From: Rakesh Bhandari (rakeshb@stanford.edu)
Date: Thu Mar 20 2003 - 18:43:03 EST
Capital,Civilization,Barbarians,Multiculturalists Aziz Al-Azmeh Almost exactly one hundered years after the Communist Manifesto, the spectre of Communism again haunted the old powers of Europe and elsewhere, and compelled them to enter into a holy alliance under the signature of freedom, and under the title of the Cold War. Several times over the previous century, this particular spectre had haunted much of Europe, to which the response was chauvinism, jingoism, nationalist mystification,the domestication of Social Democracy, in addition to to police and military action, most notably following the First World War. This time, the response was materialist. The Keynesian consensus following World War 2, and the New Deal preceding it, led to the relative humanization of capital : the "shameless, direct, brutal exploitation" of which Marx and Engels spoke in 1848, hitherto masked, contrary to the statement of the Communist Manifesto, by religious and political illusions, was now materially ameliorated. Correlatively, the history of capitalism was rewritten as a history of benign democracy, and the fascistoid right-wing ideologies and practices, social and political, that had predominated in Europe and the United States, precipitating the Second World War, were in varying ways excised from memory. At the same time rise to prominence, against stiff opposition, anti-racist and anti-colonial movements and ideologies, all of them nourished by the universal ideas of self-determination and of social improvement, deriving sustenance from historicism in both its Marxist and positivist variants. Thus arose programmes of national liberation, and of economic, social, and cultural development, all informed by a universalist humanism. It is no accident that there is a fully-fledged reversal of these global trends, which have now come into predominance after the world-historical events of 1989. To the natural theology of the market, both in metropolitan countries and in territories under the dominance of international financial institutions, naked exploitation has, in the way of all ideologies, been consecrated as a right deriving from the natural condition of social relations, described in terms of perfectly elastic market conditions. I am not concerned here with the impact of this on internal European and North American conditions, but with the re-barbarization of outsiders, which sometoimes takes on the benign appearance of multi-culturalism, premissed on a culturalist differentialism, and correlatively on pronouncing upon "communities", religions, and nations in terms of unhitorical predispositions. It is unsurprising in this context that we should constantly come across distanciating admiration of this sort for all manner of bizarre or dangerous political phenomena, such as political Islamism or Hinduism, deemed fitting and appropriate -- indeed, natural, fated -- for some other, more colourful, less civilized peoples. The slogan under which this is officiated is the right to anti-modernism, a right no longer considered as the sentimentalist philistinism which it is, and as what it was regarded by left-wing movements, but as a matter arising from nature. Industrial civilization is taken for a condition of disenchantment. The history of the colonial and post-colonial periods is here taken for a time of change unwarranted, indeed rendered impossible, by an infra-historical nature inhering in Muslims, Hindus, and others. A cardinal principle for the cognitive regime of modernity is historicism. This implied the valorization of history by associating substantive notions of change with the passage of time. Historicism, calling up names like Hegel and Marx -- as distinct from the historist doctrine, which was also perfected in Germany and provides the conceptual bedrock of notions of Hindutva as of Islamism -- is a notion of history and society as provinces of consequential change, not of substantive abidance or of naturalistic fatalism within the boundaries of self-subsistent and self-consistent cultures, or culture-nations, and historicism took on many forms, not least those of evolutionism, of progressivism, with or without teleological implication. Yet the malaise of civilization and of progress was always the leitmotif of retrogressive and repressive social and political forces, and of great salience to the jingoist anti-Communism of the past century, and there were under the regime of modernity, grosso modo, two distinctive tempers that have dwelt upon the misfortunes of civilization in general. One rationalist, yet despairing of the historical possibility of rationality and its generalization within society and among societies. The other is historist, anti-rationalist, indeed irrationalist, decrying reason and progress because they damaged the natural constitution of society, and is generally associated with conservatism. This second temper has often -- and still is -- been associated with some form of anti-industrialism or romantic and pietistic anti-capitalism, and sometimes celebrates a prelapsarian past -- of national vigour and simplicity, of order and hierarchy, of pure and primal religious life, or simply of life according to nature -- as a time of plenitude and harmony. Notions of pre-colonialist Arcadianism among conservatives in the South, today duplicated and somewhat impoverished by post-modernist communalists in India and elsewhere. We may characterize the former temper as rationalist, the latter as Romantic, the one associated with Jacobinism, the other with various forms of romantic chauvinism. Against the Enlightenment, accelerated by the French revolution and the internationlization of the republicanist model of social and political organization through Napoleonic action and example in Europe, Ottoman lands, and Latin America , a profound seam of anti-Enlightenment speculation and action was in place. In Europe, most particularly in Germany and England, with Burke, Hamann, and Herder among countless lesser others, it took the form of a diffuse but often virulent anti-Gallicism; in France itself the Enlightenment was vigorously combatted after the Revolution by royalists and other Catholics like de Maistre and Bonald in terms which became standard statements of hierarchical organism, and this was of course countered by very strong positivist and evolutionist tendencies. Despite these tensions and antagonisms, the boundaries were not always fast and firm, and German organismic and vitalist theories of nations and cultures were nevertheless resonant and deeply influential. This is not least because historism, by substituting a particularistic and incommensurable anthropology of the Volksgeist for history, posits a natural history of society to which time is somehow incidental and insubstantive, a natural history which, in certain inflections, might also be regarded in the spirit of certain Enlightenment notions of deterministic naturalism: these were manifestly important for Gobineau and to all subsequent racialist theories. The consequence of this is of course a thesis which goes very much in the opposite sense to Popper's famous but ignorant critique of historicism, for it is historicism which makes it possible to think of human liberty concretely, and not some ahistorical liberalism or English pragmatic beliefs in the crooked timber of humanity. Generally speaking, civilization was thought, in this perspective, to be something very precarious, resting uncertainly and improbably on a seething magma of barbarity, of primal humanity that, by virtue of the nature to which it is fated, eluded the dream of rational life, but which, in a social-Darwinist world, was saved from self-destruction by Malthusian mechanisms, held to have been incontrovertible mechanisms for the regulation of the inferior proletariat well into the writings of a Keynes, sand certainly, as applied to the South today, in the beliefs and practices of many international organizations. This primal humanity eluded the generalization of civility, the acquisition of a distinctive sense of time and temporality, the internatization of external coercion, and many other collateral processes of civilization. Yet this restless human magma did not consist only of uncouth rustics, drunken tradesmen, and domestic servants, but crucially constituted crowds, imposed universal suffrage upon reluctant authorities, participated in revolutions, manned barricades, set up communes, executed priests, fulfilled the spectral promises made in the opening passage of The Communist Manifesto. It made a spectacle of historical change, and this was regarded by its betters as evidence of irrationality unrelated to social conditions of eruption. And it was indeed by means of irrationalist suggestions that this Geenie on the streets was wrapped up and domesticated, by means of jingoism, imperialism and war -- the Geenie without, the colonial or the primitive, had not yet arrived as an active agency. But Barbarians both inside and outside were alike, for Frazer as for many others: Adolphe Blanqui was only one of very many nineteenth century Frenchmen to compare Algeria and other colonies with various parts of France as yet uncivilized. Of course, those who despaired of civilization, most particularly conservatives, took the short step from indicating the parlous fragility of civilized order to affirming inevitable, cyclical or linear decline, degeneration, and atrophy. There was a large body of writing on degeneration around the fin-de-siècle and up to the end of the Second World War, a fevered time by all accounts, most particularly after the First World War and the revolutionary waves that followed it. Albert Freeman declared the industrial proletariat of American Taylorism and Fordism to be submen. For his part, the prominent Zionist Max Nordau , who changed his original surname (Sµdstern) from one that indicated the uncertainty of the South to one implying Northern virility, was by no means the only one to speak at length of decadence, of decadent art and poetry; he utilized physiognomic and other theories of criminality current in the late nineteenth century, particularly writings of Lambroso, to expostulate on biological degeneration, in a manner fully anticipating the equally romantic cultural policies and the culture criticism of Entartung (degeneration) of National Socialism. Degeneration of the lower orders of society came metaphorically to stand for their uncertain subordination in an age of revolution. Alexis Carrell, celebrated eugenist and winner of the Nobel Prize for medicine who, after a career in New York laboratories, became the cultural and scientific oracle of the Maréchal Pétain at Vichy, deplored the proletarian degeneration of the energetic and intelligent northern stocks, emasculated by massification, and incapable of improvement or elevation. I mention this person because he is of particular interest to me; Carrell's once-famous book, L'Homme, cet inconnu, has been highly influential on some prominent radical Muslim fundamentalist thinkers (Qutb in the Arab World, Mawdudi in India and Pakistan, Shariati in Iran) of the 1950s and 60s, who appreciated both his ramblings about degeneration, and his staunch belief in a small guiding minority. Let us move more than half a century ahead, to the close of the millennium, to the present moment of deregulation and neo-globalization . The intervening period witnessed the rise of means other than authoritarianism and warmongering to deal with the barbaric magma below and to assimilate it. This was the Keynesian consensus that followed from the Second World War and from the vigour displayed by the Soviet Union -- the necessity of employment for all, the welfare state, the New Deal, later in the United States Johnson's Great Society and the idea of affirmative action or positive discrimination. In the case of Keynes himself, this must be seen against the background of private ideas contained in his correspondence, which regarded the proletariat as a degenerate mass, for whom the Keynesian programme of employment and welfarism may be regarded as a programme for social prophylaxis. Yet these developments entailed not only the socialization and elevation of the commoner, but also his consequent de-Barbarization. In the Third World -- and I am here starting my change of key -- this was the great era of the UNESCO, the UNDP, of national independence and non-alignment, of comprehensive development programmes, all of which led to the predominance of another discourse on outsiders, the de-Barbarizing discourse of universal development, of take-off, except amongst circles in Europe which were then thought to be hopelessly anachronistic. The Barbarian outsider, the colonial, was becoming an ex-colonial, and was no longer generally inert and only furtively active in his unreason. The Barbarian outsider was being elevated and assimilited in his turn The great change of the 1980s, in which the Keynesian basis of the post-war order was jettisoned, became possible, with indecent haste, once the alternative historical Jacobin project available since the Bolshevik revolution was no longer available -- capitalism had taken over socialist ideas just as as nineteenth-century authoritarians like Gladstone and Bismarck took over ideas of universal suffrage. While Keynesian policies and ideas were triumphant, the more archaic fundamentalism of free market economics was confined to the margins: Friedrich von Hayek, most abidingly, no less that the younger Milton Friedman who, as early as 1968, was speaking of a "natural" rate of unemployment ("The Role of Monetary Policy", in The American Econ. Rev., LVIII, 1968, 1-17). Today, in the name of a tawdry natural theology of the market, is being reproduced just this turbulent magma, within Europe and without, constituting what Toynbee called a new proletariat, internal and external, which owes nothing to civilization: with remarkable prescience, Toynbee used the term "the post-modern age" as early as 1954 (he had already used it in 1939, but only loosely and for immediate convenience), to designate the decline in the modernist European middle classes of the nineteenth century from about 1875, and the rise of these protoplasmic proletariats &emdash; these were historical processes that precipitated the events of 1917-1920, the rise of National Socialism, and the Second World War. All these events interrupted the post-1875 trend identified by the great British historian, and were compounded by the social prophylaxis of Keynesianism, leading to its century-long delay. With the collapse of Communism and of the Western Keynesianism correlative with it came the almost total disappearance of the notion of economic and social development for countries of the South. This was replaced by notions of structural adjustment in the economy and an emphasis on romantically anti-state, and therefore anti-national locality in social development, or attempts to reformulate community of various descriptions and amplitudes in the image of a national state. All this was made in terms, and in the name, of a market regarded to be the natural as well as the desirable state of mankind. Equally of the order of nature in this perspective are various areas of deregulation, which have come to comprise state, culture, and society in deliberate involution: all of these are of course matters familiar from the cant of what we may call culturalist conservationism on a world scale. In the same breath, structural marginality and the existence of large permanent rates of unemployment, the segmentation of the labour market, geographical, ethnic, and other forms of segregation, became facts of life, facts of nature. Toynbee's proletariat becomes a vast metaphor for socio-cultural and consequently political marginality, both internal and external. With this came the remarkable revival in the West of extremist nationalism and militant racism, associated with a broad, effective, quite diffuse, revival après la lettre, as it were, of the classical repertoire of romantic, conservative, vitalist conceptions of society and of history of which I have spoken. Notions of natural, almost biological boundaries of inter-group sympathy, of the impossibility of coexistence or integration, are all notions deriving from this repertoire, and are freely used by politicians as if they were matters of neutral self-evidence. What I am suggesting is that the present moment is marked by a culturalist turn, which totalizes the social inside as well as the social outside, and which sublimates the notion of race into the notion of culture and of specificity, which reifies international economic exchanges and political hegemonism by recourse to the notion of cultural Difference, grounded in modes of thought about society and culture that describe themselves as post-modernist. Like the Kulturkritik I referred to and the Lebensphilosophie associated with it, this position claims the recovery of things hidden by civilization, the abiding pre-modernity of others palatable to post-modernist taste, backwardness restituted from the snares of the Enlightenment and the modernities it spawned, a prior order of nature, a vital force, rising up as a mystery of infra-historical organisms that dwell beyond time. Once deregulated in this fashion, culture follows the market in its awakening, in its irredentism, in its voracity. I am not making a rhetorical point here: the privatization of culture entails its relegation, in practice and in principle, simultaneously to foreign, global actors like Non-Governmental organizations who have become primary deliverers of cultural development aid (in the name of multiculturalism, of local democracy, and of other shibboleths), and to private retrogressive political forces internally, duly gentrified in post-modern social theory, in the name of authenticity. I know that the vitalist, organismic, romantic genealogy of seemingly liberal post-modernism, is not immediately recognizable, and this is unsurprising. Collective amnesia and the organized public manufacture of memory made generalizable by formidable means of communication, and the devalorization of lived historical memory in favour of the virtual, are essential to post-modernist mystification, and this is not lost on one of its prophets -- I refer to J.-F. Lyotard's best book, Le post-modernisme expliqué aux enfants [Post-Modernism explained to Children] , although I must say that this connection with romanticism and pragmatism is celebrated in post-modernist literary-critical histories of that particular calling. Standard text-books of social or political theory give romanticism and vitalism decidedly minor positions in the history of the nineteenth and the first half of our own century, out of keeping with their historical weight, although it must be said that this was not the case in writings emanating from the Soviet Block, not all of which was propagandist, and the most famous of which was of course Lukacs' famous Die Zerstörung der Vernunft [The Destruction of Reason] . Not unnaturally, this irrationalism, reinforced by the predominance of pre-literate forms of communication, generates an atmosphere of infernal conspiracy pervading public life: phantasmagoric scenarios concerning the War of Civilizations, from Samuel Huntington to lesser-known tinkerers with words, the demonization with definite political purpose of, variously, the PLO, Saddam Hussein, and of Muslims in general, as had been the case in the very proximate past, with the demonization of Communism, with prohibitionism and other public agendas in the political culture of the United States. These are all instances of mass-hysterical phenomena, like Mc Carthyism, various discourses on international conspiracies by Jesuits (in the eyes of the Left in Catholic countries), of Freemasons (by Jesuits). >From the Barbarian within I come again to the Barbarian without. We have seen that the primitive, the Barbarian, the outsider, the lagard, and a host of other antitheses or failures of civilization are bound together, as a generic group of cultural categories, with similar conditions of emergence in the civilized imaginaire. In juxtaposition with a re-constitution, in conditions of the acute post-Keynesian crisis I mentioned, of the tribally-conceived Northern inside, riven with contradictions and indelibly marked by savagery as I have indicated, as happily post-modern, as being beyond modernity in the sole sense, as I see it, of being based on a modernity accomplished and renewed, whose normative, epistemological, and aesthetic equipment is no longer necessary for the maintenance and management of the public order, normative functions having been re-allocated to very thoroughgoing forms of the manipulation of consent -- in conjunction with this is a culturalist construction of outsiders, as being themselves also in the mode of return to origins occluded. And just as notions of citizenship are being questioned, most saliently in the United States, on grounds of communalism , so also are people of the South regarded from this perspective, and within the categories of North American multiculturalist practices; in this way, members of various western intelligentsias present themselves as midwives of the authenticity of others, construing what they term 'civil society' by the invention of pre-civil conceptions. Altogether, this re-Barbarization of the outsider takes the form of liberal sensibility. In learned discourse it takes the form of appropriating the anti-Orientalist theses of Edward Said: in this way orientals, especially those who describe themselves, quite implausibly but without any sense of irony, as post-colonial, in objective complicity with fundamentalist priests of authenticity, merge into the vicious cycle of this discourse of singularity: orientals are thus re-orientalized in a traffic of mirror images between post-modernists and neo-Orientalists speaking for Difference, and native orientals ostentatiously displaying their badges of authenticity, in a play of exotism from outside and self-parody from the inside. In this context, the discourse of culturalist specificity -- instead of that of economic and social inequality and inequity -- devolves to a post-1989 postulate concerning the congenital incapacity for modernity in a world of deregulation, hence for the economic, social, and political treatment of economic, political, and social problems, arising from the recent forms of globalization and deregulation, and giving rise to the spectres of terrorism and immigration. The re-Barbarization of the Southerner transforms him, beyond history and the international inequity of resources, into tribal warrior, refugee, asylum seeker or illegal immigrant -- as if these last were crossing the Mediterranean over to the Shangri-La, when they know full-well they are crossing the River Styx to lands of darkness and intense unsociability. The Southerner thus re-Barbarized turns into a terrorist and fundamentalist. Inept and incapable of development, he becomes the pathetic victim of famine and anarchy, to which he is culturally predisposed. Uncivilized and only superficially touched by modernity, he becomes again prone to tribalism and to wars of ethnicity and religion, all construed as the results of a natural history beyond human agency. Once again, we encounter the banality of irresponsibility, and we encounter a Barbarian construed as eternal when this construal itself is based on a system of relations which is mystified in the name of nature. Yet the midwives of Barbarian authenticity do not speak with the voice of nature, for she has no voice, but of naturalism and of a deterministic natural history of the cultures of others, not of reality, but of virtual memory marketed. The aesthetic of exotism and the ditinctions based on wealth merge yet again. Retour aux contributions disponibles
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