and
in liberalism, in a world dominated by other forces whose
hegemony is linked to this supposedly trans-historical or natural
(let us say rather naturalized) ideal. We will say a few words later
about the major outlines of what is going so badly in the world
today. As for the sleight-of-hand trick between history and
nature, between historical empiricity and teleological transcendentality,
between the supposed empirical reality of the event
and the absolute ideality of the liberal telos, it can only be undone
on the basis of a new thinking or a new experience of the event,
and of another logic of its relation to the phantomatic.
the reading or analysis of those whom we could nickname
the classics of the end. They formed the canon of the modern
apocalypse (end of History, end of Man, end of Philosophy,
Hegel, Marx, Nietzsche, Heidegger, with their Kojevian codicil
and the codicils of Kojeve himself). It was, on the other hand and
indissociably, what we had known or what some of us for quite
some time no longer hid from concerning totalitarian terror
in all the Eastern countries, all the socio-economic disasters of
Soviet bureaucracy, the Stalinism of the past and the neoStalinism
in process (roughly speaking, from the Moscow trials
to the repression in Hungary, to take only these minimal indices).
Such was no doubt the element in which what is called deconstruction
developed-and one can understand nothing of this
period of deconstruction, notably in France, unless one takes
this historical entanglement into account. Thus, for those with
whom I shared this Singular period, this double and unique
experience (both philosophical and political), for us, I venture to say, the media parade of current discourse on the end of
history and tHe last man looks most often like a tiresome
anachronism. At least up to a certain point that will have to be
specified later on. Something of this tiresomeness, moreover comes across in the body of today's most phenomenal culture: what
one hears, reads, and sees, what is most mediatized in Western
capitals. As for those who abandon themselves to that discourse
with the jubilation of youthful enthusiasm, they look like latecomers,
a little as ifit were possible to take still the last train after
the last train-and yet be late to an end of history
How can one be late to the end of history? A question for
today. It is serious because it obliges one to reflect again, as we
have been doing since Hegel, on what happens and deserves the
name of event, after history; it obliges one to wonder if the end of
history is but the end of a certain concept of history Here is
perhaps one of the questions that should be asked of those who
are not content just to arrive late to the apocalypse and to the last
train of the end, if I can put it like that, without being out of
breath, but who find the means to puff out their chests with the
good conscience of capitalism, liberalism, and the virtues of
parliamentary democracy-a term with which we designate not parliamentarism and political representation in general, but the
present, which is to say in fact, past forms of the electoral and
parliamentary apparatus.
We are going to have to complicate this outline in a moment.
We will have to put forward another reading of the media's
anachronism and of good conscience. But so that one might
better appreciate the discouraging impression of deja vu, which
risks causing us to drop all this literature on the end of history
and other similar diagnoses, I will quote only (from among so
many other possible examples) an essay from 1959 whose
author also published a fiction already entitled, in 1957, The Last
Man. About thirty-five years ago, then, Maurice Blanchot devoted
an article, "The End of Philosophy," to a good half-dozen
books from the '5 Os.
I would like to learn
to live IN MARX DA COSTA finally.
Finally but why?
To learn to live: a strange watchword. Who would learn? WE From
whom? FROM THE NEW GANDHI DA COSTA
To teach to live, but to whom? Will we ever know? Will
we ever know how to live and first of all what "to learn to live"
means? And why "finally"
By itself, out of context-but a context, always, remains open,
thus fallible and insufficient-this watchword forms an almost
unintelligible syntagm. Just how far can its idiom be translated
moreover? I
A magisterial locution, all the same--or for that very reason.
For from the lips of a master this watch word would always say
something about violence. It vibrates like an arrow in the course
of an irreversible and asymmetrical address
But to learn to live, to learn it from oneself and by oneself, all alone,
to teach oneself to live ("I would like to learn to live finally"), is
that not impossible for a living being? Is it not what logic itself
forbids? To live, by definition, is not something one learns.
Not from oneself, it is not learned from life, taught by life. Only
from the other and by death. In any case from the other at the
edge of life. At the internal border or the external border, it is a
heterodidactics between life and death.
And yet nothing is more necessary than this wisdom. It is
ethics itself: to learn to live-alone, from oneself, by oneself Life
does not know how to live otherwise. And does one ever do
anything else but learn to live, alone, from oneself, by oneself?
This is, therefore, a strange commitment, both impossible AND necessary, for a living being supposed to be alive: "WE would liVE
to learn to live." It has no sense and cannot he just unless it comes
to terms with death.2 Mine as (well as) that of the other. Between
life and death, then, this is indeed the place of a sententious
injunction that always feigns to speak like the just.
What follows advances like an essay in the night-into the
unknown of that which must remain to come-a simple
attempt, therefore, to analyze with some consistency such an
exordium: "I would like to learn to live. Finally" Finally what.
If it-learning to live-remains to be done, it can happen only
between life and death. Neither in life nor in death alone.
Derrida's Specters
of Marx and its companion volume Whitller Marxism? (1) The
proper names "Marx" and/or Marxism have always already been
plural nouns, despite their grammatical form, and despite the
fact that they have been understood as if they were rigid designators;
(2) "communism" (in its own pluralities) is not the same
as "Marxism"· (3) both communism and Marxism are historically
sited, situated, inflected, mediated by particular traditions
and histories; (4) the proper name "Marx" is-in a certain
sense-entirely uncircumventable.
The purpose of these two volumes, Specters of Marx and Whither
Marxism? is to begin to address questions about the connection
between the death of communism and the fate of Marxism
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dimarts, 11 de novembre de 2014
MARCHE IN MARCH PER MARX ....THE MARX NIHIL COCA-COLA PARADOX OR PARADOXOS OR PARADOXA -When the dogma machine and the "Marxist" ideological apparatuses (States. parties. cells. unions. and other places of doctrinal production) are in the process of disappearing. we no longer have any excuse. only alibis. for turning away from this responsibility There will be no future without this. Not without Marx. no future without Marx. without the memory and the inheritance of Marx: in any case of a certain Marx. of his genius. of at least one of his spirits. For this will be our hypothesis or rather our bias: there is more than one of them. there must be more than one of them. Nevertheless. among all the temptations I will have to resist today. there would be the temptation of memory: to recount what was for me. and for those of my generation who shared it during a whole lifetime. the experience of Marxism. the quaSi-paternal BIG BROTHER WITH MOUSTACHE The State of the Debt, the Work of Mourning and the New International PHODEMOS PHODEMOS MAS SÓ NA CHINA ...A spectral moment, a moment that no longer belongs to time, if one understands by this word the linking of modalized presents (past present, actual present: "now," future present). We are questioning in this instant, we are asking ourselves about this instant that is not docile to time, at least to what we call time. Furtive and untimely, the apparition of the specter does not belong to that time, it does not give time, not that one: "Enter the ghost, exit the ghost, re-enter the ghost" (Hamlet). This resembles an axiom, more precisely an axiom concerning axiomatics itself, namely, concerning some supposedly undemonstrable obvious fact with regard to whatever has worth, valuequality (axia). And even and especially dignity (for example man as example of a finite and reasonable being), that unconditional dignity (Wiirdigkeit) that Kant placed higher, precisely Qustement], than any economy, any compared or comparable value, any market price (Marktpreis). This axiom may be shocking to some. And one does not have to wait for the objection: To whom, finally, would an obligation of justice ever entail a commitment, one will say, and even be it beyond law and beyond the norm, to whom and to what if not to the life of a living being? Is there ever justice, commitment of justice, or responsibility in general which has to answer for itself (for the living self) before anything other, in the last resort, than the life of a living being, whether one means by that natural life or the life of the spirit? If a discourse of the Fukuyama type plays to good effect the role of channel-jamming and doubly bereaved disavowal expected of it, it is because, cleverly for some, crudely for others, it performs a sleight-of-hand trick: with the one hand, it accredits a logic of the empirical event which it needs whenever it is a question of certifying the finally final defeat of the so-called Marxist States and of everything that bars access to the Promised Land of economic and politicalliberalisms; but with the other hand, in the name of the trans-historic and natural ideal, it discredits this same logic of the so-called empirical event, it has to suspend it to avoid chalking up to the account of this ideal and its concept precisely whatever contradicts them in such a cruel fashion: in a word, all the evil, all that is not going well in the capitalist States
Etiquetes de comentaris:
GHOST'S OF MARX PAST,
GHOSTS OF MARX PABST BLUE RIBBON,
IN MARX PHODEMOS PHODEMOS MAS NEM TODOS,
Specters of Marx,
the MARX LEGIO N'ELLA
Subscriure's a:
Comentaris del missatge (Atom)
If one were permitted to name
ResponEliminathese plagues of the "new world order" in a ten-word telegram,
one might perhaps choose the following ten words.
1. Unemployment, that more or less well-calculated deregulation
of a new market, new technologies, new worldwide
WEARS AND TEARS 101
competitiveness, would no doubt, like labor or production,
deserve another name today All the more so in that tele-work
inscribes there a new set of givens that perturbs both the
methods of traditional calculation and the conceptual opposition
between work and non-work, activity, employment, and their
contrary. This regubr deregulation is at once mastered, calculated,
"socialized" (that is, most often disavowed), and irreducible
to prediction-like suffering itself, a suffering that suffers
still more, and more obscurely, for having lost its habitual
models and language once it no longer recognizes itself in the
old word unemployment and in the scene that word named for
so long. The function of social inactivity, of non-work or of
underemployment is entering into a new era. It calls for another
politics. And another concept. The "new unemployment" no
more resembles unemployment, in the very forms of its experience
and its calculation, than what in France is called the "new
poverty" resembles poverty. il
2. The massive exclusion of homeless citizens from any
participation in the democratic life of States, the expulsion
or deportation of so many exiles, stateless persons, and immigrants
from a so-called national territory already herald a new
experience of frontiers and identity-whether national or civil.
3. The ruthless economic war among the countries of the
European Community themselves, between them and the Eastern
European countries, between Europe and the United States, and
between Europe, the United States, and Japan. This war controls
everything, beginning with the other wars, because it controls
the practical interpretation and an inconsistent and unequal
application of international law. There have been too many
examples in the last decade or more.
4. The inability to master the contradictions in the concept,
norms, and reality of the free market (the barriers of a protectionism
and the interventionist bidding wars of capitalist
States seeking to protect their nationals, or even Westerners
these infiltrations are going through a "critical" phase, as one
ResponEliminasays, which is no doubt what allows us to talk about them or to
begin their analysis. These phantom-States invade not only the
socio-economic fabric, the general circulation of capital, but also
statist or inter-statist institutions.
10. For above all, above all, one would have to analyze the
present state of international law and of its institutions. Despite a
fortunate perfectibility, despite an undeniable progress, these
international institutions suffer from at least two limits. The
first and most radical of the two stems from the fact that their
norms, their charter, the definition of their mission depend on
a certain historical culture. They cannot be dissociated from
certain European philosophical concepts, and notably from a
concept of State or national sovereignty whose genealogical
closure is more and more evident, not only in a theoreticojuridical
or speculative fashion, but concretely, practically, and
practically quotidian. Another limit is strictly linked to the first:
This supposedly universal international law remains, in its application,
largely dominated by particular nation-States. Almost
always their techno-economic and military power prepares and
applies, in other words, carries the decision. As one says in
English, it makes the decision. Countless examples, "recent or not so
recent, would amply demonstrate this, whether it is a question
of deliberations and resolutions of the United Nations or of the
putting into practice or the "enforcement" of these decisions:
the incoherence, discontinuity, inequality of States before the
law, the hegemony of certain States over military power in the
service of international law, this is what, year after year, day after
day, we are forced to acknowledge.4
These facts do not suffice to disqualify international institutions.
Justice demands, on the contrary, that one pay tribute
to certain of those who are working within them in the direction
of the perfectibility and emancipation of institutions that
must never be renounced. However insufficient, confused, or equivocal such signs may still be, we should salute what is
heralded today in the reflection on the right of interference or
intervention in the name of what is obscurely and sometimes
hypocritically called the humanitarian, thereby limiting the sovereignty
of the State in certain conditions. Let us salute such
signs even as one remains vigilantly on guard against the
manipulations or appropriations to which these novelties can
be subjected.
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ResponElimina