Authors: Professor Michael Hardt,Antonio Negri
Tags: #Philosophy, #Political, #Political Science, #General, #American Government
the value and limitations ofpostmodernist and postcolonialist theo-
ries is a first step in this project.
Politics of Difference
In order to appreciate fully the critical powers of postmodernist
discourses, one must first focus on the modern forms of sovereignty.
As we saw in the previous sections, the world ofmodern sovereignty
is a Manichaean world, divided by a series ofbinary oppositions
that define Selfand Other, white and black, inside and outside,
ruler and ruled. Postmodernist thought challenges precisely this
binary logic ofmodernity and in this respect provides important
resources for those who are struggling to challenge modern dis-
courses ofpatriarchy, colonialism, and racism. In the context of
postmodernist theories, the hybridity and ambivalences ofour cul-
tures and our senses ofbelonging seem to challenge the binary logic
ofSelfand Other that stands behind modern colonialist, sexist,
and racist constructions. Similarly, the postmodernist insistence on
difference and specificity defies the totalitarianism of universalizing
discourses and structures ofpower; the affirmation offragmented
social identities appears as a means ofcontesting the sovereignty of
both the modern subject and the modern nation-state, along with
all the hierarchies they imply. This postmodernist critical sensibility
is extremely important in this regard because it constitutes the
proposition (or the symptom) ofa break with respect to the entire
development ofmodern sovereignty.
It is difficult to generalize about the numerous discourses that
go under the banner ofpostmodernism, but most ofthem draw at
least indirectly on Jean-Franc¸ois Lyotard’s critique ofmodernist
master narratives, Jean Baudrillard’s affirmations of cultural simula-
cra, or Jacques Derrida’s critique ofWestern metaphysics. In the
most basic and reductive formulation, postmodernist theories are
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defined by many oftheir proponents as sharing one single common
denominator, a generalized attack on the Enlightenment.2 From
this perspective the call to action is clear: Enlightenment is the
problem and postmodernism is the solution.
We should take care, however, to look more closely at what
exactly is intended by ‘‘Enlightenment’’ or ‘‘modernity’’ from this
postmodernist perspective.3 We argued earlier that modernity
should be understood not as uniform and homogeneous, but rather
as constituted by at least two distinct and conflicting traditions. The
first tradition is that initiated by the revolution ofRenaissance
humanism, from Duns Scotus to Spinoza, with the discovery of
the place ofimmanence and the celebration ofsingularity and
difference. The second tradition, the Thermidor of the Renaissance
revolution, seeks to control the utopian forces of the first through
the construction and mediation ofdualisms, and arrives finally at
the concept ofmodern sovereignty as a provisional solution. When
postmodernists propose their opposition to a modernity and an
Enlightenment that exalt the universality ofreason only to sustain
white male European supremacy, it should be clear that they are
really attacking the second tradition ofour schema (and unfortu-
nately ignoring or eclipsing the first). It would be more accurate,
in other words, to pose postmodernist theory as a challenge neither
to the Enlightenment nor to modernity in toto but specifically to
the tradition ofmodern sovereignty. More precisely still, these
various theoretical contestations are brought together most coher-
ently in a challenge to the dialectic as the central logic ofmodern
domination, exclusion, and command—for both its relegating the
multiplicity of difference to binary oppositions and its subsequent
subsumption of these differences in a unitary order. If modern
power itselfis dialectical, the logic goes, then the postmodernist
project must be nondialectical.
Once we recognize postmodernist discourses as an attack on
the dialectical form of modern sovereignty, then we can see more
clearly how they contest systems ofdomination such as racism
and sexism by deconstructing the boundaries that maintain the
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hierarchies between white and black, masculine and feminine, and
so forth. This is how postmodernists can conceive their theoretical
practice as heir to an entire spectrum ofmodern and contemporary
liberation struggles. The history ofchallenges to European political-
economic hegemony and its colonial rule, the successes ofnational
liberation movements, women’s movements, and antiracist strug-
gles, are all interpreted as the heritage ofpostmodernist politics
because they, too, aim at disrupting the order and the dualisms of
modern sovereignty. Ifthe modern is the field ofpower ofthe
white, the male, and the European, then in perfectly symmetrical
fashion the postmodern will be the field of liberation of the non-
white, the non-male, and the non-European. As bell hooks says,
in its best form radical postmodernist practice, a politics of difference,
incorporates the values and voices ofthe displaced, the marginalized,
the exploited, and the oppressed.4 The binaries and dualisms of
modern sovereignty are not disrupted only to establish new ones;
rather, the very power of binaries is dissolved as ‘‘we set differences
to play across boundaries.’’5
Postmodernist thinking has been received by a wide range of
scholars as a clarion call to a new paradigm ofacademic and intellec-
tual practice, and as a real opportunity to dislodge the dominant
paradigms ofscholarship in their own field.6 One ofthe most
important examples from our perspective is the postmodernist chal-
lenge in the field ofinternational relations.7 Here the ‘‘modernist’’
paradigm ofresearch is more or less identified with the methods
ofrealism and neorealism, and thus centered on the concept of
sovereignty, commonly understood as synonymous with the power
ofnation-states, the legitimate use ofstate violence, and territorial
integrity. From a postmodernist perspective, this ‘‘modernist’’ inter-
national relations, because ofits acceptance ofand focus on these
boundaries, tends to support the dominant power and the sover-
eignty ofnation-states. Authors in this field thus make a clear
connection between the critique ofthe binary dualisms ofthe
‘‘Enlightenment’’ developed in the context ofthe philosophical and
literary postmodernists and the challenge to the fixed boundaries
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ofmodern state sovereignty. Postmodernist international relations
theorists strive to challenge the sovereignty ofstates by deconstruct-
ing the boundaries ofthe ruling powers, highlighting irregular and
uncontrolled international movements and flows, and thus fractur-
ing stable unities and oppositions. ‘‘Discourse’’ and ‘‘interpretation’’
are presented as powerful weapons against the institutional rigidities
ofthe modernist perspectives. The resulting postmodernist analyses
point toward the possibility of a global politics of difference, a
politics ofdeterritorialized flows across a smooth world, free ofthe
rigid striation ofstate boundaries.
Although many ofthe various postmodernist theorists are lucid
in their refusal ofthe logics ofmodern sovereignty, they are in
general extremely confused about the nature of our potential libera-
tion from it—perhaps precisely because they cannot recognize
clearly the forms of power that have today come to supplant it.
When they present their theories as part ofa project ofpolitical
liberation, in other words, postmodernists are still waging battle
against the shadows ofold enemies: the Enlightenment, or really
modern forms of sovereignty and its binary reductions of difference
and multiplicity to a single alternative between Same and Other.
The affirmation of hybridities and the free play of differences across
boundaries, however, is liberatory only in a context where power
poses hierarchy exclusively though essential identities, binary divi-
sions, and stable oppositions. The structures and logics ofpower
in the contemporary world are entirely immune to the ‘‘liberatory’’
weapons of the postmodernist politics of difference. In fact, Empire
too is bent on doing away with those modern forms of sovereignty
and on setting differences to play across boundaries. Despite the
best intentions, then, the postmodernist politics of difference not
only is ineffective against but can even coincide with and support
the functions and practices of imperial rule. The danger is that
postmodernist theories focus their attention so resolutely on the
old forms of power they are running from, with their heads turned
backwards, that they tumble unwittingly into the welcoming arms
ofthe new power. From this perspective the celebratory affirmations
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ofpostmodernists can easily appear naive, when not purely mystifi-
catory.
What we find most important in the various postmodernist
currents ofthought is the historical phenomenon they represent:
they are the symptom ofa rupture in the tradition ofmodern
sovereignty. There is, ofcourse, a long tradition of‘‘anti-modern’’
thought that opposes modern sovereignty, including the great think-
ers ofthe Frankfurt School (along with the entire republican line
we have traced back to Renaissance humanism). What is new,
however, is that postmodernist theorists point to the
end
ofmodern sovereignty and demonstrate a new capacity to think outside the
framework of modern binaries and modern identities, a thought of
plurality and multiplicity. However confusedly or unconsciously,
they indicate the passage toward the constitution ofEmpire.
TheLiberation of Hybridities, or
Beyond Colonial Binaries
A certain stream ofpostcolonial studies also proposes a global politics
of difference and might be well situated in line with postmodernist
theory. Our analysis ofmodern sovereignty in the preceding sections
poses already a strong potential rationale for an accord between
postcolonialist and postmodernist theories. Insofar as modern sover-
eignty was identified with Europe’s tendency toward global domina-
tion, and more important, insofar as colonial administration and
imperialist practices were central components in the constitution
ofmodern sovereignty, postmodernist and postcolonialist theories
do indeed share a common enemy. Postmodernism appears in this
light to be fundamentally post-Eurocentric.
Postcolonial studies encompasses a wide and varied group of
discourses, but we want to focus here on the work of Homi Bhabha
because it presents the clearest and best-articulated example ofthe
continuity between postmodernist and postcolonialist discourses.
One ofthe primary and constant objects ofBhabha’s attack are
binary divisions.
In fact, the entire postcolonial project as he presents it is defined by its refusal of the binary divisions on which the
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colonialist worldview is predicated. The world is not divided in
two and segmented in opposing camps (center versus periphery,
First versus Third World), but rather it is and has always been
defined by innumerable partial and mobile differences. Bhabha’s
refusal to see the world in terms of binary divisions leads him to
reject also theories oftotality and theories ofthe identity, homoge-
neity, and essentialism ofsocial subjects. These various refusals are
very closely linked. The binary conception ofthe world implies
the essentialism and homogeneity ofthe identities on its two halves,
and, through the relationship across that central boundary, implies
the subsumption ofall experience within a coherent social totality.
In short, the specter that haunts Bhabha’s analysis and that coherently
links together these various opponents is the Hegelian dialectic,
that is, the dialectic that subsumes within a coherent totality the
essential social identities that face each other in opposition. In this
sense one could say that postcolonial theory (or at least this version
ofit) is, along with postmodernist theories, defined above all by
its being nondialectical.
Bhabha’s critique ofthe dialectic—that is, his attack on binary
divisions, essential identities, and totalization—is both a sociological
claim about the real nature ofsocieties and a political project aimed
at social change. The former is in fact a condition of possibility of
the latter. Social identities and nations were never really coherent
imagined communities; the colonized’s mimicry ofthe colonizer’s
discourse rearticulates the whole notion ofidentity and alienates it
from essence; cultures are always already partial and hybrid forma-
tions. This social fact is the basis on which a subversive political