Synthetic Fabrication: The Myth of the Politics-to-Come (Part 0:
Introduction)
Part of the series Synthetic Fabrication: The Myth of the Politics-to-Come
by Edmund Berger
Missing
The Millennium is ten years out, but for Baudrillard it might as well have already happened. The
eclipsing of the communists’ historical dream by globalized flows of floating capital and information
ushered in a cold, glacial stasis: the enveloping of any sense of forward momentum by the
simulation of what had once been real events. As ubiquitous media begins to seep down to every
crack and crevice and the whirlwind fades into the sensation of an odd vertigo, the only question
Baudrillard finds himself capable of asking is this: “What do we do now that the orgy is over?”
This orgy is the apex of modernity rendered as the endpoint of a dynamic process — “the moment
when modernity exploded upon us, the moment of liberation in every sphere.”1 To be after the orgy
is to be caught in a situation in which there is nothing left to do, because everything that has been
sought has been obtained. There is no euphoria to be found here, only terminal freeze-out. “Now all
we can do is simulate the orgy, simulate liberation.”
A similar feeling haunts the pages of Deleuze and Guattari’s final joint-work, What is Philosophy,
written in what Guattari described as “the winter years”. Without rising to a Baudrillardian hysteria
at the sight of information technology, the two decried the universalization of communication that
was occurring in their moment. “We do not lack communication”, they wrote. “On the contrary, we
have too much of it. We lack creation. We lack resistance to the present.”2 For Baudrillard, such a
resistance is all but impossible: the arrival of the simulated end of history instantly liquidates any
capacity for movement within it. Deleuze and Guattari, by contrast, find in the inauguration of this
new time the capacity “for a future form, for a new earth and people that do not yet exist”.3
By making such a suggestion, a series of questions is posed: who are these people, how do they
arise, and what do they do? The answer is, as always, far more complicated than the questions
themselves, and can be found in the strange and unclear relationship between, on the one hand,
the development of techno-economic forces, and on the other the generation of the political myth.
Such are the building blocks of a synthetic politics, a recombinant form of political subjectivity and
structural framing indicative of the realization of the untimely.
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Synthetic Fabrication The Myth of the Politics-to-Come (Part 0 Introduction)
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Synthetic Fabrication: The Myth of the Politics-to-Come (Part 0:
Introduction)
It can be said that the myth follows in the wake of techno-economic development. Although the
orgy might not be over for Deleuze and Guattari, the irreversible supremacy of a globalized
megamachine is a concern that can be tracked across their whole output, particularly in the two
volumes of Capitalism and Schizophrenia. In Anti-Oedipus, capitalism is treated as an end-point, an
“apparently victorious” system that reassembles everything that has existed.4 In a more esoteric
register, the infamous ‘accelerationist passage’ hints at this as well by invoking Nietzsche’s
affirmation of the levelling process driven by the development of society into a vast industrial
clockwork, while in A Thousand Plateaus the spread of capitalism is recast in terms of a war
machine that overtakes the world’s nation states and subordinates them to itself.5
The dynamics found in Nietzsche’s account and Deleuze and Guattari’s own are one and the same.
The former’s affirmation of industrial levelling arises from the anticipation of a mysterious ‘new
type’ of person, a “strong of the future” that will emerge from this process. For the latter, the
victory of capitalism — or the war machine — provides the fertile soil from which new, mutant
formations will grow:
We have watched the war machine grow stronger and stronger, as in a
science fiction story; we have seen it assign as its objective a peace more
terrifying than fascist death; we have seen it maintain or instigate the
most terrible local wars as part of itself; we have seen it set its sights on a
new type of enemy, no longer another State, or even another regime, but
the “unspecified enemy’… Yet the very conditions that make the State or
World war machine possible, in other words, constant capital (resources
and equipment) and human variable capital, continually recreate the
unexpected possibilities for counterattack, unforeseen initiatives
determining revolutionary, popular, minority, mutant machines.6
Nietzsche’s Strong of the Future and the “revolutionary, popular, minority, mutant machines”
spoken of here appear throughout Deleuze’s work — both with and without Guattari — as the
“people who are missing”, a “people to come”. If capitalism comes at the end, the prophetic
fulfillment of these people coming to pass does not denote the actualization of a new historical
plateau, but a movement that breaks outside of history, that uses global, integrated capitalism as
the raw materials for new formations. Deleuze and Guattari’s portrait of capitalism is one of a
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metasystem that operates through a kind of double-bind, or a machine that carries out a reciprocal
process of stratification and destratification on either side of itself. It unleashes radical energies in
the volleys of a deterritorialization that is only relative, as it becomes subjected to a subsequent
and compensatory reterritorialization. The people to come, however, stake out a position on the
path of absolute deterritorialization, and thus find themselves in remarkable affinity with the
primary process lurking below and beyond all other secondary processes.
It is unsurprising, then, that Deleuze pulls the motif of the missing, futural people from the work of
the modernist avant-garde, themselves a reflection of the irresistible tug of techno-economic
development that began accelerating into escape velocity in the wake of the industrial revolution.
They appear in Mallarmé’s lamentations that there is not yet a people ready for his Livre (“The
Book”), an ambitious work-to-be that would serve as a ‘pure work’ capable of encompassing “all
existing relations between everything”. Traces of their presence can be glimpsed again in the
writings of Franz Kafka, who for Deleuze and Guattari articulated a political program for a people
with neither history nor voice, a people who are themselves missing. “The literary machine…
becomes the relay for a revolutionary machine-to-come, not at all for ideological reasons but
because the literary machine alone is determined to fill the collective enunciation that is lacking
elsewhere in this milieu: literature is the people’s concern.”7 And finally, they arise in Paul Klee’s On
Modern Art, which directly parallels Mallarmé’s disjunction between total art and a potential people
that enter into relations with it:
Sometimes I dream of a work of really great breadth, ranging through the
whole region of element, object, meaning, and style.
This, I fear, will remain a dream, but it is a good thing that even now to
bear the possibility occasionally in mind.
Nothing can be rushed. It must grow, it should grow of itself, and if the
time ever comes for that work — then so much the better!
We must go on seeking it!
We have found parts, but not the whole!
We still lack the ultimate power, for:
the people are not with us.8
One might add to this trinity Artaud’s litany of ‘mad artists’ and transgressive voyagers (amongst
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which he, of course, counted himself), Rimbaud’s delirious self-identification with a pantheon of
eternally ‘inferior races’, and even particular variants of the modernist trope of the New Man,
especially when invoked to describe the rootless, vagabond populations who abandon their home
territories for new horizons and intensities. Such people and groups help compose the minoritarian
population of Toynbee’s “society without a history”, his term for the mobile, nomadic populations
who strive to evade, yet often undergo capture and subordination by, the State.9 If history aligns
with the State and its memory-order, then the nomads and minoritarians find themselves swept up
in the turbulent flux of becoming, passing from the State’s homeostatic order to creative
disequilibrium predicated on an anti-memory.
It is clear that art plays an essential role in this forgetting. “Memory plays a small part in art… It is
not memory that is needed but a complex material that is not found in memory but in words and
sounds: ‘Memory, I hate you’”.10 Memory is a matter of organization, the cumulative order of the
past laying claim to the present. Art, by contrast, is a matter of disassembly and recombination: it
takes the orders of historical memory and cuts them up, rearranging them into hybridized, bastard
bodies: such is the birth of new, mutant forms. By doing so the concerns of art (modern art, in
particular) are not with the impact of the past on the present, but with prying open the present to
the future in a way that profoundly transforms the present. This movement is what is at stake in the
formation of a people who have not yet existed.
The Powers of the False
The lengthiest treatment of the people to come is found in Deleuze’s exploration of the connection
between the advent of the untimely and modernist art in Cinema 2: The Time Image. His primary
concern here is with what he calls the powers of the false; while film is the primary mechanism
through which he explores this concept, it is applicable to all forms of art that are based on the
production of the new. The increased artificialization that had so frightened Baudrillard takes front
and center: it is not only that art produces something false, but it emerges from a reality that is
itself increasingly falsified. In this eclipsing of the world there occurs a “raising [of] the false to
power” which allows “life [to free] itself of appearances as well as truth”.11 What is being described
here is precisely the Nietzschean levelling process, the pulverization of the dominant orders of
representation that leaves in its wake only forces in movement. And while truth might be an
impossibility, Deleuze writes, this moment is imbued with the explosive energy of modernity,
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precisely as captured by the various artists and denizens of the avant-garde. It is this figure, the
artist-as-creator, that moves to the fore:
Only the creative artist takes the power of the false to a degree which is
realized, not in form, but in transformation. There is no longer truth or
appearance… What the artists is, is creator of truth, because truth is not to
be achieved, formed, or reproduced; it is to be created. There is no truth
other than the creation of the New: creativity, emergence, what Melville
called ‘shape’ in contrast to form. Art is the continual production of
shapes, reliefs, projections.12
Deleuze’s point of reference (one that he shares, in fact, with Baudrillard) is a short chapter in
Nietzsche’s Twilight of the Idols entitled “How the ‘True World’ Finally Became Fiction: History of an
Error”.13 Lasting no longer than a page, this chapter provides a history running from the time of the
Greeks up through modernity, noting a passage that runs through the rise of Christianity and its
subsequent unsettling by the forces of scientific reason. The essential thing to grasp in this history,
Nietzsche suggests, is the subsumption of the ‘true world’ by the mythic, configured here as fiction
or fable. In the beginning, the true world was “attainable for the wise, the devout, the virtuous”,
who are themselves living within it. With Christianity, however, the true world becomes mystified
and no longer attainable in this life. It is the promise made to the wise, devout, and virtuous. But
this marks no end in its progression: the mystification continues, and the promise of the true world
cannot be fulfilled because it has become unprovable, as the philosophy of Kant illustrates.
At the “first yawnings of reason” and the “[r]ooster’s crow of positivism” the true world appears
unattainable, and thus, in a subsequent turn, becomes “an idea with no use anymore”. There is no
longer necessity nor capacity for such an idea; even if people may still tread the old paths out of
habit, it is threatened with ejection outright. This is precisely what comes to pass in the final stage,
which for Nietzsche marks the “high point of humanity”, and is nothing short of the overcoming of
the human by the overman and the transvaluation of all existing values. The point at which Kant
arrives, when the true world becomes unprovable, is the Death of God. It follows, then, that the
completion of this process in its final stage is the Death of Man.14 “We have done away with the true
world,” Nietzsche writes, before asking “what world is left over? The apparent one, maybe… But no!
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Along with the true world, we have done away with the apparent!”15
In his essay “Nietzsche, Polytheism, and Parody”, Klossowski describes how the “refabulation of the
world” found in Twilight of the Idols works in conjunction with the eternal return.16 For Klossowski,
the process being indexed by Nietzsche is nothing short of an “ontological catastrophe” in which
the One is overturned and dissolved in the writhing sea of the Many. No longer held in place by the
transcendent law of God — and his emissary, Man — identity explodes outwards and into a
kaleidoscopic delirium as it detaches from the stratification of memory (such is the infernal logic of
the time-schizzed utterance “I am all the names in history”). Klossowski suggests that this also
entails the formation of new religions: “the eternal return of all things also wills the return of the
gods”.17 The becoming-fable of the world, in other words, charts an exit or egress from historical
time into a new mythic time.
Deleuze tracks this line into the political by finding in the artist the one who leverages the powers
of the false — understood here in conjunction with the mythic age of the untimely — to call forth
new forms. There is nothing in these powers that makes them inherently future-facing and
transformative, much less politically radical; they can lead to disaster and the suppression of the
truly new just as easily as they can to something liberatory. In the case of disaster, Deleuze himself
seems to find this to be the far more likely outcome: “There is only a slim chance, so great is the
capacity of nihilism to overcome it, for exhausted life to get control of the New from its birth, and
for completed forms to ossify metamorphosis and to reconstitute models and copies. The power of
the false is delicate, allowing itself to be recaptured by frogs and scorpions.”18 Nonetheless, “[w]hat
Nietzsche had shown [was] that the ideal of the true was the most profound fiction”. When the
people to come are forecast by the avant-garde, it is precisely this principle that is being invoked.
Legending
The chief example Deleuze provides for this process is Pierre Perrault’s 1963 film Pour la suite du
monde. A native of Quebec, Perrault’s starting point was the recognition that his country and
society was colonized and overcoded by the legacy of the French empire. Even speech was coded
by the dictates of “correct French”, itself a reflection of an age of monarchism and centralization of
power. Quebec, in other words, was an ostensibly independent political, social, and cultural territory
that nonetheless was caught in the pincers of a master that had passed into something else.
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Perrault’s goal was the transformation of this situation, one that would entail the movement of the
Quebecois people as an inferior people into a liberated people. Pour la suite du monde pushes back
against the linguistic coding of high French by deploying localized dialects, and in place of
European traditions, an older communal heritage is revived.
Perrault’s goal, however, was not simply to swap the domination by the historical memory of the
French empire with a resuscitated domestic traditionalism. The feedback between his artistic
experimentation, the weight of history, and his real collaborators was intended to spark a process
of becoming that would lead to the emergence of something authentically new and experimental.
By calling upon the powers of the false to work through the questions of identity and political
activity, Perrault was playing a game with myths — and yet he “[did] not want to give birth yet
again to myths”, as he later wrote.19 Instead, passing through this process aimed “to allow people
to give birth to themselves, to avoid myths, to escape customs, to elude Writings. I would like
people to write themselves while liberating themselves from Writing.”
This process was called “legending” by Perrault. For Deleuze it is “fabulation”, the creation and
transmission of stories or fables. His use of the concept has not, aside from the excellent writings of
Ronald Bogue,20 received much attention in the annals of Deleuze studies; the more prevalent
notion of fabulation is the one provided by the late literary theorist Robert Scholes, who described it
as an “emphasis on the art of the designer.”21 This fabulation is one interested in style and the way
it operates, particularly in certain strains of postmodernism — namely, metamodernism — that
turns away from strict realism to blend actual life with the magical or fantastic in order to
destabilize the narrative form and turn it towards an open horizon. While Deleuze’s fabulation bears
some superficial resemblances with that of Scholes (both critique the orders of representation and
look towards a shift away from old modes), the stakes are much higher in the former than the
latter. In an essay on T.E. Lawrence titled “The Shame and the Glory”, Deleuze describes a
“fabulation machine” that produces an image that “has a life of its own”, continually growing from
an initial projection of forms of life onto reality. It is “always stitched together”, a patchwork image
that serves as a “machine for manufacturing giants.”22
The fabulation of Scholes is a celebration of the designer or artist. In Deleuze’s work, the designer
or artist are themselves designed in an open-ended process. Despite being creators, they are also
conduits through which something flows and sets off cascading phase-shifts in the real. He finds
T.E. Lawrence emblematic in this regard: here was a person — a British military officer, no less! —
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who had to position himself among the subjected people and let their struggles wash over him,
allowing him to become part of that war machine, before he can find the ability to write. And when
he writes, it resonates with an incomplete transformation that traces of flux of becoming.
Lawerence’s work is not a self-serving tale of British adventurism, but a mythic exploration of a
revolutionary group subjectivity that has cut straight through his own center: “Lawrence speaks
Arabic, he dresses and lives like an Arab, even under torture he cries out in Arabic, but he does not
imitate the Arabs, he never renounces his difference, which he already experiences as a betrayal…
Lawrence’s undertaking is a cold and concerted destruction of the ego, carried to its limit. Every
mine he plants also explodes within himself, he is himself the bomb he detonates.”23
Lawerence is thus like the enigmatic figure of the far-seer described in A Thousand Plateaus. Farseers may begin as “collaborators with the most rigid and cruelest project of control”, in a manner
akin to Lawrence’s initial deployment as a representative of British imperial interests. Similar to
Perrault’s own flight from French imperialism, Lawrence exits the coding of the British empire to
join up with the Arab revolutionary machine — just as the far-seer “will abandon his or her segment
and start walking across a narrow overpass above the dark abyss”.24 As Bogue points out, Deleuze
would later describe Foucault as a seer and clairvoyant due to his unique ability to sift through the
murky byways of history in order to turn it back against itself, to use history “for something else: as
Nietzsche said, to act against the times… in favor, I hope, of a time to come.” 25 This description
resonates in kind with Perrault’s experimentation with a suppressed history in order to allow people
to ‘write themselves’, as well as Lawrence’s betrayal of his own history by embracing in part the
nomadic past of the Arabic people.
Such are the stakes for fabulation, a hallucinatory process of simultaneous unveiling and
falsification that is the “function proper to art”. This picture is, however, quite incomplete (for our
purposes here, at least). To reiterate an earlier point, the artist or designer is not the principal actor
in this process; they are neither Prometheus nor vanguard. They are but a temporal conduit
through which history and social subjection flow into becoming, mixing into an emergent bricolage.
Fabulation itself seems to come from elsewhere. Indeed, the relationship between the artist and the
invention of a people is directly tied to the war machine’s capacity for counter-attack being
contingent on the full development of capitalist production: art, Deleuze and Guattari write in AntiOedipus, joins with science as forces that ‘fall out’ from, or get pushed into overdrive by, the
advances in capitalist deterritorialization. This not only foreshadows the theory advanced in What Is
Philosophy (that philosophy, entering into a circuit with science and art to create the new, is
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capable of going beyond capitalism), but calls back to Klossowski’s exegesis on Nietzsche, wherein
art and science are essential components in a ‘conspiracy’ that entails the levelling of society
through industrial development (a topic that will soon be treated here).
It follows, then, that there is a distinctive relationship between fabulation and capitalism. Before
unpacking this, however, it is important to trace out Deleuze’s conceptual source for this process.
This would be the writings of Henri Bergson, particularly his 1932 book The Two Sources of Morality
and Religion. It is here that the full dimensions of fabulation can be understood: not simply an
emergent process that occurs on occasion, but a structure that underpins political reality itself. It is
also worthwhile to track the influence of Bergson’s philosophy on Georges Sorel who, while not a
figure that Deleuze draws upon, offers a striking account of the relationship between myth, politics,
and capitalist development that can shed light on the ultimate implications of Deleuze’s theory. The
task of constructing such a genealogy will proceed in Part 1 of the present essay.
Series Navigation
Synthetic Fabrication: The Myth of the Politics-to-Come (Part 1: The Generative Myth) →
1. Jean Baudrillard, The Transparency of Evil: Essays on Extreme Phenomena
(London: Verso Books, 1990), 3.
2. Gilles Deleuze and Felix Guattari, What Is Philosophy? (New York:
Columbia University Press, 1994), 108.
3. Ibid.
4. Gilles Deleuze and Felix Guattari, Anti-Oedipus: Capitalism and
Schizophrenia (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1983), 139.
5. In a fragment from 1887, Nietzsche writes that “Once we possess
common economic management of the earth that will soon be inevitable,
mankind will be able to find its best meaning as a machine in service of
this economy — as a tremendous clockwork, composed of ever smaller,
ever more subtly ‘adapted’ gears…”. The incorporation of the human into
the machine is described as a “dwarfing and adaptation”; in what we may
call the ‘accelerationist fragment’, due to its enigmatic invocation in AntiOedipus, this dwarfing is rendered as a “homogenizing of European man”
that “should not be obstructed”, but sped up. See Friedrich Nietzsche The
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Will to Power, trans. Walter Kaufmann and R.J. Hollingdale (New York:
Vintage Books, 1968), 463, 477-478.
6. Gilles Deleuze and Felix Guattari A Thousand Plateaus: Capitalism and
Schizophrenia, trans. Brian Massumi
7. Gilles Deleuze and Felix Guattari, Kafka: Toward a Minor Literature, trans.
Dana Polan (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1986), 17-18.
8. Paul Klee, On Modern Art (London: Faber and Faber, 1948), 54-55.
9. Arnold Toynbee, A Study of History: Abridgment of Volume I–VI (London:
Oxford University Press, 1946), 169; quoted in Christian Kerslake,
“Becoming Against History: Deleuze, Toynbee, and Vitalist
Historiography”,
Parrhesia,
No.
4
(2008),
17.
https://www.parrhesiajournal.org/parrhesia04/parrhesia04_kerslake.pdf.
10. Deleuze and Guattari, What is Philosophy?, 168.
11. Gilles Deleuze, Cinema 2: The Time Image (Minneapolis: University of
Minnesota Press, 1989),145.
12. Ibid.,147.
13. Friedrich Nietzsche, Twilight of the Idols: Or, How to Philosophize with the
Hammer, trans. Richard Polt (Indianapolis: Hackett Publishing, 1997),
23-24.
14. Deleuze writes that “[w]e distort Nietzsche when we make him into the
thinker who wrote about the death of God. It is Feuerbach who is the last
thinker of the death of God: he shows that since God has never been
anything but the unfold of man, man must fold and refold God.” Man as
such cannot properly exist until God is dead, but as soon as God is
rendered as dead, man will be tending towards death right at this
moment of his birth. “…where can man find a guarantee of identity in the
absence of God?” See Gilles Deleuze, Foucault, (Minneapolis: University of
Minnesota Press: 1989),
15. Nietzsche, Twilight of Idols, 24.
16. Pierre Klossowski, Such a Deathly Desire (New York: State University of
New York Press, 2007), 103.
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17. Ibid., 121.
18. Deleuze, Cinema 2, 147.
19. Pierre Perrault, “Cinema du reel et cinema du fiction: vraie ou fausse
distinction? Dialogue et Pierre Perrault et Rene Allio”, in Ecritures de
Pierre Perrault: Actes du colloque “gens de paroles” (Quebec, 1983), 54;
quoted in Ronald Bogue, Deleuze’s Way: Essays in Transverse Ethics and
Aesthetics (Hampshire: Ashgate Publishing Limited, 2007), 100.
20. See Ibid., as well as Ronald Bogue, Deleuzian Fabulation and the Scars of
History, (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2010).
21. Robert Scholes, Fabulation and Metafiction, (Urbana: University of Illinois
Press, 197), 3.
22. Gilles Deleuze, Essays Critical and Clinical, (London: Verso Books, 1998),
118.
23. Ibid,. 117.
24. Deleuze and Guattari, A Thousand Plateaus, 202.
25. Bogue, Deleuze’s Way, 105.
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