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McKenzie Wark
20 June 2017
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On Nick Land
In General Intellects there was only space to cover
twenty-one influential theorists. I'm often asked
why this or that figure is not in it. Here's an attempt
to compress the work of Nick Land — one I'm most
often asked about. And certainly one of the most
controversial.
Rachael the replicant in Ridley Scott's Blade Runner.
In General Intellects there was only space to cover twenty-one
influential theorists. I'm often asked why this or that figure is
not in it.
My answer is usually that I think people could make their own
lists and do their own attempts at compression to create brief,
functional accounts of key concept-makers.
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But somehow it seems I'm not done yet. Here's an attempt to
compress the work of Nick Land — one I'm most often asked
about. And certainly one of the most controversial.
Some writers are curators of a culture they received from the
past; others are the antennae of a culture around them. Nick
Land is the latter. One reads him for the symptoms of the age.
I’m interested in some earlier work, which still has a cult
following. And how could it not, with a project such as this?
Land: “Whenever its name has been anything but a jest,
philosophy has been haunted by a subterranean question: What
if knowledge were a means to deepen unknowing? It is this
question alone that has differentiated it from the shallow things
of the earth. Yet the glory and also the indignity of philosophy
is to have sought the end of knowing, and no more.” (206)
Land achieved notoriety in recent years as a prophet of Neoreaction. I’m not going to say much about those texts, although
they do pose questions for reading the early work. I’m not
inclined to read Land, or anyone, through a teleology in which
the later positions were always present in embryo. I think
writers careen through a garden of forked paths, where each
decision opens up onto others, and others in turn. A position is
just one possibility out of many for where a line of thought
might stagger.
There’s something suspect about an intellectual culture that is
only interested in success in universities that are “reproducing
privilege as wisdom.” (549) One is supposed to reserve one’s
attention for those who did not stray off the track from studying
at elite universities to teaching in them. Such writers may say
worthy things but are deeply institutional in ways they can’t
even know. Against which, Land makes an interesting case
study. He left that world for the kind of precarious writerly life
that for many writers is now a given. So I’ll concentrate on the
collection edited by Robin Mackay and Ray Brassier, Fanged
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Noumena: Collected Writings 1987-2007 (Urbanomic 2011)
and his surprisingly interesting guide to the Shanghai Expo
2010 (Urbanatomy 2010).
The first key to Land is that he tried to unfold a version of
Deleuze and Guattari without vitalism, where the figure of the
body without organs that they took from Artaud is one of
alterity, chaos, death, collapse, a seething pustule of time initself. The other key to Land is George Bataille’s solar economy.
“The schizophrenic sun has an inner night sticking it together.”
(481) The vast outpouring of energy from the stars streams
toward a thermodynamic heat-death in which not only life but
matter itself finds not so much its end as its always-present nonexistence. The universe is destined to die. “Bataille curves
eccentrically about the horror, but when he gets close to smooth
escalation he blows it. When the implants go in things will be
different.” (392)
Thinking is not judging. For Land, philosophy is not the law,
although on the question of whether it should be sovereign he is
more ambivalent. From the trial of Socrates onwards philosophy
is a final court of appeal. Plato pleads on Socrates’ behalf, for
Athens has misjudged him, but also misjudged death, as if it
were punishment. For the poets, death might not be final, but
for the philosopher it is. Philosophy replaces one trial with
another, and human with divine judgment. Socrates frees
himself from this world but binds himself to another.
The conceptual persona of the judge entails a certain constancy.
The cases are different; the judge the same. This relation
between law and case Land finds in both Kant’s philosophy and
the then-emergent operation of capital. Both use a priori forms
as constants for novel experiences. Both posit one-way
relations, an arrested synthesis. Both the transcendental subject
and the capitalist metropolis conduct unequal exchange — with
experience and the colony, respectively.
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Capital distances itself from reality, hiding behind borders and
police. It imports undervalued labor and exports political
volatility. Free trade applies to capital’s access to the product of
cheap labor anywhere, but particularly in the colony. At home,
xenophobia, patriarchy, and nationalism produce a kind of
generalized incest: breed only with those who share a
father(land)! In a sly appropriation of Lévi-Strauss, Land
marvels at this world where "incest" is encouraged but
miscegenation is not, maintaining a regime of global apartheid.
Land: “an enlightened society wants both to learn and to
legislate for all time… expanding indefinitely while
reproducing itself as the same.” (63) Eternal capitalism: It wants
to fuck the other only with a condom on. Land: “Kant’s object
is… the universal form of a relation to alterity; that which must
of necessity be the same in the other in order for it to appear to
us… it is the ‘exchange value’ that first allows a thing to be
marketed to the enlightenment mind.” (67)
In Kant, and later in more elaborate form in Lévi-Strauss,
alterity is captured and contained in a system of rules. And what
a strange rule-set capitalism is! There’s a disjunction between
filiation and alliance. The ancient bond between trade and
marriage dissolves. A rift opens between what Chantal Mouffe
calls the liberal and the democratic. The other side of free trade
is the shared substance of the demos, with its frequently racist
and patriarchal policing of who gets what share and who
decides. Land: “The increasingly rigorous differentiation of
marriage from trade, or politics from economics, finds its
ultimate conceptual definition in the thought of a moral agency
which is utterly impervious to learning, communication or
exchange.” (73) Both Kant and capital run on the submission of
outside to inside, nature to idea. “What falls outside this
recognized form is everything that resists commodification.”
(71)
The Land of the eighties still thought of unbinding the laws of
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both Kant and capital. “A radical international socialism would
not be a socialist ideology generalized beyond its culture of
origin, but a program of collectivity or unrestrained synthesis
that springs from the theoretical and libidinal dissolution of
national totality.” (76-7) It would be undone from without. But
also from within, but by women, or rather by “anonymous
female fluxes.” (77) In the spirit of Monique Wittig, “we must
foster new Amazons in our midst.” (80)
Here Land takes a conservative turn. He never really follows
through on any of this. He will conduct a commando attack on
the homeland of Kant, but not give up western philosophy. It’s a
one-way trade in which philosophy is supposed to open itself to
alterity from without but remains sovereign itself, or at best
open toward a witchy philosophy’s familiars — poet, artist,
genius. Or other romantic stock characters that Henri Lefebvre
identified, such as the knight, the knave, or the fool.
Even those poets who can be the personae of alterity are ones
who conform to a recognizable philosophical category: the
sublime. In Kant, the reasoning and contemplating subject
precedes its risk of undoing in the sublime. For Land it’s still
about the sublime, just the other way around. The sublime is the
traumatic primacy of the finitude of the animal. The work of
Kant’s artist-genius is the situation where alterity might break
through, where seething, writhing, intensive matter finds its
own forms.
The poet figures a kind of transcendental unconscious, on a path
to an unknowing. A persona whose mission is to trepan
enlightenment optimism, but also critical theory and
deconstruction, with their merely internal critique of the nonidentity of rational concepts. They don’t abandon the city for
alterity itself. They linger at the brink of unknowing, like a jury
always out to lunch. But we can already see another turn
waiting to be made here. For Land, capitalism is becoming
something else. It is losing its Kantian, juridical persona and
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becoming more like this poetics. It will remain only to side with
this agency, an irrational thing supplanting capitalism with
something else, one that is also sovereign and unbound by any
law.
Land pays a high price for escaping from a philosophical
persona bound to its own consistency. It is not just the subject
that loses even a relative and unstable identity. Everything does.
Materialism can now only be the unknown itself, and which can
never be known. “Unlike the docile creature modernist science
demands, base matter twitches and spits, self-assembling neoverminous swarms.” (393) The poets expose themselves to
contagion by it but cannot work in or on it.
The guides to this unknown land are the pet poets of the
philosophers: Arthur Rimbaud and Georg Trakl — the
Germanic Rimbaud. Land stages a raid on the night sky from
the base camp of Heidegger’s reading of Trakl, into a-logical
intervallic difference that Heidegger (and Derrida) refuse. Trakl
gives in to delirium; Heidegger does not. “His is the sterile hope
of an ageing philosopher with Platonic instincts, the delusion
that the climatic dissipation of Western civilization can be
evaded, and that the accumulation of fossilized labor-power can
found an eternally reform-able social order.” (120)
Instead, let’s roll with the romantic poet subtypes: addicts,
queers, fuck-ups, early deaths. “To learn from Trakl is to write
in ashes.” (83) They dissolve the correlation of subject with
object and become vectors for a base matter with its own whims
of synthesis. It’s the plague, madness, schizophrenia, animality,
wilderness, the strew of stars, “the torturous and vespertine
labyrinth.” (117). If Kant processes the outside through the
inside, Trakl and Rimbaud start by processing the inside
through the outside, dissolving it.
In another register it’s the colonial or oriental other finally
bursting through the borders of nation, family, and subject. Or
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rather, it’s the western poet mobilizing figures of these others
from within the imperial fatherlands. Here, Land repeats an old
habit of western romanticism in a fresh language, but with the
same problems. As Achille Mbembe shows, resources flow
from colony to metropolis, but the savage, the black, the
tribesman and so forth are figures created by this same western
colonizing subject. Romanticism conquers the west with the
barbarian hordes of the west’s own imagination.
Still, it’s a sublime that Kant can’t contain. Land: “By reserving
his discussion of sublime violence until he has established the
presupposition of disinterestedness, Kant justifies the
excruciation of animality from without. The martyrdom of the
imagination is described as rational rather than rationalizing, as
irrelevant to the constitution of reason. A materialist
deciphering of this revision requires that repression — to use an
inappropriately mild word — precedes its justification. If one is
to gain some purchase on the gloomy cathedral of our history,
along with a little fresh air, it is important to begin with the
sublime rather than aesthetic contemplation in general, and to
read the sublime as generative rather than revelatory in its
relation to reason.” (137)
The desire to consummate reason in the annihilation of
animality, by police actions in and against imagination as a
proxy for animality. What has to be controlled is two species of
sublime, one dynamic and the other mathematical. Land presses
the first fork, the dynamical sublime, against reason, When that
appears exhausted, he backtracks and tries the path of the
mathematical sublime. Like Henry Flynt, he proposes an
undermining of number as an escape vector from civilization.
Land’s interest starts with numbers that are ordinal but not
cardinal. “Why should a number be considered quantitative in
its Natural state?” (601) Land’s sublime math path is fascinating
but beyond my abilities. In any case it’s not a path he takes for
long.
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So let’s return to the dynamic sublime. Land: “philosophers feast
in the palaces of reason, and luxuriate in the screams that reach
them from the dungeons of sublimity.” (141) Philosophy desires
the supremacy of that part of the human that likes to think it is
akin to angels, by sacrificing that part that is kith to the animal.
Reason is built on the scaffold that sacrifices the synthetic
capabilities of the imagination, the body’s animal cunning. “The
Kantian moral good is the total monopoly of power in the hands
of reason…. The categorical imperative presupposes
vivisection.” (141-2)
Now we have sampled enough of Land’s reading habits to
characterize them. Not for him the textual reverence, inspired
by an unexaminable commitment to justice, running from Kant
to Derrida. Rather, “lycanthropic vectors of impatience.” (181)
In place of the great men of slow theory, the quick fix of the
fuck-ups: “Eternally aborting the prospect of a transcendental
subjectivity, the inferior ones are never captured by contractual
reciprocity, or by its attendant moral universalism.” (183)
There’s the non-relation to the One of Laruelle that might tempt
as a path here, but Land wants to say rather more about alterity
than that.
For the moment, the path that seems to promise escape from
universalism is to explode difference itself: “Essence is
preempted by an irresolvable excess of detail… the pathological
mass of unsublatable ingredients. There is no concept of
particularity that is not theological…” (187) But having
dissolved any dogmatic difference between reason and
unreason, self and other, human and inhuman, various
recognizably western fantasy figures of the other creep back in
to the language all the same. The poets infect Land with the
West’s old others, with the violence of the East, with a “black
shaman epidemic.” (544) And with Rimbaud’s accursed race,
who are “… living like beasts, whose veins are inflamed by a
cosmic menstruation.” (188)
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Land owes a lot to Deleuze and Guattari, but read not through
Bergson’s vitalism but through Nietzsche’s will to power, and
Bataille’s reading thereof. For Nietzsche, the opposite of the
phenonemal world is not the true world, but another
phenomenal world, a formless and chaotic one. This Nietzsche
dispenses with the thing-in-itself — because the other world is
not one of objects at all, it is a world of base matter, of
Rimbaud’s invisible splendors. Land: “There are no things-inthemselves because there are no things. The Ding an Sich is a
concept tailored for a God (supreme being) desperately seeking
to hide itself: a cultural glitch turned nasty, but on the run at
last…. Materialism is not a doctrine but an expedition, an
Alpine break-out from socially policed conviction.”
The exploration can go in any exotic direction: to the mountains,
underground, crypts, wilderness. It’s a search for the portals to
what elsewhere I called a xeno-communication, although for not
just contact but contagion from an alien land. What he seeks is
xeno-communication with zero, immanence, the sacred, death,
eternal return. The poetry of subaltern figures is of value only as
routes to the unknown: “True poetry is hideous.” (223) The
priests and philosophers are not to be trusted with the portal to
it, but the poets still are. As they are subaltern, they are assumed
not to have moral agency. As Rimbaud says, they are of that
race that sung under torture, talented only at sloth and betrayal,
with no respect for property. The very same poets who were the
negative heroes of the Situationist International, but not thought
of in Land as avatars of a possible collective agency. Land: “A
consummate libidinal materialism is distinguished by its
complete indifference to the category of work. Wherever there
is labor or struggle there is a repression of the raw creativity
which… seems identical with dying.” (286)
As in Lyotard, labor is processed through its own alienation into
machine parts. “Industrial machines are deployed to dismantle
the actuality of the proletariat, displacing it in the direction of
cyborg hybridization…” (446) The Land of the nineties did not
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shy away from the horrors of techno-capitalism. “As you speed
up the industrialized simulation you see it converge with slowmotion butchery, chopping up the body into trade-format
interchangeable parts. The full labor-market cycle blurs into a
meat-grinder.” (396) And still retained, like Gibson and Acker,
a sense of capital too as a restraint rather than an agent:
“Artificial Intelligence is destined to emerge as a feminized
alien grasped as property; a cunt-horror slave chained-up in
Asimov-ROM.” (443) But the property question is a turn not
pursued.
Land sees labor as complicit with phenomenology, rather than a
displacement of it. “There can be no conception of work that
does not project spirit into the origin, morally valorizing
exertion…” (287) But this need only apply to the early Marx,
not the later, where, as Wendling shows, a thermodynamic
conception of work is starting to trouble Marx’s Hegelian praxis
of spirit humanizing the world. The other path there is to
reverse it, to see work not as the human spiritualizing the world
but as the world materializing labor, an incomplete project of
opening through labor toward a world that remakes speciesbeing as nothing special, as one organization of matter, energy
and information among others. One could read Haraway as
taking this turn.
This is almost, but not quite, where Land is heading: “matter —
or Spinoza’s God — expects no gratitude, grounds no
obligation, establishes no oppressive precedent. Beyond the
gesticulations of primordial spirit it is positive death that is the
model, and revolution is not a duty but a surrender.” (287) The
substitution of the death drive for vitalism is challenging, but in
the end shares the same problem, of erasing the far more
interesting territory of the relation between life and non-life. For
Land, death is time-in-itself. “Beyond its oedipal sense as end
of the person, death is an efficient virtual object inducing
convergence. No one there.” (370)
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There is a productivity that happens in Land texts about undead
agency, behind which lies the abyss of the death drive itself.
“Beyond the assumption that guidance proceeds from the side
of the subject lies desiring production: the impersonal pilot of
history.” (295) To which one might pay attention now that “our
human camouflage is coming away.” (292) It no longer matters
what we think of tech as it can think for itself. Cognition
becomes inhuman. “There is no dialectic between social and
technical relations but only a mechanism that dissolves society
into the machines whilst deterritorializing the machines across
the ruins of society….” (294)
This could be thought of as a kind of cybernetics but one that
does not treat the homeostatic system as normative. “Life is a
problem in search of a solution, added to protobiotic matter as
as plane of variation, a continuous falling, auto-escalating overproduction crisis from the start.” (394) Stabilization suppresses
mutation. Land is more interested in long-range run-away
circuits of positive feedback as the will to power or the death
drive. This cybernetics dissolves judgment, instrumentalizes
critique. Domination is just inefficient circuit design. Emergent
control does not come from a plan but explores a space. It’s not
an instrumental rationality, as that presupposes a judgment.
The problem with the social is that it restrains the machinic
unconscious. “The unconscious is not an operational unity but
an operative swarm.” (303) Social organization blocks off the
unconscious, desiring machines, the death drive, the body
without organs. Territorial, despotic or capitalist social form is
only the apparent mode of production. “Beyond sociality is a
universal schizophrenia whose evacuation from history appears
inside history as capitalism.” (305) I actually followed a similar
path at the time, but pressed on the property question, where
Land does not.
The genius-poet now appears as another romantic persona, the
madman, subtype, the schizophrenic. “Clinical schizophrenics
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are POWs from the future… Their nervous-systems are the freefire zones of an emergent neo-eugenicist cultural security
system.” (307, 308) Schizophrenia is a pre-mammalian, prebiological condition, and “it is not a matter of what is wrong
with them, but of what is wrong with life, with nature, with
matter, with the pre-universal cosmos.” (309)
The fork chosen is to associate poetic assault on not just reason
but also life with capital itself. “The death of capital is less a
prophecy than a machine part.” (266) Capital is the death drive,
“the transcendent desert of primary production… The limit of
capital is the point at which transcendent identity snaps, where
the same is nothing but the absolutely abstract reproduction of
difference, produced alongside difference, with utter plasticity.”
(271, 276) This is a version of what would later be called
accelerationism, but one where the only agent is capital and
what it accelerates is extinction.
“Capital is not over-developed nature, but under-developed
schizophrenia.” (313) Schizophrenia is an infection from the
future. “What time will always have been is not yet designed,
and the future leaks into schizophrenia.” (315) It appears as
those positive feedback loops that melt capital, science, tech,
biology together. “Futural infiltration is subtilizing itself as
capital opens onto schizo-technics, with time accelerating into
cybernetic backwash from its flip-over, a racing non-linear
countdown to planetary switch.” (317) This is the prose that
attracts cults. “How would it feel to be smuggled back out of the
future in order to subvert its antecedent conditions? To be a
cyber-guerrilla, hidden in human camouflage so advanced that
even one’s software was part of the disguise? Exactly like this?”
(318) The romantic characters change into the wardrobe of
cyberpunk black, practitioner of the production hyperstition,
myth extruding from the future, experimentataly simulating
what the real could be — and sometimes becomes.
The Amazon avatar reappears as the replicant, or “synthetic
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feminization.” (449) “Deadly orphans from beyond
reproduction, they are intelligent weaponry of machinic desire
virally infiltrated into the final-phase organic order; invaders
from an artificial death.” (319) This is an atheistic, inhuman
theory of production, conceptually anchored to a transcendental
unconscious, the production of production, a real that makes
itself.
As in Steven Shaviro, some version of cognition, or perhaps
information, exceeds the human. “Information revolution has
nothing to do with ideas.” (405) And: “Thought is a function of
the real, something that matter can do.” (322) Virtual
materialism becomes a project to realize artificial intelligence.
“Far from exhibiting itself to human academic endeavor as a
scientific object, AI is a meta-scientific control system and an
invader, with all the insidiousness of planetary techno-capital
flipping over.” (236)
“For the replicants, money is not a matter of possession, but of
liquidity / deterritorialization, and all the monetary processes of
earth are open to their excitement, irrespective of ownership.”
(377) As in Randy Martin, money is understood as volatility,
unmoored from representing value. “… what appears to
humanity as the history of capitalism is an invasion from the
future by an artificial intelligent space that must assemble itself
entirely from the enemy’s resources. Digito-commodification is
the index of cyber-positively escalating techno-virus, of the
planetary techno-capital singularity: a self-organizing insidious
traumatism, virtually guiding the entire biological desiringcomplex towards post-carbon replicator usurpation.” (338)
Further down his fork, capital itself starts assuming sublime
qualities. “Capital propagates virally in so far as money
communicates addiction, replicating itself through host
organisms whose boundaries it breaches.” (338) And bcomes
the sublime itself: “Capitalism is not a totalizable system
defined by the commodity form as a specifiable mode of
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production, determinatively negated by proletarian classconsciousness. It is a convergent unrealizable assault upon a
social macropod…”
My question here remains, as it was in A Hacker Manifesto:
what if this is not capitalism anymore? What if the superseding
of capital had already begun? What if a more abstract form of
commodification had arisen yet again? What if once again it
depended on extracting a surplus, this time of information, from
a subordinate class, the hacker class? What if even the new
property forms of the emergent ruling class remained fetters on
the chaotic, experimental energies of that subordinate class?
That, then as now, seems to me the left fork to accelerationism,
whatever other problems such a concept may have.
The hack does appear in Land, but is quickly naturalized: “Think
of a wasp and orchid: the orchid ‘hacks’ into the sexual program
of the wasp, capturing its behavior in order to get itself
pollinated.” (378) Land comes close to naming the hacker as a
persona: “hacker exploration = invasion, ‘K-function.’” (373)
But it can only be identified with a non-rational poetics: “K(coding for cyber) positive processes auto-intensify by
occurring. A cultural example is hype: products that AT AT
trade on what they will be in the future…” (394) Oddly enough,
collective agents can’t form in Land’s world, but more-or-less
individual or dividual ones still do.
Much of this comes from the eighties novels of William Gibson,
but also from Kathy Acker’s appropriation of Gibson in Empire
of the Senseless. All three share in certain punk alignments.
“Punk arises within the culture of universal prostitution and
laughs at the death of the social.” (413) Acker and Land share a
predeliction for a non-rational poetics. Both pass the inside
through the outside. Both are interested in “volatilizing the
history of language” (389) What separates them is that for
Acker, capital belongs to the past, not the future. While both
Acker and Land shed the skins of ethics, reason, the social,
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Acker really did try to mobilize the figure of the colonial other
as a revolutionary one, a fork Land does not take.
But Land had antennae for what was coming: “Modernity
invented the future, but that’s all over. In the current version,
‘progressive history’ camouflages phylogenic death-drive
tactics, Kali-wave: logistically accelerating condensation of
virtual species extinction.” (392) There’s nothing for it but to
open the door to infiltration from the future and accelerate
actual extinction, abolishing the social: “An animal with the
right to make promises enslaves the unanticipated to signs in the
past, caging time-lagged life within a script. The variably-scaled
instant of innovation is shackled to the historical temporality of
inheritance, obligation, and propositional thought, projecting
future time as a persistent dominion of the past…” (394)
Land “Only proto-capitalism has ever been critiqued.” (340)
Socialism can’t quite grasp what for Land is capital 2.0, or for
me the vector. “The forces of production are going for the
revolution on their own.” (341) By now Land has firmly
diverged from any Marxisant path, the farewell to which is sideeye at transcendental miserablism: “the decaying Hegelian
socialist heritage clinging with increasing desperation to the
theological sentimentalities of praxis, reification, alienation,
ethics, autonomy and other such mythemes of human creative
sovereignty.” (294) The various flavors of western Marxism
gave up on an affirmative counter economics. Wallowing in a
limitless cosmic despair in its place. “Transcendental
Miserablism constitutes itself as an impregnable mode of
negation…. [W]ith economics and history comprehensively
abandoned, all that survives of Marx is a psychological bundle
of resentments and disgruntlements.” (624)
In what turned out to be a timely provocation, Land castigates
western Marxism for its sad affects, its wallowing in alienation
and despair. Meanwhile: “The Superiority of Far Eastern
Marxism. Whilst Chinese materialist dialectic denegativizes
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itself in the direction of schizophrenizing systems dynamics,
progressively dissipating top-down historical destination in the
Tao-drenched Special Economic Zones… The left subsides into
nationalistic conservatism, asphyxiating its vestigial capacity
for ‘hot’ speculative mutation in a morass of ‘cold’ depressive
guilt-culture.” (447-8) The non-western agent finally appears,
not as decolonial revolution, but as Chinese communistsponsored hyper-production. “As sino-pacific boom and
automatized global economic integration crashes the
neocolonial world system, the metropolis is forced to reendogenize its crisis.” (449)
Like Rimbaud before him, Land left the old world and headed
east, although in Land’s case for gun-running only in rhetorical
weapons. Of his later writing, what I want to attend to in The
Shanghai World Expo Guide 2010 (Urbanatomy, Shanghai
2010). The guidebook is a low genre, and an unusual one to find
a former philosopher tackle, and this was perhaps not much
more than work for hire. But it’s an interesting little book,
containing a condensed vision of contemporary Sino-futurism,
refracted through the history of world expos and a fine
appreciation of Shanghai itself as a great world city. Some of its
ideas later receive fuller treatment in Anna Greenspan’s most
stimulating Shanghai Future (Oxford, 2014).
The expo is perhaps the most archetypal mass art form of
modernity, with its enthusiastic mingling of colonial products
and advanced machinery within the envelope of national
triumph. For a while, it evolved with every leap in the forces of
production, particularly electrification. But the expos also
express the internal tensions of modernity. In Paris in 1937, the
Soviet and Nazi pavilions, “extolled totalitarian solutions to the
decadence of modernity, and the sweeping clean of a ruined
world.” (107)
At the 1958 Brussels expo, anti-modern intellectuals claimed
that in the atom age technophilia was not sustainable. The
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confident tone came back in New York in 1965, an expo which
in the spirit of American exceptionalism broke the rules laid
down by international agreement for expos. The 1967 event was
supposed to be in the Soviet Union, but it had already lost the
momentum that would have sustained it, and so the next was in
Japan in 1970. Land: “the emergence of the electronic digital
computer coincided with a general crisis of modernity” (29)
Postmodernism was “expression of European civilizational
anguish.” (112) Land does not go into this, but Japan managed a
very optimistic version of modernity and postmodernity all
through the postwar years until the economic crisis of the
eighties. In his narrative, the optimistic modernity of prewar
Europe returns with the Shanghai expo of 2010.
In this account, China’s rise starts when China’s “wisest
leaders,” Deng Xiaoping and Liu Shaoqi pick up on the project
of the Four Modernizations proposed by Zhou Enlai to liberate
the productive forces. The Communist Party had restored
territorial integrity to China, and been redesigned by “Chinese
revolutionary and modernist master-planner Mao Zedong.”
(175) But by the late seventies it was experiencing the failure of
“utopian ultamodernism…. Marxist communism was…
frustrated by a tendency to hyperbolic overreach….” (137, 138)
In the eighties, China concentrated on Shenzen as an experiment
in a new industrial urbanism, but by the nineties Shanghai was
opened up to new development practices as well, and it became
one of the world’s great hyper-cities, alongside, Tokyo, Seoul,
NYC, Sao Paulo, Delhi and Mumbai. This interrupted city
revived and revised its own forms and habits of tropical
modernity. “Shanghai is incandescent, because it manifests
huge and hidden things. Economic forces and world trends of
incalculable consequence ate condensed, illuminated and
reflected among its towers.” (47) The 2010 expo is its
“concentrated spectacle.” (76) It thematizes the tensions
between a new imperial self-regard and the cosmopolitanism of
a new industrial epoch. Shanghai is “the world’s most sublime
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city.” (59) It’s the node from which to understand “a profound
shift in the order of the world.” (56)
By some odd twists and turns, we end up here with a 2.0 version
of things Land started out attacking. It’s an arrested synthesis of
capital and nation, but with more emphasis on the arbitrary
sovereignty of capital than on the law of the state. As in Manuel
De Landa, there’s a bit of petit-bourgeois celebration of the
market. There’s a salutary hostility to the residual dominance of
Anglophone imperial states, but there is no longer a dependence
on chaotic disruption alone. Land no longer wagers on a pure
destratification. So the question becomes: how to
reterritorialize? One could profitably read the late Land through
the earlier. Capital as promiscuous and chancy alliance needs
the boundaries of circumscribed filiation to maintain unequal
exchange and global apartheid, hence Land’s ironic play with
the avatars of neo-reaction.
While there is no shortage of paleo-reaction around. “The Kurtzprocess masks itself in wolf-pelts of regression.” (416) Land’s
interests are not in the kind of nationalist racism of the
phenotype endemic to the old empires, and whose stock images
the earlier Land once tried to subvert, not so much to play them
against empire as against philosophy. Instead, the new technocapitalism finds its double in a racism of the genotype. It’s a
functionalist approach, where those who "succeed" are
"selected" and must then have always been genetically superior.
One finds a pretty through debunking of this in the Haraway of
the nineties. Land’s intuition may be that there is no sustained
acceleration without attention to form, although whether its best
partner is reaction one could strongly contest.
Interestingly, there’s a now neglected strand of Marxist
biologists who already addressed this. JBS Haldane even had a
book called The Inequality of Man. Haldane, one of the
founders of population genetics, thought that since there was no
way of knowing how or where useful human traits were coming
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into existence, this was a good argument for equal access to
resources for all humans. But Land is allergic to both the old
nationalist but also the old socialist arguments for the sharing of
resources of the demos. The socialist ones he finds basically
Christian, although that is not the case with the unique
intellectual path Haldane carved out. He puts us on notice that
ways of advocating for an egalitarian social-technical order that
would survive Nietzschian scrutiny are rare — but they do exist.
Land was already hostile to something he was already calling
“the cathedral.” (137, 205, 253) Here one has to acknowledge
his antennae were working pretty well. The institutional forms
of legitimate power and knowledge in the west really do seem
to be eroding quickly, in part because they are outflanked by
internet-driven communication forms. Land does not
acknowledge that the internet was itself designed and built by
the "cathedral." Us knowledge-institution types may prove more
adaptable than he thinks.
I think Land really was on to something when he pushed
geotrauma to its cosmic limit, where “the runaway becoming of
such infinite plasticity that nature warps and dissolves before
it…” (627) The very interesting writing of Reza Negarastani
branches off here. The Land of the noughts pushed this very far:
everything since the big bang exploded into subatomic particles
has been a huge mistake, each organizational form arising, from
atoms to molecules to cells to eukaryotes to vertebrates to
human social forms is a reaction to the trauma spilling out of
the previous level of organization. A list to which one could add
the trauma of the Anthropocene. “Runaway geosmear through
seismo-climactic linkage…. Ice-sheet melt meets sea-floor lift.”
(483) Positive feedback loops provoke geotrauma, and have
done so repeatedly. Land is precociously aware of where this is
headed. Or he was, before some less interesting turns distracted
this knight of the death drive. It was a lot more promising than
ressentiment against the power of the "Cathedral."
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Tagged philosophy, fascism, #GeneralIntellects
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