Authors: Professor Michael Hardt,Antonio Negri
Tags: #Philosophy, #Political, #Political Science, #General, #American Government
472
N O T E S T O P A G E S 3 9 9 – 4 0 5
3. On the military powers ofEmpire, see Manuel De Landa,
War in the Age
of Intelligent Machines
(New York: Zone, 1991).
4. On the constitution oftime, see Antonio Negri,
La costituzione del tempo
(Rome: Castelvecchi, 1997); and Michael Hardt, ‘‘Prison Time,’’
Genet:
In the Language of the Enemy, Yale French Studies,
no. 91 (1997), 64–79.
See also Eric Alliez,
Capital Times,
trans. Georges Van Den Abeel (Minneapolis: University ofMinnesota Press, 1996).
5. See Ju¨rgen Habermas,
Theory of Communicative Action,
trans. Thomas McCarthy (Boston: Beacon Press, 1984). Andre´ Gorz similarly recognizes
only a fraction of the proletariat as relating to the new communicative
lines ofproduction in
Farewell to the Working Class,
trans. Michael Sonenscher (Boston: South End Press, 1982).
6. Here we are following the intriguing etymology that Barbara Cassin gives for the term ‘‘philosophy.’’
7. On the constitutive notion ofthe encounter, see Louis Althuser’s late
works written after his confinement in the 1980s, in particular ‘‘Le courant souterrain du mateŕialisme de la rencontre,’’ in
E
ćrits philosophiques et
politiques,
vol. 1 (Paris: STOCK/IMEC, 1994), pp. 539–579.
I N D E X
administration: modern, 88–89, 99;
364–365; command over, 60, 314,
imperial, 339–343
344–346, 392
affect.
See
labor, affective
black nationalism, 107–109
Agamben, Giorgio, 366
Bodin, Jean, 84, 97–99
Ahmed, Akbar, 149
Bovillus, 72
AIDS pandemic, 136
Braudel, Fernand, 225, 236
Althusser, Louis, 63–64, 91
Bretton Woods accords, 244, 264–266
American Revolution, 160–164, 381
Bruno, Giordano, 77
Amin, Samir, 76–77, 334
Burke, Edmund, 104–105
anarchists, 350
Bush, George, 180
Anderson, Benedict, 95, 107
Caliban, 81–82
anthropology, 125–126, 187
Castells, Manuel, and Yuko Aoyama,
antihumanism, 91–92
286
apartheid, 125, 190–191, 194
Ceĺine, Louis-Ferdinand, 134–136
Appadurai, Arjun, 151
Ceśaire, Aime´, 117, 130
Appiah, Anthony, 138
Chaplin, Charlie, 159
architecture, 188, 190, 337
Chatterjee, Partha, 133–134
Arendt, Hannah, 163–164, 381, 387
Chiapas uprising, 54–56
Aristotle, 201, 356, 401
Christianity, 21, 36, 373
Arrighi, Giovanni, 238–239
citizenship, global, 361, 400, 403
asystemic movements, 60
civil society, 25, 328–329; global, 7,
Auerbach, Erich, 46
311
Augustine ofHippo, 207, 390, 393
Coetzee, J. M., 203–204
autonomists, 214
cold war, 178–182
autonomy ofthe political, 307
colonialism, 70, 76–77, 114–129,
axiomatic ofcapital, 326–327
199–200, 305–306; struggles against,
Bacon, Francis, 72
42–43, 106, 130–134; and the
Balibar, E
´ tienne, 192
United States, 170–171.
See also
Bandung Conference, 107, 250
decolonization
barbarians, 213–218
communication, 29, 32–35, 395, 404;
Bauer, Otto, 111
among struggles, 54–59; in
being-against, 210–214, 361
production, 289–298, 364–365
Benjamin, Walter, 215, 377
communications industries, 33, 346–347
Bhabha, Homi, 143–145
communism, 63, 237, 294, 350, 413
biopower, 23–27, 89, 389, 405–406; as
community, 45, 145, 358; and the
agent ofproduction, 29, 30, 32,
nation, 95, 97, 106–108, 113
474
I N D E X
Conrad, Joseph, 135
Dirlik, Arif, 86, 138
constituent power, 47, 59, 63,
disciplinary government, 242–243,
184–185, 358, 406, 410; in the U.S.
247–248, 250–254
Constitution, 162, 165
disciplinary society, 22–24, 88–89,
cooperation, 294–296, 366–367,
329–332
395–396, 401–402, 410–411;
discipline, 97, 158–159, 453n7; refusal
abstract, 296
of, 260–262, 273–279
corporate culture, 153
dispositif,
23, 63, 329–330
corporations, transnational, 31, 304–309
Duns Scotus, 71
corruption, 20–21, 201–203, 389–392;
Dutch East India Company, 305
cycle of, 163, 166
courts, international and supra-
East India Company, 305–306
national, 38
Empire, definition ofconcept, xiv–xv
Cowhey, Peter, 298
English Revolution, 162
crisis, 385–387; ofinstitutions,
Eurocentrism, 70, 76–77, 86, 120
196–197; ofEurope, 374–380.
See
event, 26, 28, 41, 49, 61, 411.
See also
also
modernity, as crisis
singularity
cyberpunk, 216
exception, state of, 16–17, 26, 39
cycles ofstruggles, 50–52, 54, 261
exodus, 76, 212–214, 364, 367;
anthropological, 215–217
Dante Alighieri, 71, 73
expansive tendency: ofEmpire,
Davis, Mike, 337
166–169; ofcapital, 222–228
Debord, Guy, 188–189, 321–323
exploitation, 43, 53, 208–210, 385
decentralization ofproduction,
245–246, 294–297
Falk, Richard, 36
Declaration ofIndepencence, 165, 169,
family, 148, 197
171
Fanon, Franz, 124–125, 129, 131–132
decline and fall of Empire, 20–21,
fear, 323, 339, 388
371–374
Federalist,
161
decolonization, 245–246
feminist movements, 274
deconstruction, 47–48
Fichte, Johann Gottlieb, 105
Deleuze, Gilles, and Feĺix Guattari, 25,
Fordism, 240, 242, 247–248, 256, 409;
28, 193–194, 206–207, 210, 302,
decline of, 267–268; versus Toyota
326
model, 289–290
delinking, 206, 283–284
Foucault, Michel, 13, 22–25, 28,
Descartes, Rene´, 79–80, 390
88–89, 327–330; and humanism,
desertion, 212–214
91–92; on the Enlightenment,
De Sica, Vittorio, 158
183–184
deterritorialization, xii, 45, 52, 61, 124;
Francis ofAssisi, 413
ofproduction, 294–297; operated by
Frankfurt School, 25, 143
capital, 206, 326, 346–347.
See also
French Revolution, 101–102, 104, 113,
lines offlight
117–118, 381
development theories, 282–284.
See also
Fukuyama, Francis, 189
underdevelopment theories
fundamentalism, 146–150, 312, 399
diagram, 329–330
dialectics, 51–52, 187–188; ofidentity,
Galileo Galilei, 72–73
103, 115, 127–132; critique of, 140,
Gates, Bill, 296
144–145, 359, 378–379
general intellect, 29, 364
I N D E X
475
general will, 85, 88, 96
United States, 172, 177–179; Marxist
Genet, Jean, 109
critiques of, 221–234, 270–272, 332
Gibbon, Edward, 20–21, 371–372
industrial reserve army, 447n7
Gilroy, Paul, 128
Industrial Workers ofthe World,
Gingrich, Newt, 348
207–208, 214, 412
globalization, 3, 8–9, 32, 55, 136, 348,
information infrastructure, 298–300
362; from below, xv, 43–45, 52, 59
internationalism, 45–46, 49–50, 145
governmentality, 88, 327–328
international relations, as academic
Gramsci, Antonio, 233, 383
discipline, 141–142
guaranteed income, 403
Internet, 299
Guilbaut, Serge, 382–383
intervention and sovereignty, 18, 35–38
Intifada, 54–56.
See also
Palestinians
Italian economy, 288–289
Habermas, Ju¨rgen, 33–34, 404
Haitian revolution, 123, 128.
See also
Jackson, Andrew, 168–169
L’Ouverture, Toussaint
Jameson, Fredric, 154, 187, 272, 323
Harraway, Donna, 91, 218
Jefferson, Thomas, 168–169, 182, 381
Harvey, David, 154
justice, 18–19, 82, 356
Hegel, G. W. F., 42, 129, 328, 340,
just war, 12, 36–37
375; on modern sovereignty, 81–84,
86–88, 90
Kant, Immanuel, 80–81, 183
Heidegger, Martin, 378
Kautsky, Karl, 229–231
Herder, J. G., 100–101
Kelsen, Hans, 5–6, 8, 15
Hilferding, Rudolf, 226, 229–230
Keynes, John Maynard, 243
historia rerum gestarum.
See
res gestae
Keynesianism, 242
historicism, 99–100
history: end of, 64, 189, 367–368;
La Boe´tie, E´tienne de, 204
suspension of, 11
labor, 358; immaterial, 29, 53,
history, as academic discipline, 126
290–294; abstract, 292; affective,
Hobbes, Thomas, 7–8, 83–85, 87, 323,
292–293, 364–365
388; on the people, 102–103
Las Casas, Bartolome´ de, 116
Hobson, John, 232
League ofNations, 175
homohomo,
72, 81, 204, 216
legitimation, 33–35, 38, 41, 89–90
homo tantum,
203–204
Lenin, V. I., 229–234
humanism, 77–78, 91–92, 285.
See also
Levy, Pierre, 289
Renaissance humanism
liberal politics, 188–189
human rights, 107, 313
Lincoln, Abraham, 172
hybridity, 142–146, 216; management
lines offlight, 48, 123–124
of, 172; and constitution, 316–319
local versus global, 44–46, 362
Locke, John, 7–8
ideology, 404
Los Angeles rebellion, 54–56
immanence, 64, 77, 91–92, 157, 377,
L’Ouverture, Toussaint, 116–118
402; discovery of, 70–74; of modern
love, 78, 186, 413
power, 82; ofimperial power, 161,
Lubiano, Wahneema, 108
164, 373–374; ofcapital, 326–329
Luhmann, Niklas, 13, 15
imperialism, 31, 265, 332; in contrast to
Luxemburg, Rosa: on nationalism,
Empire, xii–xiii, 9, 166–167, 374;
96–97; critique ofimperialism, 224,
struggles against, 42–43, 58; and the
228, 233–234, 270, 333
476
I N D E X
Machiavelli, Niccolò, 63–65, 90, 156,
79, 82, 87, 97; in contrast to the
234, 308, 388; on ancient Rome, 15,
people, 103, 113, 194–195, 316, 344;
162–163, 166, 372–374; on
powers of, 209–218, 357–363;
constituent power, 184–185
imperial corruption of, 391–392;
Machiavellianism, 162–163
rights of, 396–407
mafia, 37, 342
Musil, Robert, 69–70, 284–285, 289
Malcolm X, 107–108, 132
naked life, 204, 366
management and organization theory,
nation, modern concept of, 93–105
152–153
nationalism, struggles against, 42–43.
manifesto, 63–66
See also
black nationalism; subaltern
market, 86.
See also
world market
nationalism
marketing, 151–152
nationalist socialism, 111–113
Marsilius ofPadua, 73
national liberation struggles.
See
Marx, Karl, 43, 57, 62, 185, 206,
colonialism, struggles against
349–350, 363, 367; on British
nation-state, xi–xii, 43, 109–110, 236,
colonialism, 118–120; on the United
335–336
States, 168–169; on capitalist
nation-states, system of, 40, 310–311
expansion, 221–224; the missing
Native Americans, 169–171
volumes of
Capital,
234–237; on
natural right theories, 99
capitalist crisis, 261, 266–267; theory
ne´gritude, 130–131
ofvalue, 355.
See also
general
network power, 161–163
intellect; subsumption, formal and
network production, 294–297
real;
Vogelfrei
New Deal, 51, 176, 180, 381; on global
Marx, Karl, and Friedrich Engels,
level, 241–244, 265
63–65, 226, 304
New Left, 179
mass intellectuality, 29, 410
new social movements, 275
measure ofvalue, 86, 354–359, 392
Nicholas ofCusa, 71–72
media, the, 311–312, 322–323
Nietzsche, Friedrich, 90, 213, 359, 375, 378
Melville, Herman, 203–204
Nixon, Richard, 266
militant, the, 411–413
nomadism, 76, 212–214, 362–364
miscegenation, 362–364
non-governmental organizations
mobility ofpopulations, 213, 253, 275,
(NGOs), 35–37, 312–314
344: and suffering, 154–155; right to,
non-place ofpower, 188, 190, 203,
396–400
210, 319, 353, 384; and construction
modernity, 46–47, 69–74; as crisis,
ofa new place, 216–217, 357
74–78, 90, 109; postmodernist
non-work, 273
critique of, 140–143, 155
nuclear weapons, 345–347
modernization, 249–251, 280–281,
284–286
omni-crisis, 189, 197, 201
money, 346–347
ontology, 47–48, 62, 206, 354–364;
Monroe Doctrine, 177–178
absence of, 202, 391
Montesquieu, 20–21, 371–372
outside versus inside, 45, 183–190,
More, Thomas, 73
353–354, 444n5; ofcapitalist
Morris, William, 50
development, 221–228, 233–234,
Moulier Boutang, Yann, 123–124
257–258
multitude, 60–66, 73–74, 90, 161, 164,
overproduction and underconsumption,