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After the EmpireMichael Hardt and Antonio Negri,
creators of an influential theory of globalization, are back with
the next phase
By SCOTT MCLEMEE
In
2000, Michael Hardt, an associate professor of literature at Duke
University, and Antonio Negri, a legendary figure on the Italian
left, published a volume bearing the grand, stark title
Empire. Even before it was listed in the Harvard University
Press catalog, the appearance of the book was keenly anticipated
among antiglobalization activists. Rumor had it that Empire
would provide a definitive analysis of the new world order. It
would be the theoretical bridge between postmodernist academics and
a mass movement that was making it ever harder for international
financial institutions to meet in peace.
You can't buy word
of mouth like that. It did not hurt that Mr. Negri had spent much of
the previous two decades in exile, convicted of having fomented
civil disorder during the 1970s as the main theorist and éminence
grise of a revolutionary group. (In 1997, he returned from
France to serve out a prison sentence that he completed last year.)
This is known as having street cred.
When Empire
finally appeared, it was hailed as the Next Big Thing, by both
scholars and the occasional intellectual fashion reporter for a
major metropolitan daily. Empire eventually sold more than
40,000 copies. Few who purchased it ever reached a definite opinion
about, say, the relationship between the World Trade Organization
and the role of the philosopher Duns Scotus in subverting medieval
ontology. Even so, Empire made its way into coffeehouses, and
onto coffee tables; and now there is a sequel, Multitude: War and
Democracy in the Age of Empire (Penguin Press), prominently
displayed at a bookstore near you, sometimes oddly situated
alongside books by talk-show hosts or volumes of advice on managing
your portfolio.
"Empire was really written for a
university audience," says Mr. Hardt, "for graduate students, more
or less." With Multitude, "we tried to write differently, for
a much broader audience, while also doing a balancing act to make it
interesting to scholars."
Fredric Jameson, a prominent
professor of comparative literature at Duke University, called
Empire "the first great new theoretical synthesis of the new
millennium" -- a proclamation with much weight in the
humanities. The reception that work received in the
antiglobalization movement means that Multitude is getting
some critical attention outside academe. Writing in The New York
Times Book Review, Francis Fukuyama, a professor of
international political economy at the Johns Hopkins University,
complained that Multitude "lurches from analyses of
intellectual property rules for genetically engineered animals to
discourses on Dostoyevsky and the myth of the golem," and that Mr.
Hardt and Mr. Negri "take leave of reality" when discussing global
politics.
That difference in judgment has nothing to do with
any change in the thinking of Mr. Hardt and Mr. Negri between
Empire and Multitude. While the new book is more
accessible, it offers substantially the same theory as
Empire. Where Mr. Jameson is the author of an influential
Marxist analysis of postmodernism as "the cultural logic of late
capitalism," Mr. Fukuyama will always be remembered for having
hailed the triumph of the United States in the cold war as "the end
of history." No surprise, then, that they should come to different
estimates of the same theory. But another factor may also be in
play. There is a certain urgency to Multitude, as the
subtitle's reference to war and democracy may suggest. After all, it
was drafted between the September 11, 2001, attacks and the
beginning of the invasion and occupation of Iraq.
No
Justice, No Peace
Between September 11, 2001, and early
2003 the antiglobalization movement did not exactly die, though the
crowds did thin. Politicians and pundits with no interest in the
concept of a postmodern empire began talking about imperialism of
the old-fashioned sort. And not always to denounce it. Perhaps (one
current of thought went) the United States could export liberal
democracy, or at least wipe out any terrorist threat to it. Glancing
at their coffee tables, people wondered if perhaps Mr. Hardt and Mr.
Negri had been on to something.
The prospect of a global Pax
Americana might sound either utopian or nightmarish, depending on
one's politics. In any case, it bears no resemblance to the vision
of Mr. Hardt and Mr. Negri. The world order they envision is far too
complex for a single country to dominate it. The emergence of
Empire, as they write in Multitude, involves a "state of war"
that is "both global in scale and long lasting, with no end in sight
... strangling all social life and posing its own political
order."
Nor is that order compatible with democracy. Freedom
is part of the collateral damage of Empire, "buried beneath the
weapons and security regimes of our constant state of conflict." Yet
democracy does remain on the agenda. Forces emerging within (and
against) the system of Empire will create a now-unimaginable form of
global democracy. The hero of this revolutionary struggle is
something Mr. Hardt and Mr. Negri call "the multitude."
If
their term sounds a little bit like "the proletariat" -- well,
that is not entirely accidental. During the 1960s and '70s, Mr.
Negri, then a professor of political science at the University of
Padua, in Italy, published some of the densest works of Marxist
theory every committed to paper. His followers in the revolutionary
organization Workers Autonomy translated Mr. Negri's work on "the
social factory" (the idea that all sectors of life had become
extensions of capitalist production) into frequent clashes with
factory owners, politicians, and the police.
But the concept
of the multitude actually comes from Mr. Negri's later work on the
philosopher Baruch Spinoza. As a graduate student in comparative
literature at the University of Washington, Mr. Hardt published a
translation of Mr. Negri's book The Savage Anomaly: The Power of
Spinoza's Metaphysics and Politics (University of Minnesota
Press, 1991).
The Dutch thinker's pantheism and advocacy of
constitutional democracy were extremely radical positions within
17th- century European philosophy. As Mr. Hardt and Mr. Negri
reconfigure Spinoza's work for the 21st century, his concept of
multitudio sounds rather like identity politics. It includes
"different cultures, races, ethnicities, genders, and sexual
orientations; different forms of labor; different ways of living;
different views of the world; and different desires." The multitude,
write Mr. Hardt and Mr. Negri, "can never be reduced to a unity or a
single identity."
The multitude can defeat Empire's
authoritarian "biopower," write Mr. Hardt and Mr. Negri, through the
decentralized "swarm intelligence" of continuing "network
struggles." (Perhaps the most appealing thing about Hardt-Negrian
theory, at least for its enthusiasts, is its rather cyberpunkish
political vocabulary.)
Makes Its Own
Syllabus!
In an e-mail message, Mr. Negri writes, in
Italian, that he is "clearly surprised by the success of
Empire and Multitude" but considers it "important
merely as a means of enlarging the discussion around the struggle."
While his work with Mr. Hardt is certainly being read by activists
in the antiglobalization and antiwar movements, it has also found a
ready audience in aca-deme.
Harry Cleaver, an associate
professor of economics at the University of Texas at Austin, was one
of the first scholars in the United States to write about Mr.
Negri's work. He calls the collaboration with Mr. Hardt "an attempt
to get out of the little back room of lefty circles, and reach a lot
of other people, including postmodernists." Empire has turned
up on reading lists in a variety of disciplines in the humanities
and social sciences. "It's also being read in business schools,"
says Mr. Cleaver, perhaps on the principle that businesspeople
should have some sense of a left-wing analysis.
If so, future
M.B.A.'s ought to know that a considerable body of scholarship has
been devoted to examining what some radical academics see as the
hopelessly abstract character of Hardt-Negrian theory. Why develop a
stratospheric theory of Empire, the critics complain, instead of
analyzing the specific policies of, say, transnational corporations
-- or the American government?
The abstractness is both
a strength of the Empire theory and a source of frustration, says
Charlie Bertsch, an assistant professor of English at the University
of Arizona and a founding editor of the cultural-studies journal
Bad Subjects. He admires the willingness of Mr. Hardt and Mr.
Negri "to think big when most leftists seem to be thinking small."
And the concept of multitude, he says, "invites in readers who would
be turned off by reference to 'the people' or 'the masses.'" The
authors "offer a warm and fuzzy welcome to almost anyone, aside from
those on the far right, who is willing to resist 'Empire' as they
define it."
But Mr. Bertsch also says he sometimes "has a
hard time getting traction in either Empire or
Multitude," because the authors "rarely get close enough to
their topic to see its finer details."
Mr. Cleaver, the
economist, acknowledges that "a lack of concreteness" in the books
"can leave readers skeptical. But there's a lot more empirical
background to the theories than is known to people reading them
here." During the 1980s and '90s, he says, Mr. Negri and his
colleagues in Europe published a large body of research on topics in
economics, particularly concerning labor and immigration, in the
French journal Future anterieur. "It was replaced recently by
another journal called Multitudes," he says. "Very little of
the work in those journals has been translated into
English."
Even so, Mr. Hardt and Mr. Negri supply plenty of
occasions to head to the library. Empire and Multitude
generate their own rather demanding reading lists. In addition to
Spinoza and Marx, they draw on ancient and modern political
philosophers. Their footnotes reference scholarship on international
economics and the history of the labor movement, in at least four
languages. And some aspects of their work allude to another, even
stranger, collaborative project: A Thousand Plateaus, the sui
generis work of cultural theory by two French thinkers, Gilles
Deleuze, a philosopher, and Félix Guattari, a radical
"anti-psychiatrist."
Endless Struggle
The
product is a theory that sometimes resembles overstuffed luggage.
What it does not resemble is the picture of the world familiar from
dozens of other accounts of globalization.
As the
boilerplate version has it, the contemporary economy and culture of
the world are the culmination of the centuries-long spread of
capitalism, and of its most-favored political environment, liberal
democracy. That process can generate resistance from older cultural
traditions. (It can even revitalize them, as in Islamic
fundamentalism.) But the familiar story has it that globalization is
an irresistible force, revealing the strength and dynamism of a
market economy.
Not so, according to the Empire concept of
Mr. Hardt and Mr. Negri. They, too, see the world becoming fully
integrated into a purely capitalist order (a process Mr. Negri calls
"real subsumption"). But that makes the entire planet into a giant
factory, rather than a market. And ever more of the functioning of
the global factory involves what Mr. Hardt and Mr. Negri call
"immaterial labor."
That term covers more than just the
service sector or the information economy. A constant expenditure of
creativity is required to keep the system running -- through
technological innovations, for example. The mass media "assemble"
symbolic products, as if on an assembly line. And what sociologists
have termed "emotional labor" is necessary to keep restitching the
social fabric of capitalist life. As Mr. Hardt and Mr. Negri
understand things, conflicts over intellectual property, cultural
identity, and the availability of social services are struggles over
the control of immaterial labor.
By e-mail, Mr. Negri says
that "the combined efforts of my companions and me, some 30 years
ago, to understand the transformation of current capitalism ...
permitted us to engage in a definition of the new world order." A
share of the academic literature devoted to Empire has traced its
themes back to the "workerist" and "autonomist" currents that
emerged in Italian radicalism during the 1960s and 1970s. But as Mr.
Hardt points out, their collaboration involves more than recycling
old ideas.
They have sometimes spoken of "a force, almost an
instinct of humanity, that rebels against authority, against
oppression." He calls that force "the 'always already' multitude."
But their recent work, especially the latest book, stresses what Mr.
Hardt calls "the 'not yet' multitude -- the possibility, today,
of creating a political project based on the cooperation of
fundamentally different groups and interests that remain different
and independent, but nevertheless cooperate and act
together."
What Is to Be Done?
But how
does the teeming multitude "cooperate and act together"? And why?
James Heartfield, who directs the University of Delaware's program
in London, is skeptical. In his book The 'Death of the Subject'
Explained (Sheffield Hallam University Press, 2002), Mr.
Heartfield presents a rather old-fashioned Marxist critique of some
of the poststructuralist theories that have shaped Empire and
Multitude. In conversation, he describes Hardt-Negrian
radicalism as an evasion of politics altogether.
"Whenever
you galvanize a movement and band together to put forward demands,"
he says, "you exclude others. This idea of 'multitude' displaces the
problem. At one point, Negri writes, 'Down with unity.' Like a lot
of people, he dreads that moment of mediation between mass democracy
and representative democracy. But you can't just get rid of the
problem by defining it away."
Asked about this criticism, Mr.
Hardt responds, "We're certainly not in the business of writing
manifestoes, or What Is to Be Done?" He does indicate,
however, that his work with Mr. Negri has now reached the stage
where they need to "think global democracy today" -- that is,
develop some notion of what would replace Empire.
"People
spend a lot of time criticizing contemporary global institutions,
and the insufficiency of national institutions as well," he says.
"The obvious thing, of course, is to ask: What would an alternative
look like, and where would it come from?" Some of those questions
begin to emerge in the final pages of Multitude, but not the
answers.
"Toni's talking about volume three," says Mr. Hardt.
They are at the early stage of what sounds like a well-established
routine. "We exchange letters about criticisms of the last book. We
give each other reading lists." (Eventually, someone's academic
career will be made from analyzing the documents of how an American
professor and an Italian revolutionary collaborated on their
books.)
After Empire and Multitude, Mr. Hardt
says, "We need a little rest." But it is clear that Mr. Negri is
ready to push on to the next phase -- defining a new vision of
some still newer world order. The multitude waits, patiently or
otherwise.
http://chronicle.com Section: Research & Publishing Volume
51, Issue 11, Page A15
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