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		<title>Creating Common Wealth and Cracking Capitalism: A cross-reading by John Holloway&#8217;s, Michael Hardt / Tony Negri&#8217;s books</title>
		<link>https://voidnetwork.gr/2012/10/12/creating-common-wealth-and-cracking-capitalism-a-cross-reading-by-john-holloways-michael-hardt-tony-negris-books/</link>
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					<description><![CDATA[<p>In the first of a two part correspondence, John Holloway and Michael Hardt discuss some common themes that have emerged from their most recent books &#8220;Crack Capitalism&#8221; and &#8220;CommonWealth&#8221; and touch of the topics of organisation, democracy and institutionalism. The second part of the exchange will be published in Issue 15 of Shift magazine. July 2010 Dear John, One of the things I love about ‘Crack Capitalism’, which it shares with ‘Change the World Without Taking Power’, is that its argument traces the genealogy of revolt. In other words, you start with the indignation, rage, and anger that people feel</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://voidnetwork.gr/2012/10/12/creating-common-wealth-and-cracking-capitalism-a-cross-reading-by-john-holloways-michael-hardt-tony-negris-books/">Creating Common Wealth and Cracking Capitalism: A cross-reading by John Holloway&#8217;s, Michael Hardt / Tony Negri&#8217;s books</a> appeared first on <a href="https://voidnetwork.gr">Void Network</a>.</p>
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<p><span style="font-size: small;"><span style="font-family: Verdana,sans-serif;"><i>In the first of a two part correspondence, John Holloway and  Michael Hardt discuss some common themes that have emerged from their  most recent books &#8220;Crack Capitalism&#8221; and &#8220;CommonWealth&#8221; and touch of the topics of organisation, democracy and  institutionalism. The second part of the exchange will be published in  Issue 15 of Shift magazine.</i> July 2010</span></span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: small;"><span style="font-family: Verdana,sans-serif;">Dear John,</span></span><br />
<span style="font-size: small;"><span style="font-family: Verdana,sans-serif;">One of the things I love about ‘Crack Capitalism’, which it shares  with ‘Change the World Without Taking Power’, is that its argument  traces the genealogy of revolt.  In other words, you start with the  indignation, rage, and anger that people feel but you don’t stop there.   Your argument leads revolt toward both creative practice and  theoretical investigation.</span></span><br />
<span style="font-size: small;"><span style="font-family: Verdana,sans-serif;">On the one hand, although refusal is essential, perhaps even primary  in your argument, especially the break with or exodus from capitalist  social forms, every destructive force has to be accompanied by a  creative one, every effort to tear down the world around us has to be  aimed also toward the creation of a new one.  Moreover these two  processes, the destructive and the constructive, are not separable but  completely embedded or entwined with each other.  That is why, as you  say, it makes no sense to defer creating a new society until after the  complete collapse or demolition of capitalist society.  Instead we must  struggle now to create a new society in the shell of the old or, rather,  in its cracks, its interstices.</span></span><br />
<span style="font-size: small;"><span style="font-family: Verdana,sans-serif;">On the other hand, you demonstrate how revolt must lead not only to  practical but also to theoretical innovation. Although your book starts  with an affective state and instances of practical resistance, the  central argument involves a conceptual investigation, most importantly,  it seems to me, about the role and potential of our productive  capacities in capitalist society.  I don’t mean to pose a separation  here between practice and theory.  In fact, your argument requires that  they too are completely embedded or entwined.  In order to change the  world we need not only to act differently but also to think differently,  which requires that we work on concepts and sometimes invent new  concepts.<br />
The core argument of the book, which distinguishes doing from labor and  identifies abstraction as a primary power of capitalist domination,  seems to me profoundly Marxist.  It might seem paradoxical to say that  because you carefully contrast your argument to orthodox Marxist  traditions, situating your point instead in relation to Marx’s own  writings, sometimes elucidating what he actually says and demonstrating  how it goes against the orthodox Marxist tradition and at other times  going beyond Marx.  Although your argument stands indeed against the  orthodox Marxist tradition, reading Marx against Marxism in this way and  going beyond Marx puts you solidly in line (or, perhaps better, in  dialogue) with a strong current of what was once called heterodox  Marxist traditions that have been active since the 1960s.  This is  clearly apparent, for instance, in the claim, central to your argument  in this book, that the course of our project for freedom lies not in the  liberation of work, as is championed by Marxist orthodoxies and Soviet  ideology, but the liberation from work.  I see this as an essential  slogan or principle of this heterodox tradition.</span></span><br />
<span style="font-size: small;"><span style="font-family: Verdana,sans-serif;">One thing that occurs to me is that whereas in the 1970s orthodox  Marxism was indeed dominant, bolstered by the ideologues of various  official communist parties, today that line of interpretation is  virtually completely discredited.  Instead Marxist theory today is  primary characterized, in my view, by what used to be the heterodox  line, which you helped develop together with your colleagues in the  Conference of Socialist Economists and in collaboration with similar  tendencies in Italy, Germany, and France. That’s a good thing and makes  Marxist theory today more interesting and relevant.<br />
I don’t mean by this to rein you back in within Marxism.  Like you, I  care little about whether my work is called Marxist or not.  I often  find that Marxists accuse me of being not Marxist enough and  non-Marxists fault me for being too Marxist.  None of that matters to  me.  What is important, though, is how useful I find it to read Marx’s  work and it strikes me how useful it is  for you too in this book.<br />
One profound and important resonance your argument in this book shares  with Marx’s writings resides in the identification of labor (or human  productive capacity) as the site of both our exploitation and our power.   You designate this duality by distinguishing labor (which you identify  as production within a regime of capitalist abstraction) from doing  (which strikes me as very similar to Marx’s notion of ‘living labor’).   On the one hand, capital needs our productive capacities and could not  exist and reproduce without them.  Capital, in other words, does not  just oppress or dominate us but exploits us, meaning that it must  constantly seek to domesticate and command our productive powers within  the limited frame of its social system.  In your argument this is  accomplished primarily by processes of abstraction.  On the other hand,  our productive capacities always exceed and are potentially autonomous  from capital.  That dissymmetry is crucial: whereas capital cannot  survive without our labor, our productive capacities can potentially  exist and thrive without capitalist organization.  Indeed, as you  demonstrate, there are always already innumerable instances of our  productive autonomy that exist within the cracks or interstices of  capitalist society.  These are extremely important but not enough.  Your  project is to create alternative social networks of autonomous  productive cooperation that can, as I said earlier, build a society of  freedom from within capitalist society.</span></span><br />
<span style="font-size: small;"><span style="font-family: Verdana,sans-serif;">As I read ‘Crack Capitalism’, then, it seems to me that, whereas  ‘Change the World’ adopted and extended the project for the abolition of  the state, even its abolition within our own minds and practices, this  book works through the project of the refusal of work — with the  understanding that every rebellion against the capitalist labor regime  is also, necessarily, a development of our own autonomous capacities for  doing, that the destruction of the work society is coupled with the  creation of a new society based on an alternative notion of production  and productivity.</span></span><br />
<span style="font-size: small;"><span style="font-family: Verdana,sans-serif;">That brings me to a first, initial question.  We know that the  capitalist labor regime has extraordinarily well developed systems of  social organization and cooperation, which function through discipline  and control.  You analyze these primarily through the lens of  abstraction.  The mainstream workers movements and, primarily the  industrial trade unions, have also developed forms of organization and  discipline into a sort of counter-power, but, according to your  analysis, this too, like the capitalist regime, is dedicated to the  organization of abstract labor.  I think I understand this critique and  agree with it in large part, with the caveat, as you say, citing the  excellent book by Karl Heinz Roth published in the 1970s, that there has  always also been an ‘other’ workers movement.  My question, then, how  can our autonomous productive practices, our doing, be organized and  sustained as alternative social forms?  I think you would agree that the  schemes of cooperation and coordination among our practices of doing  are not spontaneous but need to be organized.  I would add that we need  to create institutions of social cooperation, and you might agree with  this too as long as I explain that by institution here I do not mean a  bureaucratic structure but rather, as anthropologists use the term, a  repeated social practice, a habit, that structures social relations.   What institutions do we already have that fulfill this role and what  kinds can we develop?  And, more specifically, what relation can this  have to the syndicalist traditions?  The point here, of course, is not  to reject entirely the traditional organizations of workers movements  but, in some respects, extend and transform them.  Here I would want to  explore the innovations within contemporary labor organizing that point  in the direction of your argument.  Can we imagine instead of a  traditional labor movement an association or syndicate of doers or,  better, a social institution of doing?  What would be its mechanisms of  social cooperation and structures of organization?  I’m not sure you  have the answers to these questions, and I don’t pretend to myself, but I  think you have some ways of thinking about how we can develop the  structures and institutions of a society of doing and that is where I  would first like to direct our exchange.</span></span><br />
<span style="font-size: small;"><span style="font-family: Verdana,sans-serif;">Best, Michael</span></span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: small;"><span style="font-family: Verdana,sans-serif;">December 2010</span></span><br />
<span style="font-size: small;"><span style="font-family: Verdana,sans-serif;">Dear Michael,</span></span><br />
<span style="font-size: small;"><span style="font-family: Verdana,sans-serif;">Thank you very much for your comments and for their tone which seems  to me just right: a strong sense of shared concern and direction and a  desire to move forward through exploring our differences. This reflects  very much what I felt while I was reading ‘Commonwealth’: a sense of the  very close touching of your preoccupations with mine, a feeling of  walking arm in arm, at times too close, at times tugging in different  directions, producing a sequence of bumps of admiration, enthusiasm and  exasperation.</span></span><br />
<span style="font-size: small;"><span style="font-family: Verdana,sans-serif;">The question you raise at the end of your letter is exactly right  because it hits directly on one of my main concerns while reading  ‘Commonwealth’: the issue of institutions, which you and Toni emphasise a  lot and which you develop especially in the last part of the book.</span></span><br />
<span style="font-size: small;"><span style="font-family: Verdana,sans-serif;">Our preoccupation, I think, is the same, but the answer we give is  rather different. Our shared concern is: how do we go on after the  explosions of rage, the jacqueries as you call them? The argentinazo of  almost ten years ago, when the people in the streets of Argentina  toppled one president after another to the resounding cry of ‘que se  vayan todos’ (out with the lot of them); the alterglobalisation movement  and the great anti-summit protests in Seattle, Cancún, Genoa,  Gleneagles, Rostock and so on; the explosions of rage in the last year  in Greece, France, Italy, Britain, Ireland and now, as I write, Tunisia,  Egypt, Algeria. Great. We applaud, jump up and down with excitement.  But then what? How do we go on? We both agree that rage is not enough,  that there must be a positive moment. We both agree that the answer is  not to build the party and win the next election or seize control of the  state. But, if not that, then what? The answer you offer is  ‘Insititutionalise. Create institutions to give duration to the  achievements of the surge of revolt’. And I want to say ‘no, no, no,  that is not the way to go, that is a dangerous proposal’.</span></span><br />
<span style="font-size: small;"><span style="font-family: Verdana,sans-serif;">Certainly I do not want to caricature what you are saying, for there  is a great deal of care and subtlety in your argument. In your letter  you say ‘I would add that we need to create institutions of social  cooperation, and you might agree with this too as long as I explain that  by institution here I do not mean a bureaucratic structure but rather,  as anthropologists use the term, a repeated social practice, a habit,  that structures social relations.’ But no, I do not agree with that,  even taking into account your broad understanding of institutions.</span></span><br />
<span style="font-size: small;"><span style="font-family: Verdana,sans-serif;">Why do I not agree? Firstly, because although you argue for an  extended understanding of institutionalisation, you open a door in which  the distinction between the two meanings will become blurred. The  repeated social practice slips easily into a bureaucratic structure and  unless you create a very sharp distinction between the two (by using  different words, for example), there is a danger that you legitimate  this slippage. In the book, the distinction is clear at times, but at  times it seems to evaporate, as in the surprising and perplexing  suggestion on p.380 that UN agencies might provide a global guaranteed  income (the mind boggles). Institutionalisation leads easily into a  state-centred politics – how else could you even imagine achieving such a  UN guarantee?</span></span><br />
<span style="font-size: small;"><span style="font-family: Verdana,sans-serif;">Secondly, I disagree because institutionalisation always means  projecting the present on the future. Even in the soft sense of a  repeated social practice, it creates an expectation that the young  should behave as their parents (or older sisters and brothers) did. But  no, they should not. ‘That’s not the way to do it, this is what you  should do’, said the veterans of 1968 to the students in the great UNAM  strike in 2000, but fortunately (or not) the students paid no attention.  Institutionalisation is always a consecration of tradition, is it not?  And what did Toni write years ago about tradition being the enemy of  class struggle? I don’t remember exactly what or where, but I do  remember thinking it was wonderful.</span></span><br />
<span style="font-size: small;"><span style="font-family: Verdana,sans-serif;">Thirdly, institutionalisation does not work, or not in the way that  it is intended to. There is a flow of struggle, a social flow of  rebellion (as my friend Sergio Tischler puts it) that cannot be  controlled and that repeatedly sweeps aside institutions devised to  channel it in a certain direction. My feeling is that you give too much  weight to institutions in your understanding of society. Can love be  institutionalised? I agree completely with your daring understanding of  the revolutionary force of love, but then you must ask, can love be  institutionalised? Surely not. Even if we say that we are not talking of  a contract of marriage, but simply “a repeated social practice, a  habit”, then probably the experience of all of us is that love  constantly clashes with habit. Love may well survive in a context of  repeated social practice, but only if it moves constantly  in-against-and-beyond it.</span></span><br />
<span style="font-size: small;"><span style="font-family: Verdana,sans-serif;">Think of the World Social Forum, the prime institution to have  emerged from the alterglobalisation movement. I am not particularly  opposed to it and I think it can provide a useful and enjoyable meeting  place, but, contrary to the intentions of most participants, it tends to  promote a bureaucratization of the movement and it certainly is not the  key to revolution.</span></span><br />
<span style="font-size: small;"><span style="font-family: Verdana,sans-serif;">Institutionalisation (broad or narrow) means trying to set life on  railway tracks or highways, whereas rebellion is the constant attempt to  break from that, to invent new ways of doing things. The proposal to  create institutions, as I see it, says that the old roads to revolution  no longer work and we must create new roads for those who follow us to  walk along. But surely not: revolution is always a process of making our  own paths. ‘Se hace el camino al andar’ (we make the road by walking &#8211;  eds’ translation) is an integral part of the revolutionary process. I  see the very idea of institutionalisation as an aspect of the  organisation of human activity as abstract labour, just what we are  fighting against.</span></span><br />
<span style="font-size: small;"><span style="font-family: Verdana,sans-serif;">‘Too easy’, you may say and of course you would be right. Does there  not have to be some form of social organization? Certainly, but our  forms of organisation, the forms of organisation that point towards a  different society, cannot be thought of as being fixed. We have ideas  and principles and experiences and directions that are more or less  common to the movements against capitalism, but given that we ourselves,  our practices and ideas are so marked by the society we are struggling  against, the forms of organisation can only be experimental, a process  of moving by trial and error and reflection.</span></span><br />
<span style="font-size: small;"><span style="font-family: Verdana,sans-serif;">But does there not have to be a coming together of the cracks? Yes,  and I think this is an issue that is not sufficiently explored in my  book. I would like to develop further at some point the question of the  confluence of the cracks, both in terms of the inspirational lighting of  prairie fires and the practical organisation of cooperation. But two  things. I feel that institutional thinking is probably an obstacle to  seeing the practice and potential of such confluence. And secondly it is  important to think of the confluence as an always experimental moving  from the particular, not a charting of the future that moves from the  totality, as I think is the tendency in your book. We are in the cracks  and pushing from there. Our problem is to break and move beyond, not to  erect an alternative system of governance. We can try to follow the  practices of existing movements, criticise them and see how the  confluence is or is not being achieved, but we cannot establish a model  for the future.</span></span><br />
<span style="font-size: small;"><span style="font-family: Verdana,sans-serif;">Dignity is a fleet-footed dance, I suggest in the book. But the doubt  that arises is that perhaps we are not capable of such agility. Perhaps  we are capable only of moving more slowly. Maybe we need institutions  as crutches, so that we can consolidate each step we make. Conceivably  so, but even then learning to walk is a throwing away of the crutches.  We betray ourselves if we do not couple subversion with  institutionalisation. If we must institutionalise, then we should  subvert our own institutions in the same breath. This is akin to the  question of identification. In ‘Change the World’, I accept that it may  sometimes be important to affirm our identity, but only if we subvert it  or go beyond it in the same breath, and what you and Toni say in your  discussion of identity is similar. Institutionalise-and-subvert, then,  is a formulation that I would find more attractive, but even then I do  not like it. Institutionalisation may be inevitable at times, but in the  tension between institutionalisation and subversion we have already  taken sides. Thought is subversion. To think is to move beyond, as Ernst  Bloch says – Ernst Bloch, whom you cite several times in the book, but  whom Toni elsewhere unforgivably, unforgivenly characterises as a  bourgeois philosopher (Antonio Negri, ‘Time for Revolution’, 2003, p.  109).</span></span><br />
<span style="font-size: small;"><span style="font-family: Verdana,sans-serif;">Publication, of course, is a form of institutionalisation and I do  participate actively in this. In publishing my arguments, I give them a  fixity. But perhaps this interchange of letters is an attempt by both of  us to subvert that institutionality: the purpose is not to defend  positions taken but to provoke each other to move beyond what we have  already written.</span></span><br />
<span style="font-size: small;"><span style="font-family: Verdana,sans-serif;">And then an unavoidable theme if we are talking of institutions: what  can I say of the title of your last chapter – ‘Governing the  Revolution’? A horrifying oxymoron? A fiercely audacious provocation? Or  is it a serious suggestion? To the extent that it seems to be a serious  suggestion, it certainly provokes and horrifies me. What upsets me is  that the phrase suggests a separation between governing and revolution  whereas for me revolution is the abolition of this separation. Governing  the revolution immediately makes me ask who, who is going to govern it?  Just as your statement on p.377 that ‘humans are trainable’ also scares  me, for who is to do the training? Who would govern your revolution,  who would train the humans? If you say we are talking of  self-governance, then fine, but why not talk then of the organisational  forms of self-determination, understanding that self-determination means  a process of self-education, self-transformation? But if we rephrase  the question like that, then we immediately have to say that the  organisational forms of self-determination are self-determining and  therefore cannot be institutionalised.</span></span><br />
<span style="font-size: small;"><span style="font-family: Verdana,sans-serif;">Let me open a second front of concern. Democracy. You centre the  discussion of revolution on the struggle for democracy. The abolition of  capitalism takes a back seat, as it were, and that confuses me. You  formulate the argument in chapter 5.3 in terms of a programme to save  capital and then say that it is not that you are abandoning the idea of  revolution, but just working with a different notion of transition. I am  not clear what you mean by this different notion of transition. It  sounds almost like a programme of transitional demands, a concept of  achieving anti-capitalist revolution by fighting for a democracy that we  know (but do not say openly) is incompatible with capitalism. The  danger is that the more you talk about democracy and the less about  capitalism, the more the whole question of revolution fades into the  background. It seems to me much simpler to start the other way around,  by saying: capitalism is a catastrophe, how do we get rid of it?</span></span><br />
<span style="font-size: small;"><span style="font-family: Verdana,sans-serif;">This letter is unreasonably long. Your fault, of course, for writing such a stimulating book. I look forward to your replies.</span></span><br />
<span style="font-size: small;"><span style="font-family: Verdana,sans-serif;">Best wishes,</span></span><br />
<span style="font-size: small;"><span style="font-family: Verdana,sans-serif;">John</span></span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: small;"><span style="font-family: Verdana,sans-serif;"><i>John Holloway is a Professor in the Instituto de Ciencias  Sociales y Humanidades of the Benemerita Universidad Autonoma de Puebla  in Mexico. </i></span></span><br />
<span style="font-size: small;"><span style="font-family: Verdana,sans-serif;"><i> </i></span></span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: small;"><span style="font-family: Verdana,sans-serif;"><i>Michael Hardt is professor of Literature at Duke University in  the USA and has published several books, including ‘Empire’ and  ‘Commonwealth’, with Antonio Negri.</i></span></span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: small;"><span style="font-family: Verdana,sans-serif;"><i>source: Shift magazine # 14 <a href="http://shiftmag.co.uk/?p=596" target="_blank" rel="noopener">http://shiftmag.co.uk/?p=596 </a></i></span></span></p>
<p>The post <a href="https://voidnetwork.gr/2012/10/12/creating-common-wealth-and-cracking-capitalism-a-cross-reading-by-john-holloways-michael-hardt-tony-negris-books/">Creating Common Wealth and Cracking Capitalism: A cross-reading by John Holloway&#8217;s, Michael Hardt / Tony Negri&#8217;s books</a> appeared first on <a href="https://voidnetwork.gr">Void Network</a>.</p>
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