Authors: Professor Michael Hardt,Antonio Negri
Tags: #Philosophy, #Political, #Political Science, #General, #American Government
exclusion proper to rule are thus increasingly interiorized within
the subjects themselves. Power is now exercised through machines
that directly organize the brains (in communication systems, infor-
mation networks, etc.) and bodies (in welfare systems, monitored
activities, etc.) toward a state ofautonomous alienation from the
sense of life and the desire for creativity. The society of control
might thus be characterized by an intensification and generalization
ofthe normalizing apparatuses ofdisciplinarity that internally ani-
mate our common and daily practices, but in contrast to discipline,
this control extends well outside the structured sites ofsocial institu-
tions through flexible and fluctuating networks.
Second, Foucault’s work allows us to recognize the
biopolitical
nature ofthe new paradigm ofpower.2 Biopower is a form of power
that regulates social life from its interior, following it, interpreting it, 24
T H E P O L I T I C A L C O N S T I T U T I O N O F T H E P R E S E N T
absorbing it, and rearticulating it. Power can achieve an effective
command over the entire life of the population only when it be-
comes an integral, vital function that every individual embraces and
reactivates ofhis or her own accord. As Foucault says, ‘‘Life has
now become . . . an object ofpower.’’3 The highest function of
this power is to invest life through and through, and its primary
task is to administer life. Biopower thus refers to a situation in
which what is directly at stake in power is the production and
reproduction of life itself.
These two lines ofFoucault’s work dovetail with each other
in the sense that only the society ofcontrol is able to adopt the
biopolitical context as its
exclusive
terrain ofreference. In the passage from disciplinary society to the society of control, a new paradigm
ofpower is realized which is defined by the technologies that
recognize society as the realm ofbiopower. In disciplinary society
the effects of biopolitical technologies were still partial in the sense
that disciplining developed according to relatively closed, geometri-
cal, and quantitative logics. Disciplinarity fixed individuals within
institutions but did not succeed in consuming them completely in
the rhythm ofproductive practices and productive socialization; it
did not reach the point ofpermeating entirely the consciousnesses
and bodies ofindividuals, the point oftreating and organizing them
in the totality oftheir activities. In disciplinary society, then, the
relationship between power and the individual remained a static one:
the disciplinary invasion ofpower corresponded to the resistance of
the individual. By contrast, when power becomes entirely biopoliti-
cal, the whole social body is comprised by power’s machine and
developed in its virtuality. This relationship is open, qualitative,
and affective. Society, subsumed within a power that reaches down
to the ganglia ofthe social structure and its processes ofdevelopment,
reacts like a single body. Power is thus expressed as a control that
extends throughout the depths ofthe consciousnesses and bodies
ofthe population—and at the same time across the entirety of
social relations.4
In this passage from disciplinary society to the society of con-
trol, then, one could say that the increasingly intense relationship
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25
ofmutual implication ofall social forces that capitalism has pursued
throughout its development has now been fully realized. Marx
recognized something similar in what he called the passage from
the formal subsumption to the real subsumption of labor under
capital,5 and later the Frankfurt School philosophers analyzed a
closely related passage ofthe subsumption ofculture (and social
relations) under the totalitarian figure ofthe state, or really within
the perverse dialectic ofEnlightenment.6 The passage we are refer-
ring to, however, is fundamentally different in that instead of focus-
ing on the unidimensionality ofthe process described by Marx and
reformulated and extended by the Frankfurt School, the Foucaul-
dian passage deals fundamentally with the paradox of plurality and
multiplicity—and Deleuze and Guattari develop this perspective
even more clearly.7 The analysis ofthe real subsumption, when this
is understood as investing not only the economic or only the cultural
dimension ofsociety but rather the social
bios
itself, and when it is attentive to the modalities ofdisciplinarity and/or control, disrupts
the linear and totalitarian figure ofcapitalist development. Civil
society is absorbed in the state, but the consequence ofthis is an
explosion ofthe elements that were previously coordinated and
mediated in civil society. Resistances are no longer marginal but
active in the center ofa society that opens up in networks; the
individual points are singularized in a thousand plateaus. What
Foucault constructed implicitly (and Deleuze and Guattari made
explicit) is therefore the paradox of a power that, while it unifies
and envelops within itselfevery element ofsocial life (thus losing
its capacity effectively to mediate different social forces), at that
very moment reveals a new context, a new milieu ofmaximum
plurality and uncontainable singularization—a milieu ofthe event.8
These conceptions ofthe society ofcontrol and biopower
both describe central aspects ofthe concept ofEmpire. The concept
ofEmpire is the framework in which the new omniversality of
subjects has to be understood, and it is the end to which the new
paradigm ofpower is leading. Here a veritable chasm opens up
between the various old theoretical frameworks of international
law (in either its contractual and/or U.N. form) and the new reality
26
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ofimperial law. All the intermediary elements ofthe process have
in fact fallen aside, so that the legitimacy of the international order
can no longer be constructed through mediations but must rather
be grasped immediately in all its diversity. We have already acknowl-
edged this fact from the juridical perspective. We saw, in effect,
that when the new notion ofright emerges in the context of
globalization and presents itselfas capable oftreating the universal,
planetary sphere as a single, systemic set, it must assume an immediate
prerequisite (acting in a state ofexception) and an adequate, plastic,
and constitutive technology (the techniques ofthe police).
Even though the state ofexception and police technologies
constitute the solid nucleus and the central element ofthe new
imperial right, however, this new regime has nothing to do with
the juridical arts ofdictatorship or totalitarianism that in other times
and with such great fanfare were so thoroughly described by many
(in fact too many!) authors.9 On the contrary, the rule oflaw
continues to play a central role in the context ofthe contemporary
passage: right remains effective and (precisely by means of the state
ofexception and police techniques) becomes procedure. This is
a radical transformation that reveals the unmediated relationship
between power and subjectivities, and hence demonstrates both the
impossibility of‘‘prior’’ mediations and the uncontainable temporal
variability ofthe event.10 Throughout the unbounded global spaces,
to the depths of the biopolitical world, and confronting an unfore-
seeable temporality—these are the determinations on which the
new supranational right must be defined. Here is where the concept
ofEmpire must struggle to establish itself, where it must prove its
effectiveness, and hence where the machine must be set in motion.
From this point ofview, the biopolitical context ofthe new
paradigm is completely central to our analysis. This is what presents
power with an alternative, not only between obedience and disobe-
dience, or between formal political participation and refusal, but
also along the entire range oflife and death, wealth and poverty,
production and social reproduction, and so forth. Given the great
difficulties the new notion of right has in representing this dimension
B I O P O L I T I C A L P R O D U C T I O N
27
ofthe power ofEmpire, and given its inability to touch biopower
concretely in all its material aspects, imperial right can at best only
partially represent the underlying design ofthe new constitution
ofworld order, and cannot really grasp the motor that sets it in
motion. Our analysis must focus its attention rather on the
productive
dimension ofbiopower.11
TheProduction of Life
The question ofproduction in relation to biopower and the society
ofcontrol, however, reveals a real weakness ofthe work ofthe
authors from whom we have borrowed these notions. We should
clarify, then, the ‘‘vital’’ or biopolitical dimensions of Foucault’s
work in relation to the dynamics ofproduction. Foucault argued
in several works in the mid-1970s that one cannot understand the
passage from the ‘‘sovereign’’ state of the ancien re´gime to the
modern ‘‘disciplinary’’ state without taking into account how the
biopolitical context was progressively put at the service ofcapitalist
accumulation: ‘‘The control ofsociety over individuals is not con-
ducted only through consciousness or ideology, but also in the
body and with the body. For capitalist society biopolitics is what
is most important, the biological, the somatic, the corporeal.’’12
One ofthe central objectives ofhis research strategy in this
period was to go beyond the versions ofhistorical materialism,
including several variants ofMarxist theory, that considered the
problem ofpower and social reproduction on a superstructural level
separate from the real, base level of production. Foucault thus
attempted to bring the problem ofsocial reproduction and all the
elements ofthe so-called superstructure back to within the material,
fundamental structure and define this terrain not only in economic
terms but also in cultural, corporeal, and subjective ones. We can
thus understand how Foucault’s conception ofthe social whole was
perfected and realized when in a subsequent phase of his work he
uncovered the emerging outlines ofthe society ofcontrol as a figure
ofpower active throughout the entire biopolitics ofsociety. It
does not seem, however, that Foucault—even when he powerfully
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grasped the biopolitical horizon ofsociety and defined it as a field
ofimmanence—ever succeeded in pulling his thought away from
that structuralist epistemology that guided his research from the
beginning. By structuralist epistemology here we mean the reinven-
tion ofa functionalist analysis in the realm ofthe human sciences,
a method that effectively sacrifices the dynamic of the system, the
creative temporality ofits movements, and the ontological substance
ofcultural and social reproduction.13 In fact, if at this point we
were to ask Foucault who or what drives the system, or rather,
who is the ‘‘bios,’’ his response would be ineffable, or nothing at
all. What Foucault fails to grasp finally are the real dynamics of
production in biopolitical society.14
By contrast, Deleuze and Guattari present us with a properly
poststructuralist understanding ofbiopower that renews materialist
thought and grounds itselfsolidly in the question ofthe production
ofsocial being. Their work demystifies structuralism and all the
philosophical, sociological, and political conceptions that make the
fixity of the epistemological frame an ineluctable point of reference.
They focus our attention clearly on the ontological substance of
social production. Machines produce. The constant functioning of
social machines in their various apparatuses and assemblages pro-
duces the world along with the subjects and objects that constitute
it. Deleuze and Guattari, however, seem to be able to conceive
positively only the tendencies toward continuous movement and
absolute flows, and thus in their thought, too, the creative elements
and the radical ontology ofthe production ofthe social remain
insubstantial and impotent. Deleuze and Guattari discover the pro-
ductivity ofsocial reproduction (creative production, production
of values, social relations, affects, becomings), but manage to articu-
late it only superficially and ephemerally, as a chaotic, indeterminate
horizon marked by the ungraspable event.15
We can better grasp the relationship between social production
and biopower in the work ofa group ofcontemporary Italian
Marxist authors who recognize the biopolitical dimension in terms
ofthe new nature ofproductive labor and its living development
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in society, using terms such as ‘‘mass intellectuality,’’ ‘‘immaterial