Authors: Professor Michael Hardt,Antonio Negri
Tags: #Philosophy, #Political, #Political Science, #General, #American Government
and material conditions ofimperial reproduction; but positively,
what pulls forward is the wealth of desire and the accumulation of
expressive and productive capacities that the processes ofglobaliza-
tion have determined in the consciousness ofevery individual and
social group—and thus a certain hope. Desertion and exodus are
a powerful form of class struggle within and against imperial post-
modernity. This mobility, however, still constitutes a spontaneous
level ofstruggle, and, as we noted earlier, it most often leads today
to a new rootless condition ofpoverty and misery.
A new nomad horde, a new race ofbarbarians, will arise to
invade or evacuate Empire. Nietzsche was oddly prescient oftheir
destiny in the nineteenth century. ‘‘Problem: where are the
barbarians
ofthe twentieth century? Obviously they will come into view and
consolidate themselves only after tremendous socialist crises.’’8 We
cannot say exactly what Nietzsche foresaw in his lucid delirium,
but indeed what recent event could be a stronger example ofthe
power ofdesertion and exodus, the power ofthe nomad horde,
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than the fall ofthe Berlin Wall and the collapse ofthe entire Soviet
bloc? In the desertion from ‘‘socialist discipline,’’ savage mobility
and mass migration contributed substantially to the collapse ofthe
system. In fact, the desertion of productive cadres disorganized and
struck at the heart ofthe disciplinary system ofthe bureaucratic
Soviet world. The mass exodus ofhighly trained workers from
Eastern Europe played a central role in provoking the collapse of
the Wall.9 Even though it refers to the particularities of the socialist
state system, this example demonstrates that the mobility ofthe labor
force can indeed express an open political conflict and contribute to
the destruction ofthe regime. What we need, however, is more.
We need a force capable of not only organizing the destructive
capacities ofthe multitude, but also constituting through the desires
ofthe multitude an alternative. The counter-Empire must also be
a new global vision, a new way ofliving in the world.
Numerous republican political projects in modernity assumed
mobility as a privileged terrain for struggle and organization: from
the so-called Socians ofthe Renaissance (Tuscan and Lombard
artisans and apostles of the Reform who, banished from their own
country, fomented sedition against the Catholic nations of Europe,
from Italy to Poland) up to the seventeenth-century sects that
organized trans-Atlantic voyages in response to the massacres in
Europe; and from the agitators of the IWW across the United States
in the 1910s up to the European autonomists in the 1970s. In these
modern examples, mobility became an active politics and established
a political position. This mobility ofthe labor force and this political
exodus have a thousand threads that are interwoven—old traditions
and new needs are mixed together, just as the republicanism of
modernity and modern class struggle were woven together. Post-
modern republicanism, ifit is to arise, must face a similar task.
New Barbarians
Those who are against, while escaping from the local and particular
constraints oftheir human condition, must also continually attempt
to construct a new body and a new life. This is a necessarily violent,
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barbaric passage, but as Walter Benjamin says, it is a positive barba-
rism: ‘‘Barbarisms? Precisely. We affirm this in order to introduce
a new, positive notion ofbarbarism. What does the poverty of
experience oblige the barbarian to do? To begin anew, to begin
from the new.’’ The new barbarian ‘‘sees nothing permanent. But
for this very reason he sees ways everywhere. Where others encoun-
ter walls or mountains, there, too, he sees a way. But because he
sees a way everywhere, he has to clear things from it everywhere
. . . Because he sees ways everywhere, he always positions himself
at crossroads. No moment can know what the next will bring.
What exists he reduces to rubble, not for the sake of the rubble,
but for that of the way leading through it.’’10 The new barbarians
destroy with an affirmative violence and trace new paths of life
through their own material existence.
These barbaric deployments work on human relations in gen-
eral, but we can recognize them today first and foremost in corporeal
relations and configurations ofgender and sexuality.11 Conventional
norms ofcorporeal and sexual relations between and within genders
are increasingly open to challenge and transformation. Bodies them-
selves transform and mutate to create new posthuman bodies.12 The
first condition ofthis corporeal transformation is the recognition
that human nature is in no way separate from nature as a whole,
that there are no fixed and necessary boundaries between the human
and the animal, the human and the machine, the male and the
female, and so forth; it is the recognition that nature itself is an
artificial terrain open to ever new mutations, mixtures, and hybrid-
izations.13 Not only do we consciously subvert the traditional
boundaries, dressing in drag, for example, but we also move in a
creative, indeterminate zone
au milieu,
in between and without
regard for those boundaries. Today’s corporeal mutations constitute
an
anthropological exodus
and represent an extraordinarily important, but still quite ambiguous, element ofthe configuration ofrepublicanism ‘‘against’’ imperial civilization. The anthropological exodus
is important primarily because here is where the positive, construc-
tive face of the mutation begins to appear: an ontological mutation
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in action, the concrete invention ofa first
new place in the non-place.
This creative evolution does not merely occupy any existing place,
but rather invents a new place; it is a desire that creates a new
body; a metamorphosis that breaks all the naturalistic homologies
ofmodernity.
This notion ofanthropological exodus is still very ambiguous,
however, because its methods, hybridization and mutation, are
themselves the very methods employed by imperial sovereignty. In
the dark world of cyberpunk fiction, for example, the freedom of
self-fashioning is often indistinguishable from the powers of an all-
encompassing control.14 We certainly do need to change our bodies
and ourselves, and in perhaps a much more radical way than the
cyberpunk authors imagine. In our contemporary world, the now
common aesthetic mutations ofthe body, such as piercings and
tattoos, punk fashion and its various imitations, are all initial indica-
tions ofthis corporeal transformation, but in the end they do not
hold a candle to the kind ofradical mutation needed here. The
will to be against really needs a body that is completely incapable
ofsubmitting to command. It needs a body that is incapable of
adapting to family life, to factory discipline, to the regulations of
a traditional sex life, and so forth. (If you find your body refusing
these ‘‘normal’’ modes of life, don’t despair—realize your gift!)15
In addition to being radically unprepared for normalization, how-
ever, the new body must also be able to create a new life. We must
go much further to define that new place of the non-place, well
beyond the simple experiences ofmixture and hybridization, and
the experiments that are conducted around them. We have to arrive
at constituting a coherent political artifice, an
artificial becoming
in the sense that the humanists spoke ofa
homohomo
produced by art and knowledge, and that Spinoza spoke ofa powerful body produced by
that highest consciousness that is infused with love. The infinite
paths ofthe barbarians must form a new mode oflife.
Such transformations will always remain weak and ambiguous,
however, so long as they are cast only in terms ofform and order.
Hybridity itselfis an empty gesture, and the mere refusal oforder
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simply leaves us on the edge ofnothingness—or worse, these ges-
tures risk reinforcing imperial power rather than challenging it. The
new politics is given real substance only when we shift our focus
from the question of form and order to the regimes and practices
ofproduction. On the terrain ofproduction we will be able to
recognize that this mobility and artificiality do not merely represent
the exceptional experiences ofsmall privileged groups but indicate,
rather, the common productive experience ofthe multitude. As
early as the nineteenth century, proletarians were recognized as the
nomads ofthe capitalist world.16 Even when their lives remain
fixed in one geographical location (as is most often the case), their
creativity and productivity define corporeal and ontological migra-
tions. The anthropological metamorphoses ofbodies are established
through the common experience oflabor and the new technologies
that have constitutive effects and ontological implications. Tools
have always functioned as human prostheses, integrated into our
bodies through our laboring practices as a kind ofanthropological
mutation both in individual terms and in terms ofcollective social
life. The contemporary form of exodus and the new barbarian life
demand that tools become poietic prostheses, liberating us from
the conditions ofmodern humanity. To go back to the Marxian
digression we made earlier, when the dialectic between inside and
outside comes to an end, and when the separate place ofuse value
disappears from the imperial terrain, the new forms of labor power
are charged with the task ofproducing anew the human (or really
the posthuman). This task will be accomplished primarily through
the new and increasingly immaterial forms of affective and intellec-
tual labor power, in the community that they constitute, in the
artificiality that they present as a project.
With this passage the deconstructive phase ofcritical thought,
which from Heidegger and Adorno to Derrida provided a powerful
instrument for the exit from modernity, has lost its effectiveness.17
It is now a closed parenthesis and leaves us faced with a new
task: constructing, in the non-place, a new place; constructing
ontologically new determinations ofthe human, ofliving—a pow-
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erful artificiality of being. Donna Haraway’s cyborg fable, which
resides at the ambiguous boundary between human, animal, and
machine, introduces us today, much more effectively than decon-
struction, to these new terrains ofpossibility—but we should re-
member that this is a fable and nothing more. The force that must
instead drive forward theoretical practice to actualize these terrains
ofpotential metamorphosis is still (and ever more intensely) the
common experience ofthe new productive practices and the con-
centration ofproductive labor on the plastic and fluid terrain of
the new communicative, biological, and mechanical technologies.
Being republican today, then, means first ofall struggling
within and constructing against Empire, on its hybrid, modulating
terrains. And here we should add, against all moralisms and all
positions ofresentment and nostalgia, that this new imperial terrain
provides greater possibilities for creation and liberation. The multi-
tude, in its will to be-against and its desire for liberation, must push
through Empire to come out the other side.
PART 3
P A S S A G E S O F P R O D U C T I O N
3.1
T H E L I M I T S O F I M P E R I A L I S M
The world is nearly all parceled out, and what there is left of it is
being divided up, conquered, and colonised. To think ofthese stars
that you see overhead at night, these vast worlds which we can
never reach. I would annex the planets ifI could; I often think of
that. It makes me sad to see them so clear and yet so far.
Cecil Rhodes
For a large portion ofthe twentieth century, the critique
ofimperialism has been among the most active and urgent arenas
ofMarxist theory.1 Many ofthese arguments are today certainly
outdated and the situation they refer to is utterly transformed. This
does not mean, however, that we have nothing to learn from them.
These critiques ofimperialism can help us understand the passage
from imperialism to Empire because in certain respects they antici-
pated that passage.
One ofthe central arguments ofthe tradition ofMarxist think-
ing on imperialism is that there is an intrinsic relation between
capitalism and expansion, and that capitalist expansion inevitably
takes the political form ofimperialism. Marx himselfwrote very
little about imperialism, but his analyses ofcapitalist expansion are
central to the entire tradition ofcritique. What Marx explained most
clearly is that capital constantly operates through a reconfiguration of