Gilles Deleuze and Felix Guattari
Capitalism: A Very Special Delirium
QUESTION: When you describe capitalism, you say: "There isn't the
slightest operation, the slightest industrial or financial mechanism that does
not reveal the dementia of the capitalist machine and the pathological
character of its rationality (not at all a false rationality, but a true
rationality of *this* pathology, of *this madness*, for the machine does work,
be sure of it). There is no danger of this machine going mad, it has been mad
from the beginning and that's where its rationality comes from. Does this mean
that after this "abnormal" society, or outside of it, there can be a
"normal" society?
GILLES DELEUZE: We do not use the terms "normal" or
"abnormal". All societies are rational and irrational at the same
time. They are perforce rational in their mechanisms, their cogs and wheels,
their connecting systems, and even by the place they assign to the irrational.
Yet all this presuposes codes or axioms which are not the products of chance,
but which are not intrinsically rational either. It's like theology: everything
about it is rational if you accept sin, immaculate conception, incarnation.
Reason is always a region cut out of the irrational -- not sheltered from the
irrational at all, but a region traveresed by the irrational and defined only
by a certain type of relation between irrational factors. Underneath all reason
lies delirium, drift. Everything is rational in capitalism, except capital or
capitalism itself. The stock market is certainly rational; one can understand
it, study it, the capitalists know how to use it, and yet it is completely
delirious, it's mad. It is in this sense that we say: the rational is always
the rationality of an irrational. Something that hasn't been adequately
discussed about Marx's *Capital* is the extent to which he is fascinated by
capitalists mechanisms, precisely because the system is demented, yet works
very well at the same time. So what is rational in a society? It is -- the
interests being defined in the framework of this society -- the way people
pursue those interests, their realisation. But down below, there are desires,
investments of desire that cannot be confused with the investments of interest,
and on which interests depend in their determination and distribution: an
enormous flux, all kinds of libidinal-unconscious flows that make up the
delirium of this society. The true story is the history of desire. A
capitalist, or today's technocrat, does not desire in the same way as a slave
merchant or official of the ancient Chinese empire would. That people in a
society desire repression, both for others and *for themselves*, that there are
always people who want to bug others and who have the opportunity to do so, the
"right" to do so, it is this that reveals the problem of a deep link
between libidinal desire and the social domain. A "disinterested"
love for the oppressive machine: Nietzsche said some beautiful things about
this permanent triumph of slaves, on how the embittered, the depressed and the
weak, impose their mode of life upon us all.
Q: So what is specific to capitalism in all this?
GD: Are delirium and interest, or rather desire and reason, distributed in a
completely new, particularly "abnormal" way in capitalism? I believe
so. Capital, or money, is at such a level of insanity that psychiatry has but
one clinical equivalent: the terminal stage. It is too complicated to describe
here, but one detail should be mentioned. In other societies, there is
exploitation, there are also scandals and secrets, but that is part of the
"code", there are even explicitly secret codes. With capitalism, it
is very different: nothing is secret, at least in principle and according to
the code (this is why capitalism is "democratic" and can
"publicize" itself, even in a juridical sense). And yet nothing is
admissable. Legality itself is inadmissable. By contrast to other societies, it
is a regime born of the public *and* the admissable. A very special delirium
inherent to the regime of money. Take what are called scandals today:
newspapers talk a lot about them, some people pretend to defend themselves,
others go on the attack, yet it would be hard to find anything illegal in terms
of the capitalist regime. The prime minister's tax returns, real estate deals,
pressure groups, and more generally the economical and financial mechanisms of
capital -- in sum, everything is legal, except for little blunders, what is
more, everything is public, yet nothing is admissable. If the left was
"reasonable," it would content itself with vulgarizing economic and
financial mechanisms. There's no need to publicize what is private, just make
sure that what is already public is beeing admitted publicly. One would find
oneself in a state of dementia without equivalent in the hospitals.
Instead, one talks of "ideology". But ideology has no importance
whatsoever: what matters is not ideology, not even the
"economico-ideological" distinction or opposition, but the
*organisation of power*. Because organization of power-- that is, the manner in
which desire is already in the economic, in which libido invests the economic
-- haunts the exonomic and nourishes political forms of repression.
Q: So is ideology a trompe l'oeil?
GD: Not at all. To say "ideology is a trompe l'oeil, " that's still
the traditional thesis. One puts the infrastructure on one side-- the economic,
the serious-- and on the other, the superstructure, of which ideology is a
part, thus rejecting the phenomena of desire in ideology. It's a perfect way to
ignore how desire works within the infrastructure, how it invests in it, how it
takes part in it, how, in this respect, it organizes power and the repressive
system. We do not say: ideology is a trompe l'oeil (or a concept that refers to
certain illusions) We say: there is no ideology, it is an illusion. That's why
it suits orthodox Marxism and the Communist Party so well. Marxism has put so
much emphasis on the theme of ideology to better conceal what was happening in
the USSR: a new organization of repressive power. There is no ideology, there
are only organizations of power once it is admitted that the organization of
power is the unity of desire and the economic infrastructure. Take two
examples. Education: in May 1968 the leftists lost a lot of time insisting that
professors engage in public self-criticism as agents of bourgeois ideology.
It's stupid, and simply fuels the masochistic impulses of academics. The
struggle against the competitive examination was abandoned for the benefit of
the controversy, or the great anti-ideological public confession. In the
meantime, the more conservative professors had no difficulty reorganizing their
power. The problem of education is not an ideological problem, but a problem of
the organization of power: it is the specificity of educational power that
makes it appear to be an ideology, but it's pure illusion. Power in the primary
schools, that means something, it affects all children. Second example:
Christianity. The church is perfectly pleased to be treated as an ideology.
This can be argued; it feeds ecumenism. But Christianity has never been an
ideology; it's a very specific organization of power that has assumed diverse
forms since the Roman Empire and the Middle Ages, and which was able to invent
the idea of international power. It's far more important than ideology.
FELIX GUATTARI: It's the same thing in traditional political structures. One
finds the old trick being played everywhere again and again: a big ideological
debate in the general assembly and questions of organization reserved for
special commissions. These questions appear secondary, determinded by political
options. While on the contrary, the real problems are those of organization,
never specified or rationalized, but projected afterwards in ideological terms.
There the real divisions show up: a treatment of desire and power, of
investments, of group Oedipus, of group "superegos", of perverse
phenomena, etc. And then political oppositions are bilt up: the individual
takes such a position against another one, because in the scheme of
organization of power, he has already chosen and hates his adversary.
Q: Your analysis is convincing in the case of the Soviet Union and of
capitalism. But in the particulars? If all ideological oppositions mask, by definition,
the conflicts of desire, how would you analyze, for example, the divergences of
three Trotskyite groupuscules? Of what conflict of desire can this be the
result? Despite the political quarrels, each group seems to fulfill the same
function vis-a-vis its militants: a reassuring hierarchy, the reconstitution of
a small social milieu, a final explanation of the world.... I dont't see the
difference.
FG: Because any resemblance to existing groups is merely fortuitous, one can
well imagine one of these groups defining itself first by its fidelity to
hardened positions of the communist left after the creation of the Third
International. It's a whole axiomatics, down to the phonological level -- the
way of articulating certain words, the gesture that accompanies them -- and
then the structures of organization, the conception of what sort of
relationships to maintain with the allies, the centrists, the adversaries....
This may correspond to a certain figure of Oedipalization, a reassuring,
intangible universe like that of the obsessive who loses his sense of security
if one shifts the position of a single, familar object. It's a question of
reaching, through this kind of identification with recurrent figures and
images, a certain type of efficiency that characterized Stalinism--except for
its ideology, prescisely. In other respects, one keeps the general framework of
the method, but adapts oneself to it very carefully: "The enemy is the
same, comrades, but the conditions have changed." Then one has a more open
groupuscule. It's a compromise: one has crossed out the first image, whilst
maintaining it, and injected other notions. One multiplies meetings and
training sessions, but also the external interventions. For the desiring will,
there is --- as Zazie says-- a certain way of bugging students and militants,
among others.
In the final analysis, all these groupuscules say basically the same thing. But
they are radically opposed in their *style*: the definition of the leader, of
propaganda, a conception of discipline, loyality, modesty, and the asceticism
of the militant. How does one account for these polarities without rummaging in
the economy of desire of the social machine? >From anarchists to Maoists the
spread is very wide, politically as much as analytically. Without even
considering the mass of people, outside the limited range of the groupuscules,
who do not quite know how to distinguish between the leftist elan, the appeal
of union action, revolt, hesitation of indifference...
One must explain the role of these machines.. these goupuscules and their work
of stacking and sifting--in cr*shing desire. It's a dilemma: to be broken by
the social system of to be integrated in the pre-established structure of these
little churches. In a way, May 1968 was an astonishing revelation. The desiring
power became so accelerated that it broke up the groupuscules. These later
pulled themselves together; they participated in the reordering business with
the other repressive forces, the CGT [Communist worker's union], the PC, the
CRS [riot police]. I don't say this to be provocative. Of course, the militants
courageously fought the police. But if one leaves the sphere of struggle to
consider the function of desire, one must recognize that certain groupuscules
approached the youth in a spirit of repression: to contain liberated desire in
order to re-channel it.
Q: What is liverated desire? I certainly see how this can be translated at the
level of an individual or small group: an artistic creation, or breaking windows,
bnurning things, or even simply an orgy or letting things go to hell through
laziness or vegetating. But then what? What could a collectively liberated
desire be at the level of a social group? And what does this signify in
relation to t"the totality of society", if you do not reject this
term as Michel Foucault does.
FG: We have taken desire in one of its most critical, most acute stages: that
of the schizophrenic--and the schizo that can produce something within or
beyond the scope of the confined schizo, battered down with drugs and social
repression. It appears to us that certain schizophrenics directly express a
free deciphering of desire. But now does one conceive a collective form of the
economy of desire? Certainly not at the local level. I would have a lot of
difficulty imagining a small, liberated community maintaining itself against
the flows of a repressive society, like the addition of individuals emancipated
one by one. If, on the contrary, desire constitutes the very texture of society
in its entirety, including in its mechanisms of reproduction, a movement of
liberation can "crystallize" in the whole of society. In May 1968,
from the first sparks to local clashes, the shake-up was brutally transmitted
to the whole of society, ing some groups that had nothing remotely to do with
the revolutionary movement--doctors, lawyers, grocers. Yet it was vested
interests that carried the day, but only after a month of burning. We are
moving toward explosions of this type, yet more profound.
Q: Might there have already been a vigorous and durable liberation of desire in
hostpry, apart from brief periods. a celebration, cartnage, war, opr
revolutionary upheavals? Or do you really believe in an end of history. after
millenia of alienation, social evolution will suddenly turn around in a final
revolution that will liberate desire forever?
FG: Neither the one nor the other. Neither a final end to history, nor
provisional excess. All civilizations, all periods have known ends of
history--this is not necessarily convincing and not necessarily liberating. As
for excewss, or moments of celebration, this is no more reassuring. There are
militant revolutionaries who feel a sense of responsibility and say: Yes excess
"at the first stage of revolution," serious things... Or desire is
not liberated in simple moments of celebration. See the discussion between
Victor and Foucault in the issue of *Les Temps Modernes* on the Maoists. Victor
consents to excess, but at the "first stage". As for the rest, as for
the real thing, Vicotr calls for a new apparatus of state, new norms, a popular
justice with a tribunal, a legal process external to the masses, a third party
capable of resolving contradictions among the masses. One always finds the old
schema: the detachment of a pseude-avant-garde capable of bringing about
syntheses, of forming a party as an embryo of state apparatus, of drawing out a
well brought up, well educated working class; and the rest is a residue, a
lumpen-proletariat one should always mistrust (the same old condemnation of
desire). But these distinctions themselves are another way of trapping desire
for the advantage of a bureaucratic caste. Foucault reacts by denounding the
third party, saying that if there is popular justice, it does not issue from a tribunal.
He shows very well that the distinction
"avant-garde-lumpen-proletariat" is first of all a distinction
introduced by the bourgeoise to the masses, and therefore serves to crush the
phenomena of desire, to *marginalize* desire. The whole question is that of
state apparatus. It would be strange to rely on a party or state apparatus for
the liberation of desire. To want better justice is like wanting better judges,
better cops, better bosses, a cleaner France, etc. And then we are told: how
would you unify isolated struggles without a party? How do you make the machine
work without a state apparatus? It is evident that a revolution requires a war
machine, out this is not a state apparatus, it is also certain that it requires
an instance of analysis, an analysis of the desires of the masses, yet this is
not an apparatus external to the synthesis. Liberated desire means that desire
escapes the impasse of private fantasy: it is not a question of adapting it,
socializing it, disciplining it, but of plugging it in in such a way that its
process not be interrupted in the social body, and that its expression be
collective. What counts is not hte authoritarian unification, but rather a sort
of infinite spreading: desire in the schools, the factories, the neighborhoods,
the nursery schools, the prisons, etc. It is not a question of directing, of
tatalizing, but of plugging into the same plan of oscillation. As long as one
alternates between the impotent spontaneity of anarchy and the bureaucratic and
hierarchic coding of a party organization, there is no liberation of desire.
Q: In the beginning, was capitalism able to assume the social desires?
GD: Of course, capitalism was and remains a formidable desiring machine. The
monary flux, the means of production, of manpower, of new markets, all that is
the flow of desire. It's enough to consider the sum of contingencies at the
origin of capitalism to see to what degree it has been a crossroads of desires,
and that its infrastructure, even its economy, was inseparable from the
phenomnea of desire. And fascism too--one must say that it has "assumed
the social desires", including the desires of repression and death. People
got hard-ons for Hitler, for the beautiful fascist machine. But if your
question means: was capitalism revolutionary in its beginnings, has the
industrial revolution ever coincided with a social revolution? No, I don't
thing so. Capitalism has been tied from its birth to a savage repressiveness;
it had it's organization of power and its state apparatus from the start. Did
capitalism imply a dissolution of the previous social codes and powers?
Certainly. But it had alread established its wheels of power, including its
power of state, in the fissures of previous regimes. It is always like that:
things are not so progressive; even before a social formation is established,
its instruments of exploitation and repression are already there, still turning
in the vaccuum, but ready to work at full capacity. The first capitalists are
like waiting birds of prey. They wait for their meeting with the worker, the
one who drops through the cracks of the preceding system. It is even, in every
sense, what one calls primitive accumulation.
Q: On the contrary, I think that the rising bourgoisie imagined and prepared
its revolution throughout the Enlightment. From its point of view, it was a
revolutionary class "to the bitter end", since it had shaken up the
*ancien regime* and swept into power. Whatever parallel movements took place
amomng the peasantry and in the suburbs, the bourgeois revolution is a
revolution made by the bopurgoiseie--the terms are hardly distinguishable--and
to judge it in the name of 19th or 20th centurey socialist utopias introduces,
by anachronism, a category that did not exist.
GD: Here again, what you say fits a certain Marxist schema. At one point in
history, the bourgoisie was revolutionary, it was even necessary--necessary to
pass thorugh a stage of capitalism, through a bourgois revolutionary stage.
It'S a Stalinist point of view, but you can't take that seriously. When a
social formation exhausts itself, draining out of every gap, all sorts of
things decode themselves, all sorts of uncontrolled flows start pouring out,
like the peasant migrations in fudal Europe, the phenomenona of "deterritorialization."
The bourgoisie imposes a new code, both economic and political, so that one can
believe it was a revolution. Not at all. Daniel Guerin has said some profound
things about the revolution of 1789. The bourgoisie never had illusions about who
its real enemy was. Its real enemy was not the previous system, but what
escaped the previous systems's control, and what the bourgoisie strove to
master in its turn. It too owed its power to the ruin of the old system, but
this power could only be exerciced insofar as it opposed everything else that
was in rebellion against the old system. The bourgoiseie has never been
revolutionary. It simply made sure others pulled of the revolution for it. It
manipulated, channeled, and repressed an enormous surge of popular desire. The
people were finally beaten down at Valmy.
Q: They were certainly beaten down at Verdun.
FG: Exactly. And that's what interests us. Where do these eruptions, these
uprisings, these enthusiasms come from that cannot be explained by a social
rationality and that are diverted, captured by the power at the moment they are
born? One cannot account for a revolutionary situation by a simple analysis of
the interests of the time. In 1903 the Russian Social Democratic Party debated
the alliances and organization of the proletariat, and the role of the
avant-garde. While pretending to prepare for the revolution, it was suddenly
shaken up by the events of 1095 and had to jump on board a moving train. There
was a crystallization of desire on board a wide social scale created by a yet
incomprehensible situation. Same thing in 1917. And there too, the politicians
climbed on board a moving train, finally getting control of it. Yet no
revolutionary tendency was able or willing to assume the need for a soviet-style
organization that could permit the masses to take real charge of their
interests and their desire. Instead, one put machines in circulation, so-called
political organizations, that functioned on the model elaborated by Dimitrov at
the Seventh International Congress--alternating between popular fronts and
sectarian retractions--and that always led to the same repressive results. We
saw it in 1936, in 1945, in 1968. By their very axiomatic, these mass machines
refuse to liberate revolutionary energy. It is, in an underhanded way, a
politics comparable to that of the President of the Republic or of the clergy,
but with red flag in hand. And we think that this corresponds to a certain
position vis-a-vis desire, a profound way of envisioning the ego, the
individual, the family. This raises a simple dilemma: either one finds a new
type of structure that finally moves toward the fusion of collective desire and
revolutionary organization: or one continues on the present path and, going
from repression to repression, heads for a new fascism that makes Hitler and
Mussolini look like a joke.
Q: But then what is the nature of this profound, fundamental desire which one
sees as beeing constitutive of man and social man, but which is constantly
betrayed? Why does it always invest itself in antinomic machines of the
dominant machine, and yet remain so similar to it? Could this mean that desire
is condemned to a pure explosion without consequence or to perpetual betrayal?
I have to insist: can there ever be, one fine day in history, a collective and
during expression of liberated desire, and how?
GD: If one knew, one wouldn't talk about it, one would do it. Anyway, Felx just
said it: revolutionary organization must be that of the war machine and not of
state apparatus, of an analyzer of desire and not an external systhesis. In
every social system, there have always been lines of escape, and then also a
rigidification to block off escape, or certainly (which is not the same thing)
embryonic apparatuses that integrate them, that deflect or arrest them in a new
system in preparation. The crusades should be analysed from this point of view.
But in every respect, capitalism has a very particular character: its lines of
escape are not just difficulties that arise, they are the conditions of its own
operation. it is constituted by a generalized decoding of all flux,
fluctuations of wealth, fluctuations of language, fluctuations of art, etc. It
did not create any code, it has set up a sort of accountability, an axiomatic
of decoded fluxes as the basis of its economy. It ligatures the points of
escape and leaps itself having to seal new leaks at every limit. It doesn't
resolve any of its fundamental problems, it can't even forsee the monetary
increase in a country over a single year. It never stops crossing its own
limits which keep reapperaing farther away. It puts itself in alarming
situations with respect to its won production, its social life, its
demographics, its borders with the Third World, its internal regions, etc. Its
gaps are everwhere, forever giving rise to the displaced limits of capitalism.
And doubtless, the revolutionary way out (the active escape of which Jackson
spoke when he said: " I don't stop running, but while running, I look for
weapons") is not at all the same thing as other kinds of esacpe, the
schizo-escape, the drug-escape. But it is certainly the problem of the
marginalized: to plug all these lines of escape into a revolutionary plateau.
In capitalism, then, these lines of escape take on a new character, a new type
of revolutionary potential. You see, there is hope.
Q: You spoke just now of the crusades. For you, this is one of the first
manifestations of collective shizohrenia in the West.
FG: This was, in fact, an extraordinary schizophrenic movement. Basically, in
an already schismatic and troubled world, thousands and thousands of people got
fed up with the life they led, makeshift preachers rose up, people deserted
entire villages. It's only later that the shocked papacy tried to give direction
to the movement by leading it off to the Holy Land. A double advantage: to be
rid of errant bands and to reinforce Christian outposts in the Near East
thretened by the Turks. This didn't always work: the Venetian Crusade wound up
in Constantinople, the Childrens Crusade veered off toward the South of France
and very quickly lost all sympathy: there were entire villages taken and burned
by these "crosses" children, who the regular armies finally had to
round up. They were killed or sold into slavery.
Q: Can one find parallels with contemporary movements: communities and by-roads
to escape the factory and the office? NAd would there be any pope to co-opt
them? A Jesus Revolution?
FG: A recuperation by Christianity is not inconceivable. It is, up to a certain
point, a reality in the United States, but much less so in Europe or in France.
But there is already a latent return to it in the form of a Naturist tendency,
the idea that one can retire from production and reconstruct a little society
at a remove, as if one were not branded and hemmed in by the capitalist system.
Q: What role can still be attributed to the church in a country like ours? The
church was at the center of power in Western civilization until the 18th
Century, the bond and structure of the social machine until the emergence of
the nation-state. Today, deproved by the technocracy of this essential
function, it seems to have gone adrift, without a point of anchorage, and to
have split up. One can only wonder if the church, pressured by the currents of
Catholic progressivism, might not become less confessional than certain
political organizations.
FG: And ecumenism? In't it a way of falling back on one's feet? THe church has
never been stronger. There us bi reasiob ti oppose church and technocracy,
there is a technocracy of the church. Historically, Christianity and positivism
have always been good partners. The development of positive sciences has a
Christian motor. One cannot say that the psychiatrist has replaced the priest.
Nor can one say the cop has replaced the priest. There is always a use for
everyone in repression. What has aged about Christianity is its ideology, not
its organization of power.
Q: Let's get to this other aspect of yopur book: the critique of psychiatry.
Can one say that France is already covered by the psychiatry of *Sectuer*--and
how far does this influence spread?
FG: The structure of psychiatric hospitals essentially depends on the state and
the psychiatrists are mere functionaries. For a long time the state was content
to practice a politics of coercion and didn't do anything for almost a century.
One had to wait fot the Liberation for any signs of anxiety to appear: the
first psychiatric revolution, the opening of the hospitals, the free services,
instituional psychotherapy. All that has led to the great utopian politics of
"Sectorization," which consisted in limiting the number of
internments and of sending teams of psychiatrists out into the population like
missionaries in the bush. Due to lack of credit and will, the reform got bogged
down: a few model services for official visits, and here or there a hospital in
the most underdeveloped regions. We are now moving toward a major crisis,
comparable in size to the university crisis, a disaster at all levels: facilities,
training of personnel, therapy, etc.
The instituional charting of childhood is, on the contrary, undertaken with
better results. In this case, the initiative has escaped the state framework
and its financing to return to all sorts of associations--childhood protection
or parental associations.... The establishments have proliferated, subsidized
by Social Security. The child is immediately taken charge of by a network of
psychologists, tagged at the age of three, and followed for life. One can expect
to see solutions of this type for adult psychiatry. In the face of the present
impasse, the state will try to de-nationalize institutions in favor of other
institutions ruled by the law of 1901 and most certainly manipulated by
political powers and reactionary family groups. We are moving toward a
psychiatric surveillance of France, if the present scrises fail to liberate its
revolutionary potentialities. Everywhere, the most conservative ideology is in
bloom, a flat transposition of the concepts of Oedipalism. In the childrens's
wards, one calls the director "uncle," the nurse, "mother."
I have even heard distinctions like the following: group games obey a maternal
principle, the workshops, a paternal one. The psychiatry of *Secteur* semms
progressive because it opens the hospital. But if this means imposing a grid
over the neighborhood, we will soon regret the loss of the closed asylums of
yesterday. It's like psychoanalysis, it functions openly, so it is all the
worse, much more dangerous as a repressive force.
GD: Here's a case. A woman arrives at a consultation. She explains that she
takes tranquilizers. She asks for a glass of water. Then she speaks: "You
understand I have a certain amount of culture. I have studied, i love to read,
and there you have it. Now I spend all my time crying. I can't bear the subway.
And the minute I read something, I start to cry. I watch television; I see
images of Vietnam: I can't stand it ..." The doctor doesn't say much. The
woman continues: "I was in the Resistance... a bit. I was a
go-between." The doctor asks her to explain. "Well, yes, don't you
understand, doctor? I went to a cafe and I asked, for example, is there
something for Rene?" I would be given a letter to pass on." The
doctor hears "Rene"; he wakes up: "Why do you say
"Rene"? It's the first time he asks a question. Up to that point, she
was speaking about the metro, Hiroshima, Vietnam, of the effect all that had on
her body, the need to cry about it. But the doctor only asks: "Wait, wait,
'Rene' ... what dies 'Rene' mean to you?" Rene--someone who is reborn
[re-n'e]? The Renaissance, this fits into a universal schema, the archetype:
"You want to be reborn." The doctor gets his bearings: at last he's
on track. And he gets her to talk about her mother and her father.
It's an essential aspect of our book, and it's very concrete. The psychiatrists
and psychoanalysts have never paid any attentiaon to delirium. It'S enough just
to listen to someone who is delirious: it's the Russians that worry him, the
Chinese; my mouth is dry; somebody buggered me in the metro; there are germs
and spermatozoa swimming everywhere; it's Franco's fault, the Jews, the
Maoists: all a delirium of the social field. Why shouldn't this concern the
sexuality of the subject--the relations it has with the Chinese, the whites,
the blacks? Whith civilization, the crusades, the metro? Psychiatrists and
psychoanalysts hear nothing of this, on the defensive as much as they are
indefensible. They crush the contents of the unsoncious under prefab
statements: "You speak to me of the Chinese, but what about your father?
No, he isn't Chinese? THen , do you have a Chinese lover?" It's atz the
same level of repressive work as the judge in the Angela Davis case who
affirmed: "Her behavior can only be explained by her beeing in love."
ANd what if, on the contrary, Angela Davis's libido was a social, revolutionary
libido? What if she were in love because she was a revolutionary?
That is what we want to say to psychiatrists and psychoanalysts: yopu don't
know what delirium is; you haven't understood anything. If our bnook has a
meaning, it is that we have reached a stage where many people feel the
psychoanalytif machine no longer works, where a whole generation is getting fed
up with all-purpose schemas--oedipus and castration, imaginary and
symbolic--which systematically efface the social, political, and cultural
contents of any psychic disturbance.
Q: You associate schizophrenia with capitalism; it is the very foundation of
your book. Are there cases of schizophrenia in other societies?
FG: Schizophrenia is indissocialble from the capitalist system, itself
conceived as primary leakage (fuite): and exclusive malady. In other societies,
escape and marginalization take on other aspects. The asocial individual of
so-called primitive societies is not locked up. The prison and the asylum are
resent notions. One chases him, he is exiled at the edge of the village and
dies of it, unless he is integrated to a neighboring village. Besides, each
system has its paricular sickness: the hysteric of so-called primitive
societies, the manic-depressive paranoiacs of the great empires... The
capitalist economy preoceeds by decoding and de-territorialization: it has its
exterme cases, i.e., schzophrenics who decode and de-territorialize themselves
to the limit; but also it has its extreme consequences--revolutionaries.
["Chaosophy", ed. Sylvere Lothringer, Autonomedia/Semiotexte 1995]