of common
responsibility does not coincide with the Realpolitik space of a classical ethic of resp onsibility, nor
with its moralistic opposite. But neither did it emerge without a difficult and painful 'syntactic
break', precisely with respect to the politically not secularized strands of Polish Catholicism,
which, in playing a constitutive role together with lay strands of former Marxists and critical
rationalists, 'moved' in their political identities .
Precisely for this reason, it was action/praxis 'able t o begin' i n the sense o f H . Arendt, which l e d
t o the creation/discovery (in a Winnicottian sense) of the space of S olidarnosc - political action
which, in so far as it could not be made to disappear by the otherwise effective dual strategy of
everyday repression and an opening to privatization, 'interrupted' the Realpolitik rationality of the
so-called reform-communist continuation of a 'slackened' Soviet empire. This interruption,
which was later facilely normalized as dissidence so as to adapt it to the hegemonically produced
'nature ofpolitical things', opened a whole decade of abnormality in Poland, and therewith, also,
in Central/Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union. Timothy Garton-Ash could still write in 1988:
'The impossible i s still happening i n Poland.' And this impossible, which, as a scope - a s a
Spielraum was living evidence to counter the notions about the 'obj ective limits' of the operational
spaces of politics in Eastern/Central Europe, developed together with the not-unrelated changes
in Moscow in 1 988-89. It even took effect where the specific 'syntax-interrupting' action that led
to S olidamosc had not come about, or had done so only in the discourse of individuals such as
Vaclav Havel (i.e . , where the pre-war constellations of political opposition - as well as the
'kept-alive' patterns of thought and power of'reformed totalitarianism', with their eerie proximity
to democratic raisons d'etat - were almost universally determinant). Thus, what we have called
above the 'use of operational space' does not only stand against a complete reactivation of the
classical-modem schema of political opposition and its levelling of thresholds. It also stands for
that opening in which the 'ecological cause', as well as the 'cause' of a reductive 'national interest',
263
can come to meet us - a meeting which, throughout the sphere of the full hegemony of
classical-modem European opposition-patterns, is constitutively impossible.
24. John M. Murray writes: 'the political defeat of Federalism did not destroy the old Court
forces in American society at large . . . . They discovered that they did not have to dominate
politics . . . to manipulate America's vast resources . . . . Thus . . . they shifted their activities . . . to
the state and local levels of the Northeast and later of the Northwest, where their enterprise,
boosterism, ability and gree d ran amok across the land . . . while Jeffersonian and Jacksonian
opponents stood impotent guard over the inactive virtue of the central government' (in 'The Great
Invasion, or Court versus Country', in]. G. A. Pocock, Three British Revolutions, 1641, 1 688, 1 776
[Princeton, Guilford: Princeton University Press, 1980J p. 427) . Murray's analysis also touches
the weakest point for the Jeffersonian pole: the lodging of slavery, despite Jefferson's attempts to
avow the contrary, within the Country-field. The above 'breakdown of control' had the result that
Murray, like nearly all progressive intellectuals of his generation in the United S tates, could in the
end only see the setting of the US schema of conflict as an anachronism, in comparison with the
(vaguely 'social-democratic') adaptation of the political to society. There is much to suggest that
this imaginary/social-democratic reference of a 'social-natural' political setting is today
disappearing in the United States.
25 . In answer to Sue Golding's query as to what, precisely, constitutes 'mainly, purely,
ideological spaces', the following could be said by way of clarification: they are the ones localized
inside 'the proj ect of ideology' . They are the ones that express themselves 'most importantly', as
Zygmunt Baumann puts it, in his Legislators and Interpreters, 'in the shifting of responsibility for the
production and reproduction of the "good society" from the holders of the secular political power
of the state to the professional spokesmen of Reason, showing their own science, ideology and
expertise as the legitimation for their unique position' (p. 1 02, passim). It is in this sense, then, that
for its bearers - speaking from a guaranteed, 'rational' identity place which can never be at stake
the question of political identity is radically incomprehensible.
26. This concealment happens in comparative studies too, when the 'national' specificity of the
party-political model of opposition enters the picture . On closer inspection, these studies can
focus only on the different 'national' chances for the 'green' or libertarian 'value position' (posited
as fully positive and self-identical references) to become politically important, against other,
predominant ones. That is to say: all 'Green forces' are treated as purely ideological groups,
within a fictitious detachment of addressing- (or rhetorical-) dimensions, 'opening' identities and
affecting political syntaxes (and not fictitious 'values') .
27. No pre-modem body of people has ever been able to understand itself in this literal
manner. The gods, The Law, The Ancestors (and so, the descendants) were also 'here', through
the implicit acknowledgement of the language-embeddedness of the 'We' -s and the '!' -so
28. Precisely the pure continuity of what Laclau and Mouffe (in relation to the turning-point of
' 1 789') call the 'democratic revolution' and its 'egalitarian logic' is constitutively more closed in on
itself than any other 'symbolic system'. That is to say, vis-a-vis the 'interruption', vis -a-vis
answering the experience of the 'constitutive outside' (i.e., to the identity-concerning incom
pleteness of what sovereignty and the rationalist 'handling of nature' make 'complete' in their
different ways). Behind that stands the pure dimension of claim and justification (quid iuris) of
'egalitarian logic' and its struggles. Because these are admitted into the nature of the modem
political will , they have as their 'natural' horizon sovereign measures which are directly
justice-creating and problem-solving: that which makes demands does not then speak as
addressee and addressor, but speaks sovereignly from its own grounded place and as directed to
that which brings forth the measures. In the passage through the contra-rotating moments of the
'democratic revolution', one also notices what is concealed in Claude Lefort's talk of the 'empty i.e.
emptied by the actions of the French Revolution space of the sovereign', a concept which has
rightly become important in Laclau's most recent writings.
29. See further, Adam Michnik's La Deuxibne Revolution.
30. See in particular, Peter Sloterdijk 'Nach der Geschichte', in Wolgand Welsch, ed., Wege
aus der moderne (Weinheim: 1 988) pp. 272ff.
3 1 . Joseph Brodsky, 'Less than One', Seleaed Essays (New YorkIToronto, 1 986) p. 287.
32. Alain Touraine, Pliidoyer for die Rettung des Sozialen (pleading to StrVe the Social) (Berlin:
World MediaiTageszeitung [TAZJ, 1990); my emphasis.
10
======
If confusion is the sign of the times, I see at the root of this confusion a
rupture between things and words, and the ideas that are their
representation.
ARTAUD
According t o Rorty, all people have a s e t of words and phrases that they use to
justify the things they do and believe . He describ es such a set of words as a
l
person's final vocabulary. It is the vocabulary that one resorts to in order to
tell a story about one's self. It is final in the sense that b eyond these words
there is only tautology, silence or force . A final vocabulary consists of a set of
'thin words' such as 'truth', 'good', 'justice', ' evil' , and more specific 'thicker
words' like 'Revolution' , 'Reason' , 'D emocracy' , ' S o cialism' . 2 I call the cluster
of 'thin words' ethical, and the cluster of 'thick words' political. It is through
this political cluster that more general, flexible words are given shape. The big
vague concepts such as 'good' are explained by reference to more particular
thicker words such as 'Lib eralism' or 'Fascism' . To put it slightly differently,
the content of the thin words is provided by the thicker words. It is these thick
words which are more commonly the subj ect of political conflict. We tend to
agree on the need for 'justice' and 'goodness ' ; the problem arises when we try
to define these words, and suggest ways of achieving them.
In recent years, an increasing number of Muslim communities have
experienced changes in their final vocabulari es. Many Muslims have started to
I would like to thank: Kishver Nasreen, Lilian Zac, Chay S enave, Dhanwant K. Rai, Louise
Miller, Ernesto Laclau, Barnor Hesse, Nur Betul Celik and Warren A. Chin. They have all
contributed in various ways to the preparation of this chapter. Needless to say, whereas the above
mentioned are responsible for much of what may be good about this paper, they are equally
accountable for its shortcomings. I would also like to thank Kim Travers, the Alternative Working
Girl, for her help with the typing of this manuscript.
264
S I GN 0 ' TIMES
265
use metaphors like 'Islamic Revolution' or 'Islamic State' to (re -)describe the
meaning of words like 'justice' , 'truth', and 'good'. This shift towards
vocabularies centred around Islamic metaphors has come to be described by
alarmed political analysts, and journalists alike, as 'Islamic Resurgence' or 'the
rise of militant Islam', and, with increasing popularity, 'Islamic Funda
mentalism' .
One of the maj or difficulties raised by the
emergence
of
' Islamic
Fundamentalism'
is
can see that there is nothing in the various crises that makes the articulation of
Is..1 am necessary. Processes such as industrialization, urbanization, expansion
266
inscribe
global
phenomena into
'Islamic
stances . ' 6
1964,
In fact the narratives which rely on the effects of urb anization, industrializ
ation, and so on, to trigger ' Islamic Fundamentalism' rest, implicitly or
explicitly, upon the explanatory power of anotller factor: the dislocation of
cultural authenticity and tradition. It is the dislocation of Islamic order and
unity which leads to ' Islamic fundamentalism' . 9 The various processes of
modernization produce a certain disjunction between tlle demands of
modernity and the rigidity of traditional culture . Ultimately, what is being
dislocated is a structure understood as an Islamic culture . Now, not only do
these accounts avoid the problem of understanding how Islam enters the
picture; they also assume that it is possible to know what form a new
inscription will take by 'knowing' the order that has been dislocated. Or, to put
it in its usual form: b ecause it is an Islamic culture that has been dislocated, the
attempts to reinscribe it will be carried out by 'Islamic Fundamentalists' .
For these accounts, then, the use of Islamic metaphors can be explained by
S I GN 0 ' TIMES
267
pointing to the identity of the culture prior to its dislocation. This, however, as
Laclau points out, is not possible : the relationship between a dislocation and
an inscription is contingent.lO In the case of 'Islamic Fundamentalism' the
very identity of Islam and Islamic practices will be transformed - and
re-signified by any new attempt to reinscribe a culture - as being Islamic. The
current struggles between 'Islamic Fundamentalists' and their enemies
revolve around these attempts to name cultures, histories and societies.
By using metaphors from Islamic texts, 'Muslim Fundamentalists' are con
sidered to be using the power of ethical words to do political work. Or to put
this in terms favoured by most commentators, they are 'manipulating' religion
for their own political ends. 'Muslim Fundamentalists' reply that Islam is not
merely a religion but a total way of life, one that includes the political. The
'Muslims' fundamentalist' demand for an 'Islamic State' is different from a
celebration of 'liberal bourgeois democracy'; not because the metaphors are
different, but because there is difference in the 'thickness' of metaphors . In
other words, 'Islamic state' refers to a thinner signifier than 'liberal bourgeois
democracy', because it refuses to acknowledge that it is simply a political sig
nifier. As many critics of ' Islamic Fundamentalism' point out, 'Islamic Funda
mentalists' tend to be rather coy about articulating the concrete form of an
'Islamic State' . Part of this vagueness is no doubt due to reasons of political
calculation, but part of it is due to the fact that the 'Islamic state' is not a
metaphor for a particular institutional arrangement; rather it is a description
of a moral universe . It is a description of a moral universe because Islam
continues to be articulated as both an ethical and political signifier. Not only is
Islam used in such a way to give content to notions such as 'justice' and 'good
ness' but it is also a thin word requiring a content.
The impossibility of deciding whether Islam operates as a political ('Islam')
or an ethical (' Islam') signifier makes it difficult to know where and how to
place it within the accounts of 'Islamic Fundamentalism' . On the other hand,
without its inclusion there can be no 'Islamic Fundamentalism'. In other
words, 'Islamic Fundamentalists' use Islam to forge their projects, but their
use of Islam also involves the construction of the identity of Islam itself. This
relationship between Islam and 'Islamic Fundamentalism' cannot be dis
covered by reference to an Islamic essence. We still have to put Islam in the
picture . But before we do that we have to clear up a little matter: so far I have
been using the label 'Islamic Fundamentalism', but I am unhappy with this
description. l l I think it makes an understanding of these movements
difficult by making them
'I have decided to retain the label modem Islamic
look simple .
fundamentalism. This is b ecause in the West, b oth
Fundamentalism as a in the mass media and the academic j ournals and
label first emerged during books , this movement is described as Islamic
the 1 920s to describe vari- fundamentalist. ' 1 2
0-!:1s Protestant sects in the
United States who took the Bible to be the literal word of God.
268
I t was reactivated during the mid-1 970s t o describe the growth in the USA of
the so-called Moral Maj ority, the phenomenon of Born Again Christianity. It
was then expanded to include the various movements which use Islamic
metaphors to (re) describe their political projects . But Muslims resist the label
of 'Islamic Fundamentalism' on several grounds .
First, if by fundamentalism is meant a literal interpretation of canonical
texts, this does not apply to 'Islamic Fundamentalists' since their interpre
tations are imaginative redescriptions of the canon. This explains why in
general the Sunni ulema has tended to oppose 'Islamic Fundamentalism'
because they regard the 'Fundamentalist' interpretations as too metaphorical.
(The position of the Shia ulema is slightly different, though it has to be noted
that the senior ulema in Iran have, on the whole, remained aloof from the
Islamic Republic.) Second, Muslims would argue that fundamentalism is
more a signifier of US foreign policy - a policy that calls its clients 'moderates'
and its opponents 'Islamic Fundamentalists' . For example, in Afghanistan it is
the fundamentalists who on the whole have wanted elections and the erosion
of tribal identities in order to construct a more populist position. It is the
moderates who have opposed elections, and sought the restoration of the
monarchy. Or take the S audi monarchy's Wahabbism, which had more to do
with a conventional understanding of fundamentalism than the Islamic
ideology advocated by Iran. Third, if by fundamentalism is meant a rej ection
of modernity, even here the position is more complicated as we shall later
explore. 'Islamic Fundamentalists' tend to reject traditional folk Islam.
Sociologically, 'Islamic Fundamentalists' come from the ranks of those with
modern education rather than traditional religious seminaries . 13
People who use Islamic metaphors to convey their hopes, to think their
political utopias, and to narrate a story of their destiny, call themselves
Islamists . 14 (To try and ward off any accusations of Orientalism in my move,
let me make the disclaimer that this is not to suggest that all Islamists are
identical in their beliefs; no more than it is to suggest that all bourgeois liberals
are part of a monolith.) In the next part of this chapter I will turn to look at the
various attempts to de-Islamize Muslim communities - a delegitimation that
has provided the context for the Islamist projects of (re-)Islamization.
2. The End of the Caliphate: Putting Islam in the Picture
S I GN 0 ' TIMES
269
governing personal status . I S All other major Muslim communities were either
directly governed by European powers or were under indirect European
control. In this way, Islam was exorcized from the political sphere .
Those Muslims who rejected the use of Islam as a political signifier and
who sought to bring, however mediated, a reconstruction of society in which
the role of Islam would be analogous to the
'As for the Caliphate it could
role of Christianity in post-reformation West
only have been a laughing stock
ern Europe; all those Muslims who rejected in the eyes ofthe civilized world
the use of Muslim metaphors, who felt that enj oying the blessings of sci
Islam should not interfere with the state - all ence. , 16
those people I will call Kemalists.
Kemalists took seriously the Weberian answer to the riddle of the 'Euro
pean miracle' ; that is, that the reasons behind Western advancement could be
located precisely in Western cultural practices Y Kemalism understood
modernization not just as a question of acquiring technology, but as some
thing that could not be absorbed without a dense network of cultural practices
which made instrumental thought possible . For the Kemalists, these cultural
practices had a specific identity; they were the cultural practices of the West.
The discourse of modernity was centred in the figure of the West: the West as
Progress, as Reason, as the destiny of Man. The Kemalists thought that
modernization would only be possible by maintaining the link between West
em rationality and technology. Mustapha Kemal made a self-conscious effort
to reproduce 'Western civilization' in Turkey. The Grand National Assembly
followed its abolition of the Caliphate by passing a series of laws that at
tempted to construct Turkish society as Western society: the New Turk was to
be firmly rooted in 'Western civilization', without Arabic script, without the
Sharia, without Fez.
The response to the abolition ranged from various attempts to re-establish
the Caliphate (for example, Fuad of Egypt, or the Khalifat movement of S outh
Asia) , to schemes to reform it (for example, Rashid Rida) , to questioning its
relevance (Abd al Raziq) , to accepting the necessity of its abolition
(Mohammed Iqbal) . I B By abolishing the Caliphate and instituting a pro
gramme of radical modernization in what had been the most powerful Muslim
state, Kemalism transformed the horizon of what had been considered
politically possible. Kemal's project of constructing Turkey as a modem
national state, self-consciously modelled on the West, found resonance in
many other Muslim societies .
The discourse of Kemalism included the Pahlavis ; it included Bourguiba
who declared that his aim was to make Tunisia a modem nation on the
principles of the French Revolution; it also included Nasserism, Baathism,
Bhutto's 'Islamic S ocialism' . Indeed, all of these projects can be seen as
variants of Kemalism. They were all constructed on a horizon opened by
Kemal 4tatiirk.
2 70
'2,000 years
that had articulated their final vocabulary. For S addam Hussein, Baathist Iraq
was precisely heir to Nebuchadnezzar's Babylon. 19
In order to constitute themselves as Western, the Kemalists had to deny and
repress any traces of the Orient. 20 This was necessary since the West was
constituted in its opposition to the Orient. To modernize, the Kemalists
believed they had to Westernize; but, paradoxically, the very nature of
Westernization meant Orientalization. For, given that the identity of the West
was constituted vis -a.-vis the Orient, they had to continue to articulate an
identity of the Orient to constitute themselves as Western. The identity of the
Orient could not be reduced to an aggregate of features and practices. The
rej ection had to be of that which unified all these elements into the Orient.
Thus , to be Western, one had to rej ect
more
than the
had to reject more than the use of the veil, the fasting in Ramadan, and so on.
The rej ection had to be 'superhard' as it involved a certain metaphorical sur
plus : the rej ection of the impossibility of being the other. In this binary logic,
representing the West meant the impossibility of being the Orient, an other
which was not only the limit but also a threat to the West. Kemalism, by
orienting itself towards the West, and embarking on the project ofWesterniz
ation, necessarily (re)produced an Oriental subject. It did this precisely by
imposing a bifurcation on Muslim societies b etween the modem and the tra
ditional. What was involved in this system of oppositions was not just the
contrast of two positive concepts, but the construction of the identity of the
primary and privileged term through the presence of its other. The difference
between the primary and secondary term not only separates and makes poss
ible a hierarchy; at the s ame time it j oins them and makes possible the subver
sion of that hierarchy.21 Here, then, the secondary term cannot be outside the
system, for the interval between the secondary and primary term is the very
guarantee of the possibility of a system. It is this interval, this void between the
West and Islam, that modernization is supposed to fil1.zz
But to fill this gap has meant constructing Muslim societies in terms of a
spatial opposition between a modern metropolis and a traditional periphery.
Modernization is constituted by constructing a bipolarized social space, and it
is advocated as a means of closing this very same space. It is precisely this gap
2 71
between the modernized and traditional, between the urban and the rural,
between the West and Islam, that Kemalism articulated, and presented itself
as the only means of suturing. Indeed, these binary divisions (so beloved of
modernization theories) became the articulatory devices that grounded the
coherence of Kemalism itself. We can see how Orientalist accounts of Islam
find an echo in Kemalism. Muslim societies are seen in terms of a lack: the
absence of technology, the absence of rationality, the absence of civil society,
the absence of modernity. Conveniently, this lack can only be filled by imports
from the West.
We find, then, with the Kemalist discourse, a curious fact. On the one hand,
the Kemalists had to divide Muslim societies into modern ('Westernized')
sector and traditional ('Islamic') sector; but, at the same time, they had to
overcome this division. But this difference could not be resolved or settled precisely because it was, itself, constitutive of the Kemalist discourse . Islam
became the necessary constitutive outside of Kemalism, whose (differential)
identity could only be fixed by reference to what opposed and undermined its
unity.
As a consequence, the Kemalists followed a twin -track strategy with respect
to Islam. On the one hand, they increasingly attempted to marginalize Islam as
a public discourse, while simultaneously seeking to gain control of Islamic
institutions. This was done either by absorbing the institutions into the secular
mainstream educational system (for example, in Tunisia) and by introducing
secular curriculum into Islamic institutes (for example, in Eygpt) ; or it was
done by placing the head of the state at the head of the religious network (for
example, Morocco) and establishing a parallel religious network (for example,
Pahlavi Iran) . In this way, Kemalism displaced Islam from the public arena
controlled by the state.
And yet this act of displacement did not lead to the withering away of lslam;
rather, it opened the possibility for its rearticulation in populist discourses
(located in civil society) quite unencumbered by any association with state
power. 23 It is in this light we should see Kemalism not as the secularization of
Islam but as its politicization.
and Kemalism
The Kemalists' attempt to exclude and dominate Islam had the effect of
disarticulating and unsettling it. What had been part of its unthought
background became a subject of political intervention. It was not that Islam
was 'out there' in Muslim societies, but rather that its political availability was
inscri ed within Kemalism. The rise of Islamism was only possible when the
2 72
273
274
o f revolt fell upon the Islamists'. Even i f w e accept, for argument's sake, the
validity of this description, it is still not clear why the failure of Kemalist
regimes does not clear the ground for other discourses such as liberalism
and/or social democracy. What is clear is the way in which it opens up space
for theories like Khomeini's. For what is common to the discourses of
liberalism, social democracy, communism and Kemalism is that all these
discourses are founded upon modernity. What I want to do in the rest of the
chapter is to tell a story about the relationship between modernity, Kemalism,
the West and Islamism. I will show that it is by trying to understand this
relationship that we can make better sense of the rise of Islamism.
4. Westoxication: 32 Kemal Atatiirk Meets Ayatollah
Khomeini
The modernist character of Kemalist discourses has led many to assume that
the Islamist opposition to Kemalism is anti-modem. But is such a thing
possible? Can we Muslims reject modernity without our gesture of defiance
being recuperated as an example of a defiant gesture in modernity's repertory?
Is not modernity all-embracing?
Zubaida has shown why Khomeini's relationship to modernity cannot be
caricatured as a straightforward rejection. From Khomeini's political writings,
which Zubaida notes are not a literal recitation but a maj or reinterpretation of
traditional Shia doctrine, he focuses on some of the main preconditions
implicit in Khomeini's Al-Hukumah Al-Islamiya (Islamic Government) .33
Zubaida demonstrates how Khomeini's radical reinterpretation is heavily
dependent on key modem notions .34 Such dependence would appear
to confirm that it is impossible to position oneself outside modernity.35
If Khomeini, the ' arch-Anti-Modern' cannot escape modernity
then no one can. However, one of the most
'Muslim Fundamentalism
interesting observations that Zubaida makes is
has no intellectual sub
that despite Khomeini's dependency on modem
stance to it, therefore it
political concepts, his discourse is conducted must collapse. ,36
exclusively in the idiom of Islamic political
theory with hardly any reference to modem political doctrines.37 This, as
Zubaida rightly points out, distinguishes Khomeini from all the recent
Muslim political theorists .38 Khomeini does not feel it necessary to follow the
common strategy of Muslim apologists : he does not try and argue that Islam is
'real democracy', or that Islam anticipates socialism, and so on. There is no
attempt by Khomeini to try and locate Islam within a tradition of progressive
history in which maj or developments are redescribed as being originally
inspired by Islam. There is no obvious attempt to incorporate or even engage
with political concepts associated with the discourses of nationalism,
S I GN 0 ' T I M E S
275
Marxism, liberalism. Indeed, Khomeini does not even examine the pros and
cons of Western political theory. Rather, and in a move that Rorty replays,
Khomeini simply presents his vocabulary as a challenge to the Kemalist
hegemony.39 As Zubaida points out, Khomeini writes as if Western thought
did not exist. 40
I think this paradoxical relationship between Khomeini and modern political
thought is important. Letus be clear about what is at stake here. Ifthe identity of
a concept is a function of its usage, then clearly the use of a concept outside the
context of its ignoble beginnings would imply the modification ofthe identity of
the concept. Even though Khomeini makes no reference to E uropean political
theory, according to Zubaida his political writings only make sense in relation to
a number of concepts which have come to be associated with the Western
Europe an political t:raditionY I want to suggest that this non-reference to the
West is significant and is a symptom of the crisis of modernity.
1. Modernity
There is much debate about whether modernity is over or is still going on.
Those like Lyotard, who argue that it is over, argue that the history of modern
ity (the Holocaust, the corruptions of empires, mutually assured destruction,
ecocide) has subverted the promises of its grand narratives (Reason, En
lightenment, Progress) , thus putting them into question. This suspicion of
grand narratives is what Lyotard calls 'post-modernity' and regards it as a new
epoch. This going beyond modernity relies on a notion of modernity that has a
certain uniformity, one which can be encapsulated and one that has important
repercussions for our understanding of Kemalism. Kemalism, as has b een
noted, is structured around modernity. The weakening of the foundations of
modernity itself would also involve the weakening of the certainties of
Kemlism.
2.
More modernity . . .
276
277
Moclernity is a way of saying: 'only in the West' (as Weber goes on to say in the
above quote) . It may say many other things besides, but it always says this.
Indeed, this intrinsic relation between modernity and the West is central
to the way in which discourses of modernity situate Europe (and its
outre-mers) vis-a-vis the rest of tl1e planet. It is only Western civilization that
is universal, though, interestingly enough; even when the West has been
universalized, it still retains its identity as the West. The easy slippage
between modernization and Westernization, the ease by which we can locate 'The struggle of European liberals
and revolutionaries from the Middle
the central tenets of modernity back to
Ages onwards against clericalism and
their roots in ' our common European
the Christian religion were necessary
home', demonstrates the seamless way to remove the invocation of super
in which modernity just fades into the natural authority from political life
West and vice versa. Modernity, then, is and the same applies to Islam. 'so
not a type of discourse with a centre,
rather it is a discourse the centre of which is occupied by a particular identity.
278
Those people who think modernity has exhausted its possibilities are
inspired by a very specific reading of Nietzsche's account of nihilism. But, as
Warren reminds us, there are two distinct kinds of nihilism in Nietzsche :
European nihilism and the original Ancient nihilism. 5 1 When Nietzsche is
invoked it tends to be for the former nihilism; that is, the condition after the
death of God, when nothing is true and everything is permitted . This nihilism
arises from the interior of European culture, where the development of critical
practices has undermined the ability to believe in any certainty. The parallels
between Nietzsche's European nihilism and conventional accounts of
post-modernity are clear.
But my interest lies more in Nietzsche's account of the original (political)
nihilism: a nihilism that arises from the experience of political repression; a ni
hilism that contextualizes and historicizes the subordinated. This sense of
nihilism, I think, captures closely the effect of European domination on the
subj ects of that domination. The experience of colonization brings forth the
contingency of the world of those who have been colonized : their sacred
narratives become (for the colonizer) j ust another collection of stories . The
emergence of particularity as a particularity is related to the unevenness in the
relations ofpower: only the powerful can articulate themselves as Masters ofthe
Universe; while it is only the colonized, the defeated, who suspect the
significance or the usefulness of their final vocabularies - the powerful are not
called to do the same kind of questioning. This description would see
'post-modernity' emerging in the periphery and migrating to the centre via
decolonization. Post-modernity, then, is not something that succeeds or
eliminates
modernity,
but
rather
something that is
found
alongside
modernity. 52
Decolonization, coming
2 79
280
authenticity, i n the context o f the periphery, have the same logic a s similar
types of politics at the centre.
At the heart of this issue is a question: is either the form or the content of a
discourse sufficient to allow us to characterize a meta-nanative as such? What
makes a meta-narrative a meta-nanative : its unbending nature, its imperial
ambition, or its place of enunciation?
I would argue that it is only possible to classifY Islamism as a meta-narrative
if we ignore the conditions of its enunciation; that is, forget its marginal status.
In other words, by eradicating the hierarchical world order and focusing on
the presumed content of Islamism we can describe it as one of the last
foundationalist discourses. But having said this, is any attempt to constitute a
centre, regardless of its context and its conditions of enunciation, sufficient to
permit us to categorize that discourse as a meta-narrative? For isn't it precisely
the impossibility of having discourses without centres that has led various
post-modern thinkers to propose notions such as 'strategic essentialism'
(Spivak) or 'weak thought' (Vattimo) ?S8 What these notions try to do is to
recognize that a meta-narrative is a meta-narrative not because it has a centre,
but rather because its centre is strong. The solution they see is not to take on
the strategy of 'infantile Leftism' (which would support the abolishing of
centres) but, rather, to replace them with 'weak centres' .
But i f i t i s the strength o f the centre that makes the difference, then what
makes the centre strong? One answer would be that a centre would be weak if
its discourse recognizes its own indeterminate, contingent and provisional
nature. Another way of answering the same question would be to see the
strength of a centre as a function of power. By redescribing post-modernity
from the perspective of the periphery we can perhaps see th e limits of the
peripheral politics of authenticity. Authenticity refers to an attempt to recover
a pristine identity which has been suppressed. Thus, in the context of the
discussion of Islamism, words like 'revival', 'resurgence', and 'return' are
used. However, if Islam does not have an essence, its use is a reinterpretation,
and any 'return' or 'recovery' is only that which is articulated as such.
This is to say, then, that one cannot understand a discourse by focusing only
on its form and!or content; the conditions of its enunciation are vital. S9 But in
the context of the periphery, the conditions of enunciation are, by definition,
weak. This is why I think the discourse of Islamism cannot be read as another
(pre)modernist meta-narrative. It may have the discursive economy of the
grand narratives of the Enlightenment, but its conditions of enunciation are
such that it cannot be confused with them.
An attempt to constitute a centre from a position of weakness, from the
margins, cannot have the same hardness as a centre at the heart of a
hierarchical world order. Islamism exists as a precarious alternative to
Kemalism; it cannot but help engage with other traditions and discourses. It is
constantly being asked to account for itselfin the language that is not its own; it
S I GN 0 ' T I M E S
281
is always having to begin from a point it would not choose (for example,
President Carter's description of intervention in Iran as being part of 'ancient
history' - as though it had, apparently, no bearing on the anti -Americanism of
the Iranian Revolution) . In this sense too, then, the problem of the decentring
of the West has to be understood in Gramscian rather than Spenglerian terms .
For here the hegemonic order that naturalized and sedimented a certain
narrative structure has broken down, even though tremendously unequal
power structures are still in place. The West is being decentred to the extent
that its claim that 'there is no alternative' no longer has the force it once did .
Interestingly, then, Islamism does not become the 'other' of post
modernity, but one of the possibilities of de centring of the West. Islamist
movements are a continuation and radicalization of the process of decolonization.
The Iranian revolution looked towards Islam, not France, Russia or China, as
its inspiration and 'model'. To see Islamism as a continuation of decoloniz
ation in other contexts does not mean we can easily fit it within the framework
of modernity. This is where Zubaida, by separating the content of Khomeini's
theory from its conditions of enunciation, that is, by making the division
between the text (form + content) and the context - concentrating, instead, on
the content almost exclusively - fails to see that Khomeini is one of the
possibilities of the post-modern condition. That is, Khomeini's political
significance is only possible in the context of a de centred West. That is, until
the Iranian revolution it was not possible to
'Islamic revivalist movements are
think beyond the great models of political
not sweeping the Middle East and
modernity. Now one can say that Islamist
are not likely to be the wave of the
discourses do not have to present them future.'6o
selves as products of, or as coming
from, the terrain of Western political discourse.
First objection
One could say that all this talk of post-modernity and decentring is all very well
for philosophers and 'wannabe' philosophers, but in reality such descriptions
have no influence on how a Muslim would lead her everyday life . Language
games have their own communities, and not everyone will find descriptions of
decentring interesting or useful.
But I would argue that the expression 'decentring of the West' is an
abbreviation for a complex set of processes which have tangible effects,
particularly in that these processes refer to the boundaries of a cognitive
282
Second objection
Decentring of the West makes no sense in the context of the new world order.
Rather than being decentred, the West is the only centre left standing. The fall
of the Soviet empire confirms the hegemony of the West, and the
state-of-the-art Western technology that blew S addam out of Kuwait, the
precision-guided munitions that shattered the so-called 'fourth largest army
in the world', demonstrate that no new rival to the West is likely. There is no
alternative to the West. 62
But to what extent was Moscow an alternative to the West - as opposed to
being an alternative to Washington? From outside the West, both socialism
and capitalism were part of Western philosophical traditions. As Young
writes : 'Marxism, as a body of knowledge, remains complicit with and even
extends the system to which it is opposed.'63 From the point of view of the
Islamists, the collapse of socialism is not read as the failure of viable
alternatives to the West. Socialism and capitalism are both considered to be
part of the same Western civilization; they are both, to borrow Connolly's
labels, 'civilisations of productivity' . 64 For the Islamist, the disintegration of
one of the twin pillars of Western hegemony is confirmation of the decentring
of the West.
The recent panic in the academy over multi -culturalism should also temper
283
some of the post-Cold War triumphalism. After all, what kind of a triumph is it
that requires the victors to fight tooth and nail to defend a cultural canon the
victory of which is being so loudly proclaimed? The importance ofKhomeini's
style of intervention hints at a paradigmatic shift. The reason why the failures
of the Kemalist regimes have not lead to a clearing for other political dis
courses - such as liberalism or social-democracy - is because these discourses
were all centred on the idea of the West. The decentring of the West weak
ens not only Kemalism but also other discourses that are anchored in the
figure of the West and were made possible by the expansion of the West.
The 'entrenched vocabulary' of the Western political tradition is no longer
strong enough to rule out of order the vague promises of an Islamist vocabu
lary.
Conclusion
Imagine L. is a Muslim student in an American university. She is sitting in
front of Professor D . who teaches courses in Philosophy and in Business
Studies. Professor D . is trying to convince her to take his course in
Philosophy. L. is not wholly convinced; she says : 'I'm not sure, Professor; I'm
not really into Western Philosophy.'
'But why not?' asks Professor D.
L. replies that it seems to her that philosophy is nothing more than the
ideology of the Western ethos.
'Let me explain, ' says Professor D . , with a smile. 'Your statement is
condemned to permanent incoherence; it is meaningless. What permits you to
speak of ideology? For the distinction between ideology and philosophy is a
philosophical distinction. Ideology means a particular discourse that has
unirersalistic ambitions . Now, the opposition between the contingent particu
larity and the universally valid is a philosophical one . To criticize Western
philosophy can only be done by using the weapons of Western philosophy
itself. To speak outside Western metaphysics is impossible, for it has no
outside. By saying that philosophy is an ideology of the West, you are already
,
engaged in Western philosophy. 65
L. thinks for while, a haiku by Ishida Hayko comes to her mind, but she
can't remember exactly how it goes : something about a caged eagle, feeling
lonely, flapping its wings . L. begins to speak, the Professor stares out of his
window, it will be October soon.
She says: 'I heard once that an ex-US army officer told General Giap that
the Americans had never lost a battle in Vietnam. Giap replied that this was
true, but it was also irrelevant.'
284
Notes
1. R. Rorty, Contingency, Irony and Solidarity (Cambridge University Press, Cambridge,
1 9 89) p. 73 .
2. Ibid.
3. G.W.F Hegel, The Philosophy 0/History (New York: Dover Publications, 1 956) p. 360.
4. See, for example, E. Said, ClTVering Islam (London: Routledge, 1981) where he examines
some of the aspects of the threat and confusion Islamist movements cause both politically and
analytically.
5. My descriptions of 'Islamic Fundamentalism' have been mainly culled from the follow
ing: F. Ajami, The Arab Predicament (Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 1 9 8 1 ) ;
M. Fisher, 'Islam and the Revolt of the Petty Bourgeoisie', in Daedalus, vol. III, Winter 1 982,
pp. 1 0 1-25 ; M. Gilesenan, Recognizing Islam (London: LB. Tauris, 1982); F. Halliday and
H. Alwai, eds, State and Ideology in the Middle East and Pakistan (London: Macmillan, 1988); and
S. Hunter, ed., The Politics 0/ Islamic Revivalism (Bloomington, Ill : Indiana University Press,
1 988).
6. V. S. Naipaul, Among the Believers (London: Andre Deutsch, 1981) p. 398.
7. For an interpretative understanding of Heidegger's concept of culture as it relates to this
point, see H. Dreyfus, Being-in-the- World (London/Cambridge: M.LT. Press, 1990) pp. 1 5-25.
8. To what extent Islam was an important factor in the mobilization of the Iranian people, in
opposition to the anti-Pahlavi regime, is a vexed question. S ome, like Fred Halliday (Iran:
Dictatorship and Development [Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1979]) feel it was the proletariat (in the
form of the oil workers) 'flexing its muscles' that brought down the regime. Others, like Suroosh
Irfani, Revolutionary Islam m Iran (London: Zed Books, 1983) acknowledge the importance of
Islam in mobilization and organization of the Iranian Revolution.
9. Dislocation involves a certain loss of coherence when an event cannot be explained in the
terms of the context of which it occurs. Therefore it reveals the fragility and the limits of that
context.
10. E. Laclau, New Reflections 0/ the Revolution 0/ Our Time (London: Verso Books, 1 990)
pp. 43-60.
1 1 . See S . Zubaida, Islam, the People and the State (London: Routledge, 1 989) pp. 1-3 and
3 8-41 ; and E. Abrahamian, 'Khomeini: Fundamentalist or Populist?', New Left Review 186,
March-April 1992, pp. l 03-5. They both point to the inappropriateness of the label 'Islamic
Fundamentalism' to describe various Islamic-orientated projects.
12. A. Ahady, 'The Decline of Islamic Fundamentalism', Journal o/Asian andAfrican Studies,
vol. XXVII, no. 3-4, 1992, p. 23 1 .
1 3 . See R.A Hinnebach's comments o n the social bases o f the Syrian Islamists, and Norma
Salem's observation on Islamists in Tunisia, in Hunter, The Politics o/Islamic Revivalism, pp. 48
and 159-60 respectively. M. Moaddel finds that even in Iran almost 42 per cent of the members of
the first parliament came from non-theological intellectual backgrounds; see his Class, Politics and
Ideology in the Iranian Revolution (New York: Columbia University Press, 1993) p. 225 .
14. If we use this criterion to describe Islamists, are we not also including the Gulf regimes, as
well other Muslim regimes which use Islam as a marker oflegitimacy? I would argue that all those
regimes which use Islam as a marker oflegitimacy are still trying to maintain a distinction between
their identity and Islamic metaphors. That is, their vocabulary is implicitly or explicitly organized
around a distinction between the ethical and the political. Thus, in this case, Islam acts as a
marker of legitimacy because it remains an ethical signifier. It does not become a political
signifier.
1 5 . Zubaida, Islam, the People and the State, p. 42.
16. Mustapha Kemal Atatiirk, A Speech Delivered by Mustapha KemalAtatiirk, 1 927 (Ankara:
Basbakanlik Basimevi, 1 9 83), p. 10.
17. See for example where Bryan Turner, in his Mar.rism and the End o/Orientalism (London:
Routledge, 1 974), shows the importance in tlle work ofWeber of Islam as a counterfactual model
to the rise of capitalism. The counterfactuality ofIslam resides in its cultural difference between it
and Protestant Europe. As Turner argues, this difference is not as decisive or deep as is presented
in the work of Weber and subsequent modernization theorists.
18. H. Enyat, Modem Islamic Political Thought (London: Macmillan Press, 1 982) gives a
S I GN 0 ' TIMES
285
detailed account of the theoretical ferment that the abolition of the Caliphate caused amongst
Muslim intellectuals.
1 9 . There is much debate as to the extent to which Arab nationalism excludes Islam. Arab
nationalists of various hues tend to push the 'Ummayadist' line about the indivisibility of Islam
and Arabism. However, to the extent Islam is subsumed as either the 'first Arab revolution' or the
'genius of Arabism', it is clear that Arabist and other forms of Kemalism are willing to concede
only a secondary (and private) role for Islam.
20. It is necessary to distinguish between the hegemonic logic ofKemalism, which made a very
clear rejection of the Orient, and more hybridized (and more nuanced) positions in which the
rejection of the Orient was more selective, emerging away from the state centres. In other words,
Kemalism did not eliminate all previous associations and practices which involved Islam, even
though it did have an impact upon many of them. Kemalism was hegemonic in articulating a
central subject position of a de- Islamicized subj ect. However, this position opened the terrain of
other possible subject positions articulated around it; ones that represented more hybridized
subjectivities that were able to articulate, in different shapes and forms, Islamic and Kemalist
elements.
2 1 . J Derrida, Positions (London: Athlone Press, 1 9 87) pp . 48-5 2 .
2 2 . See L. Binder's Islamic Liberalism (Chicago : The University of Chicago Press, 1 9 88) for a
discussion of the link between Orientalism, modernization theory and Muslim societies.
23 . A. al-Azmeh, 'Islam and Arab Nationalism', Review ofMiddle East Studies, vol. 8, 1 988,
makes a similar point regarding the split between Islamism and Arab Nationalism as being
analogous to the division between state and civil society.
24. Laclau, New Reflections, p. 66.
2 5 . Ibid.
26. Rorty makes the distinction between ironists and metaphysicians based on their different
approaches to epistemology. See especially Irony, Contingenry, Solidarity, pp. 73-8.
27. Laclau, New Reflections, pp. 65-6 .
28. This use of 'occurrent' or 'presence-at-hand' is taken from Dreyfus's translation of
Heidegger's Vorhandenheit, in Dreyfus, Being-in-the- World, p. xi.
29. See E. Laclau and C. Mouffe, 'Post-Marxism without Apologies', New Left Review, 1 6 6 ,
November-Decemb er 1987 - a heroic effort t o explain this to Geras - alas, to no avail.
30. Laclau, New Reflections, pp. 28-3 1 .
3 1 . S e e especially Islam, the People and the State, p . 1 6 1 , where Zubaida comments how so
much ofthe writing on the Muslim world suffers from slipping from the historically specific to the
cultural essential.
3 2 . This term is used by JA. Ahmad, Occidentosis (Berkeley: Mizan Press, 1 9 84) to describe
the cultural policy of the Pahlavi regime.
3 3 1 This monograph can be found in Khomeini's Islam and Revolution, trans. H. Algar
(Berkeley, Mizan Press, 1 980) .
3 4 . S e e especially Zubaida, Islam, the People and the State, pp . 1 8-26.
35. On the impossibility of escaping modernity, see David Kolb, The Critique ofPure Modemity
(Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 1 988) pp . 26 1-2 . See also Laclau, New Reflections,
pp. 187-8 for the impossibility of asserting Third World Identities in exclusive opposition to
universalism. Interestingly, for Descombes, in his Modern French Philosophy (Cambridge :
Cambridge University Press, 1 980) pp. 1 3 6-40, one cannot even criticize Western metaphysics as
being the ideology of the West, since the distinction between philosophy and ideology is itself a
product of Western metaphysics.
3 6 . V.S . Naipaul, as quoted in Said, Covering Islam, p. 7.
3 7 . Zubaida, Islam, the People and the State, p. 1 3 .
3 8 . Ibid.
39. Rorty declares: 'Conforming to my own percepts, I am not going to offer arguments against
the vocabulary I want to replace . ' Irony, Contingenry, Solidarity, p. 9. Alas, he forgets to cite
Khomeini.
40 . Zubaida, Islam, the People and the State, p. 1 3 .
4 1 . Ibid.
42. R. Rorty, Essays on Heidegger and Others (Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 1 9 9 1 )
p. 67.
286
45. In a similar light, see Connolly's remarks on the resignation of Rorty's politics, in his
Politics andAmbiguity (Madison: The University of Wisconsin Press, 1987) pp. 1 20-22.
46. R. Young, White Mythologies (London: Routledge, 1 990) pp. 1 9-20 .
4 7 . R . Carr, Th e Speaator, 1 1 May 1 9 92, p. 27.
48. W. E. Connolly, Political Theory andModernity (Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1 988) p. 1 .
49. M . Weber, Th e Protestant Ethic and the SPirit ofCapitalism (New York: Grove Press, 1 957),
p. 25; J. Habennas, The Philosophical Discourse ofModernity (Cambridge: Polity Press, 1 987).
50. F. Halliday, 'The Iranian Revolution and its Implications', New Left Review 1 66,
November-December 1 987, p. 34.
5 1 . M. Warren, Nietzsche 's Political Thought (Cambridge, Mass.: M.LT. Press, 1 988) p. 14.
52. The experience of decolonization in the 'New World' (such as the American continent,
Australia, New Zealand) illustrates the undecidable nature ofits relation to modernity. In the case
of Latin America, the independence movement started off as a loyalist reaction to the Spanish
Crown in the face of the Napoleonic invasion of the Iberian peninsula. Here decolonization did
not imply a questioning of the certainties of modernity; rather, it demonstrated its hegemonic
character.
5 3 . Young, WhiteMythologies, pp. I I-15.
54. Taken from Led Zeppelin's 'A Stairway to Heaven', this line was used as an epigraph by
Bret Easton Elis for his novel Less than Zero (London: Pan Books, 1 986).
55. Of course, such a description would be open to attack on the lines of: 'By enlarging the
notion of post-modernity you make it meaningless.' Such an objection could only come from
within the paradigm of referential language theory; i.e., that post-modernity has a specific positive
content.
56. Salman Rushdie, The Times, 1 1 February 1993, p. 4.
57. See Aziz al-Azmeh's 'The Discourse of Cultural Authenticity: Islamist Revivalism and
Enlightenment Universalism', in E. Deutsch, Culture and Modernity (Hawaii: Hawaii University
Press, 1 99 1 ) . The curious thing about Azmeh's intervention is how he is able to criticize the
essentialist logic of authenticity in the Arab world, but is unable or unwillin g to overcome an
equally essentialist notion of the universality of the West.
58. For 'strategic essentialism' see G. Spivik, In Other Worlds (New York: Methuen, 1 99 1 )
p. 205 . For 'weak thought' s e e G. Vattimo, 'Dialectica, Diferencia y Pensamiento Debil', in
G. Vattimo and P .A. Rovatti, eds, El Pensamiento Dibil (Madrid: Catedra, 1 990) pp. 3 1-6 .
59. M. Foucault, The Archaeology of Knowledge (London: Tavistock, 1 98 6) pp. 3 2-8, and
1 03-4.
60. Z. Brezinski, Power and Principle (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1 9 8 1 )
p. 564.
6 1 . For example, Fred Halliday writing on the eve of the Iranian Revolution discussed possible
scenarios for a post-Pahlavi Iran. These included: a military dictatorship, a socialist revolution, a
continuation of the dynasty. There is no indication of the possibility of an Islamist alternative. See
his Iran: Diaatorship and Development (Middlesex: Penguin, 1 979), pp. 300-309.
62. This thesis has been most sensationally advanced by Francis Fukiyama, The End ofHistory
and the Last Man (London: Hamish Hamilton, 1992).
63. Young, White Mythologies, pp. 2-3 .
64. Connolly, Politics andAmbiguity, pp. 76-82.
65. This is the argument advanced by Descombes (1 986), who reads the Foucault-Derrida
debate as debate about the possibility of transcending the limits of Western reason, see pp. 1 3 6-9.
Notes on C ontributors
Glenn Bowman
Alktta J. Norval
is Lecturer
University of Essex.
Renata Saled
Ljubljana.
Bobby S ayyid
Cornell University.
Zoltan Szankay
Germany.
287
288
Index
indeterminacy of 1 3 3-4
and nationalism 225-6
in S erbian populism 2 1 4-20
and Slovenian opposition 223-4
see also hegemony
Augustine, S aint 85
authenticity, politics of279-8 1
availability of a discourse 272-3
289
290
T H E M A K I N G OF P O L I T I C A L I D E N T I T I E S
INDEX
291
Gramsci, Antonio 1 1 7
Green threshold 234-44, 248-50,
25 1 -6
Greens (Slovenia) 223-4
grounds
and conditions 58-60
formal, real and complete 49-52
as reflective determinations 9 1 ,
92-3
Guzzoni, Ute 94, 96
292
identification
Lacan on 3 1 , 1 97
and lack of identity 3 , 1 3-17, 3 1-5
with the nation, and fantasy 2 1 1-14,
2 1 7-19, 228-3 1
and political ordering 3 5-7
identitary logic 1 1 8-24, 1 3 2-3
identity
construction of 1-5 , 1 20-24
deconstructive operation on 93-100
democratic logic of 1 1 9
and essentialism 1 75-6
Hegel on 44-7, 82-93, 1 00-1 01n17
and national community 140-47, 1 5 7
and new political space 234-7, 255
philosophical concept of 8 1-3 , 9 1-2
as return of the thing to itself
59-60
Imaginary-Real- Symbolic 52
imagined communities 140-47
immigration discourse 1 8 6-9
in-itselflfor-itself 54-5 , 57
indetermination, horror of 1 3 2-3
individual, and modernity 105-10
Inkatha 123
insider/outsider strategies 1 25-3 1
internationalism 149-5 0
intifoda 160-,.64
Islam, identity of 266-74
Islamism ('Islamic Fundamentalism')
265-8, 271-5, 279-83
Israel
and Jewish diaspora 1 5 8 , 1 66n7
and Palestinian identity 144-6, 1 5 3-5 ,
1 5 6-7, 160-65
I N D EX
293
modernity
and East European revolutions 1 1 8
and Islam 265-6, 268-7 1 , 274-83
and legitimacy 107-8
liberty and equality in 1 03 , 1 04-1 0
p olitical ideology o f 1 , 3 5 , 234,
241-54, 256-8, 259n5
and problem of order 1 3 2
Mohammed Iqbal 269
Mohr, Jean 1 5 1
moral majorities, East European 226-8
Mouffe, Chantal, Hegemony and Socialist
Strategy (with Ernesto Laclau) 1 43 ,
1 44, 147, 1 6 1 , 1 6 5 , 1 67nI 8, 2 1 5 ,
229, 245 , 256
Murray, John M. 263n24
Murray, M. 1 1 7
Murvin, Junior 178
Mzika, Ezekiel 1 82
294
THE M A K I N G OF P O L I T I C A L I D E N T I T I E S
Norval, Aletta 7
Nozick, Robert 1 0 6
223-5
order, political
Praxis 207
theory of 1 7-23
Lacan
Other
enjoyment of, and ethnic hatred
2 1 1-12
Rabin, Yitzhak 1 60
Race Relations Act 1 8 9
racism
apartheid as exemplary form of 1 1 8- 1 9
and Britishness 1 9 5
complexity of struggle against 1 7 1-2
essentialist resistance to 1 9 9
gro unds o f 5 8
Palestine Liberation Organization
(PLO) 1 6 2-3
Palestinian national identity 1 3 8-40,
142, 1 44-65
parapraxis 3 8n23
particularism 4-5
Rastafari
Rawls, John 1 0 6
Real, the
plurality 1 09- 1 0 ,
172-3
in H e g el 53--8, 62,
re gg a e 1 7 8-9, 1 8 1
8 3-93
renaissance 5 9
representation, a s self-consciousness 77
1 07-8 , 1 09- 1 0
politicization of s o ci al id entities 4
repression, logic of 34
resistances, location o 1 82-3 , 1 9 1-200
responsive and affirmingyes 76-83 ,
9 9-1 00
P o sel , D. 1 2 9
INDEX
Rhikhoto 125
295
Spinoza, Baruch 82
rights 5
spontaneity, as self-determination 4 1 , 45
Stalinism 214-15
Rousseau,Jean-Jacques 1 05
Social Contraa 1 04
Rushdie (Salman) affair 1 7 1-2
subjectivity
and freedom 1 2-14
and lack 1 2-17, 27, 3 1
as non -transparent 42
and self-determination 4 1
suture, logic o f 33-4
Saled, Renata 7
Sandys, Duncan 1 87
symbolic castration 69
Sayer, Derek 1 1 5, 1 1 8, 1 1 9
Szankay, Zoltan 7
Sayyid, Bobby 8
Schelling, Friedrich 82, 1 00n12
Schmitt, Carl 1 09, 1 1 1nn6-7
Scotus, Duns 29
self-consciousness 42
1Locqueville, Alexis d e 1 04
224
separatism 1 92
totalitarianism 2 1 8, 261n16
totality 5 1-3 , 8 1
165
transcendental argument 2
transference 40
157
244-6
Socialist Youth Organization (Slovenia)
223
society effect, and power 1 7-19, 23
Solidamosc 234-55 passim, 262-3n23
Sore!, Georges 24-6, 30, 3 6
undecidability 1 1 7, 133
United National Leadership of the
Uprising (palestine) 1 62, 1 64,
169n46
296
violence 23-7, 3 0
Yamato, Gloria 1 82
Young, Robert, White Mythologies 276-7,
282
Yugoslavia, politics in former 205-3 1
Zac, Lilian 6
Zizek, Slavoj 6, 1 00-1 0 InI7, 141
Zubaida, S . 274-5 , 281
Zupanov, Josip 206