control
AND becoming
Negri: The problem of politics seems to
have always been present in your intellectual life. Your involvement in various
movements (prisoners, homosexuals, Italian autonomists, Palestinians), on the
one hand, and the constant problematizing of institutions, on the other, follow
on from one another and interact with one another in your work, from the book
on Hume through to the one on Foucault. What are the roots of this sustained
concern with the question of politics, and how has it remained so persistent
within your developing work? Why is the relation between movement and
institution always problematic?
Deleuze: What I've been interested in are
collective creations rather than representations. There's a whole order of
movement in "institutions" that's independent of both laws and
contracts. What I found in Hume was a very creative conception of institutions
and law. I was initially more interested in law than politics. Even with Masoch
and Sade what I liked was the thoroughly twisted conception of contracts in
Masoch, and of institutions in Sade, as these come out in relation to
sexuality. And in the present day, I see Francois Ewald's work to reestablish a
philosophy of law as quite fundamental. What interests me isn't the law or
laws1 (the former being an empty notion, the latter uncritical
notions), nor even law or rights, but jurisprudence. It's jurisprudence,
ultimately, that creates law, and we mustn't go on leaving this to judges.
Writers ought to read law reports rather than the Civil Code. People are already thinking about establishing a
system of law for modern biology; but everything in modern biology and the new
situations it creates, the new courses of events it makes possible, is a matter
for jurisprudence. We don't need an ethical committee of supposedly
well-qualified wise men, but user-groups. This is where we move from law into
politics. I, for my own part, made a sort of move into politics around May 68,
as I came into contact with specific problems, through Guattari, through
Foucault, through Elie Sambar. Anti-Oedipus was from beginning to end a book of
political philosophy.
Negri: You took the events
of '68 to be the triumph of the Untimely, the dawn of counteractualization.2
Already in the years leading up to '68, in your work on Nietzsche and a bit
later in Coldness and Cruelty, you 'd given a new meaning to politics—as
possibility, event, singularity. You 'd found short-circuits where the future
breaks through into the present, modifying institutions in its wake. But then
after '68 you take a slightly different approach: nomadic thought always takes
the temporal form of instantaneous counteractualization, while spatially only
"minority becoming is universal." How should we understand this
universality of the untimely?9
Deleuze: The thing is, I became more and more
aware of the possibility of distinguishing between becoming and history. It
was Nietzsche who said that nothing important is ever free from a
"nonhistorical cloud." This isn't to oppose eternal and historical,
or contemplation and action: Nietzsche is talking about the way things happen,
about events themselves or becoming. What history grasps in an event is the
way it's actualized in particular circumstances; the event's becoming is
beyond the scope of history. History isn't experimental,3 it's just
the set of more or less negative preconditions that make it possible to experiment
with something beyond history. Without history the experimentation would
remain indeterminate, lacking any initial conditions, but experimentation
isn't historical. In a major philosophical work, Clio, Peguy explained that
there are two ways of considering events, one being to follow the course of the
event, gathering how it comes about historically, how it's prepared and then
decomposes in history, while the other way is to go back into the event, to
take one's place in it as in a becoming, to grow both young and old in it at
once, going through all its components or singularities. Becoming isn't part of
history; history amounts only the set of preconditions, however recent, that
one leaves behind in order to "become," that is, to create something
new. This is precisely what Nietzsche calls the Untimely. May 68 was a
demonstration, an irruption, of a becoming in its pure state. It's fashionable
these days to condemn the horrors of revolution. It's nothing new; English
Romanticism is permeated by reflections on Cromwell very similar to
present-day reflections on Stalin.4 They say revolutions turn out
badly. But they're constantly confusing two different things, the way
revolutions turn out historically and people's revolutionary becoming. These
relate to two different sets of people. Men's only hope lies in a revolutionary
becoming: the only way of casting off their shame or responding to what is
intolerable.
Negri: A Thousand Plateaus, which I regard
as a major philosophical work, seems to me at the same time a catalogue of
unsolved problems, most particularly in the field of political philosophy. Its
pairs of contrasting terms—process and project, singularity and subject,
composition and organization, lines of flight and apparatuses/strategies, micro
and macro, and so on—all this not only remains forever open but it's constantly
being reopened, through an amazing will to theorize, and with a violence
reminiscent of heretical proclamations. I've nothing against such subversion,
quite the reverse . . . But I seem sometimes to hear a tragic note, at points
where it's not clear where the "war-machine" is going.
Deleuze: I'm moved by what you say. I think
Felix Guattari and I have remained Marxists, in our two different ways,
perhaps, but both of us. You see, we think any political philosophy must turn
on the analysis of capitalism and the ways it has developed. What we find most
interesting in Marx is his analysis of capitalism as an immanent system that's
constantly overcoming its own limitations, and then coming up against them
once more in a broader form, because its fundamental limit is Capital itself. A
Thousand Plateaus sets out in many different directions, but these are the
three main ones: first, we think any society is defined not so much by its
contradictions as by its lines of flight, it flees all over the place, and it's
very interesting to try and follow the lines of flight taking shape at some
particular moment or other. Look at Europe now, for instance: western
politicians have spent a great deal of effort setting it all up, the
technocrats have spent a lot of effort getting uniform administration and
rules, but then on the one hand there may be surprises in store in the form of
upsurges of young people, of women, that become possible simply because
certain restrictions are removed (with "untechnocratizable"
consequences); and on the other hand it's rather comic when one considers that
this Europe has already been completely superseded before being inaugurated,
superseded by movements coming from the East. These are major lines of flight.
There's another direction in A Thousand Plateaus, which amounts to considering
not just lines of flight rather than contradictions, but minorities rather
than classes. Then finally, a third direction, which amounts to finding a
characterization of "war machines" that's nothing to do with war but
to do with a particular way of occupying, taking up, space-time, or inventing
new space-times: revolutionary movements (people don't take enough account, for
instance, of how the PLO has had to invent a space-time in the Arab world), but
artistic movements too, are war-machines in this sense.
You say there's a certain tragic or melancholic tone in all
this. I think I can see why. I was very struck by all the passages in Primo
Levi where he explains that Nazi camps have given us "a shame at being
human." Not, he says, that we're all responsible for Nazism, as some would
have us believe, but that we've all been tainted by it: even the survivors of
the camps had to make compromises with it, if only to survive. There's the
shame of there being men who became Nazis; the shame of being unable, not
seeing how, to stop it; the shame of having compromised with it; there's the
whole of what Primo Levi calls this "gray area." And we can feel
shame at being human in utterly trivial situations, too: in the face of too
great a vulgarization of thinking, in the face of tv entertainment, of a ministerial speech, of "jolly
people" gossiping. This is one of the most powerful incentives toward philosophy,
and it's what makes all philosophy political. In capitalism only one thing is
universal, the market. There's no universal state, precisely because there's a
universal market of which states are the centers, the trading floors. But the
market's not universalizing, homogenizing, it's an extraordinary generator of
both wealth and misery. A concern for human rights shouldn't lead us to extol
the "joys" of the liberal capitalism of which they're an integral
part. There's no democratic state that's not compromised to the very core by
its part in generating human misery. What's so shameful is that we've no sure
way of maintaining becomings, or still more of arousing them, even within
ourselves. How any group will turn out, how it will fall back into history,
presents a constant "concern."5 There's no longer any
image of proletarians around of which it's just a matter of becoming conscious.
Negri: How can minority
becoming be powerful? How can resistance become an insurrection ? Reading you,
I'm never sure how to answer such questions, even though I always find in your
works an impetus that forces me to reformulate the questions theoretically and
practically. And yet when I read what you 've written about the imagination, or
on common notions in Spinoza, or when I follow your description in The
Time-Image of the rise of revolutionary cinema in third-world countries, and
with you grasp the passage from image into fabulation, into political praxis, I
almost feel I've found an answer. . . Or am I mistaken ? Is there then, some
way for the resistance of the oppressed to become effective, and for what's
intolerable to be definitively removed? Is there some way for the mass of
singularities and atoms that we all are to come forward as a constitutive
power, or must we rather accept the juridical paradox that constitutive power
can be defined only by constituted power?
Deleuze: The difference between minorities and
majorities isn't their size. A minority may be bigger than a majority. What
defines the majority is a model you have to conform to: the average European
adult male city-dweller, for example ... A minority, on the other hand, has no
model, it's a becoming, a process. One might say the majority is nobody.
Everybody's caught, one way or another, in a minority becoming that would lead
them info unknown paths if they opted to follow it through. When a 'minority
creates models for itself, it's because it wants to become a majority, and
probably has to, to survive or prosper (to have a state, be recognized,
establish its rights, for example). But its power comes from what it's managed
to create, which to some extent goes into the model, but doesn't depend on it.
A people is always a creative minority, and remains one even when it acquires a
majority^ it can be both at once because the two things aren't lived out on the
same plane. It's the greatest artists (rather than populist artists) who invoke
a people, and find they "lack a people": Mallarme, Rimbaud, Klee,
Berg. The Straubs in cinema. Artists can only invoke a people, their need for
one goes to the very heart of what they're doing, it's not their job to create
one, and they can't. Art is resistance: it resists death, slavery, infamy,
shame. But a people can't worry about art. How is a people created, through
what terrible suffering? When a people's created, it's through its own
resources, but in away that links up with something in art (Garrel says there's
a mass of terrible suffering in the Louvre, too) or links up art to what it
lacked. Utopia isn't the right concept: it's more a question of a
"tabulation" in which a people and art both share. We ought to take up
Bergson's notion of tabulation and give it a political meaning.
Negri: In your book on
Foucault, and then again in your TV interview at INA,6 you suggest
we should look in more detail at three kinds of power: sovereign power,
disciplinary power, and above all the control of "communication "
that's on the way to becoming hegemonic. On the one hand this third scenario
relates to the most perfect form of domination, extending even to speech and
imagination, but on the other hand any man, any minority, any singularity, is
more than ever before potentially able to speak out and thereby recover a
greater degree of freedom. In the Marxist Utopia of the Grundrisse, communism
takes precisely the form of a transversal organization of free individuals
built on a technology that makes it possible. Is communism still a viable
option? Maybe in a communication society it's less Utopian than it used to be?
Deleuze: We're definitely moving toward
"control" societies that are no longer exactly disciplinary.
Foucault's often taken as the theorist of disciplinary societies and of their
principal technology, confinement (not just in hospitals and prisons, but in
schools, factories, and barracks). But he was actually one of the first to say
that we're moving away from disciplinary societies, we've already left them
behind. We're moving toward control societies that no longer operate by
confining people but through continuous control and instant communication. Burroughs
was the first to address this. People are of course constantly talking about
prisons, schools, hospitals: the institutions are breaking down. But they're
breaking down because they're fighting a losing battle. New kinds of
punishment, education, health care are being stealthily introduced. Open
hospitals and teams providing home care have been around for some time. One can
envisage education becoming less and less a closed site differentiated from the
workspace as another closed site, but both disappearing and giving way to
frightful continual training, to continual monitoring7 of worker-schoolkids
or bureaucrat-students. They try to present this as a reform of the school
system, but it's really its dismantling. In a control-based system nothing's
left alone for long. You yourself long ago suggested how work in Italy was
being transformed by forms of part-time work done at home, which have spread
since you wrote (and by new forms of circulation and distribution of products).
One can of course see how each kind of society corresponds to a particular kind
of machine—with simple mechanical machines corresponding to sovereign
societies, thermo-dynamic machines to disciplinary societies, cybernetic
machines and computers to control societies. But the machines don't explain anything,
you have to analyze the collective arrangements of which the machines are just
one component. Compared with the approaching forms of ceaseless control in open
sites, we may come to see the harshest confinement as part of a wonderful
happy past. The quest for "uni-versals of communication" ought to
make us shudder. It's true that, even before control societies are fully in
place, forms of delinquency or resistance (two different things) are also
appearing. Computer piracy and viruses, for example, will replace strikes and
what the nineteenth century called "sabotage" ("clogging"
the machinery) .8 You ask whether control or communication societies
will lead to forms of resistance that might reopen the way for a communism
understood as the "transversal organization of free individuals."
Maybe, I don't know. But it would be nothing to do with minorities speaking
out. Maybe speech and communication have been corrupted. They're thoroughly permeated
by money—and not by accident but by their very nature. We've got to hijack
speech. Creating has always been something different from communicating. The
key thing may be to create vacuoles of noncommunication, circuit breakers, so
we can elude control.
Negri: In
Foucault and in The Fold, processes of
subjectification seem to be studied more closely than in some of your other
works. The subject's the boundary of a continuous
movement between an inside and outside. What are the political consequences of
this conception of the subject^ If the subject can't be reduced to an
externalized citizenship, can it invest citizenship with force and life? Can it
make possible a new militant pragmatism, at once a pietas toward the world and
a very radical construct. What politics can carry into history the splendor of
events and subjectivity. How can we conceive a community that has real force
but no base, that isn't a totality but is, as in Spinoza, absolute?
Deleuze: It
definitely makes sense to look at the various ways individuals and groups
constitute themselves as subjects through processes of subjec-tification: what
counts in such processes is the extent to which, as they take shape, they elude
both established forms of knowledge and the dominant forms of power. Even if
they in turn engender new forms of power or become assimilated into new forms
of knowledge. For a while, though, they have a real rebellious spontaneity.
This is nothing to do with going back to "the subject," that is, to
something invested with duties, power, and knowledge. One might equally well
speak of new kinds of event, rather than processes of subjectification: events
that can't be explained by the situations that give rise to them, or into which
they lead. They appear for a moment, and it's that moment that matters, it's
the chance we must seize. Or we can simply talk about the brain: the brain's
precisely this boundary of a continuous two-way movement between an Inside and
Outside, this membrane between them. New cerebral pathways, new ways of
thinking, aren't explicable in terms of microsurgery; it's for science, rather,
to try and discover what might have happened in the brain for one to start
thinking this way or that. I think subjectification, events, and brains are
more or less the same thing. What we most lack is a belief in the world, we've
quite lost the world, it's been taken from us. If you believe in the world you
precipitate events, however inconspicuous, that elude control, you engender new
space-times, however small their surface or volume. It's what you call pietas.
Our ability to resist control, or our submission to it, has to be assessed at
the level of our every move. We need both creativity and a people.
Conversation with Toni
Negri Futur Anterieur 1(Spring 1990), translated by Martin Joughin.
Translator’s
notes:
1. La loi, les lois: "the
law" and "laws" correspond to a judicial system of positive
laws enacted in a legal code (such as the Civil Code in France). I use
"law" (without a definite article) to translate droit, as a
system of rights (droits), "natural law," Latin jus as
opposed to lex.
2. Contre-effectuation: characterized
by Deleuze in The Logic of Sense as "counter-acting" the
passive encoding of all activity in predefined roles, by playing the self-determining
"actor" rather than any externally determined part in events.
3. L'histoire n'est pas I 'experimentation:
on the twin sense of "experience" and "experiment" in the
last word, see "Breaking Things Open," n. 13.
4. Reflections on Cromwell were arguably far
more central to French Romanticism—whose birth as a distinct movement is
traditionally dated to the publication of Victor Hugo's Cromwell in
1827—than to its British precursor.
5. Souci: a care, anxiety,
worry—something one's always having to think about.
6. The Institut National d'Audiovisuel, set up
by the French government in 1975 as a center for training, research, and
development in audiovisual media, partly funded by the French tv networks, and producing a small number
of programs for network broadcast.
7. Controle continu, literally
"continuous control," is also the French term for "continuous
assessment" in education; formation permanente, here translated as
"continual training," is also the standard term for "continuing
education."
8. A sabot
was a worker's wooden clog.