Authors: Professor Michael Hardt,Antonio Negri
Tags: #Philosophy, #Political, #Political Science, #General, #American Government
between communication and production in more detail in Section 3.4.
27. See Hardt and Negri,
Labor of Dionysus,
chaps. 6 and 7.
28. Despite the extremism ofthe authors presented in Martin Albrow and
Elizabeth King, eds.,
Globalization, Knowledge, and Society
(London: Sage, 1990), and the relative moderation ofBryan S. Turner,
Theories of Modernity and Postmodernity
(London: Sage, 1990), and Mike Featherstone, ed.,
Global Culture, Nationalism, Globalization, and Modernity
(London: Sage, 1991), the differences among their various positions are really relatively
minor. We should always keep in mind that the image ofa ‘‘global civil
society’’ is born not only in the minds ofcertain postmodernist philoso-
phers and among certain followers of Habermas (such as Jean Cohen and
Andrew Arato), but also and more importantly in the Lockean tradition
ofinternational relations. This latter group includes such important theo-
rists as Richard Falk, David Held, Anthony Giddens, and (in certain
respects) Danilo Zolo. On the concept ofcivil society in the global
context, see Michael Walzer, ed.,
Toward a Global Civil Society
(Providence: Berghahn Books, 1995).
29. With the iconoclastic irony ofJean Baudrillard’s more recent writings
such as
The Gulf War Did Not Take Place,
trans. Paul Patton (Bloomington: N O T E S T O P A G E S 3 5 – 3 8
425
Indiana University Press, 1995), a certain vein ofFrench postmodernism
has gone back to a properly surrealist framework.
30. There is an uninterrupted continuity from the late cold war notions of
‘‘democracy enforcing’’ and ‘‘democratic transition’’ to the imperial theo-
ries of ‘‘peace enforcing.’’ We have already highlighted the fact that many moral philosophers supported the GulfWar as a just cause, whereas
juridical theorists, following the important lead of Richard Falk, were
generally opposed. See, for example, Richard Falk, ‘‘Twisting the U.N.
Charter to U.S. Ends,’’ in Hamid Mowlana, George Gerbner, and Herbert
Schiller, eds.,
Triumph of the Image: The Media’s War in the Persian Gulf
(Boulder: Westview Press, 1992), pp. 175–190. See also the discussion
ofthe GulfWar in Danilo Zolo,
Cosmopolis: Prospects for World Govern-
ment,
trans. David McKie (Cambridge: Polity Press, 1997).
31. For a representative example, see Richard Falk,
Positive Prescriptions for the
Future,
World Order Studies Program occasional paper no. 20 (Princeton: Center for International Studies, 1991). To see how NGOs are integrated
into this more or less Lockean framework of ‘‘global constitutionalism,’’
one should refer to the public declarations of Antonio Cassese, president
ofthe United Nations Criminal Court in Amsterdam, in addition to his
books,
International Law in a Divided World
(Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1986), and
Human Rights in a Changing World
(Philadelphia: Temple
University Press, 1990).
32. Even the proposals to reform the United Nations proceed more or less
along these lines. For a good bibliography ofsuch works, see Joseph
Preston Baratta,
Strengthening the United Nations: A Bibliography on U.N.
Reform and World Federalism
(New York: Greenwood, 1987).
33. This is the line that is promoted in some ofthe strategic documents
published by the U.S. military agencies. According to the present Penta-
gon doctrine, the project ofthe enlargement ofmarket democracy should
be supported by both adequate microstrategies that are based on (both
pragmatic and systemic) zones ofapplication and the continual identifica-
tion ofcritical points and fissures in the antagonistic strong cultural blocs that would lead toward their dissolution. In this regard, see the work of
Maurice Rounai ofthe Strategic Institute in Paris. See also the works on
U.S. interventionism cited in Section 1.1, note 28.
34. One should refer, once again, to the work of Richard Falk and Antonio
Cassese. We should emphasize, in particular, how a ‘‘weak’’ conception
ofthe exercise ofjudicial functions by the U.N. Court ofJustice has
gradually, often under the influence of Left political forces, been trans-
formed into a ‘‘strong’’ conception. In other words, there is a passage
426
N O T E S T O P A G E S 4 1 – 4 7
from the demand that the Court of Justice be invested with the functions
ofjudicial sanction that come under the authority ofthe U.N. structure
to the demand that the court play a direct and active role in the decisions ofthe U.N. and its organs regarding norms ofparity and material justice
among states, to the point ofcarrying out direct intervention in the name
ofhuman rights.
35. See Max Weber,
Economy and Society,
trans. Guenther Roth and Claus Wittich (Berkeley: University ofCalifornia Press, 1968), vol. 1, chap. 3,
sec. 2, ‘‘The Three Pure Types ofAuthority,’’ pp. 215–216.
1 . 3 A L T E R N A T I V E S W I T H I N E M P I R E
1. We mean to ‘‘flirt with Hegel’’ here the way Marx described in the
famous postscript to volume 1 of
Capital
(trans. Ben Fowkes [New York: Vintage, 1976]) ofJanuary 24, 1873 (pp. 102–103). As they did to Marx,
Hegel’s terms seem useful to us to frame the argument, but quickly we
will run up against the real limit oftheir utility.
2. This presentation is admittedly simplified, and many studies present much more sophisticated discussions ofplace. It seems to us, however, that
these political analyses always come back to a notion of‘‘defending’’ or
‘‘preserving’’ the bounded local identity or territory. Doreen Massey ar-
gues explicitly for a politics of place in which place is conceived not as
bounded but as open and porous to flows beyond, in
Space, Place, and
Gender
(Minneapolis: University ofMinnesota Press, 1994), in particular p. 5. We would contend, however, that a notion ofplace that has no
boundaries empties the concept completely ofits content. For an excellent
review ofthe literature and an alternative conception ofplace, see Arif
Dirlik, ‘‘Place-based Imagination: Globalism and the Politics ofPlace,’’
unpublished manuscript.
3. We will return to the concept ofthe nation at greater length in Sec-
tion 2.2.
4. ‘ I view location as a fundamental material attribute of human activity
but recognize that location is socially produced.’’ David Harvey,
The
Limits of Capital
(Chicago: University ofChicago Press, 1984), p. 374.
Arjun Appadurai also discusses ‘‘the production oflocality’’ in a way
consistent with Harvey and with our argument in
Modernity at Large:
Cultural Dimensions of Globalization
(Minneapolis: University ofMinnesota Press, 1996), pp. 178–199.
5. Erich Auerbach,
Mimesis: The Representation of Reality in Western Literature,
trans. Willard Trask (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1953).
6. This methodological connection between critique and construction that
rests firmly on the basis ofa collective subject was articulated well in
N O T E S T O P A G E S 4 8 – 5 2
427
Marx’s own historical writings and developed by various traditions of
heterodox Marxist historiography in the twentieth century, such as the
work ofE. P. Thompson, the Italian workerist writers, and the South
Asian subaltern historians.
7. See, for example, Guy Debord’s
Society of the Spectacle,
trans. Donald Nicholson-Smith (New York: Zone Books, 1994), which is perhaps the
best articulation, in its own delirious way, ofthe contemporary conscious-
ness ofthe triumph ofcapital.
8. For a good example ofthis deconstructionist method that demonstrates
its virtues and its limitations, see the work ofGayatri Spivak, in particular her introduction to Ranajit Guha and Gayatri Spivak, eds.,
Selected Subaltern Studies
(New York: Oxford University Press, 1988), pp. 3–32.
9. See ArifDirlik, ‘‘Mao Zedong and ‘Chinese Marxism,’ ’ in Saree Makdisi,
Cesare Casarino, and Rebecca Karl, eds.,
Marxism beyond Marxism
(New York: Routledge, 1996), pp. 119–148. See also ArifDirlik, ‘‘Modernism
and Antimodernism in Mao Zedong’s Marxism,’’ in ArifDirlik, Paul
Healy, and Nick Knight, eds.,
Critical Perspectives on Mao Zedong’s Thought
(Atlantic Heights, N.J.: Humanities Press, 1997), pp. 59–83.
10. On the tactical ambiguities ofthe ‘‘national politics’’ ofthe socialist and communist parties, see primarily the work ofthe Austro-Marxists, such
as Otto Bauer’s
Die Nationalita¨tenfrage und die Sozialdomocratie
(Vienna: Wiener Volksbuchhandlung, 1924); and Stalin’s influential ‘‘Marxism and
the National Question,’’ in
Marxism and the National and Colonial Question
(New York: International Publishers, 1935), pp. 3–61. We will return
to these authors in Section 2.2. For a special and particularly interesting case, see Enzo Traverso,
Les marxistes et la question juive
(Paris: La Brèche, 1990).
11. On the cycle ofanti-imperialist struggles in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries (seen from the Chinese perspective), see Rebecca
Karl,
Staging the World: China and the Non-West at the Turn of the Twentieth
Century
(Durham: Duke University Press, forthcoming).
12. On the hypothesis that struggles precede and prefigure capitalist development and restructuring, see Antonio Negri,
Revolution Retrieved
(London: Red Notes, 1988).
13. This notion ofthe proletariat might thus be understood in Marx’s own
terms as the personification ofa strictly economic category, that is, the
subject oflabor under capital. As we redefine the very concept oflabor
and extend the range ofactivities understood under it (as we have done
elsewhere and will continue to do in this book), the traditional distinction 428
N O T E S T O P A G E S 5 5 – 6 0
between the economic and the cultural breaks down. Even in Marx’s
most economistic formulations, however, proletariat must be understood
really as a properly
political
category. See Michael Hardt and Antonio Negri,
Labor of Dionysus
(Minneapolis: University ofMinnesota Press, 1994), pp. 3–21; and Antonio Negri, ‘‘Twenty Theses ofMarx,’’ in
Saree Makdisi, Cesare Casarino, and Rebecca Karl, eds.,
Marxism beyond
Marxism
(New York: Routledge, 1996), pp. 149–180.
14. See Michael Hardt, ‘‘Los Angeles Novos,’’
Futur anteŕieur,
no. 12/13
(1991), 12–26.
15. See Luis Gomez, ed.,
Mexique: du Chiapas à la crise financière,
Supplement,
Futur anteŕieur
(1996).
16. See primarily
Futur anteŕieur,
no. 33/34,
Tous ensemble! Re´flections sur les
luttes de novembre-dećembre
(1996). See also Raghu Krishnan, ‘‘December 1995: The First Revolt against Globalization,’’
Monthly Review,
48, no.
1 (May 1996), 1–22.
17. Karl Marx,
The Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte
(New York: International Publishers, 1963), p. 121.
18. See Gilles Deleuze, ‘‘Postscript on Control Societies,’’ in
Negatiations,
trans. Martin Joughin (New York: Columbia University Press, 1995),
pp. 177–182.
19. In opposition to the theories ofthe ‘‘weakest link,’’ which not only were the heart ofthe tactics ofthe Third International but also were largely
adopted by the anti-imperialist tradition as a whole, the Italian
operaismo
movement ofthe 1960s and 1970s proposed a theory ofthe ‘‘strongest
link.’’ For the fundamental theoretical thesis, see Mario Tronti,
Operai e
capitale
(Turin: Einaudi, 1966), esp. pp. 89–95.
20. One can find ample and continuous documentation ofthese techniques
of disinformation and silencing in publications ranging from
Le Monde
Diplomatique
to
Z Magazine
and the
Covert Action Bulletin.
Noam Chomsky has tirelessly worked to unveil and counter such disinformation in
his numerous books and lectures. See, for example, Edward Herman and
Noam Chomsky,
Manufacturing Consent: The Political Economy of Mass
Media
(New York: Pantheon, 1988). The GulfWar presented an excellent example ofthe imperial management ofcommunication. See W. Lance
Bennett and David L. Paletz, eds.,
Taken by Storm: The Media, Public
Opinion, and U.S. Foreign Policy in the Gulf War
(Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1994); and Douglas Kellner,
The Persian Gulf TV War
(Boulder: Westview Press, 1992).
21. This operation offlattening the struggles in the f
orm ofan inverted
homology with the system is adequately represented by the (in other
N O T E S T O P A G E S 6 1 – 7 3
429
respects quite impressive and important) work ofImmanuel Wallerstein
and the world systems school. See, for example, Giovanni Arrighi, Ter-
ence Hopkins, and Immanuel Wallerstein,
Antisystemic Movements
(London: Verso, 1989).
22. Keeping in mind the limitations we mentioned earlier, one should refer
here to the work ofFeĺix Guattari, particularly the writings ofhis final
period such as
Chaosmosis,
trans. Paul Bains and Julian Pefanis (Sydney: Power Publications, 1995).
P O L I T I C A L M A N I F E S T O
1. Louis Althusser, ‘‘Machiavel et nous,’’ in
E