Authors: Professor Michael Hardt,Antonio Negri
Tags: #Philosophy, #Political, #Political Science, #General, #American Government
munication ofstruggles. One such obstacle is the absence ofa
recognition ofa common enemy against which the struggles are
directed. Beijing, Los Angeles, Nablus, Chiapas, Paris, Seoul: the
situations all seem utterly particular, but in fact they all directly attack A L T E R N A T I V E S W I T H I N E M P I R E
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the global order ofEmpire and seek a real alternative. Clarifying the
nature ofthe common enemy is thus an essential political task. A
second obstacle, which is really corollary to the first, is that there
is no common language ofstruggles that could ‘‘translate’’ the partic-
ular language ofeach into a cosmopolitan language. Struggles in
other parts ofthe world and even our own struggles seem to be
written in an incomprehensible foreign language. This too points
toward an important political task: to construct a new common
language that facilitates communication, as the languages of anti-
imperialism and proletarian internationalism did for the struggles
ofa previous era. Perhaps this needs to be a new type ofcommunica-
tion that functions not on the basis of resemblances but on the basis
of differences: a communication of singularities.
Recognizing a common enemy and inventing a common
language ofstruggles are certainly important political tasks, and we
will advance them as far as we can in this book, but our intuition
tells us that this line ofanalysis finally fails to grasp the real potential presented by the new struggles. Our intuition tells us, in other
words, that the model ofthe horizontal articulation ofstruggles in
a cycle is no longer adequate for recognizing the way in which
contemporary struggles achieve global significance. Such a model
in fact blinds us to their real new potential.
Marx tried to understand the continuity ofthe cycle ofprole-
tarian struggles that were emerging in nineteenth-century Europe
in terms ofa mole and its subterranean tunnels. Marx’s mole would
surface in times of open class conflict and then retreat underground
again—not to hibernate passively but to burrow its tunnels, moving
along with the times, pushing forward with history so that when
the time was right (1830, 1848, 1870), it would spring to the surface
again. ‘‘Well grubbed old mole!’’17 Well, we suspect that Marx’s old
mole has finally died. It seems to us, in fact, that in the contemporary
passage to Empire, the structured tunnels ofthe mole have been
replaced by the infinite undulations ofthe snake.18 The depths
ofthe modern world and its subterranean passageways have in
postmodernity all become superficial. Today’s struggles slither si-
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lently across these superficial, imperial landscapes. Perhaps the in-
communicability ofstruggles, the lack ofwell-structured, communi-
cating tunnels, is in fact a strength rather than a weakness—a strength
because all ofthe movements are immediately subversive in them-
selves and do not wait on any sort ofexternal aid or extension to
guarantee their effectiveness. Perhaps the more capital extends its
global networks ofproduction and control, the more powerful any
singular point ofrevolt can be. Simply by focusing their own powers,
concentrating their energies in a tense and compact coil, these
serpentine struggles strike directly at the highest articulations of
imperial order. Empire presents a superficial world, the virtual center
ofwhich can be accessed immediately from any point across the
surface. If these points were to constitute something like a new cycle
ofstruggles, it would be a cycle defined not by the communicative
extension ofthe struggles but rather by their singular emergence,
by the intensity that characterizes them one by one. In short, this
new phase is defined by the fact that these struggles do not link
horizontally, but each one leaps vertically, directly to the virtual
center ofEmpire.
From the point ofview ofthe revolutionary tradition, one
might object that the tactical successes ofrevolutionary actions
in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries were all characterized
precisely by the capacity to blast open the
weakest link
ofthe imperialist chain, that this is the ABC ofrevolutionary dialectics, and thus
it would seem today that the situation is not very promising. It is
certainly true that the serpentine struggles we are witnessing today
do not provide any clear revolutionary tactics, or maybe they are
completely incomprehensible from the point ofview oftactics.
Faced as we are with a series ofintense subversive social movements
that attack the highest levels ofimperial organization, however, it
may be no longer useful to insist on the old distinction between
strategy and tactics. In the constitution ofEmpire there is no longer
an ‘‘outside’’ to power and thus no longer weak links—ifby weak
link we mean an external point where the articulations ofglobal
power are vulnerable.19 To achieve significance, every struggle must
attack at the heart ofEmpire, at its strength. That fact, however,
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does not give priority to any geographical regions, as ifonly social
movements in Washington, Geneva, or Tokyo could attack the
heart ofEmpire. On the contrary, the construction ofEmpire, and
the globalization ofeconomic and cultural relationships, means that
the virtual center ofEmpire can be attacked from any point. The
tactical preoccupations ofthe old revolutionary school are thus
completely irretrievable; the only strategy available to the struggles
is that ofa constituent counterpower that emerges from within
Empire.
Those who have difficulty accepting the novelty and revolu-
tionary potential ofthis situation from the perspective ofthe strug-
gles themselves might recognize it more easily from the perspective
ofimperial power, which is constrained to react to the struggles.
Even when these struggles become sites effectively closed to com-
munication, they are at the same time the maniacal focus of the
critical attention ofEmpire.20 They are educational lessons in the
classroom ofadministration and the chambers ofgovernment—
lessons that demand repressive instruments. The primary lesson is
that such events cannot be repeated ifthe processes ofcapitalist
globalization are to continue. These struggles, however, have their
own weight, their own specific intensity, and moreover they are
immanent to the procedures and developments ofimperial power.
They invest and sustain the processes ofglobalization themselves.
Imperial power whispers the names ofthe struggles in order to
charm them into passivity, to construct a mystified image ofthem,
but most important to discover which processes ofglobalization
are possible and which are not. In this contradictory and paradoxical
way the imperial processes ofglobalization assume these events,
recognizing them as both limits and opportunities to recalibrate
Empire’s own instruments. The processes ofglobalization would
not exist or would come to a halt ifthey were not continually both
frustrated and driven by these explosions of the multitude that touch
immediately on the highest levels ofimperial power.
Two-Headed Eagle
The emblem ofthe Austro-Hungarian Empire, an eagle with two
heads, might give an adequate initial representation ofthe contem-
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porary form of Empire. But whereas in the earlier emblem the
two heads looked outward to designate the relative autonomy and
peaceful coexistence of the respective territories, in our case the
two heads would have to be turned inward, each attacking the other.
The first head ofthe imperial eagle is a juridical structure and
a constituted power, constructed by the machine ofbiopolitical
command. The juridical process and the imperial machine are always
subject to contradictions and crises. Order and peace—the eminent
values that Empire proposes—can never be achieved but are none-
theless continually reproposed. The juridical process ofthe constitu-
tion ofEmpire lives this constant crisis that is considered (at least
by the most attentive theoreticians) the price ofits own develop-
ment. There is, however, always a surplus. Empire’s continual ex-
tension and constant pressure to adhere ever more closely to the
complexity and depth ofthe biopolitical realm force the imperial
machine when it seems to resolve one conflict continually to open
others. It tries to make them commensurate with its project, but
they emerge once again as incommensurable, with all the elements
ofthe new terrain mobile in space and flexible in time.
The other head ofthe imperial eagle is the plural multitude
ofproductive, creative subjectivities ofglobalization that have
learned to sail on this enormous sea. They are in perpetual motion
and they form constellations of singularities and events that impose
continual global reconfigurations on the system. This perpetual
motion can be geographical, but it can refer also to modulations
ofform and processes ofmixture and hybridization. The relationship
between ‘‘system’’ and ‘‘asystemic movements’’ cannot be flattened
onto any logic ofcorrespondence in this perpetually modulating
atopia.21 Even the asystemic elements produced by the new multi-
tude are in fact global forces that cannot have a commensurate
relationship, even an inverted one, with the system. Every insurrec-
tional event that erupts within the order ofthe imperial system
provokes a shock to the system in its entirety. From this perspective,
the institutional frame in which we live is characterized by its radical
contingency and precariousness, or really by the unforeseeability
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ofthe
sequences of events
—sequences that are always more briefor
more compact temporally and thus ever less controllable.22 It be-
comes ever more difficult for Empire to intervene in the unforesee-
able temporal sequences ofevents when they accelerate their tempo-
rality. The most relevant aspect that the struggles have demonstrated
may be sudden accelerations, often cumulative, that can become
virtually simultaneous, explosions that reveal a properly ontological
power and unforeseeable attack on the most central equilibria of
Empire.
Just as Empire in the spectacle ofits force continually deter-
mines systemic recompositions, so too new figures ofresistance are
composed through the sequences ofthe events ofstruggle. This is
another fundamental characteristic of the existence of the multitude
today,
within
Empire and
against
Empire. New figures ofstruggle and new subjectivities are produced in the conjuncture ofevents,
in the universal nomadism, in the general mixture and miscegena-
tion ofindividuals and populations, and in the technological meta-
morphoses ofthe imperial biopolitical machine. These new figures
and subjectivities are produced because, although the struggles are
indeed antisystemic, they are not posed
merely against
the imperial system—they are not simply negative forces. They also express,
nourish, and develop positively their own constituent projects; they
work toward the liberation ofliving labor, creating constellations
ofpowerful singularities. This constituent aspect ofthe movement
ofthe multitude, in its myriad faces, is really the positive terrain
ofthe historical construction ofEmpire. This is not a historicist
positivity but, on the contrary, a positivity ofthe
res gestae
ofthe multitude, an antagonistic and creative positivity. The deterritorializing power ofthe multitude is the productive force that sustains
Empire and at the same time the force that calls for and makes
necessary its destruction.
At this point, however, we should recognize that our metaphor
breaks down and that the two-headed eagle is not really an adequate
representation ofthe relationship between Empire and the multi-
tude, because it poses the two on the same level and thus does not
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recognize the real hierarchies and discontinuities that define their
relationship. From one perspective Empire stands clearly over the
multitude and subjects it to the rule ofits overarching machine, as
a new Leviathan. At the same time, however, from the perspective
ofsocial productivity and creativity, from what we have been calling
the ontological perspective, the hierarchy is reversed. The multi-
tude is the real productive force of our social world, whereas Empire
is a mere apparatus ofcapture that lives only offthe vitality of
the multitude—as Marx would say, a vampire regime ofaccumu-
lated dead labor that survives only by sucking off the blood of
the living.
Once we adopt this ontological standpoint, we can return to