John Hutnyk on Sun, 9 Aug 1998 13:57:21 +0200 (MET DST) |
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[email protected] byJohn Hutnyk //speed.metaphor One hundred and fifty[-one] years ago in France Marx published The Poverty of Philosophy, and although this work has always been eclipsed by another text written at the end of that year[1], it is worth consulting and is as much deserving of reprint as the Manifesto (which has been released again by at least six different publishers - both texts can be accessed via the world wide web at http://csf.Colorado.EDU/psn/marx/Admin).=20 One of the points Derrida makes in Archive Fever: A Freudian Impression, has to do with how an =91archive ought to be idiomatic=92 (Derrida 1995/1996:90). Certainly Marx=92s Poverty of Philosophy is replete with idiosyncrasies, an almost contemptuous critique of Proudhon, alongside early formulations of some of the most brilliant insights into political economy. The idioms Derrida has in mind though are not only idiosyncratic, but pertain to language, context, time, meaning and translation. It is worth then considering just what kind of idiom is there when we read Marx today. It is =91perhaps=92 plausible to do this in the context of time - 15= 0 years, 1000 days before the millennium, alongside Derrida=92s Archive Fever and at a conference on =91Time and Value=92. There seems no more auspicious moment.[2] The first worry I have with discussions of Derrida and Marx has to do with the inevitable practical and political importance that must be kept in mind throughout. This concerns the political value of reading, Marx, Derrida, theory in general, it concerns the speed, and expertise, with which we read, the ways in which we claim authority to have read, and the implications of this reading for how we live in the world=85 (These are not easy or uncomplicated issues, and they are not to be rushed - obviously reading is also in the world, political and practical. The question is how? What sort of politics, what kinds of practice, what speed of reading?). It worries me that reading slowly would also of course be no guarantee, but I am concerned that the speed in which we often read is too fast, and my worry is that the times in which we find ourselves reading are not understood. Amidst this worry and concern, I=92d suggest that the whole metaphorics of speed has infected our understanding to the point of paralysis, and that political practice takes time. This has important implications. Nearly everyone seems to accept with no problem the acceleration of capital which today reaches such a degree that the instantaneous is privileged as never before. Capitalism has sped up and now moves so fast, it is often said, that all is a blur (financial transfers by electronic optic, hyper-cyber-giga acceleration, etc.) - I think at least some of these rates need to be disaggregated.=20 I want to read speed, time and the poverty of philosophy in relation to Derrida=92s Archive Fever in what may seem initially to be only a convenien= t correspondence, but which will become more important. Looking for correspondences, I have drawn my quotes in part from Marx archived (in English =3D idiomatic translation?) on the world wide web. It is now possible to read, search and download more than enough Marx text to keep anyone busy. The =91Marx and Engels Internet Archive=92 (MEIA), maintained = on a server in Colorado (URL given above) begins with a sentence I want to misread. I want to misread this sentence carefully, since to do so raises all the issues that concern me in an attempt to read Derrida=92s latest books - Specters of Marx, Archive Fever and The Politics of Friendship. The Marx and Engels web introduction begins: =91The M/E Internet Archive is continually expanding, as one work after another is brought on-line. While quite comprehensive as is, it's not complete=92. This expanding, unfinishe= d archive then=85 //derrida.freud Derrida begins Archive Fever with an avoidance of conventional times.=20 =91Let us not begin at the beginning, nor even at the archive=92 (Derrida 1995/1996:1). In a lecture delivered in London at the conference =91Memory: the Question of Archives=92, Derrida entices =91us=92 to begin with a media= tion on the word. To begin, before time, with a word.=20 Archive Fever deserves attention for several reasons, but its tone is such that, I think at least, we should already beware of how it - how Derrida - suggests we read, not just this word, but what reading the word means in general. Derrida will, towards the end of this book, tell us that =91nothin= g is less reliable today than the word =93archive=94=92 (Derrida 1995/1996:90= ), but as yet this has to be demonstrated. In the (not) beginning, the word =91archive=92 suggests, among other things, order, and so command, and this might already warn that we are in the realms of power, and unreliability. It may be well to remember this is where the power of a certain metaphysical thinking operates, positing the real and the lived, conserving and memorialising power. Derrida notes a certain archiving distinction is at the heart of this order when he says the archive =91takes place at the place of the originary and structural breakdown of memory=92 (Derrida 1995/1996:11). (It does matter who controls and orders the archive. If every reading is transformational, archives are not repositories nor as =91conservative=92 as they pretend).=20 Time will be bound up here with memory, the time of memory, and its technologies: for =91there is no archive =85 without a technique of repetition=92 (Derrida 1995/1996:11). Archive fever will be the problem of wanting to repeat the origin, to return (Derrida 1995/1996:90). This return privileges the origin and makes the technical apparatus of that return (the apparatus of the archive) secondary. Derrida says this is the fever of psychoanalysis. What is analysed like a symptom here is a double structure, a contagious pattern - one that is first of all laid out in Freud=92s book on that very old (and archived) resource called =91Moses=92. Derrida is less interested in Moses than in Freud=92s comments on the value of his own archiving, and there will be reasons to think this is Derrida speaking through Freud (he later comments on the =91dramatic twist=92 of Fr= eud speaking of himself through speaking of a colleague (Derrida 1995/1996:89), but at the moment of the analysis of Moses, Freud asks the question of the value of his own writings, and he gives the answer, according to Derrida, that one =91can only justify the apparently useless expenditure of paper, ink, and typographic printing, in other words the laborious investment in the archive=92 by putting forward a novelty, a discovery (Derrida 1995/1996:12).=20 Freud=92s discovery, in the Moses text, is that of the destructive impulse. =91Was it worth it?=92, might have been Freud=92s and Derrida=92s question,= and it is a question I want eventually to put to Derrida=92s work on Marx. It migh= t have been Derrida=92s question, and ventriloquy plays havoc with the analysis here because, although it is not, it could be (=91Perhaps=92, if w= e follow the hesitations and affiliations of The Politics of Friendship, it is). Instead, Derrida=92s text revolves - returns to - questions of the technical apparatus that occupied him in his early essay =91Freud and the Scene of Writing=92 (Derrida 1967/1976). Based on the fact that =91Freud d= id not have at his disposition the resources provided today by archival machines of which one could hardly have dreamed in the first quarter of this century=92 (Derrida 1995/1996:14), Derrida will ask if these new machines will change anything: =91What is at issue here is nothing less tha= n the future=92 (Derrida 1995/1996:14) [he adds =91if there is such a thing= =92 - this future will be very important when its time to look at Specters of Marx].=20 In an innocent way accepting the homogenous context in which a question such as this can be asked, Derrida would investigate (though he actually does not have the time to do this, so often we are left with a promise that an investigation would show something, perhaps, but there is not time) the various technical apparatuses of psychoanalysis - =91for perception, for printing, for recording, for topic distribution of places of inscription, of ciphering, of repression, of displacement, of condensation=92 (Derrida 1995/1996:15). We are well used to seeing question= s concerning technology these days, as Derrida asks:=20 =91Is the psychic apparatus better represented or is it affected differentl= y by all the technical mechanisms for archivization and for reproduction, for prosthesis of so-called live memory, for simulacrums of living things which already are, and will increasingly be, more refined, complicated, powerful than the =93mystic writing pad=94 (microcomputing, electronization= , computerisation, etc?)=92 (Derrida 1995/1996:15)=20 The mischievous questioning Derrida offers then is to dream of a cyber-Freud, a webbed-up, internet-surfing, micro-chip probing, psycho-cyber-netical, Oedipoloroid, electra-callibrational, pentium-envying, hyper-Freud (Derrida=92s fantasy question also possibly hides a lament for a place as Freud=92s analysand - perhaps he wants to post-date his communication and set up an appointment):=20 =91One can dream or speculate about the geo-techno-logical shocks which would have made the landscape of the psychoanalytic archive unrecognisable for the past century if =85 Freud, his contemporaries, collaborators and immediate disciples, instead of writing thousands of letters by hand, had had access to MCI or AT&T telephonic credit cards, portable tape-recorders, computers, printers, faxes, televisions, teleconferences, and above all E-mail=92 (Derrida 1995/1996:16 my emphasis).=20 Above all E-mail. He privileges the new personal communications format on the basis of a view of technology that to me seems to take on a messianic tone. Could it be that that Derrida is mesmerised by the novelty of email - as if we would not =91recognise=92 its use in psychoanalysis? [Today, to cite just the most tabloid of examples, analysts in Manhattan have their dictated notes telephoned through to VDU operators in places like Bangalore, India, to be typed up and transferred back to Manhattan the next day. Would this really be so unrecognisable?]. Whatever the case, Derrida=92s enthusiasm for new technology is clear: =91electronic mail toda= y, even more than the fax, is on the way to transforming the entire public and private space of humanity=92 (Derrida 1995/1996:17).=20 What is Derrida saying here? Transforming the entire space of humanity?=20 Surely, not in its entirety? - a slippage here into the globalising eurocentrism he usually is careful to guard against. So often the fetish for new technological =91product=92 in the shopping malls of Paris, New Yor= k, Tokyo etc., is extended to the entire planet. Declarations of a transformation of the entirety of human space seems a little hasty, the sort of thing to be expected from the propagandists of AT&T, not from staid old philosophy. And again: even more than the fax? The transferability of office memos across geography - from identical offices in London to Cairo, from Sydney to Santa Cruz. Is the fax so old hat? Why does Derrida make so much of the process of electronic archiving effected by new technologies that inaugurate a distancing effect? He suggests that these new technologies move Freud=92s works =91away from us at great speed,= in a continually accelerated fashion=92 (Derrida 1995/1996:18), and he compare= s our relation to them as akin to that of archaeologists or of biblical philologists, or of medieval copyists (Moses and the archive again). He does not want to denigrate philology, but this =91should not close our eyes to the unlimited upheaval underway in archival technology=92 (Derrida 1995/1996:18). Why, I want to ask, is this unlimited, and what are the implications of saying so?=20 Derrida also asks if the received protocols of reading, interpretation and classification =91must=92 be applied to the, supposedly unified, =91corpus= =92 of Freudian psychoanalysis (Derrida 1995/1996:36). There are interesting moves afoot here, not only with regard to the unity of the corpse - the integrity of the dead, we could say - but also of the protocols of reading that shall be applied to the archive in the future. Derrida says this is a question of the future =91to come=92, one we will =91only know in times t= o come=92 (Derrida 1995/1996:36). He refers, in this paragraph, to his book o= n Marx, and to a =91spectral messianicity=92 [which is not messianic - he doe= s not invoke the ghost of Benjamin which haunts here], and there can be no doubt that the question of protocols of readings =91to come=92 are importan= t in relation to both Marx and Freud.=20 What are the themes signalled here and how do they fit the current conjuncture? I think all this has to do with a new astonishment at time and technology, not that these aren=92t old topics for the now elderly Derrida [he has often written that =91time is violence=92[3]]. Never alone = in worrying about time, recently he shows certain symptoms of being less subtle than he previously so often was. Increasingly thinking about death, as Freud did at the end (these are not just jokes: of Gerontology), Derrida refers to =91upheavals=92 in the =91economy of speed=92 of psychoan= alysis. In the course of raising questions about the techniques of investigation and interpretation in the face of technological transformation (and it is still necessary to raise questions about psychoanalysis as cure, as normalisation), upheavals in the =91progress of representation=92 in psychoanalysis become pertinent. No longer just the children=92s toy of the magic writing slate upon which the trace of what is written remains beneath the surface even when erased, but today, tape-recorders, video, electronic telecoms. The economy of speed concerns =91all that is invested in the representational models of the psychic apparatus for perception=92 (Derrida 1995/1996:15).=20 Are the techniques of Freudian analysis out of date as Derrida=92s questioning might imply? Indeed, the =91laws=92 or rules of the consultatio= n, of free association and the absence of =91technological=92 recording device= s in the consultation rooms seem to ensure this is so. What then of other disciplines that have embraced at least some of these devices - the video camera in anthropology or cultural studies, the electronic retrieval systems in history? I wonder at this, since email - and Derrida writes: =91above all email=92 - is not much more than the electronic delivery of letters and so does not seem so different to Freud=92s scrivening practice, if on a grandly different scale (questions of scale are different to questions of speed). Some postal history should be remembered - there used to be a half dozen deliveries of mail each day in major metropolises like London: back and forth, first mail to invite someone for morning tea, second to postpone to lunch, third to rearrange for the afternoon, and forth to cancel and agree to meet later at the club - admittedly all this only for the upper class urban elite, but it is a pattern replicated on the larger scale of those who are electronically wired today. Some may say even that email is a step back from the immediacy of the phone - and all of Derrida=92s work on phonologism would echo here=85 Certainly the hype of email has its political critics, none more so than those writing about the parts of the third world less adequately webbed up than elsewhere,[4] and where it is also sometimes a two hour walk to the nearest phone (see Scott McQuire=92s essay on the =91Uncanny Home=92, on differential rates of inter= net access, privileging USA, UK, Australia and Canada, and also see activist group discussion of first world demands for information vis a vis time constraints and access costs to phonelines etc., on the autonomous Marxism discussion list aut-op-sy <http://jefferson.village.Virginia.EDU/~spoons/>). The point is that there are still significant delays in the relays that exchange meanings here (much of the circuitry remains copper, for example from a mine like that of Bougainville in the Pacific, rather than optic fibre[5]). Of course, the advent of video-exchange over the internet in =91real time=92 will both tend to displace the text of email, and move a step past the telephonic into immediacy of audio- visuallinkages across space for the well-resourced elites. Sure, this may be good news for archivists vis a vis Freud, communicating face-to-face across time and space, but sorry, Freud cannot accept the call. Being dead, as we will see, he cannot answer except through Derrida=92s control of the archive, through what Derrida can show that he has already said. Derrida knows this, and says =91Freud can only acquiesce=92 (Derrida 1995/1996:41).=20 [...] //derrida.specters-of-marx Derrida offers a new Marx. Revamped. Back from the dead. Let us cut to the chase - there are some problems relating to what I am sorely tempted to call =91the a-political tone recently adopted by Derrida=92[6] . The full title is Specters of Marx: the State of the Debt, the Work of Mourning and the New International. The problems appear at the very moment when Derrida has (finally) (re)turned to Marx (Derrida does call it a return, but Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak has rightly quipped: =91when was ever the time t= o have left off reading Marx?=92 [Spivak 1996]. Derrida has anticipated, and writes: =91And if one interprets the gesture we are risking here as a belated-rallying-to-Marxism, then one would have to have misunderstood quite badly=92 [Derrida 1993/1994:88]. I want to read this =91gesture=92 an= d indeed I do think we =91have to=92 misunderstand in just this =91bad=92 way= , to insist upon this misunderstanding so as to draw out consequences and politics, to insist upon a =91bad Marxism=92 that will become clearer). Wha= t is the problem? Derrida proposes the foundation of a New International. I will want to argue that this call, which is an explicit call for an Internationalist =91politics=92, abruptly empties and simplifies where previous confrontations - say with the conservative Claude L=E9vi-Strauss - called forth more.=20 [...] In Specters of Marx, evoking ghosts of 1848 (among other things, also the year of the actual publication of the Manifesto), Derrida announces a new International that would be:=20 =91without status, without title, and without name, barely public even if i= t is not clandestine, without contract, =93out of joint=94, without coordination, without party, without country =85 without common belonging t= o a class. The name of new International is given here to what calls to the friendship of an alliance without institution among those who, even if they no longer believe in the Socialist-Marxist International, in the dictatorship of the proletariat continue to be inspired by at least one [my emphasis] of the spirits of Marx or Marxism even if this alliance no longer takes the form of the party or of a worker=92s international, but rather of a kind of counter-conjuration, in the (theoretical and practical) critique of the state of international law, the concepts of State and nation, and so forth: in order to renew this critique, and especially to radicalise it.=92 (Derrida 1993/1994:85-86)=20 The important words here are the alliance with just one of the spirits of Marxism, the dismissal of the party, the class, the workers, the proletariat (=91barely public=92 - I will not yet read this as elitism, but remember that the =91entire public and private space of humanity=92 is to b= e transformed by email). In favour of an international critique of Law and concepts, of the State and so forth, which would no doubt be worthy, and worthwhile, but surely in favour too of a massive restriction of the scope and possibility of Marxism. Indeed, an avoidance of using, in this context, the c-word for the international (Socialist, he says, not Communist). Is it too hasty to read this as symptomatic of a non-Marxism, of a reduction sliding rapidly into renunciation of those who might still remain organised in the party-worker-communist forms? There is much in the way of rampant anti-Marxism and anti-Leninism about today, and Derrida would not want to fall prey to further contribution to this, surely. Yet, the Marx Derrida deals with seems to offer less even than the electronic archive. An International that gives up upon institutionalising at the very moment of its constitution seems inadequate in the face of a recognition that Justice must exceed its examples. [...] //derrida.marx.tick-tock If we were to take up the issues of email, telematics, the speeding capital of the current conjuncture, then we could also read Marx on time. It is clear from The Poverty of Philosophy, and from the later works, that time is, for Marx, a social relationship and is to be understood as the intertwining of three different temporalities, that of production, that of circulation and that of reproduction. These are perhaps not all the temporalities that are relevant - for example there may be that of the movement from formal to real subsumption, and we might add the different rhythms of resistance, of critical commentary, of organisation of the class struggle, all of which might complicate the above. Yet, it is obvious that in Marx=92s text there are differing temporalities that imping= e upon the calculations of capitalist production, and time is central to its working. Importantly the rhythms of these circuits are not always the same. First and foremost it is value that is the time of socially necessary labour, and it is clear that this is not a simple calculation. More recently (relatively), the work of Fortunati (1981/1995) has demonstrated the determination of socially necessary labour, the role of domestic labour and sexual reproductive work - in several senses - is not calculated explicitly, indeed, this is the criteria of its hidden character under patriarchal capitalism. Similarly, the abstract calculation of circulation time in the paperwork of moneybags may not correspond to the practicalities and specificities of circulation and distribution, but must work in averages and means. Also, the antagonistic relations between capital and labour throw variously speeding spanners into the most carefully calculated plans, to a greater and lesser extent in the differing domains of production, in the circulation phase and in reproduction (where shopping is civil war). Similarly, the subsumption thesis could be rethought in a context where centre and periphery no longer works geographically nor temporally in the same ways. The subsumption of inner city relations may also be formal or real in the financial centre that is optic fibre inner London etc. (but this would be another research task - see Thrift=92s informative and pithy attack on the newness of the electronic city and those =91driven by a desire to fix on metaphors of modern life like speed, circulation and travel, which were already tired before they were recycled last time around=92 [Thrift 1996:1466]).=20 [...] to be continued (part 2) --- # distributed via nettime-l : no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a closed moderated mailinglist for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: [email protected] and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # URL: http://www.desk.nl/~nettime/ contact: [email protected]