Authors: Professor Michael Hardt,Antonio Negri
Tags: #Philosophy, #Political, #Political Science, #General, #American Government
labor,’’ and the Marxian concept of‘‘general intellect.’’16 These
analyses set off from two coordinated research projects. The first
consists in the analysis ofthe recent transformations ofproductive
labor and its tendency to become increasingly immaterial. The
central role previously occupied by the labor power ofmass factory
workers in the production ofsurplus value is today increasingly
filled by intellectual, immaterial, and communicative labor power.
It is thus necessary to develop a new political theory ofvalue that
can pose the problem ofthis new capitalist accumulation ofvalue
at the center ofthe mechanism ofexploitation (and thus, perhaps,
at the center ofpotential revolt). The second, and consequent,
research project developed by this school consists in the analysis of
the immediately social and communicative dimension ofliving labor
in contemporary capitalist society, and thus poses insistently the
problem ofthe new figures ofsubjectivity, in both their exploitation
and their revolutionary potential. The immediately social dimension
ofthe exploitation ofliving immaterial labor immerses labor in all
the relational elements that define the social but also at the same
time activate the critical elements that develop the potential of
insubordination and revolt through the entire set oflaboring prac-
tices. After a new theory ofvalue, then, a new theory ofsubjectivity
must be formulated that operates primarily through knowledge,
communication, and language.
These analyses have thus reestablished the importance ofpro-
duction within the biopolitical process ofthe social constitution,
but they have also in certain respects isolated it—by grasping it in
a pure form, refining it on the ideal plane. They have acted as if
discovering the new forms of productive forces—immaterial labor,
massified intellectual labor, the labor of‘‘general intellect’’—were
enough to grasp concretely the dynamic and creative relationship
between material production and social reproduction. When they
reinsert production into the biopolitical context, they present it
almost exclusively on the horizon oflanguage and communication.
One ofthe most serious shortcomings has thus been the tendency
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among these authors to treat the new laboring practices in biopoliti-
cal society
only
in their intellectual and incorporeal aspects. The productivity ofbodies and the value ofaffect, however, are absolutely central in this context. We will elaborate the three primary
aspects ofimmaterial labor in the contemporary economy: the
communicative labor ofindustrial production that has newly be-
come linked in informational networks, the interactive labor of
symbolic analysis and problem solving, and the labor ofthe produc-
tion and manipulation of affects (see Section 3.4). This third aspect,
with its focus on the productivity of the corporeal, the somatic, is
an extremely important element in the contemporary networks of
biopolitical production. The work ofthis school and its analysis
ofgeneral intellect, then, certainly marks a step forward, but its
conceptual framework remains too pure, almost angelic. In the final
analysis, these new conceptions too only scratch the surface of the
productive dynamic ofthe new theoretical f
ramework ofbio-
power.17
Our task, then, is to build on these partially successful attempts
to recognize the potential ofbiopolitical production. Precisely by
bringing together coherently the different defining characteristics
ofthe biopolitical context that we have described up to this point,
and leading them back to the ontology ofproduction, we will be
able to identify the new figure of the collective biopolitical body,
which may nonetheless remain as contradictory as it is paradoxical.
This body becomes structure not by negating the originary produc-
tive force that animates it but by recognizing it; it becomes language
(both scientific language and social language) because it is a multi-
tude ofsingular and determinate bodies that seek relation. It is thus
both production and reproduction, structure and superstructure,
because it is life in the fullest sense and politics in the proper sense.
Our analysis has to descend into the jungle ofproductive and
conflictual determinations that the collective biopolitical body offers
us.18 The context ofour analysis thus has to be the very unfolding
oflife itself, the process ofthe constitution ofthe world, ofhistory.
The analysis must be proposed not through ideal forms but within
the dense complex ofexperience.
B I O P O L I T I C A L P R O D U C T I O N
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Corporations and Communication
In asking ourselves how the political and sovereign elements ofthe
imperial machine come to be constituted, we find that there is no
need to limit our analysis to or even focus it on the established
supranational regulatory institutions. The U.N. organizations, along
with the great multi- and transnational finance and trade agencies
(the IMF, the World Bank, the GATT, and so forth), all become
relevant in the perspective ofthe supranational juridical constitution
only when they are considered within the dynamic ofthe biopoliti-
cal production ofworld order. The function they had in the old
international order, we should emphasize, is not what now gives
legitimacy to these organizations. What legitimates them now is
rather their newly possible function in the symbology of the imperial
order. Outside of the new framework, these institutions are inef-
fectual. At best, the old institutional framework contributes to
the formation and education of the administrative personnel of the
imperial machine, the ‘‘dressage’’ ofa new imperial eĺite.
The huge transnational corporations construct the fundamental
connective fabric of the biopolitical world in certain important
respects. Capital has indeed always been organized with a view
toward the entire global sphere, but only in the second halfofthe
twentieth century did multinational and transnational industrial and
financial corporations really begin to structure global territories
biopolitically. Some claim that these corporations have merely come
to occupy the place that was held by the various national colonialist
and imperialist systems in earlier phases ofcapitalist development,
from nineteenth-century European imperialism to the Fordist phase
ofdevelopment in the twentieth century.19 This is in part true, but
that place itselfhas been substantially transformed by the new reality
ofcapitalism. The activities ofcorporations are no longer defined
by the imposition ofabstract command and the organization of
simple theft and unequal exchange. Rather, they directly structure
and articulate territories and populations. They tend to make nation-
states merely instruments to record the flows ofthe commodities,
monies, and populations that they set in motion. The transnational
corporations directly distribute labor power over various markets,
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functionally allocate resources, and organize hierarchically the vari-
ous sectors ofworld production. The complex apparatus that selects
investments and directs financial and monetary maneuvers deter-
mines the new geography ofthe world market, or really the new
biopolitical structuring ofthe world.20
The most complete figure ofthis world is presented from the
monetary perspective. From here we can see a horizon ofvalues
and a machine ofdistribution, a mechanism ofaccumulation and
a means ofcirculation, a power and a language. There is nothing,
no ‘‘naked life,’’ no external standpoint, that can be posed outside
this field permeated by money; nothing escapes money. Production
and reproduction are dressed in monetary clothing. In fact, on the
global stage, every biopolitical figure appears dressed in monetary
garb. ‘‘Accumulate, accumulate! This is Moses and the Prophets!’’21
The great industrial and financial powers thus produce not
only commodities but also subjectivities. They produce agentic
subjectivities within the biopolitical context: they produce needs,
social relations, bodies, and minds—which is to say, they produce
producers.22 In the biopolitical sphere, life is made to work for
production and production is made to work for life. It is a great
hive in which the queen bee continuously oversees production and
reproduction. The deeper the analysis goes, the more it finds at
increasing levels ofintensity the interlinking assemblages ofinter-
active relationships.23
One site where we should locate the biopolitical production
oforder is in the immaterial nexuses ofthe production oflanguage,
communication, and the symbolic that are developed by the com-
munications industries.24 The development ofcommunications net-
works has an organic relationship to the emergence ofthe new
world order—it is, in other words, effect and cause, product and
producer. Communication not only expresses but also organizes
the movement ofglobalization. It organizes the movement by multi-
plying and structuring interconnections through networks. It ex-
presses the movement and controls the sense and direction ofthe
imaginary that runs throughout these communicative connections;
B I O P O L I T I C A L P R O D U C T I O N
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in other words, the imaginary is guided and channeled within the
communicative machine. What the theories ofpower ofmodernity
were forced to consider transcendent, that is, external to productive
and social relations, is here formed inside, immanent to the produc-
tive and social relations. Mediation is absorbed within the productive
machine. The political synthesis ofsocial space is fixed in the space
ofcommunication. This is why communications industries have
assumed such a central position. They not only organize production
on a new scale and impose a new structure adequate to global space,
but also make its justification immanent. Power, as it produces,
organizes; as it organizes, it speaks and expresses itselfas authority.
Language, as it communicates, produces commodities but moreover
creates subjectivities, puts them in relation, and orders them. The
communications industries integrate the imaginary and the symbolic
within the biopolitical fabric, not merely putting them at the service
ofpower but actually integrating them into its very functioning.25
At this point we can begin to address the question ofthe
legitimation
ofthe new world order. Its legitimation is not born of the previously existing international accords nor ofthe functioning
ofthe first, embryonic supranational organizations, which were
themselves created through treaties based on international law. The
legitimation ofthe imperial machine is born at least in part ofthe
communications industries, that is, ofthe transformation ofthe new
mode ofproduction into a machine. It is a subject that produces
its own image ofauthority. This is a form oflegitimation that rests
on nothing outside itselfand is reproposed ceaselessly by developing
its own languages ofself-validation.
One further consequence should be treated on the basis of
these premises. Ifcommunication is one ofthe hegemonic sectors
ofproduction and acts over the entire biopolitical field, then we
must consider communication and the biopolitical context coexis-
tent. This takes us well beyond the old terrain as Ju¨rgen Habermas
described it, for example. In fact, when Habermas developed the
concept ofcommunicative action, demonstrating so powerfully its
productive form and the ontological consequences deriving from
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that, he still relied on a standpoint outside these effects of globaliza-
tion, a standpoint of life and truth that could oppose the informa-
tional colonization ofbeing.26 The imperial machine, however,
demonstrates that this external standpoint no longer exists. On
the contrary, communicative production and the construction of
imperial legitimation march hand in hand and can no longer be
separated. The machine is self-validating, autopoietic—that is, sys-
temic. It constructs social fabrics that evacuate or render ineffective
any contradiction; it creates situations in which, before coercively
neutralizing difference, seem to absorb it in an insignificant play of
self-generating and self-regulating equilibria. As we have argued
elsewhere, any juridical theory that addresses the conditions of
postmodernity has to take into account this specifically communica-
tive definition ofsocial production.27 The imperial machine lives
by producing a context ofequilibria and/or reducing complexities,
pretending to put forward a project of universal citizenship and
toward this end intensifying the effectiveness of its intervention