Authors: Professor Michael Hardt,Antonio Negri
Tags: #Philosophy, #Political, #Political Science, #General, #American Government
second, the name is said to derive from the mispronunciation of a
Chinese cook in Seattle, ‘ I Wobbly Wobbly.’’ The primary focus
ofthe IWW was the universality ofits project. Workers ofall
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languages and races across the world (although in fact they only
made it as far as Mexico) and workers of all trades should come
together in ‘‘One Big Union.’’
Taking our cue from the IWW, and clearly departing from
Augustine in this regard, we would cast our political vision in line
with the radical republican tradition ofmodern democracy. What
does it mean to be republican today? What sense can it have in the
postmodern era to take up that antagonistic position that constituted
a radically democratic alternative within modernity? Where is the
standpoint from which critique can be possible and effective? In
this passage from modernity to postmodernity, is there still a
place
from which we can launch our critique and construct an alternative?
Or, ifwe are consigned to the non-place ofEmpire, can we construct
a powerful non-place and realize it concretely, as the terrain of a
postmodern republicanism?
TheNon-Placeof Exploitation
In order to address this problematic, allow us a briefdigression.
We mentioned earlier that Marx’s theoretical method, in line with
the tradition ofmodern critiques ofmodernity, is situated in the
dialectic between inside and outside. Proletarian struggles consti-
tute—in real, ontological terms—the motor ofcapitalist develop-
ment. They constrain capital to adopt ever higher levels oftechnol-
ogy and thus transform labor processes.3 The struggles force capital
continually to reform the relations of production and transform the
relations ofdomination. From manufacturing to large-scale industry,
from finance capital to transnational restructuring and the globaliza-
tion ofthe market, it is always the initiatives oforganized labor
power that determine the figure ofcapitalist development. Through
this history the place ofexploitation is a dialectically determined
site. Labor power is the most internal element, the very source of
capital. At the same time, however, labor power represents capital’s
outside, that is, the place where the proletariat recognizes its own
use value, its own autonomy, and where it grounds its hope for
liberation. The refusal of exploitation—or really resistance, sabo-
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tage, insubordination, rebellion, and revolution—constitutes the
motor force of the reality we live, and at the same time is its living
opposition. In Marx’s thought the relationship between the inside
and the outside ofcapitalist development is completely determined
in the dual standpoint ofthe proletariat, both inside and outside
capital. This spatial configuration has led to many political positions
founded on the dream of affirming the place of use value, pure and
separate from exchange value and capitalist relations.
In the contemporary world this spatial configuration has
changed. On the one hand, the relations ofcapitalist exploitation
are expanding everywhere, not limited to the factory but tending
to occupy the entire social terrain. On the other hand, social relations
completely invest the relations ofproduction, making impossible
any externality between social production and economic produc-
tion. The dialectic between productive forces and the system of
domination no longer has a
determinate place.
The very qualities of labor power (difference, measure, and determination) can no longer
be grasped, and similarly, exploitation can no longer be localized
and quantified. In effect, the object of exploitation and domination
tend not to be specific productive activities but the universal capacity
to produce, that is, abstract social activity and its comprehensive
power. This abstract labor is an activity without place, and yet it
is very powerful. It is the cooperating set of brains and hands, minds
and bodies; it is both the non-belonging and the creative social
diffusion of living labor; it is the desire and the striving of the
multitude ofmobile and flexible workers; and at the same time it
is intellectual energy and linguistic and communicative construction
ofthe multitude ofintellectual and affective laborers.4
The inside defined by use value and the outside ofexchange
value are nowhere to be found, and hence any politics of use
value, which was always based on an illusion ofseparability, is
now definitely inconceivable. That does not mean, however, that
production and exploitation have ceased. Neither have innovation
and development nor the continuous restructuring ofrelations of
power come to an end. On the contrary, today more than ever,
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as productive forces tend to be completely de-localized, completely
universal, they produce not only commodities but also rich and
powerful social relationships. These new productive forces have no
place, however, because they occupy all places, and they produce
and are exploited in this indefinite non-place. The universality of
human creativity, the synthesis offreedom, desire, and living labor,
is what takes place in the non-place ofthe postmodern relations
ofproduction. Empire is the non-place ofworld production where
labor is exploited. By contrast, and with no possible homology with
Empire, here we find again the revolutionary formalism of modern
republicanism. This is still a formalism because it is without place,
but it is a potent formalism now that it is recognized not as abstracted
from the individual and collective subjects but as the general power
that constitutes their bodies and minds. The non-place has a brain,
heart, torso, and limbs, globally.
Being-Against: Nomadism, Desertion, Exodus
This recognition takes us back to the initial question: What does
it mean to be republican today? We have already seen that the
modern critical response ofopening the dialectic between inside
and outside is no longer possible. An effective notion of postmodern
republicanism will have to be constructed
au milieu,
on the basis
ofthe lived experience ofthe global multitude. One element we
can put our finger on at the most basic and elemental level is
the
will to be against.
In general, the will to be against does not seem to require much explanation. Disobedience to authority is one of
the most natural and healthy acts. To us it seems completely obvious
that those who are exploited will resist and—given the necessary
conditions—rebel. Today, however, this may not be so obvious.
A long tradition ofpolitical scientists has said the problem is not
why people rebel but why they do not. Or rather, as Deleuze and
Guattari say, ‘‘the fundamental problem of political philosophy is
still precisely the one that Spinoza saw so clearly (and that Wilhelm
Reich rediscovered): ‘Why do men fight
for
their servitude as stubbornly as though it were their salvation?’ ’ 5 The first question of
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political philosophy today is not ifor even why there will be
resistance and rebellion, but rather how to determine the enemy
against which to rebel. Indeed, often the inability to identify the
enemy is what leads the will to resistance around in such paradoxical
circles. The identification ofthe enemy, however, is no small task
given that exploitation tends no longer to have a specific place and
that we are immersed in a system ofpower so deep and complex
that we can no longer determine specific difference or measure.
We suffer exploitation, alienation, and command as enemies, but
we do not know where to locate the production ofoppression.
And yet we still resist and struggle.
One should not exaggerate these logical paradoxes. Even
though on the new terrain ofEmpire exploitation and domination
often cannot be defined in specific places, they nonetheless exist.
The globality ofthe command they impose represents the inverted
image—something like a photo negative—ofthe generality ofthe
multitude’s productive activities. And yet, this inverted relation
between imperial power and the power ofthe multitude does not
indicate any homology. In effect, imperial power can no longer
discipline the powers ofthe multitude; it can only impose control
over their general social and productive capacities. From the eco-
nomic point ofview, the wage regime is replaced, as a function of
regulation, by a flexible and global monetary system; normative
command is replaced by the procedures ofcontrol and the police;
and the exercise ofdomination is formed through communicative
networks. This is how exploitation and domination constitute a
general non-place on the imperial terrain. Although exploitation
and domination are still experienced concretely, on the flesh ofthe
multitude, they are nonetheless amorphous in such a way that it
seems there is no place left to hide. If there is no longer a place
that can be recognized as outside, we must be against in every
place. This being-against becomes the essential key to every active
political position in the world, every desire that is effective—perhaps
of democracy itself. The first anti-fascist partisans in Europe, armed
deserters confronting their traitorous governments, were aptly called
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‘‘against-men.’’6 Today the generalized being-against ofthe multi-
tude must recognize imperial sovereignty as the enemy and discover
the adequate means to subvert its power.
Here we see once again the republican principle in the very
first instance: desertion, exodus, and nomadism. Whereas in the
disciplinary era
sabotage
was the fundamental notion of resistance, in the era ofimperial control it may be
desertion.
Whereas being-against in modernity often meant a direct and/or dialectical opposi-
tion offorces, in postmodernity being-against might well be most
effective in an oblique or diagonal stance. Battles against the Empire
might be won through subtraction and defection. This desertion
does not have a place; it is the evacuation ofthe places ofpower.
Throughout the history ofmodernity, the mobility and migra-
tion ofthe labor force have disrupted the disciplinary conditions
to which workers are constrained. And power has wielded the most
extreme violence against this mobility. In this respect slavery can
be considered on a continuum with the various wage labor regimes
as the most extreme repressive apparatus to block the mobility
ofthe labor force. The history ofblack slavery in the Americas
demonstrates both the vital need to control the mobility oflabor
and the irrepressible desire to flee on the part ofthe slaves: from
the closed ships ofthe Middle Passage to the elaborate repressive
techniques employed against escaped slaves. Mobility and mass
worker nomadism always express a refusal and a search for liberation:
the resistance against the horrible conditions ofexploitation and
the search for freedom and new conditions of life. It would be
interesting, in fact, to write a general history of the modes of
production from the standpoint of the workers’ desire for mobility
(from the country to the city, from the city to the metropolis, from
one state to another, from one continent to another) rather than
running through that development simply from the standpoint of
capital’s regulation ofthe technological conditions oflabor. This
history would substantially reconfigure the Marxian conception of
the stages ofthe organization oflabor, which has served as the
theoretical framework for numerous authors up to Polanyi.7
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Today the mobility oflabor power and migratory movements
is extraordinarily diffuse and difficult to grasp. Even the most sig-
nificant population movements ofmodernity (including the black
and white Atlantic migrations) constitute lilliputian events with
respect to the enormous population transfers of our times. A specter
haunts the world and it is the specter ofmigration. All the powers
ofthe old world are allied in a merciless operation against it, but
the movement is irresistible. Along with the flight from the so-
called Third World there are flows of political refugees and transfers
ofintellectual labor power, in addition to the massive movements
ofthe agricultural, manufacturing, and service proletariat. The legal
and documented movements are dwarfed by clandestine migrations:
the borders ofnational sovereignty are sieves, and every attempt at
complete regulation runs up against violent pressure. Economists
attempt to explain this phenomenon by presenting their equations
and models, which even ifthey were complete would not explain
that irrepressible desire for free movement. In effect, what pushes
from behind is, negatively, desertion from the miserable cultural