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Sadie Plant/Texts/Books/Author/Plant - The Most Radical Gesture - The Situationist International in a Postmodern Age.pdf
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The most radical gesture
The Most Radical Gesture is the first major study of the Situationist
International, a revolutionary movement of extraordinary ambition and
influence whose reflections on art, everyday life, pleasure, spontaneity,
the city, and the spectacle have ensured it a vital, but largely hidden, role
in the development of twentieth-century culture and politics. Revealing
the extent to which situationist ideas and tactics have influenced
subsequent political theory and cultural agitation, this book discusses a
variety of specific movements and moments of contestation, including
Dada, surrealism, the events of May ’68, the Italian autonomists, the Angry
Brigade, and punk, placing the situationists in a line of impassioned antiauthoritarian dissent which also informs the work of writers like Lyotard
and Deleuze and underwrites contemporary debates on postmodernism.
It suggests that Baudrillard’s reflections on hyperreality are impoverished
reworkings of the situationists’ critical analysis of capitalist society as a
spectacle, and challenges postmodern denials of meaning, reality, and
history by showing that postmodernism itself depends on a tradition which
completely undermines the purposeless pessimism it promotes.
In addition to its unprecedented treatment of situationist theory, The
Most Radical Gesture is therefore also the first book to situate postmodern
ideas in this vital historical, cultural, and political context. The product of
a long-standing engagement with situationist ideas, it uses theoretical
reflection, polemical speculation, and accounts of particular moments of
cultural and political excitement to tell a fascinating and accessible tale
with wide appeal to the general reader and those interested in all aspects
of twentieth-century culture. The Most Radical Gesture will also be
welcomed by those engaged with radical artistic, cultural, and political
interventions, and debates around Marxism, poststructuralism, and
postmodernism.
Sadie Plant is Lecturer in Cultural Studies at the University of
Birmingham.
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The most radical gesture
The Situationist International in
a postmodern age
Sadie Plant
London and New York
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First published 1992
by Routledge
11 New Fetter Lane, London EC4P 4EE
Simultaneously published in the USA and Canada
by Routledge
29 West 35th Street, New York, NY 10001
Reprinted 1992, 1995 (twice), 1997, 2000
Routledge is an imprint of the Taylor & Francis Group
This edition published in the Taylor & Francis e-Library, 2002.
© 1992 Sadie Plant
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reprinted or reproduced or utilised in
any form or by any electronic, mechanical, or other means, now known or hereafter
invented, including photocopying and recording, or in any information storage or
retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publishers.
British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
Library of Congress Cataloguing in Publication Data
A catalogue record for this book is available from the Library of Congress
ISBN 0-415-06221-7 (hbk)
ISBN 0-415-06222-5 (pbk)
ISBN 0-203-21026-3 Master e-book ISBN
ISBN 0-203-21038-7 (Glassbook Format)
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To my parents and my cosmic twin.
Thanks, in place of acknowledgements,
to everyone who helped.
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Contents
Preface
ix
1
‘Now, the SI’
1
2
‘…a world of pleasures to win, and nothing to lose but
boredom’
38
3
‘…a single choice: suicide or revolution’
75
4
‘Victory will be for those who create disorder without
loving it’
111
‘Flee, but while fleeing, pick up a weapon’
150
Notes
Bibliography
Name index
Subject index
188
208
219
222
5
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Preface
The situationist analysis of contemporary capitalist society was simple
and effective. Its express purpose was to transform this society, and it
remains invaluable to those who share its revolutionary aims. Removed
from this context, it can be like a series of instructions about swimming:
interesting to the non-swimmer, but unable to express the wetness of
water. Much of its meaning is therefore lost in the course of this
discussion, which does not use the situationist thesis, but describes it
in comparison to other analyses. Situationist theory can be made to
perform in the big top of critical theory to great effect: it can expose
the complacency and superficiality of much contemporary thought,
jump through the same intellectual hoops and stand up to academic
scrutiny. But unlike those theories to which it can be compared, it is
merely playing in this role. It demands practical realisation, and is a
theory which was only made possible by the acts of rebellion,
subversion, and negation which foreshadowed it and continue to assert
the discontent and disrespect inspired by the economic, social, and
discursive relations which define contemporary capitalism.
Nevertheless, the Situationist International has been ignored by its
detractors and protected by those attracted to it for too long. There is
no longer any damage to be done to its ideas by introducing them into
the profoundly non-revolutionary milieu of contemporary intellectual
debate. And its practices, which never, of course, belonged to it at all,
are quite safe in the hands of those whose need them.
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Chapter 1
‘Now, the SI’
The Situationist International was established in 1957 and published twelve
issues of a journal, Internationale Situationniste, until 1969. Many aspects
of its theory can be found in Marxist thought and the tradition of avantgarde artistic agitation which includes movements like Dada and
surrealism. But the movement also stands in a less distinct line of pleasureseeking libertarian ism, popular resistance, and autonomous struggle, and
its revolutionary stance owes a great deal to this diffuse tradition of
unorthodox rebellion. With its beginnings in an artistic milieu, the SI
finally developed a more overtly political position from which its members
gave full expression to their hostility to every aspect of existing society.
The situationists characterised modern capitalist society as an
organisation of spectacles: a frozen moment of history in which it is
impossible to experience real life or actively participate in the
construction of the lived world. They argued that the alienation
fundamental to class society and capitalist production has
permeated all areas of social life, knowledge, and culture, with the
consequence that people are removed and alienated not only from
the goods they produce and consume, but also from their own
experiences, emotions, creativity, and desires. People are spectators
of their own lives, and even the most personal gestures are
experienced at one remove.
The situationist project was not, however, ridden with
pessimism, and while the first chapter of this book dwells on the
darker implications of defining modern society as a spectacle,
reams of situationist exuberance and delight come quickly on its
tail. For although the situationists suggested that the whole of life as
it is experienced under capitalism is in some sense alienated from
itself, they postulated neither the inevitability of this alienation nor
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the impossibility of its critique. Even though the ability to control
one’s own life is lost in the midst of all-pervasive capitalist
relations, the demand to do so continues to assert itself, and the
situationists were convinced that this demand is encouraged by the
increasingly obvious discrepancy between the possibilities awoken
by capitalist development and the poverty of their actual use. The
ethos of need, labour, and sacrifice is unnecessarily perpetuated,
serving only to maintain the capitalist system; the idea that we must
continue to struggle to survive hinders human development and
precludes the possibility of a life of playful opportunity in which
the satisfaction of desires, the realisation of pleasures, and the
creation of chosen situations would be the principal activities. Long
a utopian dream realisable only on canvas or in poetry, capitalist
development has brought us to the point at which the end of
alienated experience is a real possibility. The situationists saw the
dissemination of propaganda to this effect as the central task of a
revolutionary organisation.
The situationists were, of course, writing at a time of great
affluence and technological achievement. At its peak, the capitalism
of the 1950s and 1960s could promise and deliver more than ever
before. A buoyant economy offered unprecedented levels of
income, social security, education, and technological development.
Political, sexual, and artistic freedoms were encouraged, blatant
inequalities were reduced, anything could be bought and more
people had the money to buy. Leisure, tourism, and consumer
choice extended the variety, opportunity, and comfort afforded by
capitalist society, and the possibility of economic crisis, still less
social revolution, seemed remote. Some theorists proclaimed the
disappearance of the working class, and many even declared
capitalism to have been transformed by its own success into the
progressive society free from class and ideological conflict it had
always claimed to be. Others, however, including the situationists,
c o n s i d e r e d s u c h c o m p l a c e n cy s u p e r fi c i a l a n d p r e m a t u r e .
Recognising that capitalist society had indeed changed since Marx’s
mid-nineteenth-century critique, they claimed that its economic
structure remained fundamentally the same. The misery of material
poverty may have diminished, but life in capitalist society was still
made miserable by the extension of alienated social relations from
the workplace to every area of lived experience. The leisures and
luxuries gained from capitalism can only be consumed: there is
more free time, choice, and opportunity, but the commodity form in
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‘Now, the SI’
3
which everything appears serves only to reproduce the alienated
relations of capitalist production.
The introduction of the radical demands of the imagination,
creativity, desire, and pleasure to their revolutionary project is
indicative of the situationists’ distance from orthodox Marxism. It
also reflects the influence of Dada and surrealism, whose
provocative style, demands for immediacy, and cravings for
autonomy were carried into the situationist project. These
movements extended their initial artistic concerns to attacks on the
whole gamut of cultural and social relations, arguing that capitalism
circumscribes even the possibilities of expressing subjective
experience. While Dada railed against every constraint, the
surrealists developed a more coherent and dialectical critique of
existing society which demanded the complete reconciliation of
subject and object, the individual and the world, reason and the
imagination. Drawing on what they considered to be the most useful
aspects of these movements, the situationists developed their
recognition that language and artistic expression were implicated
with all other social relations, their hostility to the separation of art
and poetry from everyday life, and their demands for experiences
disallowed by existing society. Dada and surrealism had interrupted
and subverted the language and images with which they worked,
invoking a wider world of meanings which challenged conventional
arrangements of reality. And in their challenges to the inevitability
and immutability of the spectacle, the situationists pursued this
same attempt to conjure a totality of possible social relations which
exceeds and opposes the totality of spectacular relations. They took
the words, meanings, theories, and experiences of the spectacle, and
placed them in an opposing context; a perspective from which the
world was given a fluidity and motion with which the static
mediocrity of the spectacle could be negated. Introducing a sense of
historical continuity by showing that the spectacle, in spite of its
seamless appearance, carries the seeds of an emancipated and
pleasure-filled world, the situationists showed that what could
become real is more meaningful and desirable than that which is in
being. The spectacle circumscribes the reality it presents, but it does
not preclude the possibility of identifying a bigger and better world
of chosen relations and experiences beyond its constraints.
For the situationists, freedoms of thought and action were not to
be sacrificed to the future: theirs was a programme of immediate
demands to be lived in the present as both the means and ends of
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revolutionary activity. Scorning all mediation and representation,
they demanded autonomy for themselves and the proletariat in
whose hands the possibility of social transformation lay. Capitalist
social relations arise in every area and must be exposed and
contested by those who experience them, and in their advocacy of
workers’ councils, the situationists joined a revolutionary tradition
hostile to the hierarchy and bureaucracy of those who would
educate, represent, and lead the people to revolution. Yet in a sense,
the situationists formed a vanguard movement themselves, claiming
theoretical superiority and tactical supremacy. They alone could
sense the cravings of even the well-fed; of all radical currents, they
had revealed the spectacular nature of capitalist society and could
maintain a position in contradiction to it. But their libertarian ism
placed them in the role of propagandists and provocateurs rather
than leaders or organisers. And in this role they continuously
undermined complacency wherever it arose, particularly among the
radical milieu. Situationist texts make uncomfortable reading for
anyone with an interest in the maintenance of the status quo, and in
their terms this includes even many of those committed to its
negation.
This antagonistic stance has undoubtedly contributed to the
scarcity of serious discussion of situationist theory, something
which has not always been to the detriment of its ideas and
practices. Those in sympathy with the movement’s goals and tactics
have been able to proceed without the unwelcome attentions of
academics, and there has been none of the mystification or stasis
usually associated with the introduction of revolutionary discourse
to the academy. For many, situationist theory is already mysterious,
and the apparent obscurity of many of the texts has also contributed
to their neglect. However, their basic thesis is plain enough. And
what has really written the situationists out of intellectual history is
their own determination to avoid recuperation within existing
channels of dissent and critical theory. Shunning the academy, the
media, and orthodox conceptions of art and politics, they defined
themselves as the last specialists: in the post-revolutionary world,
there would be no need for elite groups of revolutionaries, and art,
politics, and all other disciplines would no longer exist as separated
areas of thought. Situationist theory, the unified study of
spectacular society, was therefore to be the last discipline too, the
last great project, the final push towards the transformation of
everyday life from a realm of bland consumption to free creation.
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‘Now, the SI’
5
Poetry, political theory, adventure, scandal: anything which
disturbed the old world and revealed the possibilities of the new was
collected and woven into situationist theory, and every hint of
compromise with the spectacle smacked of complicity with its
relations and promised certain defeat.
Of course, the situationists’ attempt to transform everyday life
has been defeated, although their involvement with the upheavals of
1968 made them believe they had succeeded in helping it on its way.
Neither have there been any further projects of the scale of that
perpetrated by the SI and, in the present fin de millénium
atmosphere of postmodernity, such all-encompassing revolutionary
theories are said to be no longer possible. They bear the illegitimate
arrogance of political totalitarianism, depending on unsupportable
beliefs and assuming the possibility of ascertaining the way the
world really is, regardless of the vicissitudes of appearance or the
ambiguities of meaning. On this reading, the situationists’ attempt
to construct a unified theory of capitalism merely brought them
within the totality they thought they were opposing. But in spite of
the radical opposition of situationist and postmodern thought, all
theoretisations of postmodernity are underwritten by situationist
theory and the social and cultural agitations in which it is placed.
The situationist spectacle prefigures contemporary notions of
hyperreality, and the world of uncertainty and superficiality
described and celebrated by the postmodernists is precisely that
which the situationists first subjected to passionate criticism.
This continuity is not coincidental. The philosophers most
closely associated with postmodern thought, Jean-François Lyotard
and Jean Baudrillard, both emerged from the same political milieu
as the situationists. Baudrillard’s work is informed by his contacts
with the situationist Guy Debord, and Lyotard was involved with
Socialisme ou Barbarie and the mouvement du 22 mars, probably
the groups whose political ideas and activities were closest to those
of the SI. Allusions to the situationists are to be found in the work of
both authors, and although postmodernism turns situationist theory
against itself, the traces, even the tyre-tracks of the style,
vocabulary, and scope of the situationist project run across
postmodernism. Poetry, pleasures, cities, and subversions are
themes common to both frameworks, and in their hostility to the
Left, their attacks on the complacency and complicity of established
forms of radicalism, their desire to collapse distinctions between the
aesthetic and the everyday, and their search for the loci of social
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power in relations of language, knowledge, and everyday
experience, the situationists provided postmodernism with much of
the ammunition for its attacks on established genres of thought and
s o c i a l o r g a n i s a t i o n . M o r e o v e r, t h e t a c t i c s w i t h w h i c h
postmodernism makes these attacks were already present in the
situationist armoury: pastiche and deconstruction, subversive
violence from within systems of social organisation or thought,
playful irreverence towards respected theories, and the exposure of
every hidden allusion and resonance.
Postmodernism uses all this to convey our departure from the
modern period in which we experienced ourselves as autonomous
subjects capable of making judgements, expressing desires, and
acting upon the world. In Jean Baudrillard’s work, it suggests that
modern society has become hyperreal, a world in which the
spectacle defines, circumscribes, and becomes more real than
reality itself. Baudrillard describes the seductive power of images
which fool us into believing a reality persists beyond this
hyperreality, and suggests that subjectivity is produced by a host of
networks of social relations and discursive constructions so
complex that it cannot be unravelled to reveal causes, directions, or
meanings. There is no such thing as a social whole or a theoretical
unity: the notion of society is a myth belying the essential
discontinuity of social relations, and the development of theory is
the totalitarian exercise of power on the world’s dynamic fragments.
The individual and the world are decentred: there is no core, no
soul, no God, and no economic imperative. Alienation is not a
problem peculiar to capitalism, but an inevitable feature of life to
which we might as well develop a positive attitude, and the search
for authenticity betrays a hopeless nostalgia for a unity which never
existed in the first place. We live in the midst of codes, messages,
and images which produce and reproduce our lives. These may have
had their origins in commodity production, but have since won their
independence and usurped its role in the maintenance of social
relations. All that remains is the pleasure of playing in the
fragments, the disruption and resistance of the codes in which we
live, the jouissance of realising that the search for meaning is
endlessly deferred and has no point of arrival and, in the absence of
new movements, styles, or genres, the continual reiteration of those
of the past In the postmodern imagination, alienation is everywhere
and is therefore nowhere; power is dispersed and so impossible to
seize. We will only ever feel at home, liberated, and content if we
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‘Now, the SI’
7
give up looking for a world more real, a social organisation more
free, and a happiness more profound than those provided for us.
There is no subject of history digging capitalism’s grave, and no
Elysian field on the other side of the barricade.
Considered in these terms, postmodernism is a manual for
survival, and a very good one, in a capitalist world which seems
immune to transformation. Building on the failure of the social
revolution which has been just around every twentieth-century
corner, it cultivates an attitude which enables one to cope with the
continual refurbishment of buildings, opinions, cities, and fashions,
and its reassurance that it is quite natural to feel lost, confused, and
uncertain of the solidity of the ground beneath one’s feet is
welcome news to the shaky survivor of the late twentieth century.
But, full of advice about surviving in the here and now, it tells us
little about the possibilities of transforming it: of metaphorically
and literally leaving the twentieth century behind. And this was the
intention of the situationist analysis, which was not a treatise on
survival, but an indication of the possibilities of living in a world for
which the imperatives of survival have long since disappeared. It
was not an account of how to have as much fun as possible in this
s o c i a l e nv i r o n m e n t — a l t h o u g h i n t h i s r e s p e c t i t r iva l s
postmodernism—but the theoretical transcription of attempts to
have as much fun as possible changing it.
The articles published in Internationale Situationniste are
indicative of the scope of the movement’s interests. Questions of
town planning and artistic intervention were joined by critiques of
the cinema, language, and political organisation; the Algerian War,
the Middle East, Vietnam, the situation in China and, in later issues,
the beginnings and aftermath of the events of 1968, were all given
serious consideration. The SI’s conferences, its internal wrangles,
and its reception in mainstream discourse were widely covered, and
a variety of telling tales of everyday life were reported in support of
the situationists’ theoretical stance. Like the metallic colours of its
covers, the collective editorship of the journal changed with each
issue. An extraordinary number and variety of people passed
through the ranks of the Situationist International, but the majority
had brief and ignominious careers, with exclusion or resignation
sealing the fate of most participants. Two major books emerged
from this chaos, one by Raoul Vaneigem, who joined the SI in 1962,
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and the other, The Society of the Spectacle, by the somewhat selfstyled leader of the group, Guy Debord.
The Society of the Spectacle appeared a decade after the
establishment of the Situationist International. The book by no
means encompasses the wealth of Situationist theory and, read in
isolation from the movement’s other texts, it is dry and uninspiring,
with the only hints of Situationist provocation and extravagance
appearing in the wealth of italicised enthusiasm and the stolen
goods it collects. In line with the movement’s tactical subversions
of existing texts and materials, much of the book consists of
passages plagiarised and subtly rewritten; as a consequence, it is
full of Hegelian turns of phrase and vaguely familiar transpositions
of the work of Marx and Lukács. But the condensed form in which
its arguments are presented makes The Society of the Spectacle a
rich source for a number of Situationist themes, particularly those
which define modern capitalist society as a spectacle and identify
its internal contradictions.
Vaneigem’s book, The Revolution of Everyday Life, was
published in the same year as The Society of the Spectacle and
presented a rather more anecdotal, extravagant, and subjective work
of propaganda to accompany Debord’s theoretical investigations.
Vaneigem’s rejection of the spectacle was a moral, poetic, erotic,
and almost spiritual refusal to co-operate with the demands of
commodity exchange. It unleashed witty and compelling tirades
against the myths and sacrifices of consumer society, asserting a
radical subjectivity which could fire pleasures, spontaneity, and
creativity at the all-encompassing equivalence and emptiness of
modern life. Above all, it contested the system of social relations
which forces us to exist as survivors shackled by needs and forced
into labour when all the possibilities of a rich, desiring life are
constantly displayed. But although The Revolution of Everyday Life
expressed the situationists’ enduring appeal for life, intensity,
passion, and play, it also displayed an impatience with theory and
the rather more serious political commitment demanded by Debord.
Nobody thought it was very funny when Vaneigem went off on
holiday as the great events of 1968 began to unfold, and the tension
between having fun in the present and saving it up until after the
revolution was an enduring problem which played no small part in
the final collapse of the SI.1
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‘Now, the SI’
9
It was in rather more sober tones, therefore, that Debord
presented The Society of the Spectacle. More than a decade after its
publication, he wrote:
In 1967 I wanted the Situationist International to have a book
of theory. The SI was at this time the extremist group which
had done the most to bring back revolutionary contestation to
modern society; and it was easy to see that this group, having
imposed its victory on the terrain of critical theory, and having
skilfully followed it through on that of practical agitation, was
then drawing near the culminating point of its historical action.
So it was a question of such a book being present in the
troubles that were soon to come, and which would pass it on
after them to the vast subversive sequel that they could not fail
to open up.2
The ‘troubles’ of 1968 which were indeed ‘soon to come’ were
regarded by the situationists as the mass demonstration of their
theory, and if Debord had a single message to convey, it was without
doubt the conviction that the ‘days of this society are numbered; its
reasons and merits have been weighed and found to be lacking; its
inhabitants are divided into two parties, one of which wants this
society to disappear’.3 His book contended that although the class
and economic structure of capitalist society had suffered no
qualitative change since its analysis by Marx, the extension of
commodity relations to all aspects of life and culture, accelerated by
new systems of technology, information, and communication,
required the development of a new paradigm within which
contemporary society could be understood. The spectacle provided
the perfect framework. It captured the contemplative and passive
nature of modern life and accounted for the boredom and apathetic
dissatisfaction which characterised social experience. It could move
beyond the basic categories of orthodox Marxism while at the same
time preserving the possibility of a revolutionary critique and
providing a perspective from which every aspect of contemporary
discourse, culture, social organisation, and daily existence could be
challenged. And although the SI’s analysis was not just a response
to the increasing role of the mass media, information, and
advertising, the notion of the spectaclealso facilitated a valuable
analysis of the ubiquitous messages, signs, and images which
conspire to confuse appearance with reality and throw into question
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The most radical gesture
the possibility of distinguishing true experience, authentic desire,
and real life from their fabricated, manipulated, and represented
manifestations. Above all, the notion of the spectacle conveyed the
sense in which alienated individuals are condemned to lives spent
effectively watching themselves. It suggested that, far from being
inevitable attributes of the human condition, the boredom,
frustration, and powerlessness of contemporary life are the direct
consequence of capitalist social relations.
In common with other situationist texts, therefore, The Society of
the Spectacle painted a picture of a society which believes itself
capable of providing everything, satisfying all desire, relieving
every burden, and fulfilling every dream. But this is also a world
which insists that every moment of life must be mediated by the
commodity form, a situation which makes it impossible to provide
anything for oneself or act without the mediation of commodities. A
spectacle can only be watched and enjoyed at a distance, from
where it appears glamorous and desirable; participation may be
possible, but its form and extent will be predetermined by the
context in which it appears. The promises of self-fulfilment and
expression, pleasure and independence which adorn every billboard
are realisable only through consumption, and the only possible
relation to the social world and one’s own life is that of the observer,
the contemplative and passive spectator. The commodity form
places everything in the context of a world organised solely for the
perpetuation of the economic system; a tautological world in which
the appearance of real life is maintained in order to conceal the
reality of its absence. Bombarded by images and commodities
which effectively represent their lives to them, people experience
reality as second-hand. Everything has been seen and done before;
quests for fulfilment are always frustrated, and just as workers find
no satisfaction in the products of their labour, so ‘no one has the
enthusiasm on returning from a venture that they had on setting out
on it. My dears,’ said Debord in one of his films, ‘adventure is
dead.’4
The basis of this characterisation of capitalist society was
already laid in Marx’s early and graphic descriptions of alienation.
Performed not in order to satisfy a need but as a means of satisfying
other needs, all work undertaken within capitalism is external,
alien, and ‘shunned like the plague’ wherever possible. Workers are
left debased, exhausted, and denied, and the individual only ‘feels
himself outside his work, and in his work feels outside himself. He
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‘Now, the SI’
11
feels at home when he is not working, and when he is working he
does not feel at home.’ 5 Alienated from the products of their labour,
their time, and their own selves, workers produce and reproduce
alienated relations both between themselves and things and between
each other. The relations of capitalist production are therefore
reproduced in all social relations; circum-scribing social reality,
alienation comes to be perceived as the necessary reality of daily
life. In his later writings too, Marx emphasised the estrangement or
alienation intrinsic to capitalist production. The commodity
fetishism of Capital is a renewed consideration of the phenomenon
in which relations between people assume the form of relations
between things. In the absence of any real world of unalienated
social experience, commodity relations become mysterious and
fantastic; labour is turned against the worker and appears as an
autonomous power, and because the totality of these relations is
presented as a natural order, the worker loses all reason to challenge
or understand the experience of alienation.
The situationists argued that these alienated relations of
production are now disseminated throughout capitalist society.
Leisure, culture, art, information, entertainment, knowledge, the
most personal and radical of gestures, and every conceivable aspect
of life is reproduced as a commodity: packaged, and sold back to the
consumer. Even ways of life are marketed as lifestyles, and careers,
opinions, theories, and desires are consumed as surely as bread and
jam. Constantly creating new markets, the commodity relations of
twentieth-century capitalism extend their grasp to the very intimacy
of people’s everyday lives where nineteenth-century capitalism
built its geographical empires. And although Marx had also
recognised that commodity relations extend the experience of
alienation beyond the workplace, he retained a sense of the worker
being at home ‘outside his work’. The spectre that has haunted
subsequent radical theorists is that this remaining realm of free and
unalienated experience is increasingly eroded by the encroachment
of capitalist relations. And if alienation really does extend to both
work and leisure time, there is a danger that it becomes completely
meaningless, since there is nothing with which to compare it and
nothing in relation to which it can be defined. The situationists
argued that although the ubiquity of alienated relations does indeed
make them increasingly difficult to contradict, it is always possible
to identify some point of contrast or opposition to them. The
desires, imaginings, and pleasures of the individual can never be
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The most radical gesture
completely eradicated: as a system which operates by transforming
objects into commodities and people into their producers and
consumers, capitalism cannot but sustain a sense of the reality it
distorts. And this suggests that some contradiction between life as it
is and life as it could be is preserved regardless of the spectacle’s
insistence on its own seamless inevitability.
Presenting the spectacle as ‘the material reconstruction of the
religious illusion’, 6 Debord argued that the mediations of church
and priest, the separation of body and soul, and the demands of
sacrifice and deferred gratification which marked pre-capitalist
society are now redeveloped to produce the same experiences of
removal, alienation, and mystification. Seeking salvation and
fulfilment in the spectacle of this world rather than the next, the
producers and consumers of the spectacle are equally removed from
their own lives and still live in a separated relation to themselves:
‘The absolute denial of life, in the shape of a fallacious paradise, is
no longer projected onto the heavens, but finds its place instead
within material life itself.’7 The spectacular world presents itself as
a natural phenomenon, requiring no organisation, denying the
existence of any economic foundation, and offering itself as ‘an
enormous positivity, out of reach and beyond dispute’; 8 it is the
‘moment at which the commodity completes its colonization of
social life. It is not just that the relationship to commodities is now
plain to see—commodities are now all there is to see; the world we
see is the world of the commodity.’ 9 And this vision of a united,
complete, and natural social whole is a representation which
compensates for the increasing fragmentation and alienation of
daily life and belies the existence of all discontinuity and
contradiction. The spectacle is the ‘materialization of ideology’; 10 a
society in which the particular perspective of the bourgeoisie is
given a concrete form. It is a society asleep, in hibernation or a state
of suspended animation, for which ‘ideology is no longer a
historical choice, but simply an assertion of the obvious’. 11
This absolute realisation of commodity relations produces an
entirely inverted world, in which everything ‘that was directly lived
has become mere representation’, 12 a ‘dull reflection’ 13 of itself.
Mystified by this removal, it is difficult to understand why the world
appears to be so whole, natural, and unremarkable, yet is so
extraordinarily difficult to really engage and feel at home in. ‘The
spectator feels at home nowhere, for the spectacle is everywhere’,14
and areas of life which were once untouched by the logic of the
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‘Now, the SI’
13
commodity form are now possible only within it. Free time is filled
with provided forms of leisure and entertainment, and free choice is
made from a pre-selected variety of goods, lifestyles, roles, and
opinions. The content of life is swept aside by the commodity form
in which it appears; all other means of judging, evaluating, and
living in the world are emptied of their real meaning and reduced to
the abstract standards of production and consumption. The
spectacle is a society which continually declares: ‘Everything that
appears is good; whatever is good will appear.’ 15 A world in which
such circularity dominates all social experience is impoverished;
only the commodity can exist, and as representations of the whole
social world become increasingly tangible, the ‘real consumer
becomes a consumer of illusions. The commodity is this factually
real illusion, and the spectacle is its general manifestation.’16
The contradiction which displaces the tautologous unity of
capitalist society has long been identified in the tension between the
forces and relations of production. In The Communist Manifesto,
Marx and Engels observed that just as the end of feudal society was
necessitated by the development of the forces of production beyond
the social relations they supported, so the productive forces
unleashed by capitalism project it into a crisis of its own.
The productive forces at the disposal of society no longer tend
to further the development of the conditions of bourgeois
property; on the contrary, they have become too powerful for
these conditions, by which they are fettered, and so soon as
they overcome these fetters, they bring disorder into the whole
of bourgeois society…. The conditions of bourgeois society
are too narrow to comprise the wealth created by them.17
The consequent crises of over-production which mark bourgeois
society can be temporarily assuaged, primarily by the cultivation of
new markets, but their resolution can only be achieved with the
abolition of the social and economic relations which lag behind the
forces of production. The situationists agreed that the contradiction
between the forces and relations of production is the essential
antagonism of capitalist society, and were similarly at home with
Marxist conceptions of history and class. The spectacle remains a
class society, founded on a system of production which separates
workers from one another, the products of their labour, and the
commodities they consume. Regardless of the abundance of
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The most radical gesture
spectacular society, the essential poverty of everyday life left the
situationists convinced that the proletariat is still reproduced by
capitalist social relations as the class capable of realising and
superseding the economic contradictions of capitalism. And the
image of unity and seamless self-sufficiency which modern society
cultivates is itself a product of the separations, divisions, and
contradictions which riddle the spectacle. ‘The unreal unity the
spectacle proclaims masks the class division on which the real unity
of the capitalist mode of production is based.’ 18
But the waters of western Marxism in which the SI played were
those which considered the essential problem of modern capitalism
to lie with its ability to contain, rather than produce, class conflict
and economic crisis. To generations of Marxist theorists, bourgeois
society had seemed increasingly able to deal with the economic
contradictions implicit in it, and the situationists were not alone in
their concern with the effects of increasing alienation on the ability
of the proletariat to gain consciousness of its strength and
significance. Crisis had always been averted, not least because the
extension of the market necessary to the solution of crises of overproduction was largely achieved by the extension of commodity
relations into discourse, culture, and everyday life. For earlier
theorists such as George Lukács and Antonio Gramsci, cultural and
ideological institutions exerted an unprecedented stranglehold on
working-class consciousness, propagating a world view in which
capitalism appears as the only possible system of social and
economic relations. And in the 1960s work of Herbert Marcuse,
capitalism’s cultural and ideological stabilisers were emphasised
still more with claims that capitalist social relations have infected
the very souls of those who live within them. For Marcuse, the
working class had been bought off by a society which allowed no
dissent from the single dimension of a dominant capitalist ideology,
and in his work, the role of the proletariat was displaced by a new
faith in the desires and imaginings of the unconscious mind and
those social groups free to explore them.
Other theorists, like those involved in Socialisme ou Barbarie, a
post-war movement whose membership included Cornelius
Castoriadis (who also wrote under the names of Paul Cardan and
Pierre Chalieu), Claude Lefort, Pierre Canjuers, Jean-François
Lyotard and, for a short time, Guy Debord, kept their faith in the
proletariat and argued that the dissemination of alienated relations
throughout every aspect of daily life merely paved the way for a
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‘Now, the SI’
15
radical and all-encompassing contestation. Socialism ou Barbarie
defined the ‘struggle of human beings against their alienation, and
the ensuing conflict and split in all spheres, aspects, and moments
of social life’19 as the central locus of modern opposition. And it was
not merely capitalist social organisation in which unprecedented
levels of alienation were observed: the group defined Soviet society
as bureaucratic or state capitalist and argued that bureaucratisation
was the common feature of Soviet, eastern, and western European
societies. This was a position which Debord carried into the SI,
pausing only to distinguish between the diffuse spectacle of
advanced capitalist society and its concentrated totalitarian form.
Both Socialism ou Barbarie and the SI redefined the proletariat
in relation to the spectacular homogeneity of everyday life,
reconstituting class society in terms of a division between those
who give and those who take the orders, and identifying as
proletarian all those who have no control over their own lives. ‘The
triumph of an economic system founded on separation leads to the
proletarianization of the world,’20 declared Debord, and rebellions
against the powerlessness and mediocrity of ordinary life become
the motor of a revolution which springs not from material poverty
but from the absence of control. There is therefore no question of
t h e p r o l e t a r i a t h av i n g d i s a p p e a r e d u n d e r t h e w e i g h t o f
consumerism; on the contrary, the extension of commodity relations
to all aspects of daily life merely enlarges the revolutionary class.
Indeed, the situationists contemptuously dismissed claims that
the proletariat had been eradicated. ‘Where on earth can it be?
Spirited away? Gone underground? Or has it been put in a
museum?’ laughed Vaneigem. ‘We hear from some quarters that in
the advanced industrial countries the proletariat no longer exists,
that it has disappeared forever under an avalanche of sound systems,
colour TVs, waterbeds, two-car garages and swimming pools.’ 21
Pointing to a plethora of wildcat strikes, riots, and other
manifestations of dissatisfaction, Vaneigem quoted a French worker
in support of his case that even material abundance cannot
compensate for the absence of passion and autonomy. ‘Since 1936 I
have been fighting for higher wages. My father before me fought for
higher wages. I’ve got a TV, a fridge and a VW. If you ask me it’s
been a dog’s life from start to finish.’ 22 And although it appeared to
the Debord of 1967 that the proletariat ‘has utterly lost the ability to
assert its own independence’ and its illusions about itself, it had
certainly not been eliminated:
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The most radical gesture
indeed it remains irreducibly present, under the intensified
alienation of modern capitalism, in the shape of the vast mass
of workers, who have lost all power over the use of their lives
and who, once they realize this, must necessarily redefine
themselves as the proletariat—as negation at work in the
bosom of today’s society.23
If alienation is both the means and the end of spectacular
organisation, all those who struggle to assert the negation of their
alienation perform the proletariat’s revolutionary role.
This conception of the proletariat enabled the situationists to see
a nascent class consciousness in all rebellion against the poverty of
everyday experience. So, for example, ‘rebellious tendencies
among the young generate a protest that is still tentative and
amorphous, yet already clearly embodies a rejection of the
specialised sphere of the old politics, as well as of art and everyday
life’. 24 Together with struggles against the hierarchy and
bureaucracy of union organisation, this sort of rebellion signals ‘a
new spontaneous struggleemerging under the sign of criminality’. 25
Calling for a new Luddism, this time turned against the ‘machinery
of permitted consumption’, Debord pointed to all refusals of
alienated work, leisure, organisation, and consumption as the
ground of a revolutionary onslaught on spectacular society.
Lukács’ History and Class Consciousness greatly influenced The
Society of the Spectacle with its view that capitalist development
produces elements which both deflect and encourage the
proletariat’s recognition of its position. On the one hand, the total
occupation of social life by the commodity reifies consciousness to
an unprecedented extent: ‘as the capitalist system continuously
produces and reproduces itself economically on higher and higher
levels, the structure of reification progressively sinks more deeply,
more fatefully and more definitively into the consciousness of
man’. 26 But on the other hand, ‘the commodity can only be
understood in its undistorted essence when it becomes the universal
c a t eg o r y o f s o c i e t y a s a w h o l e ’ , 2 7 a n d t h e c o m m o d i t y ’ s
dissemination to all areas of everyday life makes it increasingly
visible. Older forms of domination, those of church and family, for
example, are swept aside when the commodity comes to ‘penetrate
society in all its aspects and to remould it in its own image’,28 and
the ‘commodity character of the commodity, the abstract,
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‘Now, the SI’
17
quantitative mode of calculability shows itself here in its purest
form’.29 Debord likewise argued that although the dissemination of
commodity relations throughout social experience might make
consciousness of them more difficult, it also produces the starkest
of choices and the unprecedented possibility of a radical break with
the whole. As the disaffected and the small-time saboteurs gain
consciousness of their alienation, they are faced with the choice of
accepting the spectacular totality, or completely rejecting it:
‘capitalism’s ever-intensifying imposition of alienation at all levels
makes it increasingly hard for workers to recognize and name their
own impoverishment’, but at the same time ‘puts them in a position
of having either to reject it in its totality or do nothing at all’.30 Or,
as a 1990s flyposter says to a kid sitting in the middle of a
wasteland: ‘Have you ever considered a career in total revolution?’
Such a perspective did not endear the situationists to traditional
forms of political organisation. The playful libertarianism of their
avant-garde roots made them see both the revolutionary party,
always in danger of developing as an end in itself, and the
theoretical presuppositions on which it is based as the irredeemable
components of the old world of separated contemplation. Debord
saw the failure of the early revolutionary movements and the
development of Marxism as a scientific discipline encouraging an
emphasis on economic contradiction as the mainspring of
revolution which merely reinforces the passivity and sacrifice of
capitalist social relations.
It became important patiently to study economic development,
and once more to accept, with Hegelian tranquillity, the
suffering it imposed—that suffering whose outcome was still a
‘graveyard of good intentions.’ All of a sudden it was
discovered that, according to the ‘science of revolutions’,
consciousness now always came on the scene too soon, and
needed to be taught.31
For Debord, the party, from which this education traditionally
comes, merely encourages the endless deferral of the revolutionary
moment. Even when the contradictions are obvious and openly
acknowledged, the long wait for conditions to ripen means that
possibility of their revolutionary supersession can remain a distant,
and spectacular, dream.
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The most radical gesture
For the situationists, the prospect of either revolutionary
organisation or theory representing the working class was quite
unthinkable. Since such representation is precisely the ground of
a l i e n a t i o n a ga i n s t w h i c h t h e r evo l u t i o n i s e ff e c t e d , ‘ t h e
revolutionary organization must learn that it can no longer combat
alienation by means of alienated forms of struggle’. 32 It cannot
‘represent the revolutionary class’, but must ‘simply recognise itself
as radically separated from the world of separation’: 33
when the proletariat discovers that its own externalized power
conspires in the continual reinforcement of capitalist society,
no longer merely thanks to the alienation of its labor, but also
thanks to the form taken on by unions, parties and institutions
of State power that it had established in pursuit of its own selfemancipation, then it must also discover…that it is indeed the
class which is totally opposed to all reified externalizations and
all specializations of power. It is the bearer of a revolution that
can leave nothing outside itself, that demands the permanent
domination of the past by the present and a universal critique
of separation.34
Alienated social relations must be negated at every point of the
revolutionary struggle if the profound impoverishment of everyday
life is to be countered: ‘The revolutionary organisation must
necessarily constitute an integral critique of society—a critique,
that is to say, which refuses to compromise with any form of
separated power and which is directed globally against every aspect
of alienated social life.’ 35 And the only principles of political
organisation capable of fulfilling these criteria are those of
autonomous self-management on which the idea of the soviet, or
workers’ council, is based.
Although workers’ councils do not overcome all the problems of
separated organisations and hierarchies, such autonomous forms of
organisation certainly raise the right questions and subject all forms
of hierarchy and mediation to a rigorous critique. And the
situationists were convinced that it is to the establishment of
councils that the revolutionary organisation must work, without,
however, producing a separated ideology of councilism itself.
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‘Now, the SI’
19
Once embodied in the power of workers’ councils—a power
destined to supplant all other powers worldwide—the
proletarian movement becomes its own product; this product is
the producer himself, and in his own eyes the producer has
himself as his goal. Only in this context can the spectacle’s
negation of life be negated in its turn.36
This had also been the position held by the young Lukács, who
argued that the tight organisation and rigorous hierarchy of the
Leninist party was merely the reproduction of the alienated
relations produced by capitalism. Only the workers’ council ‘spells
the political and economic defeat of reification’, 37 since the
increasing mechanisation and specialisation of capitalist production
demands that the worker’s activity ‘becomes less and less active and
more and more contemplative’.38 Capitalism’s ‘image of a frozen
reality that nevertheless is caught up in an unremitting, ghostly
movement at once becomes meaningful when this reality is
dissolved into the process of which man is the driving force.’39 And
those who produce and reproduce alienated social relations cannot
be given consciousness of this meaning by some external power, but
must actively realise it themselves. For both Lukács and the
situationists, only workers’ councils embodied the autonomous and
direct forms of political participation by which this driving force
might be realised. Capable of refusing all external mediation and
resisting the spectacular separations of capitalist life, the
situationists envisaged self-managed councils as both the means of
social transformation and the basis of post-capitalist social
organisation.
This hostility to all forms of separation led the situationists to
adopt what might be characterised as a maximalist position, from
which all experiences of alienation, representation and hierarchy
were ascribed to capitalist social relations. 40 Alienation, no matter
how natural or necessary it might turn out to be, must be contested
as if it were the sole consequence of capitalist society: only from
this extreme position is the reversal of perspective necessary to the
critique of the spectacle possible, and any stance which fails to
subject the totality of existing society to a rigorous critique is
vulnerable to accommodation within it. In History and Class
Consciousness, Lukács’ own use of the term ‘reification’ was
similarly broad. Reification, the reduction of the individual to the
thing, appears in a society which satisfies ‘all its needs in terms of
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The most radical gesture
commodity exchange’, 41 and constitutes ‘the immediate reality of
every person living in capitalist society’. 42 Later criticising the term
‘reification’, Lukács pointed out that it confused those forms of
alienation for which capitalist social relations are really responsible
with those which form part of the natural separation of the human
subject from the world. This position, he argued, had led to an
analysis which on the one hand fostered the idea of some immutable
human condition, and on the other demanded the impossible
development of a consciousness capable of overcoming an
alienation which was really the natural attribute of consciousness
and not at all specific to capitalism. But the situationists’ decision to
hold capitalism responsible for all forms of alienation was a tactical
response to the problem of criticising a society in which it is
increasingly difficult to distinguish the natural from the socially
constructed at any point. Everything must be contested in order to
ensure that no remnants of the old world were carried over into the
new, and if alienation is the defining characteristic of the social and
discursive relations in which we live, then it is alienation in all its
manifestations which must be contested. Although this was a stance
which left the situationists vulnerable to charges of Utopianism for
their invocations of a post-revolutionary world free of all mediation,
specialisation, domination, and hierarchy, theirs was not an attempt
to do away with the conflict between the individual and the world,
but rather to interrogate every moment of their interaction.
This position was reinforced by the situationists’ conception of
the ‘situation’ itself. ‘So far philosophers and artists have only
interpreted situations’, they declared, paraphrasing Marx and taking
a swipe at Sartre: ‘the point now is to transform them. Since man is
the product of the situations he goes through, it is essential to create
human situations. Since the individual is defined by his situation, he
wants the power to create situations worthy of his desires.’ 43 Great
importance had been attached to the way in which one is situated in
the world by Sartre and those philosophers, including Heidegger
and Kierkegaard, who exerted some influence on existentialist
philosophy. For Sartre, ‘there is freedom only in a situation, and
there is a situation only through freedom’. 44 The human subject
which acts ‘for itself’ (as opposed to the object which exists ‘in
itself’) is always already thrown into the world and is only able to
choose and act in relation to it. The freedom of the existentialist
subject is not the unlimited ability to choose anything, but the
ability to act in and against the world in which it finds itself. ‘There
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‘Now, the SI’
21
can be a free for-itself only as engaged in a resisting world. Outside
of this engagement the notions of freedom, of determinism, of
necessity lose all meaning.’ 45 In Hegel’s conception of the
development of human self-consciousness, to which Marx, Lukács,
Sartre, and the situationists were all indebted, social awareness and
human freedom again develop out of the struggle against nature and
the recognition of oneself in productive activity or labour on the
world. In this dialectical conception of the world, the separation and
antagonism between consciousness and the world, the subject and
the object, is necessary to human development: it is out of this
difference or friction that full self-consciousness emerges. And the
purpose of situationist attacks on this separation was not to achieve
a Utopian world of perfect stasis without the possibility of future
change or development, but one in which the real adventures of
historical life could be played out in a society which, ‘having
brought down all its enemies, will at last be able to surrender itself
joyously to the true divisions and never-ending confrontations of
historical life’. 46 So the attack on all forms of separation and
mediation was really a challenge to the existing conceptions of
difference and contradiction. The situationists were not determined
to end all separation, but to live in a world which had emerged out of
the radical critique of that which exists.
Although it is the sufferings and struggle of our labour on and
against the world which have brought us to our present state of
consciousness, human consciousness and its expression is merely
fettered and arrested by the illegitimate perpetuation of alienated
relations of production beyond the need to survive. ‘The
accumulation of production of ever-improving technological
capabilities is proceeding even faster than nineteenth-century
communism predicted. But we have remained at the stage of a
superequipped prehistory.’ 47 Freedom from this prehistory would
liberate us from necessity and launch us into a new world of free
choice and playful extravagance, and it is the supersession of the
relations which preclude these freedoms which must motivate the
contemporary revolutionary project. ‘We need to work toward
flooding the market—even if for the moment merely the intellectual
market’, argued the situationists, ‘with a mass of desires whose
realisation is not beyond the capacity of man’s present means of
action on the material world, but only beyond the capacity of the old
social organisation.’ 48 It is in the play born of desire that individuals
should now be able to recognise themselves, progressing with a new
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The most radical gesture
and chosen set of relations no longer dictated by the ethos of labour
and struggle but governed by the free and playful construction of
situations, of which the revolutionary moment is the first and the
best.
For the situationists, one of the central mechanisms by which the
spectacle precludes the possibility of such a world is its cultivation
of the myth that it is the only system of social organisation capable
of providing the means of survival. Indeed, capitalist relations of
production have always been justified on the grounds that they
facilitate the satisfaction of basic needs, and if work performed in
order to survive has been the stick of capitalist relations, the
possibility of achieving freedom from this necessity has been its
carrot, its heaven on earth. The prospect of increasing free time,
leisure, and the opportunity to enjoy the fruits of one’s labour is
continually held out as the reward of increased productivity. And
t h e s i t u a t i o n i s t s a rg u e d t h a t a l t h o u g h t h e e c o n o m i c a n d
technological achievements of capitalism have made the prospect of
this reward a real possibility, the alienated relations of production
which were necessary to the abolition of material privation and the
s a t i s f a c t i o n o f b a s i c n e e d s a r e n ow p e r p e t u a t e d w i t h o u t
justification. Economic growth has ‘given rise to an abundance
thanks to which the basic problem of survival, though solved, is
solved in such a way that it is not disposed of, but is rather forever
cropping up again at a higher level’. 49 Alienated production was
only necessary to a people desperate to survive; now that the forces
of production unleashed by capitalism have rid us of this
desperation, the social relations which once facilitated human
development have become its brake and hindrance. Societies have
been liberated from ‘the natural pressures occasioned by their
struggle for survival, but they must still be liberated from their
liberators’. 50 New threats and enemies are continually introduced to
combat that of material poverty: the perpetual terrors of nuclear
war, epidemic, and environmental disaster reproduce an ideology of
the urgent need to survive. The horizon of capitalist Utopia must
constantly recede: ‘The satisfaction of basic needs remains the best
safeguard of alienation; it is best dissimulated by being justified on
the grounds of undeniable necessities.’51 At a time when survival
could have become an imperative of the past, superseded by a life
free from the demands of need, everyday life remains ‘governed by
the reign of scarcity’ and organised ‘within the limits of a
scandalous poverty’.52
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‘Now, the SI’
23
This poverty is enforced and reproduced through the production
of commodities which pretend to offer satisfactions they
continually deny. ‘Consumable survival must increase, in fact,
because it continues to enshrine deprivation.’ 53 Even the most banal
and unnecessary of commodities is presented as a means of
survival—‘how can you live without X soap powder?’ —or
sometimes offered as a more obvious threat: ‘you cannot live
without a credit card’, or ‘you need to use cosmetics’. ‘As poverty
has been reduced in terms of mere material survival’, wrote
Vaneigem, ‘it has become more profound in terms of our way of
life.’54 Integral to the rhetoric of advanced capitalist societies, the
free realms of luxury, leisure, and consumption merely reproduce
the alienated relations by which they were produced, introducing a
new cycle of scarcity, privation, and the imperatives of survival. The
spare time for which generations of workers struggled has been
invaded by the very alienated relations from which it was supposed
to have been a holiday: modern capitalism demands a ‘surplus of
“collaboration”’,55 and alienated consumption ‘is added to alienated
production as an inescapable duty of the masses’.56 At such a stage
of over-development and abundance, the workers who were once
coerced into producing the goods they needed are now encouraged
to consume the commodities they are told they need; the extension
of commodity relations to all areas of social experience means that
the worker is not even free from them outside the workplace.
Leisure is defined in terms of commodified time, activities, and
goods; free time is spent, and the realm outside work is increasingly
the province of alienated relations.
All of a sudden the workers in question discover that they are
no longer invariably subject to the total contempt so clearly
built into every aspect of the organisation and management of
production; instead they find that every day, once work is over,
they are treated like grown-ups, with a great show of solicitude
and politeness, in their new role of consumers.57
No longer a mere adjunct to production, consumption becomes
necessary to the circulation of commodities, the accumulation of
capital, and the survival of the spectacular system.
But consumption merely reproduces the alienation and isolation
experienced in production. Increasingly meaningless commodities
are circulated and contemplated as external and hostile goods:
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intrinsically dissatisfying, they embody alienated social relations
and take their entire meaning from the spectacular whole in which
they arise. The whole life of those societies in which modern
conditions of production prevail presents itself as an immense
accumulation of spectacles.’ 58 A staggering abundance of
commodity choices is offered, and identification is demanded not
with a single commodity but the commodity system itself: it is the
spectacle as a whole which is advertised and desired. The lights, the
opportunities, the shops, the excitement: the attraction of capitalist
societies has always been their glamorous dynamism, the surfeit of
commodities and the ubiquity of choice they offer. But in practice,
anything can be chosen except the realm in which choice is
possible. One can choose to be, think, and do anything, but as the
roles, ideas, and lifestyles possible within capitalist society are
a l l ow e d t o a p p e a r o n l y t o t h e ex t e n t t h a t t h ey a p p e a r a s
commodities, the equivalence and homogeneity of commodities is
inescapable in the most private aspects of life. The shops always
carry everything except the thing one really wants; they are ‘full of
things’, but one cannot buy all of them, still less all the shops. The
act of choosing between a variety of commodities, whether they are
roles or things, lifestyles or opinions is, by virtue of its place in the
alienated whole, fated to be an instance of ‘false choice offered by
spectacular abundance’; 59 an irrelevant and meaningless choice
between empty and equivalent commodities.
Every product represents the hope for ‘a dramatic shortcut to the
long-awaited promised land of total consumption’, 60 but the
fulfilment of this promise is possible only with the attainment of the
totality of commodities, a desire which excites the accumulation of
commodities but which is ultimately insatiable. ‘The satisfaction
that the commodity in its abundance can no longer supply by virtue
of its use value is now sought in the acknowledgement of its value
qua commodity.’61 Commodities circulate as ends in themselves;
goods which are one day presented as unique and ultimate products,
the very best and the very latest goods, are replaced and forgotten
the next:
what this means for the consumer is an outpouring of religious
zeal in honour of the commodity’s sovereign freedom. Waves
of enthusiasm for particular products, fuelled and boosted by
the communications media, are propagated with lightning
speed. A film sparks a fashion craze, or a magazine launches a
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chain of clubs that in turn spins off a line of products. The
sheer fad item perfectly expresses the fact that, as the mass of
commodities becomes more and more absurd, absurdity
becomes a commodity in its own right.62
And the life of the consumer becomes increasingly absurd as well,
able to find identity only in the act of pointless consumption. ‘In
this way reified man proclaims his intimacy with the commodity.’
Following in the footsteps of the old religious fetishism, with
its transported convulsionaries and miraculous cures, the
fetishism of the commodity also achieves its moment of acute
fervor. The only use still in evidence here…is the basic use of
submission.63
This intimate identification of the individual with the commodity is
born out of the attempt to escape alienation: the search for some
unity and meaning in the midst of increasing fragmentation and
isolation. But the commodity’s role in the reproduction of alienated
relations makes this fulfilment impossible: the society of
commodity abundance produces its own contradictions. It needs to
cultivate new needs and awake new desires, but can never allow
them to be fulfilled since its own imperatives for constant
innovation and increased production and consumption are
dependent on a continued struggle for satisfaction.
Unable to allow participation on terms other than its own, the
spectacle propagates the image of participation and invites
everyone to ‘join in’ with the happy whole whilst at the same time
ensuring that this totality is illusory and unattainable: a strong,
appealing, but empty image. In principle, one can have anything, do
anything, be anything, and go anywhere, but one cannot choose or
define the whole in which these abundant choices are made.
Everything is offered, and everything has great appeal, but the
something it is possible to choose is impoverished and mundane.
The world is an exciting place, but the bit in which one lives might
be as dull as ditch-water. As the representation of itself, life is
complete and fulfilling; as it is actually possible to live it, it is
fragmented and disappointing. It is only in the context of the
advertised whole, the image of spectacular unity, that the
commodity has meaning: just as the colourful stripes of knitwear on
the shelves of a Benetton shop conceal the single colour of each
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item, so the consumption of all commodities entails an immediate
loss of their glamour.
The sole real status attaching to a mediocre object of this kind
is to have been placed, however briefly, at the very center of
social life and hailed as the revelation of the goal of the
production process. But even this spectacular prestige
evaporates into vulgarity as soon as the object is taken home by
a consumer —and hence by all other consumers too. At this
point its essential poverty…stands revealed—too late. For by
this time another product will have been assigned to supply the
system with its justification, and will in turn be demanding its
moment of acclaim.64
It is, of course, necessary that the promised land remain
unattainable. Everyone knows that gas central heating will not
really make them feel more at home; perfumes do not bring
everlasting happiness, and holidays can’t make one’s dreams come
true. But these grand desires are constantly advertised, and the
realisation that gas central heating does not fulfil its promises does
not make our desire to belong in the world disappear. Even though
we are condemned to seek fulfilment amidst the fragments of
alienated commodities and second-hand experiences, the constant
innovations of commodity production merely encourage our search
for satisfaction, our eager watch for the next best thing.
In the midst of these perpetual cycles of redevelopment,
revolution is, of course, the one change precluded by the spectacle.
Change occurs within the spectacle, but the spectacle is static: time
frozen into its own commodification and constantly reproducing
itself in cycles of return. Every new commodity presents itself as the
last, the perfect, and the ultimate: consume this product, try this
experience, be this person, and you will never want for more. But
wanting more is an experience built into the alienated commodity:
desires are only raised and never fulfilled by its privation.
Yesterday’s innovation is continually superseded, and the ultimate
product has an ever-decreasing life span. The car to end all cars, the
holiday of a lifetime, the perfect kitchen—the best, the biggest, the
final achievement of production and design—all are passed over in
favour of a new finality with an accelerated movement. ‘Something
that can assert its own unchanging excellence with uncontested
arrogance changes nonetheless’, and every ‘new lie of the
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advertising industry implicitly acknowledges the one before.’ 65 The
commodity must simultaneously be the last and the latest; the end of
history is declared and denied every day. And so the spectacle
continually affirms that ‘there was history, but “there is no longer
any history”’, a point made by Marx and developed by both Lukács
and Debord.66
In The Society of the Spectacle, Debord agreed with Marx that
capitalist relations of production have imposed a sense of linear
time on a world whose pre-industrial time had been experienced as
cyclical. ‘The victory of the bourgeoisie was the victory of a
profoundly historical time—the time corresponding to the economic
form of production, which transformed society permanently, and
from top to bottom.’67 Lived in relation to the seasons, the hours of
light and darkness, and the phases of the moon, the time of preindustrial societies returned upon itself and embodied no sense of
progress. But the accumulation of capital entails the constant
development of all social relations: there is no cyclical return, but
only the necessity of change. Capitalist production makes time
historical, irreversible, and universal. Its history is no longer made
up of a series of isolated events, but produced in the accumulation
of capital and commodity production: ‘the worker, at the base of
society, is for the first time not materially estranged from history,
for now the irreversible is generated from below’.68 And, merely by
‘demanding to live the historical time that it creates, the proletariat
discovers the simple, unforgettable core of its revolutionary project;
and every attempt to carry this project through…signals a possible
point of departure for a new historical life’.69
The senses of time and history generated by capitalist production
may be irreversible and progressive but, experienced purely in
terms of commodified and spectacularised moments, they are
necessarily lived at a distance: contemplated and observed without
the possibility of real engagement. ‘So the bourgeoisie unveiled
irreversible historical time and imposed it on society only to deprive
society of its use.’ 70 And in this purely economic time, spectacular
time manifests itself as a pseudo-cyclical form of ‘augmented
survival in which daily lived experience embodies no free choices
and is subject, no longer to the natural order, but to a pseudo-nature
constructed by means of alienated labour’. 71 Spectacular time builds
‘on the natural vestiges of cyclical time, while at the same time
using these as models on which to base new homologous variants’.72
Week and weekend, the morning after the night before, the news and
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the soap, the annual holiday and the office party: all these provide
new cycles which punctuate and veil the reality of linear time.
‘Cyclical time was the time of a motionless illusion authentically
ex p e r i e n c e d ; s p e c t a c u l a r t i m e i s t h e t i m e o f a r e a l i t y i n
transformation experienced as an illusion.’ 73 The festivals and
events which the cyclical time of pre-capitalist society required to
mark its passage and return are recreated in the spectacle as pseudofestivals, in which the only available roles are those of audience,
consumer, or star. Carnivals and festivals are outlawed when they
threaten to transgress these spectacular forms.
In the spectacle, time is advertised and consumed as free time,
time out, time to drink tea, eat chocolate, invest, and retire.
Measured quantitatively in units of production and consumption, it
is spent, wasted, and saved. Sliced into saleable units, time is sold as
‘moments portrayed, like all spectacular commodities, at a distance
and desirable by definition’.74 This is epitomised by the selling of
‘“fully equipped” blocks of time’: 75 the all-inclusive shopping mall
and the package holiday in which time ‘sheds its qualitative,
variable, flowing nature; it freezes into an exactly delimited,
quantifiable continuum filled with quantifiable “things” […] in
short, it becomes space’. 76 Travel, made easier by technological
development and the imposition of the global market, is translated
into tourism, ‘the chance to go and see what has been made banal’, 77
and the peculiar characteristics of places are lost in the
dissemination of commodity equivalence. The mass planning of the
1960s produced a ‘new architecture specifically for the poor’, 78 and
encouraged the development of a homogeneous space interspersed
with ‘temples of frenetic consumption’, 79 shopping centres, leisure
centres, new towns, and environments which continually declare:
‘On this spot no one will ever do anything—and no one ever has.’ 80
As the recent development of theme parks, reconstructed villages,
architectural pastiche, and the heritage industry shows, both history
and space become objects of contemplation: geographical areas are
increasingly places to look at rather than to live in, and although it is
possible to go anywhere, there is less and less reason to do so.
With qualitative difference emptied out of every aspect of the
spectacular world, all possibilities of real engagement and
participation are removed. Even the most devastating criticism can
assume the mundane superficiality of the commodity form and,
translated into spectacle, the most transgressive of gestures loses its
impact. Capitalism ‘paints its own picture of itself and its enemies,
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imposes its own ideological categories on the world and its history’
while real ‘historical changes, which show that this society can be
superseded, are reduced to the status of novelties, processed for
mere consumption’. 81 But the situationists were convinced that the
perpetual raising and dashing of hopes, desires, and histories on
which capitalism is dependent left it vulnerable to subversion on
every front ‘Capitalist civilisation has not yet been superseded
a n y w h e r e , bu t i t c o n t i n u e s t o p r o d u c e i t s ow n e n e m i e s
everywhere.’ 82 And to the immobile surfaces of the spectacular
world they responded with a dynamic conception of dialectical
critique, intended to expose the spectacle as a particular moment of
the historical time it denies, undermining its claims to universality
and revealing it as a partial construct masquerading as a real world.
Lukács’ answer to the ubiquity of alienated relations had been to
argue that ‘the developing tendencies of history constitute a higher
reality than the empirical “facts”’,83 and the situationists also based
their critique on the idea that the possibilities of transformed social
relations bear a greater meaning than the immediate realities of the
spectacle in which they arise.
Debord presented dialectical critique as a way of thinking ‘that is
not content simply to seek the meaning of what is but aspires to
understand the dissolution of everything that is—and in the process
to dissolve all separation’. 84 Situationist theory therefore conjured
two perspectives: that possible within existing social relations, and
that made possible by their supersession. History, change,
participation, reality, and every meaning developed within
spectacular society must be reinterpreted in the light of a
perspective of the possible. The struggle against alienation demands
a total reversal of perspective, embodied in a theory which again
puts reality on its feet and posits a totality of historical development
beyond the existing, pseudo-totality of the spectacle. But this
reversal cannot be a contemplative turn made by theory alone, and it
is useless to ponder the theoretical possibility of social contestation.
The contestation of alienation is also a struggle against the
separations and specialisations of an intellectual programme, and if
an effective critique can only be generated from within spectacular
relations, it must also be realised as a practical contestation. ‘A
critical theory of the spectacle cannot be true unless it joins forces
with the practical movement of negation in society.’85 Neither can
the spectacle be opposed by some preexisting, uncontaminated, or
authentic reality. It does not present a situation in which two worlds,
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the real and the spectacular, conflict: even this ‘separation is part
and parcel of the unity of the world, of a global social praxis that
has split up into reality on the one hand and image on the other’. 86
The spectacle cannot be set in abstract opposition to concrete
social activity, for the dichotomy between reality and image
will survive on either side of any such distinction. Thus the
spectacle, though it turns reality on its head, is itself a product
of real activity. […] Each side therefore has its share of
objective reality. And every concept, as it takes its place on one
s i d e o r t h e o t h e r, h a s n o f o u n d a t i o n a s i d e f r o m i t s
transformation into its opposite: reality erupts within the
spectacle, and the spectacle is real.87
There are no free realms or pockets of social experience untouched
by the spectacle in which terms such as ‘authenticity’, ‘meaning’, or
‘reality’ maintain their independent meaning uncontaminated by
commodity relations. Everything is compromised by its appearance
within the spectacle, and all the terms in which this can be
expressed are themselves the products of spectacular society. Even
the subject against which commodity relations are pitted ‘can only
arise out of society—that is, out of the struggle that society
embodies’. 88 Likewise, ‘the pseudo-need imposed by the reign of
modern consumption’ cannot be opposed to ‘any authentic need or
desire that is not itself equally determined by society and its
history’.89 The critique of the spectacle can only be an immanent
critique: there are no absolute standards, authentic human beings, or
transcendental truths on which it can be based.
The implications of this position were developed in the
situationists’ analysis of the Watts riots in Los Angeles in 1965.
Dealing with a situation which has since reasserted itself in
countless instances from Handsworth to Brixton, the situationists
argued that the looting of the Watts district was ‘the most direct
realisation of the distorted principle, “To each according to his false
needs” —needs determined and produced by the economic system
that the very act of looting rejects.’
But since the vaunting of abundance is taken at its face value
and immediately seized upon instead of being eternally
pursued in the rat race of alienated labour and increasing but
unmet social needs, real desires begin to be expressed.90
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Regardless of the actual booty, what the rioter really takes is the spectacle
literally. The spectacle which offers itself as a whole is taken as such: the
spell of the shop window is broken and the objects are revealed for what
they really are in relation to their subjective appropriation—useful,
beautiful, empty, or worthless as the case may be. The real desire which
begins to emerge is for the power to choose, to assign value, to control
what is offered and that which is possible. During the 1990 Poll Tax riot
in London, it was the signs of conspicuous consumption that were attacked:
the most expensive shops, the brightest neon signs, and the most prestigious
cars. Caught up in the fracas by an accident of traffic flow, a vintage car
was spared by the crowd. Was this the remnant of an old respect which
the emerging consciousness should overcome, or the manifestation of a
new system of values which distinguished between one form of
consumption and another? From a situationist perspective, there is no
tribunal at which such questions can be decided, and certainly no
possibility of distinguishing between the ‘good’ values of the revolutionary
consciousness and the ‘bad’ ones of spectacular reification in advance. It
is only when the real possibility of actively effecting a particular situation
arises that ‘real desires begin to be expressed’.
The situationists’ entire theory was based on the assumption that
both the objective and subjective ingredients of a new society are
already present within the spectacle, so that all that is needed is a
reversal of the perspective in which spectacular society is lived.
They insisted that the construction of situations ‘begins on the ruins
of the modern spectacle’, 91 and their condemnations of existing
society left no room for calls for a return to nature or any precapitalist age. The situationists envisaged a future in which the
creativity, imagination, technology, and knowledge developed
within capitalist society would allow us to abolish work, satisfy
desire, create situations, and overcome all the problems posed by
the perpetuation of outmoded social and economic relations. In the
practical contestation of the spectacle, the ‘secret of negation’s
potential’ will be unveiled, 92 and all the efforts of the revolutionary
organisation and its theory must be directed towards the development of an active ‘propaganda of desire’ to arouse direct
consciousness of ‘the appalling contrast between the possible
constructions of life and its present poverty.’ 93 The material
conditions for a world of playful engagement, uncommodified
leisure and unqualified pleasure had long been achieved. The
spectacle was conceived as a society poised on the brink of
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revolution, saved only by its ability to control those manifestations
of the desires and dissatisfactions that would disturb it.
Paying no regard to the distrust with which the traditional organs
of opposition treated absenteeism, unofficial strikes, ‘mindless
violence’, shop lifting, graffitoed advertisements, and every attempt
to take momentary control of ordinary life, the situationists were
convinced that such daily acts of disruption and resistance to work,
authority, and consumption showed that the spectacle was already
and always being contested. The development of increasingly
sophisticated devices with which the control and removal of real
experience is effected is matched by the sophistication of their
appropriation by the very subjectivity it intends to control. Pirate
broadcasters crowd the airways, fax machines send works of art in
office hours, desk-top publishers produce propaganda, and
electricity meters run backwards all over the developed world. Just
as everything which appears in opposition to the spectacle can be
brought within it, so everything which appears within spectacular
society can be reclaimed by the consciousness which seeks to
subvert it.
The situationists were aware of the difficulties in their theoretical
stance. Although they could claim that the desires to participate in
history and construct the situations in which one lives are
reproduced by spectacular relations as surely as they are denied,
they could offer only the hope that the consciousness of these
desires would develop to the point at which a wholesale onslaught
on the social totality was possible. And for all the sophistication of
their conception of immanent critique, the situationists did not
avoid the problem of finding some point of opposition to
spectacular society. No matter how accurate, a theory, as Debord
acknowledged, is useless in itself; of The Society of the Spectacle,
he wrote:
Anyone who reads this book attentively will see that it gives no
kind of assurances about the victory of the revolution, nor of
the duration of its operations, nor of the rough roads it will
have to travel, and still less about its capacity, sometimes
rashly boasted of, to bring perfect happiness to everyone. 94
But although the situationists protected themselves with arguments
that those who help ‘the epoch to discover what it can do’ are ‘no
more sheltered from the defects of the present than innocent of the
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most baneful of that which may come to pass’, 95 Debord was
convinced that ‘those who really want to shake an established
society must formulate a theory which fundamentally explains this
society’. 96 With characteristic self-assurance, Debord was
convinced he had achieved this goal. ‘I flatter myself’, he wrote in
1979, ‘to be a very rare contemporary example of someone who has
written without being immediately contradicted by the event.’ He
continued: ‘I have no doubt that the confirmation all my theses
receive ought not to last right until the end of the century and even
beyond. The reason for this is simple: I have understood the factors
that constitute the spectacle.’ 97
This confidence marked all situationist writing. Convinced that
their integration of cultural practice and political theory produced a
unique and devastating formula for the critique of everyday life and
the transformation of the social world, the SI treated the vast
majority of contemporary analyses of consumer society with the
contempt it was sure they deserved. The situationists were of course
in a most unusual and fortuitous position: all earlier critiques of the
everyday had been developed within academia, avant-garde artistic,
literary, and political movements, or the minds of a few brave
rebels, poets, and dreamers. Rarely had there been a collective
attempt to overcome the fragmentations attributed by the
situationists to spectacular relations and develop a unified critique
of every aspect of daily life.
The 1960s were witness to a host of theoretisations dealing with
the proliferation of forms of communication, information, and
consumption. Many bemoaned the superficiality of modern life and
decried the absence of real experience, and the situationists were
not alone in their view that the development of capitalist relations
required renewed analyses of their production and reproduction.
And although the question of alienation preoccupied many post-war
intellectuals, observations of the ubiquity of alienated social
relations produced unprecedented difficulties for social critique
wherever they were made. Without the assurance of some realm free
from the influence of commodity relations, the possibility of
negating their hegemony is compromised and problematic. In OneDimensional Man, Marcuse argued that while the structure of
capitalism remained fundamentally undisturbed, new forms of
domination and integration make alienation integral to
consciousness itself. The apparent tolerance and variety of modern
capitalism conceals its totalitarian tendency to eradicate any
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alternative dimension of thought or experience. Indeed, Marcuse
claimed that ‘the extent to which this civilisation transforms the
object world into an extension of man’s mind and body makes the
very notion of alienation questionable’.98
Attempts to defend the subject against the encroachment of
commodity relations were thrown into further disarray by the rise of
structuralist and semiological theories which questioned the whole
notion of subjective experience and encouraged a turn away from
the humanism of the western Marxist tradition. These theoretical
developments gradually undermined every aspect of the situationist
project, which nevertheless pursued its attacks on the alienating
effects of modern society with a flagrant disregard for the new
concern with signs and structures. Structuralism was seen as the
spectacle’s expression of itself, a philosophy which proclaimed the
end of history as surely as the world in which it arose, with its claim
‘that a brief freeze in historical time is in fact a definitive
stability’. 99 Structuralism, argued Debord, sees ‘the eternal presence
of a system that was never created and will never disappear’; 100 it is
a ‘thought underwritten by the State, a thought that conceives of the
present conditions of spectacular “communication” as an absolute’.
It is not structuralist theory itself ‘that serves to prove the
transhistorical validity of the society of the spectacle’, but ‘the
society of the spectacle, imposing in its massive reality, that
validates the chill dream of structuralism’.101 From a situationist
perspective, structuralist analyses of the codes and categories in
which everyday life is framed and produced were far too willing to
take the spectacle literally. The situationists were certainly
concerned to understand the role of the signs, codes, images, and
messages which constitute modern life, but they remained
convinced that these were merely the consequences of an overdeveloped system of alienated production, requiring no new science
of signs or structures. The spectacle, insisted Debord, is not ‘a
product of the technology of the mass dissemination of images’, 102
nor a ‘collection of images; rather, it is a social relationship between
people that is mediated by images’.103 The spectacular world which
lends itself so well to structuralist and semiological analysis ‘is both
the outcome and the goal of the dominant mode of production’.
It is not something added to the real world—not a decorative
element, so to speak. On the contrary, it is the very heart of
society’s real unreality. In all its specific manifestations—news
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or propaganda, advertising or the actual consumption of
entertainment—spectacle epitomizes the prevailing model of
social life. It is the omnipresent celebration of a choice already
made in the sphere of production, and the consummate result
of that choice.104
Although it is only with the later work of Baudrillard that the
situationist project comes into open conflict with the consequences
of the turn away from critical negation foreshadowed by the
development of structuralist analyses, it is undoubtedly with
Baudrillard’s early writings, in which commodities begin to
circulate without reference to meaning, utility, or value, that
situationist theory resonates most clearly.
Debord and the young Baudrillard shared the view that
consumption was occupying an increasingly central role in the lives
of the inhabitants of advanced capitalist society, arguing that the
circulation of commodities almost becomes an end in itself, quite
regardless of the subjects who buy, sell, and produce them.
Baudrillard’s first book, Le systèms des objets, was close to many of
the ideas of The Society of the Spectacle which narrowly pre-dated
it. Charting the rise of the consumer society, Baudrillard argued that
we live in an increasingly closed relation to commodities which
assume an unprecedented plasticity, multi-purpose functionalism
and superficiality. A new morality of consumption, circumscribed
by leisure, advertising, and fun, replaces the work ethic of a society
geared around production, and a society of rapid and pointless
change comes to dominate lived experience: ‘Everything is in
motion, everything is changing, everything is being transformed
and yet nothing changes. Such a society, thrown into technological
progress, accomplishes all possible revolutions but these are
revolutions upon itself.’105
Like Debord, Baudrillard argued that commodities have meaning
only within the whole—the spectacle—in which they appear. ‘Few
objects today are offered alone, without a context of objects to
speak for them…. Washing machine, refrigerator, dishwasher and
so on have different meanings when grouped together than each one
has alone, as a piece of equipment.’ 106 Although at this stage
Baudrillard retained the possibility of a critical relation to the
consumer society, invoking forms of irrational violence and
resistance to symbols of consumption such as cars, neon signs, and
shops, he also tended to argue that alienation had become complete
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and unsurpassable. Social relations ascend ‘from pure and simple
abundance to complete conditioning of action and time and finally
to the systematic organization of ambience, which is characteristic
of the drugstores, the shopping malls, or the modern airports in
our futuristic cities’. 107 ‘Multiple forms of refusal’ might come
together for a while, as they did in 1968, but there could be no
necessity or predictability about their development. In his 1973
text The Mirror of Production and the subsequent publications
considered later in this book, Baudrillard came to see social
critique as an increasingly unforeseeable, dispersed, and
purposeless reaction to a world in which commodities are
displaced by a system of signs. Replacing the Marxist critique of
political economy with a logic of sign value and fetishism,
B a u d r i l l a r d i n c r e a s i n g l y a rg u e d t h a t m o d e r n s o c i e t y i s
characterised not merely by an extension of commodity relations,
but by the conspicuous consumption of commodities as signs of
social status and personal identity.
By this point in the development of Baudrillard’s work, the
process of spectacularisation and the removal of meaning
identified by Debord is completed, with the absolute abstraction
of the commodity which signifies only itself. There can no longer
be any distinction between the real and the advertised thing, and
thus no experience of poverty, disappointment, or disillusion in
the act of consumption. All that is consumed is the sign of the
object: a sign, such as ‘revolutionary new washing machine’ which
signifies only itself and conceals or belies nothing else. Whereas
Debord argued that commodities circulate almost solely for the
sake of abstract buying and selling, Baudrillard gradually removed
all sense of the ‘almost’ and claimed that commodities have
become pure signs which no longer even pretend to point to
anything real. Two of the phrases—‘no longer’ and ‘always
already’ —which pepper Baudrillard’s more recent texts express
his position perfectly: it is no longer possible to speak of the real,
and reality is always already become spectacle. Situationist theory
always teeters on the brink of this position, continually advancing
towards the abyss of a society made up of meaningless and
inexorable signs, but always pulling its arguments back to the
terra firma of a real world experienced by real people. For
Debord, it is no longer easy to speak of the real, and reality is
always already vulnerable to spectacularisation. But there is none
of the inevitability of Baudrillard’s bleak picture of homogeneity
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‘Now, the SI’
37
and meaninglessness. The leap into hyperreality is never made,
and the struggle to assert and resolve the contradiction between
reality and its spectacular inversion in the moment of revolution
remains the defining characteristic of situationist theory.
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Chapter 2
‘. . . a world of pleasures to win, and
nothing to lose but boredom’
If modern society is a spectacle, modern individuals are spectators:
observers seduced by the glamorous representations of their own lives,
bound up in the mediations of images, signs, and commodities, and
intolerably constrained by the necessity of living solely in relation to
spectacular categories and alienated relations. In The Society of the
Spectacle, Debord’s primary concern was with the internal contradictions
of spectacular society, and his speculations about the desires and
imaginings which might negate it were confined to considerations of the
opposition the spectacle actually produces itself. But in The Revolution
of Everyday Life, Vaneigem had few qualms about making attractive,
inspiring, and sometimes unsupported claims on behalf of the radical
subjectivity he saw rising against the spectacle at every turn.
Vaneigem’s radical subject negates the seductive glamour of the
spectacle with demands for active participation; it responds to the
mediations of spectacular life with forms of immediate
communication and direct control; it challenges the spectacle’s
claim to circumscribe reality with actions and gestures which allow
for forms of self-realisation in another, broader, chosen context. A
creative, imaginative, and sensuous subjectivity, it takes the
promises of the spectacle literally, willing the end of all separation,
and refusing to perpetuate the sacrifices, deferrals, and endless
layers which mark its relationship to the world. It wants to strip
away the veils of commodified experience to gain the immediacy of
a world directly lived, in which the potential revealed by
technological and cultural experiment are unleashed, and the
possibilities of a world free from work, need, and sacrifice can be
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‘A world of pleasures to win’
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explored. In short, the radical subject demands the right to construct
the situations in which it lives.
The political demand to be in control of one’s own life and
environment, participating in the world with a frank immediacy free
of all separation, hierarchy, and bureaucracy, is also the poetic and
sensual desire to be really in the world, feeling its most intimate
reality, which has been raised in long traditions of religious, artistic,
and political expression. Generations of poets, prophets, and
revolutionaries, 1 not to mention lovers, drug-takers, and all those
who have somehow found the time to stand and stare, have craved
the experience of complete integration: the moment of absolute
excess, unity, communion, and utter completion; the glimpse of how
it is to be truly found and profoundly lost at the same time. ‘The
eruption of lived pleasure’, wrote Vaneigem, ‘is such that in losing
myself I find myself; forgetting that I exist, I realize myself.’2 But
those who have found this point at which they are also lost have
often run away from it too, shocked by the realisation that oneness
with the world entails the loss of the ability to think, experience,
criticise, or reflect upon it. While the radical subject is ecstatic, it
cannot express itself; as soon as it is separated again, it cannot
remember how it felt at the time. Much situationist writing gives the
impression that such painful paradoxes would disappear in the postrevolutionary world. Since the spectacle is said to take the principle
of ‘divide and rule’ to its absolute extreme, its supersession must be
the end of all separation, alienation, and every form of division; a
harmonious destination at which all historical struggle is finally,
orgasmically, reconciled. This was indeed the absolute with which
the situationists contested spectacular relations. But they were quite
clear that there is no static haven of pleasure on demand on the other
side of even situationist barricades. And although the situationists
were sure that new dynamisms and conflicts would arise to shatter
the idea that the ludic world is a Utopian point of arrival, they still
posed the experience of ecstatic integration as the absolute
contradiction to spectacular mediocrity and exclusion.
Futurism, Dada, surrealism, and a host of other movements and
experiments were also guided by the will to gain immediate
experience of the world and transform the everyday into a reality
desired and created by those who live in it Their manifestos were
always full of urgent longings for a changed world, and their
productions were shot through with searches for more intensity and
desire. Although the artist can create atmospheres and realise
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The most radical gesture
fantasies only in the most limited of contexts, the products of the
imagination can serve as a propaganda of the possible, and it was in
this sense that the situationists acknowledged their place in the
tradition of avant-garde agitation to which movements like Dada
belong. Critical of the separated role of the avant-garde, the
situationists saw themselves superseding, rather than merely contributing to, its history. But they loved Dada’s nihilism, respected
surrealism’s subversions, and sifted through them for pretty gems
and useful tools as they had hunted through Hegel and Marx.
Although each movement adopted completely different strategies of
dissent, both Dada and surrealism agitated against the removal of
art to a separated realm in which it is practised by a few specialists
within well-defined perimeters. They abandoned work in favour of
play, disrupted notions of originality, genius, and artistic form, and
experimented with forms of expression disallowed within capitalist
society. Saturated with the feeling that reality is elsewhere, and real
life sacrificed on altars of bourgeois production and consumption,
the movements’ protagonists argued and played with the system of
values which entrapped them in ways the situationists could not but
admire.
By the time the Situationist International emerged in the late
1950s, the ideas and tactics of both Dada and surrealism had been
challenged and rearranged by a number of the less well-known
tendencies discussed in this chapter. But these central movements
continued to inform the style and atmosphere of the SI, in whose
hands the techniques of a century of avant-garde contestation were
to be forged into the weapons of a political armoury with which not
only the values, but the entire network of social relations could be
challenged.
Both Dada and surrealism arose in response to the enormous
political events of the early decades of the twentieth century, with
the First World War and the workers’ movements which culminated
in the 1917 revolution forming their backdrop. Dada can neatly be
characterised as nihilistic art practised at the beginning of the
century. But it remains impossible to define the movement without
treading on its toes, since it was determined to control its own
meanings and definitions, establishing its own criterion of success,
and bowing to none of the values and interests adopted by
conventional artistic and political practice. Dada was a broad and
disparate movement, without any form of organisation, programme,
or cohesion. It crossed national boundaries, transgressed those
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between art, politics, and daily life, and expressed itself in a variety
of media, including poetry, performance, painting, cinema,
typography, montage, and idiosyncratic combinations of each.
Dada emerged during the First World War from a group of
deserters, dissenters, and refugees who had gathered in Zurich.
Convinced that ‘there must be a few young people in Switzerland
w h o , l i ke m e , w e r e i n t e r e s t e d n o t o n l y i n e n j oy i n g t h e i r
independence but also in giving proof of it’, 3 Hugo Ball was among
those who set up the dadaist Cabaret Voltaire in 1916. The Cabaret
became the focus for an extraordinary attack on cultural, moral,
intellectual, and political values. ‘We had lost confidence in our
“culture”. Everything had to be demolished,’ wrote Marcel Janco.
‘At the Cabaret Voltaire we began by shocking the bourgeoisie,
demolishing his idea of art, attacking common sense, public
opinion, education, institutions, museums, good taste, in short, the
whole prevailing order.’ 4 And in the eyes of the young dadaists, the
system of values and relations which had produced the war was
mirrored in the fine sensibilities, impeccable good taste, and
implacable confidence of the bourgeoisie. A generation was being
massacred in the names of culture, honour, reason, and civilisation,
and these were the values which dada, in turn, set out to destroy. The
absurdity of the word ‘dada’ was itself a provocation. Referring to
everything under the sun and nothing in particular, it was intended to
infiltrate the ranks of established meanings and demand that they
justified their own validity in a world turned upside-down by the war.
Dada’s impact was such that it could not be ignored: the press,
artistic and political authorities alike were forced to speak of it in
tones reserved for conventional disciplines, movements, and values.
It was a nonsense word in a world it considered insanely sensible;
its very presence challenged the solidity and certainty of all
meaning. But although Tristan Tzara, one of Dada’s most forthright
protagonists, declared that the movement existed ‘without aim or
design, without organisation’, Dada also insisted that ‘there is a
great destructive, negative work to be done. To sweep, to clean’, and
rid the world of the ‘bandits who have demolished and destroyed the
centuries.’ 5 In many of its manifestations, Dada displayed overt
political commitments and expressed the hope that new possibilities
of living would emerge from the wreckage it left in its wake. And
although it declared itself anti-art and agitated against the notions
of creativity, genius, individualism, and originality inherent in the
prevalent conception of art, it was not against the making, saying,
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The most radical gesture
and showing of things in which art is engaged. What it did oppose
was any restriction on the means by which things are made, the ends
to which they are used and interpreted, and the extent to which they
are separated from the rest of life. In the belief that cultural values
were inexorably bound up with social, political, and moral relations, Dada rode roughshod over the conventions of perfection and
order, harmony and beauty, appropriate media and literary form. Art
and literature were its point of departure for an onslaught on the
whole.
For the surrealists too, the First World War was devastating
beyond itself and required a critique of the entire social order.
Aware that ‘the society which had sent them so gaily to death was
waiting for them on their return, if they managed to escape, with its
laws, its morality, its religions’, 6 the surrealists professed their
commitment to social transformation and searched for a new and
more authentic reality on which to base their criticisms of existing
social relations. And whereas the dadaists had declared a complete
disregard for their predecessors, the surrealists actively sought a
tradition of poetic, erotic, and impassioned rebels in which to place
themselves. Among their heroes was Rimbaud, with his vision of
the poet becoming ‘a seer by a long, prodigious, and rational
disordering of all the senses’, embracing all forms ‘of love, of
suffering, of madness’7 and seeking a life of real adventure. Jarry’s
pataphysical science of imaginary solutions; de Sade, the ‘freest
spirit that has ever existed’; 8 the sinister beauty of Baudelaire’s
flowers of evil; Fourier’s impassioned social theory; and
Lautréamont’s wild plagiarisms and juxtapositions: all decorated
the surrealists’ world. But of those more immediate and living
influences, Guillaume Apollinaire, Jacques Vaché, and Dada itself
were perhaps the most important
Apollinaire filled the young surrealists with the possibilities of
new and experimental forms of poetic communication. Observing
that the technological wonders of light bulbs, metro stations, and
aeroplanes had stolen the poets’ show, he used the term ‘surreal’ to
capture the ‘new spirit’ of a poetry capable of discovering and
expressing the horrors and marvels of contemporary experience.
And if Apollinaire infused the group with poetic dreams, Vaché
instilled a Dada-like spirit of satirical derision in André Breton, the
man with whom the surrealist group is most closely associated.
Breton had been a close friend of the young Vaché, whose
outrageousbehaviour and scorn for authority left him with a lasting
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antipathy to convention and propriety. Vaché bequeathed few
momentos of his short life; objecting to being killed in the war (‘I
shall die when I want to die and then I shall die with somebody
else’ 9), he lived with an extraordinary sense of absurd comedy
crowned by a fatal dose of opium, taken with a friend, at the age of
only twenty-three.
It was, however, Dada which exerted the greatest influence on the
surrealist group which emerged in Paris in 1924. But Dada was not
merely an early or immature version of surrealism. Its satirical
attacks on all forms of value, order, and convention had a powerful
and distinctive air recognisable in a variety of later cultural and
political agitations. A great deal of dadaist activity was devoted to
the subversive rearrangement of words and images; the newspaper
had assumed an unprecedented importance during the war, and the
new mass media presented itself as an easy target Tzara advised
aspiring poets to cut a newspaper article into words and make a
poem by shaking them out of a bag at random, 10 revealing the
hidden possibilities of language, and undermining notions of
creativity and genius by providing a way for anyone to work with
words. The introduction of scissors and glue liberated words and
presented advertisements, newspaper articles, and poems as
arbitrary patterns. And words themselves were made to appear as
chance arrangements of sounds and signs in Dada’s performances of
brutist poetry and simultaneous poems, in which texts in different
languages were read at the same time. Such stagings produced the
shocking effect of language as mere rhythmical noise, forcing
Dada’s audience to face the emptiness and chaos of the world they
believed so comfortable and secure. Phonetic poems like Ball’s ‘O
Gadji Beri Bimba’ and Raoul Hausmann’s ‘f m s b w’, played with
the aural and visual effect of syllables and typefaces, providing the
‘great step by which total irrationality was introduced into
literature’11 of which Dada was so proud.
But Dada’s interruptions of language and meaning were not
literally effected without reason: ‘in these phonetic poems we
totally renounce the language that journalism has abused and
corrupted,’ explained Ball. ‘We must return to the innermost
alchemy of the word, we must even give up writing secondhand;
that is, accepting words (to say nothing of sentences) that are not
newly invented for our own use.’ 12 This desperate search for
autonomy from all forms of compromise with existing meanings
and forms of communication marked the whole dadaist project.
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The most radical gesture
When Aragon wrote of his belief, ‘childish as it may seem, that to
name the War, even in order to oppose it, was to publicise it’, 13 he
put his finger on Dada’s central dilemma: how was it possible to
stand free of the despised values and structures whilst at the same
time remaining sufficiently engaged to make some difference to
them?
For a few years, Dada successfully walked this tightrope between
involvement and disengagement. Notions of genius, originality, and
every convention surrounding the work of art were beautifully
undermined not only by Tzara’s cut-up poetry but a wealth of biting
collage, photomontage, and chance collections of a deconstructed
and fragmented world. Marcel Duchamp’s ‘ready-mades’ excited
the dadaist concern with the objects and experiences of everyday
life, and likewise challenged the means by which art may be judged
as ‘original’ or ‘plagiaristic’. Displaying objects such as a hat rack
and a snow shovel, whose choice, he wrote, ‘was based on a reaction
of visual indifference with a total absence of good or bad taste’,
Duchamp declared ‘that these ready-mades became works of art as
soon as he said they were’.14 Most famous of these pieces was a
urinal, turned on its back and signed ‘R.Mutt’. When the urinal,
which Duchamp solemnly named Fountain, was rejected by an
exhibition committee in 1917 on the grounds that it was plagiaristic
and ‘a plain piece of plumbing’, this was the response:
Whether Mr Mutt with his own hands made the fountain or not
has no importance. He CHOSE it. He took an ordinary article
of life, placed it so that its usual significance disappeared
under the new title and point of view—created a new thought
for that object. As for plumbing, that is absurd. The only works
of art America has given are her plumbing and her bridges. 15
The ‘ready-made’ declared that since nothing is owned or original,
nothing can be plagiarised. ‘Since the tubes of paint used by the
artist are manufactured and ready-made products’, wrote Duchamp
in a note of triumph, ‘we must conclude that all the paintings in the
world are ready-mades aided’. 16
This attack on all traditional definitions and evaluations of art
was relentlessly pursued. But if the dadaists were convinced that the
symbols and values of existing culture were always already
compromised, they were unsure of the status of the world revealed
by their deconstructions. Their hostility to all codes and principles
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‘A world of pleasures to win’
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meant for some that Dada could not concern itself with the creation
of new laws and values, and nonsense was layered on nonsense
without end. For others, however, a pure and authentic reality could
be discerned in the wreckages they caused: Hans Arp believed that
their deconstructions of the existing social and cultural codes
revealed a new and more natural set of laws, and many were ‘alert to
the call of another reason, another logic, which demanded a
different experience and different symbols.’ 17 Arp spoke of his
desire to ‘destroy the reasonable deceptions of man and recover the
natural and unreasonable order’, describing Dada as being ‘for the
senseless, which does not mean nonsense. Dada is senseless like
nature.’ 18 Conducting his experiments with random collages,
poems, and wood reliefs not in defiance of codes and principles, but
‘according to the law of chance’, Arp maintained that this was a way
of ‘creating pure life’.19
For the most part, Dada’s purposeful and meaningful rejection of
purpose and meaning was intended as an outrageous provocation of
all bourgeois values. In Zurich, Dada had shown ‘the bourgeoisie
the unreality of his world, the nullity of his endeav-ours’,20 but this
hostility only found a direct political expression in Germany, where
Spartakist agitation poised the country on the brink of revolution. In
Berlin and Cologne, Dada’s satirical attacks became a powerful
political weapon: the name of one dadaist journal had such an
impact that its title, which translates as ‘every man his own
football’, entered the language ‘as an expression of contempt for
authority and humbug’, and one of its protagonists recalled that
they ‘carried a supply of gummed labels saying “Hurra Dada!” for
sticking on the walls of police station cells’. 21 Dada’s techniques of
photomontage and caricature flourished amidst the working-class
movements from which its Zurich roots were removed, and the
situationists were later to insist that Dada ‘had a chance for
realisation with the Spartakists, with the revolutionary practice of
the German proletariat’. It was their failure, wrote Mustapha
Khayati, which ‘made the failure of Dada inevitable’.22
There were clearly limits to the effectiveness of a project based
on the attack of cultural values: ‘seekers of an experimental
culture’, wrote the situationists, ‘cannot hope to realise it without
the triumph of the revolutionary movement’. 23 And the German
dadaists were certainly aware that the project’s antipathy to any
form of commitment and its engagement, albeit hostile and critical,
with the values of bourgeois artistic practice, had led it to an
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The most radical gesture
impossible apoliticism. Grosz and Herzfelde were sure that Dada’s
‘only mistake was to have been seriously engaged at all with socalled art’.
Dada was the breakthrough, taking place with bawling and
scornful laughter; it came out of a narrow, overbearing, and
overrated milieu, and floating in the air between the classes,
knew no responsibility to the general public. We saw then the
insane end products of the ruling order of society and burst into
laughter. We had not yet seen the system behind this insanity.24
Dada was eventually unable successfully to confront or step outside
of the culture it despised. Doomed to find a place within the existing
system of values, all it could do was ensure that its reception was
made as difficult as possible. In this respect it was extraordinarily
successful.
Dada’s strategy was to embrace the contradictions and
hypocrisies into which it was forced. Its deliberate cultivation of
confusion allowed it, for a while, to effect an internal critique—a
deconstruction—of reason, language, and culture. ‘DADA remains
within the framework of European weaknesses,’ conceded Tzara;
‘it’s still shit but from now on we want to shit in different colours so
as to adorn the zoo of art with all the flags of all the consulates.’ 25
‘What we need’, he wrote in his 1918 manifesto, ‘are strong,
straightforward, precise works which will be foreve r
misunderstood.’ 26 ‘I am writing a manifesto and there’s nothing I
want, and yet I’m saying certain things, and in principle I am
against manifestos, as I am against principles.’ 27 Continually
pressurised to be something it was not—an artistic movement, a
literary school, a political challenge—Dada embraced this
falsification too: ‘Lying is ecstasy—which lasts longer than a
second— there is nothing that lasts longer.’ 28 But it was not merely
lying. Tzara’s manifestos were tactics in a struggle against a
particular set of values and meanings, and Dada’s provocations
were not effected for their own sake, but for the sake of something
new and better,
‘Liberty: DADA, DADA, DADA; the roar of contorted pains, the
interweaving of contraries and of all contradictions, freaks and
irrelevances: LIFE’, concluded the 1918 manifesto. 29 The
movement saw itself making a clean break with the values of the
past, a great flood which would wash away the war and affirm the
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possibility of a fresh start. The nonsensical was adopted for sensible
ends; the pointless and absurd did have a point Dada was, in effect,
an attempt to take the propaganda of war and capital literally, as
though it was continually saying: ‘you want us to behave
irrationally, so we will’. Nevertheless, trading on shock tactics,
ridicule, and indeterminacy in the cultural domain, the movement
could not survive without some larger social movement to effect the
destruction of which it dreamed, and Dada was gradually forced
into a dilemma of suicide or silence. Richter spoke for all the
dadaists when he wrote, ‘We were all fated to live with the
paradoxical necessity of entrusting ourselves to chance while at the
same time remembering that we were conscious beings working
towards conscious goals’,30 and, unable to say anything that would
not bring it within the existing cultural values and structures it
despised, Dada finally made the graceful and politically astute
move of abolishing itself. 31
Like every subsequent movement with the scope of Dada,
surrealism was to ‘try to do something new/after knowing that
because of Dada nothing is new’, 32 and the surrealist project was
undertaken in full consciousness of the successes and failures of its
predecessor. A number of surrealists had been engaged with Dada;
some, like André Breton and Louis Aragon, encountered it when
Tzara journeyed to Paris in 1920. But they soon became aware of
the fleeting effects of its nihilistic provocations. Describing his own
movement towards the search for meaning, Aragon wrote that under
the Dada flag he had ‘felt the great power that certain places, certain
sights exercised over me, without discovering the principle of this
enchantment’, 33 happy to suppose ‘that nothing is worth the trouble,
that two and two do not necessarily make four, that art has no
importance whatever, that it is rather nasty to be a literary man, that
silence is golden’.34 The surrealists were concerned that this Dadaist
conclusion stifled all attempts at progressive and critical art,
literature, and political practice, removing purpose and direction
from the critique of culture and society.
In an effort to rebuild the critical project, surrealism adopted a
new set of tactics. While its protagonists were equally hostile to the
cultural and social values derided by Dada and as determined as
their predecessors to retain their independence and delimit their
own activities, they were also aware that tactics of shock, evasion,
and provocation had a limited effect. Unlike Dada, the movement
developed a rigorous discipline designed to safeguard its
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The most radical gesture
revolutionary aims, although this meant that surrealism was
dominated by matters of internal discipline, exclusions, and
Breton’s contested leadership. And instead of struggling in vain to
stay free from the influence of despised cultural codes, the
surrealists assumed the role of an artistic and literary movement
with the intention of subverting convention from within.
Surrealism was an overt search for the unity and integration of all
experience, with all separation held to be the consequence of an
artificial estrangement, the isolated component of the true unity of
surreality.
Everything leads us to believe that there exists a certain point
in the spirit at which life and death, the real and the imaginary,
the past and the future, the communicable and the
incommunicable, the high and the low, cease to be perceived as
contradictory. Now it is vain to search for any other motive in
surrealist activity than the hope of discovering that point.35
This was both the hope for a future society in which the coincidence
of these dichotomies would be realised, and an immediate search for
such moments of supreme interaction, ‘unimaginably dazzling,
between man and the world of things.’ 36 The surrealists were
passionately attached to those events marked by the eruption of the
marvellous into ordinary experience: stunning and haphazard
moments in which the fantastic surprises a world of mundane
causality. They invoked a realm of splendour and possibility,
searching for the means to express all that is unexpected, fresh,
awesome, and vertiginous. Breton wrote of ‘the breath of the
possible’ touching one in the street; Aragon spoke of ‘those
moments when everything slips away from me, when immense
cracks appear in the palace of the world. I would’, he declared,
‘sacrifice my life for them.’37
Whereas the dadaists had used the arbitrary to ridicule all belief
in order, the surrealists invested chance with a meaning and
significance derived from their general appropriation of Freudian
theory. Dreams and the wanderings of the imagination were said to
bear a significance beyond the manifest incoherence of their
images; random meetings between the material world and a ‘secret
appeal from within’ in everyday life were privileged as moments of
‘objective chance’, the ground of surrealist investigations of the
marvellous, the inspiring, and the impassioned. Surrealist activity
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was devoted to the investigation of those attitudes, activities, and
environments most propitious to the eruption of desire and the
experience of the surreal: a dreamt object found in the street; a
dreamt street found in the world; an imagined world fused into the
real. Developing these moments into a set of alternative principles
on which cultural activity could be based, the surrealists abandoned
the dadaist tendency to negate all principles. They began something
of a propaganda exercise to reveal the infinite possibilities and
endless pleasures trapped in experiences and desires unfulfilled and
hidden by a social system dependent on the smooth functioning of a
rationality limited to the accumulation of capital. In Freudian terms,
this was a rejection of the reality principle in favour of the pleasure
principle. But whereas Freud had argued that some repression of the
drives to pleasure was essential for the maintenance of civilisation,
the surrealists wanted the entire social world to be arranged in
harmony with desires, pleasures, and imaginings.
Experiments with automatism in writing, painting, and everyday
life were conducted in the belief that the absence of conscious
control over one’s thoughts and actions would give some freedom to
explore new and forbidden ways of thought and articulation.
Automatic writing, for example, was an attempt to capture the
essence of the stream of consciousness in forms which would
express it in as pure and unadulterated form as possible. Aware of
Freud’s use of free association as therapy, Breton and Soupault
decided to ‘blacken some paper’ with such thought, an exercise
which they treated with a ‘praiseworthy disdain for what might
result from a literary point of view’ 38 just as Duchamp had declared
his indifference to orthodox means of artistic evaluation. But they
were interested in this writing for other reasons, particularly those
associated with the radically new perceptions of reality they might
allow, and the surrealists saw their techniques revealing a new
world, in which surreality, the union of the real and the imagined,
might find its true expression. Like the random collage, the
automatic text reduced the significance and responsibility of the
individual poet and stood as a transcription rather than a production,
a discovery rather than an invention. And many other surrealist
constructions were inspired by dreams and daydreams; some of
them combined images and words to produce ‘poem-objects’, and
others were ‘found’, like the dadaist ‘ready-made’.
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The found object was said to be ‘enough to undo the beauty of
everything beside it’,39 and the surrealists had a treasury of such
objects and places in Paris, itself the ‘most dreamed-of of their
objects’. 40 Places such as the Tour St Jacques, the Porte Saint-Denis,
the erotic serenity of Place Dauphine, and the bustling markets of
Les Halles (now home to an entirely different set of glass and
mirrored marvels), were revered and often visited as sites peculiarly
receptive to the surrealist explorer. In the streets of Paris,
breathtaking possibilities and marvels, signs of another reality, and
glimpses of the strange and disconcerting were perceived through
chinks in the normality of everyday reality. Aragon’s Paris Peasant
and Breton’s Nadja are scattered with detailed descriptions of signs,
cafés, arcades, and little corners of the city, and the surrealists
strolled the streets with the same freedom they exercised in the
automatic text: that gained by the absence of conscious control.
Drifting according to whim and desire, they explored the city and
watched it reveal the marvels of objective chance and surreality.
This playful spirit combined with a delight in chance to produce
an intense interest in games and playing. A phrase of
Lautréamont’s—‘Poetry must be made by all. Not by one’41 —was
adopted with enthusiasm in support of collaborative experiments
with automatism and creativity. For the surrealists, Lautréamont’s
own juxtaposed images in Les Chants de Maldoror had undone
every convention of language and its connection with the world, and
they sought practices which could pursue this extravagance to its
limits. Poems, drawings, collages, and dialogues of questions and
answers were constructed by a number of people, generally in the
manner of the well-known game ‘Consequences’, in which
sentences are added to sequences hidden by the folds of the paper
on which they are written. To play at this was to make an ‘exquisite
corpse’, a phrase taken from an initial experiment in the technique,
in which ‘the elements of discourse confront one another in as
paradoxical a manner as possible and so that human
communication, from the outset diverted in this way, takes the mind
registering it through the greatest adventure’.42 Phrases as wild as
‘The rouged and powdered lobster scarcely illuminates various
double kisses’, and ‘The anaemic little girl makes the wax-polished
mannequins blush’, were obtained in these playful experiments.
The surrealists wanted to give the marvellous a reality in the
everyday, capturing pure thought and prolonging the passion of
fleeting pleasures and momentary desires. Paris Peasant, Aragon’s
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‘modern mythology’ of the city, identified love as the great
experience capable of destroying constraint and mundanity. ‘In
love… in all love there resides an outlaw principle, an irrepressible
sense of delinquency, contempt for prohibitions and a taste for
havoc,’ 43 he wrote, and love became a surrealist symbol of and
incentive to revolt. The marvellous quality of the city streets was
mirrored in what Aragon called the ‘surrealist glow in the eyes of all
women’, 44 and as Paris epitomised the surrealists’ city, so the
heroine of Breton’s Nadja symbolised their women: objects of
desire, figures of beauty, muses and inspirations, childlike and
powerful, mystical and receptive. To love a woman was to love a
sorceress, an enchantress, a glamorous person. It was to commune
with the source of all inspiration and marvel, to discover, as Breton
wrote, that beauty ‘will be convulsive or will not be at all.’ 45
Surrealist eroticism extended into all aspects of daily life and
artistic experience, but the sexism and heterosexism of some
surrealist writing and art has since thrown a shadow over the
exuberant longings it expressed. Indeed, the fact that the products of
the surrealist imagination sometimes offered no challenge to
prevailing social and cultural conventions casts doubt on the
possibility of access to a realm of the imagination free of all social
and cultural construction and challenges its very existence.
Although the difficulty of transcribing secret and hidden desires
into the language and culture of a society which represses its
experience was never fully articulated, the surrealists were clearly
aware of this first problem. The paradoxical ‘rational disordering of
the senses’ with which they were working meant that they wanted to
voyage into the unknown while at the same time returning to tell the
tale, expressing their adventures in the terms of existing structures
of language and meaning. This desire to straddle madness and
sanity, chaos and poetry, formed a central tension of surrealist
activity. The most extraordinary of their discoveries assumed a
place within the institutionalised worlds of art and literature they
wished to subvert, and the most extravagant of their reveries had to
be expressed in the discourses of the society they despised. But,
reluctant to lose sight of the provocative wonders of unconscious
realm itself, the surrealists’ recognition of these difficulties served
only to encourage their political development. If the entire
prevailing system of social and cultural relations forced even the
most radical of gestures to convention and conformity, they
reasoned, the entire system must be at fault
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Although the surrealists’ problematic engagement with the
French Communist Party (PCF) produced more difficulties than it
solved, their basic alignment with the Party’s revolutionary
sentiments was itself quite clear. The surrealists were convinced
that the achievement of an impassioned social experience in which
authentic communication, the realisation of art, and the union of
individual and world would characterise everyday experience was
possible only with the end of capitalism and the dawn of a new,
ludic, age. Nevertheless, this awareness did not prevent the
surrealists from pursuing their experiments in the cultural domain;
indeed, their insistence on the autonomy of their project and its
importance to a successful social revolution was the main point of
their disagreement with the PCF, who failed to see why the
surrealists seemed to accept so much of the Marxist project while
refusing to drop their activities in favour of political duties. Of
course, the surrealists considered that their actions were political,
arguing that their propaganda of desire was as necessary as the
Party’s own work and insisting that although surrealism might
consider itself ‘in the service of the revolution’, it would remain
free to determine the nature of that service. The poetry concealed by
capitalism could not be put off until after the revolution, and
prohibited desires should not have to wait for their fulfilment ‘I
r e a l l y f a i l t o s e e — s o m e n a r r ow - m i n d e d r evo l u t i o n a r i e s
notwithstanding’, wrote Breton, ‘why we should refrain from
supporting the Revolution, provided we view the problems of love,
dreams, madness, art, and religion from the same angle they do.’46
The group insisted that there was no ambiguity in their position: ‘all
of us seek to shift power from the hands of the bourgeoisie to those
of the proletariat. Meanwhile, it is none the less necessary that the
experiments of the inner life continue and do so, of course, without
external or even marxist control.’47
For the surrealists, the exploration and articulation of reveries
and desires served to expose the poverty of a reality organised
solely for the perpetuation of capitalism. Their revolutionary
dreams were extravagant and undisciplined by any party standards:
their work was full of a rhetoric of revolution which prioritised the
spirit of revolt and the ‘metaphysics of the provocateur’.48 Robert
Desnos described the surrealist group as being held together by
‘something that resembled the fellowship of those who are going to
blow up a city in a spirit of revolt’,49 and for Breton: ‘It is revolt
itself, and revolt alone, that is the creator of life.’ 50 At his most
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provocative, Breton declared: ‘Surrealism was not afraid to make
for itself a tenet of total revolt, complete insubordination, of
sabotage according to rule, and…it still expects nothing save from
violence.’
The simplest surrealist act consists of dashing down into the
street, pistol in hand, and firing blindly, as fast as you can pull
the trigger, into the crowd. Anyone who, at least once in his
life, has not dreamed of thus putting an end to this petty system
of debasement and cretinisation in effect has a well-defined
place in that crowd, with his belly at barrel-level. 51
It was not surprising that the Party was as hostile to such ‘infantile
disorder’ as the surrealists were to the Party’s bureaucratic
seriousness. The populist ‘workerism’ of the PCF was completely at
odds with surrealism’s insistence that play, pleasure, spontaneity,
and the ‘outlaw principle’ were the real ground of human dignity,
and Tzara’s exuberant invocations of life and liberty in the 1918
manifesto had bequeathed a fondness for the autonomous passion of
the ‘soaring flight of black flags’ 52 of the anarchist tradition.
Regardless of their prevarications with the PCF, the surrealists’
belief that to ‘condemn the subversive is to condemn everything that
is not absolutely resigned’53 led to their involvement in and support
for a number of political causes. They were signatories to calls for
resistance to the fascist demonstrations in Paris in the 1930s, and
against Renault after the death of eight workers; Benjamin Péret
fought in Spain and he, Sadoul, and Aragon faced imprisonment for
their subversive publications. Breton enjoyed a celebrated
friendship with Trotsky; and the surrealists supported Moroccan
and Algerian struggles for independence. Indeed, it was the horrors
of the Moroccan war which led Breton to declare: ‘I believe it
impossible for us to avoid most urgently posing the question of the
social regime under which we live, I mean of the acceptance or the
non-acceptance of this regime.’ 54
For some, however, surrealism was always bluffing an anger
which Dada had really felt. ‘They give us a lot of piffle about the
revolution—first the revolution of the word, now the revolution in
t h e s t r e e t , ’ c o m p l a i n e d H e n r y M i l l e r. 5 5 D a d a wa s ‘ m o r e
entertaining. They had humour at least. The Surrealists are too
conscious of what they are doing. It’s fascinating to read about their
intentions, but when are they going to pull it off?’ 56 And although
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surrealism’s engagement with literary and artistic practice was
intended to be subversive, the movement always carried a serious
weight which Dada’s careless extravagances avoided. Nevertheless,
the surrealists cultivated an atmosphere of libertarian experiment
and purposeful desire which has continued to thrive, and although
some forms of surrealism lapsed into occultism, uncritical
eroticism, and repetitions of earlier literary and artistic projects,
others never lost their romantic attachment to revolutionary change
and the possibility of a transformed reality. After the collapse of the
‘official’ surrealist movement in the post-war years, a variety of
little papers, groups, and dispersed individuals continued to keep
what Jean Schuster has called the red thread running through the
surrealist rope in fine colour.57 And some of these were among the
currents which convened the Situationist International in 1957.
Ten years earlier, a group of surrealists had formed the
Revolutionary Surrealist Group in an effort to revive the political
urgency of a surrealism which had lost its way in France and among
those who, like Breton, had been most closely associated with the
‘official’ movement. Of the figures involved in this enterprise,
Christian Dotremont, a Belgian surrealist, and Asger Jorn, a Danish
painter, were later to have a great impact on the Situationist
International. Belgian surrealism had always retained a distinctive
character with people like Paul Nougé, Marcel Mariën, René
Magritte, and Jane Graverol producing some of the most radical
forms of experimental art and poetry. And, in a definitive move
away from the French movement, the group Cobra, which took its
name from the cities from which its protagonists hailed
(Copenhagen, Brussels, and Amsterdam), established a more
‘northern’ network of revolutionary artists. Dotremont and Jorn
were joined by Noiret, Constant, Corneille, and Appel, and the
group pledged itself to a collective onslaught on the specialisation
of art and the elucidation of its revolutionary role. The movement
blossomed, encompassing poets, musicians, painters, and theorists.
Some of its most interesting experiments involved architecture and
the city environment, with Constant developing a synthesis of
architectural and revolutionary concerns which was also to find its
place in the SI. This was also a theme developed by the International
Movement for an Imagist Bauhaus (IMIB), a group which fused
Enrico Baj’s Nuclear Art movement and the remnants of Cobra,
which had disbanded in 1951. Jorn remained one of the key figures
of this movement too, making contacts with an extraordinary
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variety of artists including the Italians Pinot-Gallizio and Simondo,
and in 1956, all these strands converged with the First World
Congress of Liberated Artists, a meeting held in the Italian town of
Alba, where Jorn, Pinot-Gallizio, and Simondo had worked the
previous summer. The congress paved the way for the establishment
of the Situationist International in 1957, at which the IMIB, the
legendary London Psychogeographical Society, and the Lettrist
International (LI) were finally brought together.
The bankruptcy of post-war surrealism, fatefully marked by the
1944 publication of Maurice Nadeau’s The History of Surrealism,
had also been noticed by the lettrists, a group which played a vital
role in the immediate history of the SI. The lettrists took
surrealism’s search for a creativity stripped of the layers of social
convention and meaning to a glorious extreme and, under the initial
direction of Isidore Isou, a Romanian living on the Parisian borders
of insight and insanity, the lettrists also tried to perfect the dadaist
break between words and meanings by freeing letters from words
themselves. As autonomous signs and hieroglyphs, letters could
provide the bricks of a new creative process, attracting new
references, meanings, and chosen significances. Isou privileged
creativity as the central purpose of human life, arguing that since
creation was no longer the prerogative of God, anyone could do it
and so become god (a position which encouraged his megalomania,
his passion for the construction of great systems of thought, and his
enduring will to tell the world of his amazing discoveries about
everything from music to mathematics). The lettrists indulged in
some Dada-like provocations; in 1950 they disrupted the Easter
Sunday mass in Notre Dame, and they attacked Charlie Chaplin’s
enthusiastic reception in Paris in 1952. Disagreements over this last
scandal provided the excuse for some of the lettrists to break with
Isou and establish the Lettrist International; including Debord, Gil
Wolman, and Michèle Bernstein, this group produced the bulletin
Potlatch and developed a number of the positions which were later
to form the basis on which the Situationist International was
established.
In the struggles and failures of the cultural movements of the first
half of the twentieth century, the nascent situationists saw the
possibility of a final assault on the distinction between art and
everyday life and all the means by which the construction of a
s o c i e t y e n j oy i n g t h e f r u i t s o f t e c h n o l o g i c a l a n d c u l t u r a l
achievement is denied. They were critical of the avant-garde’s
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The most radical gesture
failure to develop its spirit of revolt into a coherent critique, and
called for both the realisation of artistic transformations and the
suppression of art as a separated and specialised practice. But the
rhetoric of their criticism was suffused with surrealist provocation,
and the great destructive game of Dada was also taken into the
situationist project as a desire to clear the ground for new forms of
communication, participation, and subjective experience. For
Debord, Dada’s role ‘was to have delivered a mortal blow to the
traditional conception of culture’; as for surrealism, its assertion of
‘the sovereignty of desire and surprise, proposing a new use of life,
is much richer in constructive possibilities than is generally
thought’.58 Only by the suppression of art as a category in its own
right could the realisation and integration of the artistic and poetic
into everyday experience for which Dada and surrealism had longed
be achieved.
Just as in the first half of the nineteenth century revolutionary
theory arose out of philosophy (out of critical reflection on
philosophy, out of the crisis and death of philosophy), so now it
is going to rise once again out of modern art—out of poetry—
out of its supersession, out of what modern art has sought and
promised, out of the clean sweep it has made and of all the
values and rules of everyday behaviour.59
Long the cultural safety-valve of a society which ‘must above all
prevent a new setting out of revolutionary thought’, 60 the avantgarde
had become as specialised and alienated as any other aspect of
spectacular culture. Even so, Debord was convinced that the
achievements of its cultural critique remained necessary to the
success of any social revolution: the revolutionary movement
‘cannot establish authentic revolutionary conditions without
resuming the efforts of the cultural avant-garde toward the critique
of everyday life and its free construction’. 61
The situationists wanted to transcend the distinction between
revolutionary politics and cultural criticism once and for all, and
although there were later arguments and a major split on the
question of art, they certainly went further than their predecessors
in the collapse of these distinctions. Their initial interest, carried
over from the LI, was centred on the environment in which the
situations of the everyday are lived. Potlatch carried a number of
pieces on urbanism and the city which argued that architecture
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‘must reach the point of exciting passion’ 62 and converged in calls
for a unitary urbanism, a critical study of the city utilising all
artistic and technical resources. Not merely a variety of city
planning, unitary urbanism was intended to broaden architectural
concerns to the whole atmosphere of space and the possibilities of
living in it. This perspective was promoted by Constant, who stayed
on in Alba after the 1956 congress to design a sort of mobile city for
some gypsies camped on Pinot-Gallizio’s land. The building was to
be completely flexible, open to internal design and continual
modification according to the particular atmospheres in which its
inhabitants might choose to live.
This sort of unitary environment required the study and negation
of the relationship between the material world and its subjective
experience. Emotions, desires, and experiences of all sorts differ
according to the architecture of a space and the arrangements of
colours, sounds, textures, and lighting with which it is created. The
situationists pointed to the forms of conditioning imposed by
shopping malls, night clubs, adverts, and even police methods of
interrogation as evidence of the existence of a plethora of
techniques by which experiences, desires, attitudes, and behaviour
are presently manipulated. The width of streets, the heights of
buildings, the presence of trees, advertisements and lights, the
circulation of traffic, the colours of front doors, and the shapes of
windows: urban lives are shaped in the most subtle and neglected
ways by these arrangements of space. The situations in which we
live are created for us.
Yet neither the artist, for whom the deconstruction of the city is
too large a task, nor the revolutionary, for whom it is too
superstructural a concern, show any interest in the effects of
e nv i r o n m e n t s o n t h o s e w h o l iv e w i t h i n t h e m . T h i s w a s
incomprehensible to those involved in both the LI and the SI. ‘We
are bored in the city’, declared Ivan Chtcheglov in 1953: ‘we really
have to strain still to discover mysteries in the sidewalk
billboards’, 63 yet are discouraged from expressing this boredom by
the city’s insistence that it is the most exciting place to be. People
are similarly dissuaded
from making any criticism of architecture with the simple
argument that they need a roof over their heads, just as
television is accepted on the grounds that they need
information and entertainment. People are made to overlook
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the obvious fact that this information, this entertainment, and
this kind of dwelling place are not made for them, but without
them and against them.64
If the avant-garde had failed to deliver the transformation of
everyday reality it promised, so had the city planners: ‘Urbanism
promises happiness. It should be judged accordingly.’65 Again, it
was in the weighing of the actual against the promised and the
possible that the situationists sought the radical negation of the
spectacle.
The situationists’ desire to become psychogeographers, with an
understanding of the ‘precise laws and specific effects of the
geographical environment, consciously organised or not, on the
emotions and behaviour of individuals’,66 was intended to cultivate an
awareness of the ways in which everyday life is presently conditioned
and controlled, the ways in which this manipulation can be exposed
and subverted, and the possibilities for chosen forms of constructed
situations in the post-spectacular world. Only an awareness of the
influences of the existing environment can encourage the critique of
the present conditions of daily life, and yet it is precisely this concern
with the environment in which we live which is ignored.
The sudden change of ambiance in a street within the space of a
few meters; the evident division of a city into zones of distinct
psychic atmospheres; the path of least resistance which is
automatically followed in aimless strolls (and which has no
relation to the physical contour of the ground); the appealing or
repelling character of certain places—all this seems to be
neglected.67
Concealed by the functional drudgery of city life, such areas of
psychogeographical research were seen as the ground of a new realm
of experiment with the possibilities of everyday experience.
One of psychogeography’s principle means was the dérive. Long a
favourite practice of the dadaists, who organised a variety of
expeditions, and the surrealists, for whom the geographical form of
automatism was an instructive pleasure, the dérive, or drift, was
defined by the situationists as the ‘technique of locomotion without a
goal’,68 in which ‘one or more persons during a certain period drop
their usual motives for movement and action, their relations, their
work and leisure activities, and let themselves be drawn by the
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attractions of the terrain and the encounters they find there’.69 The
dérive acted as something of a model for the ‘playful creation’70 of all
human relationships.
Unlike surrealist automatism, the dérive was not a matter of
surrendering to the dictates of an unconscious mind or irrational
force. Indeed, the situationists’ criticisms of surrealism concluded
that ‘the unconscious imagination is poor, that automatic writing is
monotonous, and that the whole genre of ostentatious surrealist
“weirdness” has ceased to be very surprising’.71 Nor was everything
subordinated to the sovereignty of choice: to dérive was to notice the
way in which certain areas, streets, or buildings resonate with states
of mind, inclinations, and desires, and to seek out reasons for
movement other than those for which an environment was designed.
It was very much a matter of using an environment for one’s own
ends, seeking not only the marvellous beloved by surrealism but
bringing an inverted perspective to bear on the entirety of the
spectacular world. Potlatch carried a lovely example of this inversion
of priorities in the form of a letter addressed to The Times protesting
against the redevelopment of London’s Chinese quarter. After a
defence of the area itself, the letter ends:
Anyway, it is inconvenient that this Chinese quarter of London
should be destroyed before we have the opportunity to visit it
and carry out certain psychogeographical experiments we are at
present undertaking…if modernisation appears to you, as it does
to us, to be historically necessary, we would counsel you to carry
your enthusiasm into areas more urgently in need of it, that is to
say, to your political and moral institutions.72
In spite of situationist differences with the surrealist project, the
situation ists’ dérive was of course inspired by surrealist strolls. It was
Breton who had described the street, ‘with its disturbances and its
glances’, as ‘my one true element. There I partook, as nowhere else’,
he wrote, ‘of the wind of circumstance.’73 Surrealism had invoked a
world of floating encounters through which the hunter of marvels
drifts according to whim and desire.
The means were simple enough; merely buy a Sunday ticket at
a suburban railway station and shunt for hours and hours on all
the tracks of a landscape of dislocation, on a journey whose
end is never fixed in advance.74
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The surrealists had also called for the ‘irrational embellishment’ of
Paris; in 1933, Le Surréalisme au service de la révolution carried
Breton’s responses to the question of whether one should ‘preserve,
move, modify, change or suppress’ a variety of Parisian landmarks.
The towers of Notre Dame were to be replaced by ‘an enormous
glass cruet, one of the bottles filled with blood and the other with
sperm’; the Palace of Justice was to be razed and the site ‘covered
by a magnificent graffiti to be seen from an airplane’; and the Opera
transformed into ‘a fountain of perfumes’ with the staircase
reconstructed ‘from the bones of prehistoric animals’. 75 This
exercise was inverted in Potlatch with lettrist demands for the
rational embellishment of the city of Paris, in which the metro was
to be opened at night, the prisons opened, museums abolished, and
statues renamed. Four solutions to the existence of churches were
suggested: while Debord wanted them totally destroyed, Wolman
wanted to empty them of all religious significance, Fillon argued
they should be kept as places in which to experience fear, and
Bernstein, most imaginatively, wanted to let them fall into ruins.76
With a backward glance at surrealism, Debord declared: ‘That
which changes our ways of seeing the streets is more important than
what changes our way of seeing painting.’ 77 Avant-garde disruptions
of artistic and literary values had spawned a variety of means of
displacing the usual contexts, meanings, and purposes of images
and signs, and the situationist extension of such subversions to the
environment developed such dislocation into a technique with wide
political application. Out of the tradition which took letters out of
words, inverted Notre Dame, and put urinals in galleries, the
situation ists developed an armoury of confusing weapons intended
constantly to provoke critical notice of the totality of lived
experience and reverse the stultifying passivity of the spectacle.
‘Life can never be too disorienting,’ wrote Debord and Wolman, in
support of which they described a friend’s experience wandering
‘through the Harz region of Germany while blindly following the
directions of a map of London’. 78
Such disorientation was not craved for its own sake. But as a
means of showing the concealed potential of experimentation,
pleasure, and play in everyday life, the situationists considered a
little chaos to be a valuable means of exposing the way in which the
experiences made possible by capitalist production could be
appropriated within a new and enabling system of social relations.
Both the experiments of the avant-garde and spectacular society
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itself reveal the possibilities for the construction of situations, the
manipulation of environments, and the creation of atmospheres and
ambiances. To be able to play with techniques of conditioning and
experiment with a multitude of environments and atmospheres in a
world in which the imperatives of work and survival have long since
passed was the situationist dream. Theirs was not a low-tech or notech vision of the future, but a world in which technological
achievement comes into its own. ‘We have invented the architecture
and the urbanism that cannot be realised without the revolution of
everyday life—without the appropriation of conditioning by
everyone, its endless enrichment, its fulfillment’79 Chtcheglov’s
remarkable ‘Formulary for a New City’ experimented with ‘a
thousand ways of modifying life’. ‘The hacienda must be built,’ he
declared, a phrase which enjoys a continuing significance in
contemporary culture. 80 ‘Everyone will live in his own personal
“cathedral”, so to speak. There will be rooms more conducive to
dreams than any drug, and houses where one cannot help but love.
Others will be irresistibly alluring to travellers.’ 81 Chtcheglov
considered the possibilities of the mobile house, changeable city
environments, and the establishment of such areas as a ‘Bizarre
Quarter’, a ‘Happy Quarter’, a ‘Sinister Quarter’, and advocated the
‘changing of landscapes from one hour to the next’ which again
would result in ‘complete disorientation’.82 His message, one which
ultimately got him locked away, was essentially this: ‘It has become
essential to bring about a complete spiritual transformation by
bringing to light forgotten desires and by creating entirely new
ones. And by carrying out an intensive propaganda in favour of
these desires.’ 83
With the establishment of the Situationist International at the
1957 unification conference in the small Italian town of Cosio
d’Arroscia, the attempt to weld these disparate desires for the
transformation of the everyday into a coherent revolutionary
perspective started in earnest. ‘First of all we think the world must
be changed,’ began one of the documents presented to the meeting.
‘We want the most liberating change of the society and life in which
we find ourselves confined. We know that this change is possible
through appropriate actions.’ 84 Arguing that revolutionary action
was lagging behind ‘the development of modern possibilities of
production which call for a superior organization of the world’,85
t h e d o c u m e n t d ev e l o p e d C h t c h eg l o v ’ s d e m a n d s f o r t h e
multiplication of desires and the construction of situations by those
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who live them: ‘we have to multiply poetic subjects and objects […]
and we have to organize games of these poetic objects among these
poetic subjects.’ This, it continued, ‘is our entire program, which is
essentially transitory. Our situations will be ephemeral, without a
future: passageways. The permanence of art or anything else does
not enter into our considerations.’86
The contingency of this position was indicative of the
situationists’ distrust of all foundations, essences, and absolutes.
The spectacle and its negation were seen to be engaged in a
perpetual articulation; the radical subject invoked by the
situationists desires the destruction of the mediations of the
spectacle, but is drawn on no rigorous conception of human nature
and has no universal foundation. The immediate communion of
love, the free expression of creativity, and the realisation of dreams
are never merely denied by the spectacle; on the contrary, they are
constantly advertised and promoted, and the circulation of
commodities depends on their maintenance. Nevertheless, the
situationists’ enthusiasm for life in the face of spectacular survival
was often posed in terms of a faith in the existence of deep-seated
desires. Vaneigem was convinced that creativity, love, and play ‘are
to life what the needs for nourishment and shelter are to survival’,87
constituting a fundamental ‘other’ to capitalist relations. For him,
the alienation of the spectacle is not complete: the passion to create
reveals the persistence of desires for self-realisation; love reveals
the will for real communication; and play reveals the desire for free
and chosen forms of participation in the world. And there are
moments, be they poetic or erotic, which seem to represent some
pure pole of authenticity which will always survive the vacuous
equivalence of commodity relations.
The Revolution of Everyday Life was based on the conviction that
people live ‘separated from one another, separated from what they
are in others, and separated from themselves. The history of
humanity is the history of one basic separation which precipitates
and determines all the others: the social distinction between masters
and slaves.’ 88 In capitalist societies, the ‘struggle for the whole man’
is constituted as a class conflict, and only the end of this
fundamental separation between classes can facilitate the
transcendence of all other distinctions and divisions. But the
situationists were not content merely to state the historical necessity
of the class struggle. In what is perhaps one of his most famous
statements, Vaneigem declared: ‘People who talk about revolution
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and class struggle without referring explicitly to everyday life,
without understanding what is subversive about love and what is
positive in the refusal of constraints, such people have a corpse in
their mouth.’89 This was not merely a dig at the revolutionary who
beats his lover, or the party whose discipline is worse than that of
the workplace. It was an appeal for all contestation to issue from the
subjective experience of everyday life, a demand for the end of a
specialised politics removed from the very realm in which rebellion
and dissent have their origins. Individual subjectivity ‘is rooted in
the desire to realise oneself by transforming the world’,90 the will to
construct daily life with ‘the most thoroughgoing fusion of reason
and passion’. 91 Embarrassed by subjective experiences, dreams, and
desires, people tend to ignore and reject the inner realm in which are
dealt ‘the most deadly blows to morality, authority, language and
our collective hypnotic sleep’. 92 Yet it is here, in the intimacy and
spontaneity of one’s own self, that there persists a ‘lived immediacy
threatened on all sides yet not yet alienated’. 93
Who can gauge the striking-power of an impassioned
daydream, of pleasure taken in love, of a nascent desire, of a
rush of sympathy? Everyone seeks spontaneously to extend
such brief moments of real life; everyone wants basically to
make something out of their everyday life.94
This desire, the will to really live and experience the world at its
cutting edge, was said to be the motor-force of both the spectacle
and its revolutionary negation. It sells fast cars as surely as it
produces dissatisfaction; it is continually commodified and in turn
wrenched free from spectacular relations in a perpetual struggle for
its realisation.
For the situationists, neither the factory nor the canvas were
privileged sites of this contestation between desire and the false
promise of its fulfilment. It is everyday life which provides the
ground for a revolutionary theory and practice intended to cut
through all separations and specialisations. ‘We still have to place
everyday life at the center of everything…. Everyday life is the
measure of all things: of the fulfillment or rather the nonfulfillment
o f h u m a n r e l a t i o n s ; o f t h e u s e o f l ive d t i m e ; o f a r t i s t i c
experimentation; of revolutionary politics.’95 This was a position
shared by the sociologist Henri Lefebvre. Indeed, there is much
debate about who influenced whom: Lefebvre was involved in the
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The most radical gesture
same pre-situationist milieu, and although the situationists
considered him an incorrigible specialist in social critique and
disassociated themselves from his work when he plagiarised their
‘Theses on the Paris Commune’, 96 many of their ideas converged
with those expressed in his Critique de la vie quotidienne, published
in three volumes between 1947 and 1981. In this analysis of the
alienation of the modern world, Lefebvre argued that everyday life
and the commodities, roles, and discourses which populate it form
the basis of all social experience and the true realm of political
contestation. Lefebvre’s work had been introduced by Dotremont to
the Revolutionary Surrealist Group in the 1940s, where his calls for
an art that would transform the everyday (‘Let everyday life become
a work of art! Let every technical means be employed for the
transformation of everyday life!’ 97) had an immediate effect. For
both the situationists and Lefebvre, everyday life is the very realm
over which we should have control, yet it is experienced as
mundane and dull in its ubiquity. On the escape from the
fragmentation and mediocrity of our own experience, we run
blindly towards the promises of wholeness, fulfilment, and unity
implicit in the world of the abundant commodity. And it is in the
hopelessness of this scramble that the disjunction between the
possibilities of life and the impoverished realities of survival are
most keenly felt; it is here that the revolution becomes a living and
immediate possibility.
The transformation of the everyday ‘is not reserved for some
va g u e f u t u r e bu t i s p l a c e d i m m e d i a t e l y b e f o r e u s b y t h e
development of capitalism and its unbearable demands.’98
One can thus conclude that if people censor the question of
their own everyday life, it is both because they are aware of its
unbearable misery and because sooner or later they sense—
whether they admit it or not—that all the real possibilities, all
the desires that have been frustrated by the functioning of
social life, were focussed there, and not at all in the specialised
activities or distractions. That is, awareness of the profound
richness and energy abandoned in everyday life is inseparable
from awareness of the poverty of the dominant organisation of
this life.99
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It is ‘life itself, which is cruelly absent’ from the everyday. ‘People
are as deprived as possible of communication and self-realisation.
Deprived of the opportunity to personally make their own
h i s t o r y. ’ 1 0 0 A n d t h i s d e p r iva t i o n m a n i f e s t s i t s e l f i n t h e
spectacularisation of every aspect of life which, fragmented into
‘specialised activities and distractions ’ and continually shown to
those who might otherwise be living it, is contemplated at one
remove. A variety of roles as broad and tempting as the spectrum of
material commodities is offered for a consumption that precludes
the possibility of any real and autonomous engagement: it is not
possible to potter in the garden without becoming a gardener;
putting up a few shelves is difficult without assuming the role of a
‘do-it-yourselfer’; listening to the music of a particular band
involves a host of extraneous categorisations; and travel is difficult
without tourism. Experiences are offered in ‘everything included
packages’ not confined to holidays but manifest in shopping
centres, arts centres, theme parks, and leisure centres. An interest in
one aspect of such packages is difficult to sustain: if you like X,
you’ll love Y. And such promises are flattering. We like to be told
who we really are because our alienation makes us unable to decide
for ourselves. Even the refusal of a preestablished set of
commodified patterns leads us into the roles, equally pre-ordained
and unthreatening, of the individualist, the eccentric, the
disaffected, or the revolutionary.
Vaneigem pressed the point in The Revolution of Everyday Life:
‘The stereotyped images of the star, the poor man, the communist,
the murderer-for-love, the law-abiding citizen, the rebel, the
bourgeois, will replace man, putting in his place a system of
multicopy categories.’ 101 The commodification of human choice
places every experience within a predefined role and enforces
identification with a spectacular and specific category from which
an experience of the whole is impossible.
Under what we have called ‘the colonization of everyday life’,
the only possible changes are changes of fragmentary roles. In
terms of more or less inflexible conventions, one is
successively citizen, head of family, sexual partner, politician,
specialist, professional, producer, consumer. Yet what boss
doesn’t himself feel bossed? The proverb applies to everyone:
you sometimes get a fuck, but you always get fucked!102
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The fragmentation of roles within modern society is an immediate
consequence of the increasing division of labour demanded by
capitalist relations of production; Lukács had observed that the
specialisation of skills ‘leads to the destruction of every image of
the whole’,103 and for the situationists, the specialist and the expert
were roles indicative of the separation running throughout the
spectacle. Yet for all the authority and respect apparently invested in
the expert, each ‘is alienated in being out of place with the others;
he knows the whole of one fragment and knows no realisation’. 104
In every field—the production of cars, the reproduction of
knowledge, and the servicing of people—a wealth of detailed
knowledge is held in the isolation of suspended animation from the
totality of social experience. Every lifestyle demands a commitment
which can only be transgressed at the point of stardom, when the
expert in one field is judged fit to pronounce on any other.
Politicians can slide into broadcasting and athletes into Parliament
with an ease which reveals the emptiness of all spectacular roles.
And it is in the celebrities presented by the spectacle that the full
spectrum of human possibilities is offered for consumption. The
stars of the public realm have adventures, romances, scandals, and
careers on behalf of those who can only spectate: ‘Forgetting life,
one can identify with a range of images, from the brutish conqueror
and brutish slave at one pole to the saint and pure hero at the
other.’ 105 In The Society of the Spectacle, Debord argued that the
celebrity, ‘the spectacular representation of a living human
being’, 106 ‘the opposite of the individual’, 107 epitomises the
alienated identification demanded by the spectacle. Glamorous
objects of contemplation admired from afar, stars are shown
basking in the spectacular whole: able to buy all the things in the
shop and the shop as well, celebrities are model citizens who
compensate for their spectators’ inability to experience the whole.
They present the image of integrated individuals, ‘the admirable
people in which the system personifies itself who are, nevertheless,
‘well known for not being what they are’. 108 The superstars of the
1960s and 1970s have now been superseded by the short-lived
banality of the nine-day wonder, a development which perhaps
reinforces the situationist argument that the real people are as
nothing in comparison to the equivalent slots they fill.
‘Eventually’, observed Vaneigem, ‘identification with anything
at all, like the need to consume anything at all, becomes more
important than brand loyalty to a particular type of car, idol, or
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politician.’109 As the search for some identity amidst the distance
and unreality of modern life intensifies, it ‘matters little whether
people are good or bad, honest or criminal, left-wing or right-wing:
the form is irrelevant’. 110 The transformation of ways of life into
spectacular roles means that it is impossible to live them out with
any sense of pleasure or fulfilment; events and experiences are valid
only in terms of the representations and meanings given within the
spectacular whole. And the vague awareness that one is performing
a predefined role which carries its own set of associations,
messages, and images means that an unfortunate self-consciousness
creeps into the most ordinary of gestures. Life becomes clichéd, and
real emotions can only be expressed in borrowed languages.
Vaneigem argued that even the tiniest of gestures—opening a door,
holding a teacup, a facial expression— and the most private and
individual actions—coming home, making tea, arguing with a
lover—have always already been represented and shown to us
within the spectacle.
The mechanism of the alienating spectacle wields such force
that private life reaches the point of being defined as that which
is deprived of spectacle; the fact that one escapes roles and
spectacular categories is experienced as an additional
privation, as a malaise which power uses as a pretext to reduce
everyday life to insignificant gestures.111
Packaged and sold back to us, little can be done with a sense of
authenticity: every gesture belongs elsewhere and returns to us as a
hostile, external, and alienated moment
What is meant by the everyday in ‘everyday language’ is
therefore the mundanity and the banality that is excluded from
spectacular representation. Devoid of its glamorous representation,
experience becomes almost embarrassing, something of which one
feels ashamed; an event without a camera barely occurs, and a
commodity is meaningless without its advertised image. Without
representation, life might as well not happen at all. Football
provides an excellent example of this removal of real experience
and its return as a simulated version of itself. Suppressed as a game
of wild and often violent abandon played in the streets of late
nineteenth-century towns whose normal business was suspended for
several days, football became increasingly specialised; removed to
the stadium and then to the television, participation in the sport
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became confined to club membership, gambling on the result,
intimate knowledge of players and leagues, and the acquisition of
e m b l e m s o f i nvo l v e m e n t : b a d g e s , h a t s , s c a r ve s , v i d e o s ,
programmes, and, in the age of ‘football hooliganism’, scars and
trophies won in street and terrace fighting. It is well known that
supporters always run as they leave matches; when not pursued by
police horses this is generally because what the followers of the
game really want to do is play it. And of course they do: there are
thousands of league clubs in Britain, the big teams still scout for
talent among the amateurs, and in spite of the ubiquity of ‘no ball
games’ signs, goal posts are still painted on city walls. But the ‘real’
football is now the spectacle of football; the televised match
becomes better than ‘being there’, and all forms of participation in
the game are downgraded or outlawed. ‘Football fans took to the
Alcester streets following England’s win in the World Cup on
Sunday’, reported a small Midlands paper in 1990. ‘Six people
started an impromptu football game at the traffic lights in Station
Road, watched by more supporters. But their game came to a
premature end when local beat officers confiscated the ball and the
crowd went home.’112
Desires for pleasure, excitement, and adventure are raised and
dashed at every turn, subjected to the palliatives of consumption
and diverted into banal scandals and pseudo-events. A diet of
fabricated and exaggerated news about the fictional characters of
soap-opera lives is offered in response to demands for real life and
intensity themselves raised by promises of the next episode, and a
concern for public opinion through polls, surveys, and market
research grows in inverse proportion to the real effect the public can
have. Wars, elections, and disasters assume a spectacular unreality
w h i c h m a ke s t h e m i n d i s t i n g u i s h a b l e f r o m t h e i r fi c t i o n a l
counterparts, and participation in the public realm becomes an
isolated spectator sport of its own. Developments in communication
and information technology make free and immediate exchange
more possible, while the impoverishment of their use merely
reinforces the alienated pseudo-participation allowed by the
spectacle. Teletext and Oracle may allow viewers to vote by
telephone on everything from nuclear war to the next episode of a
soap opera, but the scenario in which a nation of people unable to
take control of their own lives reaches in one movement for the
telephone in order to determine the life of a fictional character
conjures a picture of absolute alienation, the appearance of
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participation, control, and communication emptied of all meaning.
‘The trick’, writes Vaneigem, ‘is that the spectators of the cultural
and ideological vacuum are here enlisted as its organizers. The
spectacle’s inanity is made up for by forcing its spectators…to
participate in it.’113
Even activities which might threaten the very existence of the
spectacle are brought within the confines of commodified ways of
life and, for the situationists, the colonisation of even the most
radical gestures constituted one of the spectacle’s most subtle
mechanisms of control. The communist and the rebel may be
consumed as readily as every other role, with their spectacular
appearance precluding the possibility of their real experience. One
cannot be a real rebel, but one can assume and consume the image
of rebellion, most obviously manifest in material commodities—
badges, T-shirts, posters, haircuts—to the advantage of the system
as a whole. Dissent is turned into a spectacle of its own, and rebels
become spectators of their own rebellion, consuming the life in
which they want to participate, and slotting into a seductive and
glamorous role in which they can have no real effect: ‘all individual
reality, being directly dependent on social power and completely
shaped by that power, has assumed a social character. Indeed, it is
only inasmuch as individual reality is not that it is allowed to
appear.’ 114 Having bought all the right clothes and read all the right
books, would-be rebels find themselves unwittingly supporting
commodity relations. Consumers of struggle and voyeurs of distant
revolution, they are presented with pre-ordained paths: there are
parties to join, papers to sell, meetings to attend, and
demonstrations in which to intervene. For the most sincere of
activists, the image of the revolutionary, the union leader, or the
party organiser bears a seductive power of its own which belittles
the reality of their political engagement. Dissatisfaction, wrote
Debord, ‘itself becomes a commodity as soon as the economics of
affluence finds a way of applying its production methods to this
particular raw material’. 115 Even the heroin addict, the football
hooligan, the graffiti artist, and the truant are offered as predefined
options to the disaffected who, in their attempts to escape from
a l i e n a t i o n i n t o a n e x p r e s s i o n o f i n d iv i d u a l i t y, b e c o m e
accommodated within roles as hostile and removed as those from
which they are escaping. Anything which arises within the spectacle
is subject to its equivalence, and even the most hostile action can be
made to reproduce the alienation of the whole.
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But the situationists were not weighed down by such reflections.
‘On the other hand’, Vaneigem pointed out, ‘the spectacle is fast
approaching a saturation point, the point immediately prior to the
eruption of everyday reality.’ 116 There is resistance to the readymade
role and, surrounded by a glamour they cannot possibly sustain,
spectacular ways of life continually reveal their poverty. The
‘structures of the spectacle are in crisis’, he wrote, ‘because so
many balls have to be kept in the air at the same time. The spectacle
has to be everywhere, so it becomes diluted and selfcontradictory.’ 117 Vaneigem argued that ‘roles now operate on a
level perilously close to their own negation: already the average
failure is hard put to it to play his role properly, and some
maladjusted people refuse their roles altogether’. 118 And among
these refuseniks are ‘those who develop a theory and practice of this
refusal. From such maladjustment to spectacular society a new
poetry of real experience and a reinvention of life are bound to
spring.’119 Writing in 1967, Vaneigem did not of course have long to
wait before he saw this new poetry in action on the streets of Paris.
The events of 1968 are remembered for the irruption of play,
festivity, spontaneity, and the imagination into the political realm; a
conjunction of which the situationists and the entire history from
which they emerged had dreamt for years. And in spite of desperate
attempts to separate workers from students and leaders from
followers, this was certainly a time in which the pre-ordained roles
and multicopy categories of the spectacle were refused. ‘The
construction of situations will be the continual realisation of a big
deliberately chosen game’, 120 the LI had declared, identifying the
‘systematic provocative dissemination of a host of proposals
tending to turn the whole of life into an exciting game’121 as one of
the great tactics of subversion and the goal of all provocation.
‘Never work!’ declared the slogans of 1968, opposing all labour to
the playful activity of the post-revolutionary world. And in 1934,
when Breton had described the objects of early surrealist criticism,
it was work again which was his greatest target.
Intellectually, it was vulgar rationalism and chop logic that
more than anything else caused our horror and our destructive
impulse. Morally, it was all duties: religious, civic, and of the
family. Socially, it was work. Did not Rimbaud say: ‘Never
will I work, O torrents of flame!’122
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This antipathy to work had characterised much surrealist writing.
‘There is no use living if one has to work,’123 wrote Breton, and it
was common currency that openness to the surreal ‘presupposes
availability and only the idle can be at the complete disposal of
chance’. 124 The situationists’ analysis of capitalist development
made such rhetoric a real possibility; Lautréamont’s dream of a
poetry made by all became the hope for a poetic world constructed
by all. ‘Just as it makes utopias possible’, wrote Vaneigem, so
‘modern technological expertise also does away with the purely
fairy tale nature of dreams. All my wishes can come true—from the
moment that modern technology is put at their service.’ 125
Revolution was conceived as the first freely constructed game, a
collective transformation of reality in which history is seized by all
its participants. Play, pleasure, and participation were to be the
hallmarks of a new form of social organisation appropriate to a
world in which the imperatives of survival no longer legitimise
relations of domination, alienation, or the separation between the
individual and the world. The euphoric fluidity of the revolutionary
moment, in which experiences gain a tangible immediacy which
makes a few days seem like years, comes out of the free and
experimental play unleashed by the total rejection of existing rules.
‘Revolutionary moments are carnivals in which the individual life
celebrates its unification with a regenerated society,’ 126 declared
Vaneigem, invoking the festivity of a world displaced by an
immediate passion for the here and now: ‘the first few days of an
insurrection are a walk-over simply because nobody pays the
slightest attention to the enemy’s rules: because they invent a new
game and because everyone takes part in its elaboration.’ 127 The joy
of freely assumed roles is rediscovered in the midst of the
contestation of those previously prescribed, and out of the ruins of
commodified lifestyles and definitions emerge new patterns of
playfully chosen and flexible identities like those one fleetingly
adopts when playing charades or childhood games of make-believe.
And play is also the charm with which the revolution is protected
from hierarchy and mediation.
An efficiently hierarchized army can win a war, but not a
revolution; an undisciplined mob can win neither. The problem
then is how to organize, without creating a hierarchy; in other
words, how to make sure that the leader of the game doesn’t
become just ‘the Leader’. The only safeguard against authority
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and rigidity setting in is a playful attitude. Creativity plus a
machine gun is an unstoppable combination.128
The situationists wanted to develop this provocative love of play
into a way of life. For Vaneigem, ‘only play can deconsecrate, open
up the possibilities of total freedom…the freedom, for example, to
turn Chartres Cathedral into a fun-fair, into a labyrinth, into a
shooting-range, into a dream landscape’. 129 Games were no longer
to be the activities of alienated leisure time; freed from this
separation and with a ‘radical negation of the element of
competition’, 130 playing in the ruins of the spectacle was to be the
central activity of everyday life. Play was seen as the stuff of life
where work had been the stuff of survival: ‘Ludic attraction is the
only possible basis for a non-alienated labour, i.e. productive
work’, 131 and the ethic of play, adventure, and a creative,
participatory life was posed as the negation of the entire spectacular
perspective. ‘We must start to play right now if the future is not to
become impossible. […] The vital objectives of a struggle for the
construction of everyday life are the sensitive key points of all
hierarchical power.’132
This conception of play was not, of course, sitting in the free
realm untainted by spectacular relationships that is the
revolutionary waiting room. Play and the participation it allows also
fuels the spectacular world where, diverted into commodified roles
and lifestyles, it both squanders and raises the desire for the real life
invoked by the situationists. Neither was play the only point of
contradiction to the impoverished forms of expression and
exchange they invoked. Vaneigem sought points of opposition to
c o m m o d i t y ex c h a n g e i n ev e r y c o n c e iva b l e a r e a o f l i f e ,
investigations which led him through detailed histories of festivity,
gratuity, unrestrained love, and all expressions of individuality. ‘We
must rediscover the pleasure of giving,’ he wrote. ‘What beautiful
potlaches the affluent society will see—whether it likes it or no—
when the exuberance of the younger generation discovers the pure
gift’, 133 he declared, invoking the feudal contempt for exchange as a
‘will to deny interchangeability’ in which ‘so much room was left
for play, humanity, gratuitousness, that inhumanity, religion and
solemnity came at times to appear as secondary to such
preoccupations as war, love, friendship or hospitality.’ 134 And even
though the ‘cramped style of the nobility was only a crude sketch of
the grand style which will be invented by masters without slaves’, it
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was a ‘style of life nonetheless—a world away from the wretched
forms of mere survival which ravage the individual’s existence in
our time.’135 Like the surrealists, Vaneigem saw love offering ‘the
perfect model of communication: the orgasm, the total fusion of two
separate beings. It is a glimpse of a transformed universe.’ 136
Diverted into a host of clichéd, commodified, and sacrificial
relationships, love is a long way from the point at which it would be
possible to say: ‘I know you don’t love me because you love only
yourself. I am just the same. So love me.’ 137 But it conjures the
longing for a world in which such honesty and authenticity might be
possible, and is ‘bound to overflow into the will to transform the
whole of human activity, into the necessity of building a world
where lovers feel themselves to be everywhere free.’ 138 Vaneigem
was convinced that ‘all pleasure embodies the search for total,
unitary satisfaction, in every sphere’,139 arguing that the dream of
the absolute, excess, realisation, and a world in which words like
‘utterly’ could find a meaning, spills out of every moment of
pleasure, eroticism, sensuality, and emotion.
But even Vaneigem’s exuberant defences of radical subjectivity
did not depend on the essentialist conceptions of truth, reality, and
desire he sometimes evoked. ‘I realise that I have given the
subjective will an easy time in this book’, he wrote, ‘but let no one
reproach me for this without first considering the extent to which
the objective conditions of the contemporary world advance the
cause of subjectivity day after day. Everything starts from
subjectivity, but nothing stays there.’140 Vaneigem did speak of the
desire to build a passionate life, the passion for play, love, and
creativity but, contrary to the impression given by some of his own
more passionate and creative passages, the desire to live is not some
inherent characteristic squashed and repressed by capitalist social
relations. Endorsing Debord’s insistence that the ‘subject can only
arise out of society—that is, out of the struggle that society
embodies’,141 Vaneigem defined the subjective desire for life as a
‘political decision’, made by those who refuse a world in which the
‘guarantee that we shall not die of starvation entails the risk of
dying of boredom’. 142
The desire to live is chosen in the knowledge that the end of
scarcity, the needs of survival, and the necessity of work have been
made possible by capitalism and are stemmed only by its
perpetuation. None of the building blocks of situationist theory—
the subject, history, class, desire—were conceived as objective and
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ahistorical characteristics waiting to be identified, discovered, and
labelled within a theoretical construction. Not even the creativity
and spontaneity which could transform the everyday were regarded
as the pure expressions of desire unleashed. And although Vaneigem
defined spontaneity as ‘the true mode of being of individual
creativity, creativity’s initial, immaculate form, unpolluted at the
source and as yet unthreatened by the mechanisms of cooptation’,143 he also pointed out that spontaneity ‘can never spring
from internalised restraints, even subconscious ones, nor can it
survive the effects of alienating abstraction and spectacular cooptation: it is a conquest, not a given’. 144 The post-revolutionary
world is one in which people will be free to make and realise
themselves in the world as they wish; a world in which the struggle
for survival in which we are now trapped will become the struggle
for life. ‘History is leading us to the crossroads where radical
subjectivity is destined to encounter the possibility of chan- ging
the world.’145
The radical subject endorsed by Vaneigem is not waiting in some
haven for the day of its release: it is actually made possible by the
development of capitalist forces of production and the contestation
of the relations in which they arise. It is a free consciousness which
emerges in the course of its daily resistance to the spectacular
relations in which it arises and will decide its own nature in the
process of their final contestation. Its desires are advertised on the
underground, given away with ten gallons of diesel, and promoted
in the entire ideology of spectacular life. They are offered in the
form of self-contained and ‘unitary’ palliatives, from which no
overspill is possible but which, according to Vaneigem, nevertheless
‘entail two risks for Power. In the first place they fail to satisfy, and
in the second they tend to foster the will to build a real social
unity.’ 146 It was the possibility of exploiting this double danger
which encouraged situationist explorations of how the spectacle’s
own diversionary tactics could in turn be diverted into revolutionary
weapons.
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Chapter 3
‘. . . a single choice: suicide or
revolution’
The path to the magnificent future envisaged by the situationists was not,
of course, without its dangers, and one of the distinguishing features of
situationist theory was its recognition that all forms of criticism, dissent,
and resistance occupy an internal relation to the system they oppose. No
matter how impassioned or desiring, it is impossible for the subject to
stand outside the spectacle and pronounce on it from a position of clean
removal, and any attempt to develop a critical analysis of the totality of
social and discursive relations must recognise that the meanings, tactics,
and goals with which it works are always already implicated within the
relations of power they resist. The situationists did not, however, accept
that the means and ends of resistance are always already defined by these
relations, a position characteristic of many of the post-68 philosophies
considered in the next chapter. The most radical of gestures is indeed
vulnerable to integration, and expressions of dissent are often deliberately
fostered as political safety-valves. But the situationists were convinced
that none of this precludes the possibility of evading, subverting, and
interrupting the processes by which effective criticism is rendered
harmless.
Situationist talk of the recuperation of dissent was intended to
convey the subtlety and effectiveness by which criticism of the
spectacle is enlisted in its support. It carried a stronger meaning
than terms such as ‘integration’, ‘co-option’, or the ‘repressive
tolerance’ identified by Marcuse, 1 for although each of these
expressed the way in which dissenting voices can be rendered
harmless by their absorption into the spectacle, the notion of
recuperation suggested that they are actually subject to processes of
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The most radical gesture
inversion which give an entirely new and affirmative meaning to
critical gestures. Represented in the spectacle, the vocabulary of
revolutionary discourse is taken up and used to support the existing
networks of power: the theory ‘that was developed by the strength
of the armed people now develops the strength of those who disarm
the people’. 2 Change, self-management, and autonomy have
become the prerogatives of the right; revolution, the realisation of
dreams, and the possibilities of a transformed life are now the
domain of the advertising industry.
Although the situationists were neither brave nor foolish enough
to think they could avoid engagement with the recuperative powers
of the spectacle, they were convinced that any critical project must
endeavour to sidestep and expose the whole process by which
criticism is turned against itself. This effort determined the entire
style, the methods, and organisation of the movement. Sometimes it
produced an atmosphere of rigorous self-criticism and demands for
perfection which even the SI was ultimately unable to fulfil, and the
situationists did not always escape the implications of many of their
attacks on other currents of radical thought and activity. But their
often playful and disarming assumptions of arrogant superiority
enabled them to produce devastating criticisms of many of those
ostensibly engaged in radical critique for their complicity with the
relations they sought to undermine. Condemning the cultural
integration of artists, the pseudoradicalism of students, and the
unions’ role in the pacification and absorption of dissent, the
situationists showed how each assumes a spectacular and supportive
role. The demands of anarchists and Utopians were decried as
incoherent and confused by their deferral of revolution to some
future point of magical metamorphosis; the prototype parties of the
revolutionary Left were seen as enabling the spectacle to parade its
image of tolerant pluralism while at the same time reproducing the
hierarchy, bureaucracy, and mediations of capitalist relations.
Radical academics provided the appearance of revolutionary
critique while similarly reproducing the specialisation of
knowledge and the lucrative elitism of their own roles, and those
still committed to cultural production were dismissed for their
displays of naïve self-interest.
A society in which ‘the individual’s own gestures are no longer
his own, but rather those of someone else who represents them to
him’ 3 is capable of moving every experience and expression into a
representation of itself. Critical discourse is subject to the same
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77
qualities of fragmentation, stasis, equivalence, and vacuity which
mark every commodified aspect of modern society: turned into
spectacle, criticism becomes an object of contemplation itself. Its
impact no greater than that of the romantic novel or the weather
forecast, it serves only to strengthen the image of rebellion and
dissent willingly cultivated by the spectacular whole. Without the
slightest hint of suppression or intolerance, the spectacle ensures
that the appearance of real dissent precludes its real appearance. It
becomes a part of that which it criticised and, like any other result
of alienated production and consumption, returns packaged to those
who created it.
The situationists argued that it is as a consequence of these
recuperative powers that ‘the ruling society has proved capable of
defending itself, on all levels of reality, much better than
revolutionaries expected’. 4 It should never be forgotten, they
warned, that ‘the bourgeoisie is the only revolutionary class that
ever won’ ,5 and all revolutionary criticism must recognise the
failures of the past and learn from the implications and effects of
this failure. ‘Words forged by revolutionary critique are like
partisans’ weapons: abandoned on the battlefield, they fall into the
hands of the counterrevolution and like prisoners of war are
subjected to forced labour.’ 6 In this way, for example, the word
‘“revolutionary” has been neutralised to the point of being used in
advertising to describe the slightest change in an ever-changing
commodity production’,7 and a commodity like beer can be sold
with the slogan ‘The Red Revolution is Coming’. 8
The development of this perspective owed much to the
situationists’ avant-garde heritage, from which they learned a great
deal about the tactics of evading and exposing the system of
relations in which they worked. The gradual introduction of the
avant-garde into mainstream culture provided a perfect case study
of the recuperation of radical discourse. Dada’s anti-art and
surrealism’s subversions have both assumed the mantle of
institutionalised art, with their works exhibited, consumed, and
reproduced in contexts which relieve them of all critical content
Forty years after their adventures, the dadaists looked in dismay at
the fate of their agitations. Huelsenbeck observed that the weapons
forged by Dada have been turned into ‘popular ploughshares with
which to till the fertile soil of sensation-hungry galleries eager for
business’, 9 and Duchamp lamented that the urinal with which he had
once challenged the bourgeoisie was now admired for its aesthetic
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The most radical gesture
b e a u t y. 10 N o t m e r e l y a r e t h e a c t u a l w o r k s o f s u c h
movementstransplanted into foreign soil, but the forms, techniques,
and the magic they worked are also used to ends entirely different
from those with which they were developed. ‘Everywhere
Surrealism appears in recuperated forms: commodities, works of
art, publicity techniques, the language of power, a model of
a l i e n a t e d i m a g i n a t i o n , o b j e c t s o f d evo t i o n , a n d c u l t u r a l
accessories.’11 Even the surrealists’ deliberate attempts to evade this
process were fraught with difficulty. Philippe Soupault recorded a
conversation in which the early surrealist group expressed its
unease at the speed with which its work was absorbed into the
French literary tradition:
the conversation took a sudden turn, fear of pleasing. We were
being welcomed from the very beginning as successors, heirs,
by our elders. Gide, Valéry, the Nouvelle Revue Française,
Jacques Riviére, etc. A career like any other. It was already
understood. Shit! Would Rimb[aud] or Lautr[éamont] …them,
eh? Suddenly, it became a kind of dialogue, like challenges
ex c h a n g e d … D e c e ive … B [ r e t o n ] d e fi n e d t h e w o r k o f
destruction we were to undertake with whoever else wanted to,
but between us a secret engagement…. People must still
believe that we are poets. 12
Whereas Dada was engaged in a project of direct contestation with
the structures of culture and society, the surrealists chose the path of
subversion and sabotage. Setting themselves up as the ‘enemy
within’, they adopted the role of double agents, masquerading as a
literary school while at the same time undermining literature itself.
This was, however, a difficult game to play. Eager that they should
still appear as poets, the surrealists’ writing accorded with certain
senses of harmony, aesthetic appeal, and many other conventional
values, and the inevitable confusions of double agency made them
unable to put up a wholehearted resistance to the prevailing system
of social and economic relations.
Although it was the surrealists’ awareness of these problems
which encouraged their development of an overt political
consciousness, the movement remained rooted in the cultural
domain. And for the situationists, any project which
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‘A single choice’
79
fails to sustain a praxis of radically overthrowing the
conditions of life…does not have the slightest chance of
escaping being taken over by the negativity that reigns over the
expression of social relationships: it is recuperated like the
image in a mirror, in inverse perspective. 13
In this way, ‘the most corrosive concepts are emptied of their
content and put back into circulation in the service of maintaining
alienation: dadaism in reverse. They become advertising slogans.’ 14
Aware of the ‘danger of surrealism’, wrote Debord, the bourgeoisie
‘has been able to dissolve it into ordinary aesthetic commerce’ and
would now ‘like people to believe that surrealism was the most
radical and disturbing movement possible’. Cultivating a nostalgia
for the excesses of surrealism, any attempt to effect a new cultural
transgression is automatically reduced ‘to a surrealist déjà-vu, that
is, to a defeat which according to it is definitive and can no longer
be brought back into question by anyone’. 15
The view that such recuperations are the inevitable and generally
insignificant fate of any peripheral, avant-garde, or critical
movement was hotly contested by the situationists, for whom
recuperation was synonymous with the processes of
commodification and spectacularisation on which the spectacle is
dependent. Anything which resists the alienation, separation, and
specialisation of the spectacle must be brought within the confines
of commodity exchange; challenges to the commodity form must be
made to assume the vacuity and equivalence necessary to the
reproduction of commodity relations. The situationists argued that
collapses of the marvellous into the mundane or the critical into the
counterrevolution are never signs of natural destiny or apolitical
degeneration. On the contrary, such shifts are effected in order to
remove the explosive content from gestures and meanings which
contest the capitalist order.
Turned into commodities, works of radical art and political
criticism support the system of relations they despised. The
products of movements like Dada and surrealism are later used to
reproduce the forces that ‘dominate present social life both
officially and in fact: noncommunication, bluff, frantic desire for
novelty as such, for the rapid turnover of arbitrary and uninteresting
gadgets’, 16 and the gestures and discourses which disrupted or
opposed commodity relations are forced to operate within them.
Unchanged in their content, the commodity form they assume robs
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The most radical gesture
them of any intrinsic value, and all attempts to develop an
understanding of modern society as a totality of social, economic,
and cultural relations are similarly deflected into isolated
perspectives from which only partial knowledge is possible.
Revolutionary critique is diverted into fragmentary oppositions
which, ‘like the teeth on cogwheels…mesh with each other and
make the machine go round, the machine of the spectacle, the
machine of power’, 17 and the absence of real political debate is
concealed by endless rounds of apparent argument and meaningless
contradiction.
In a caricature of antagonisms, power urges everyone to be for
or against Brigitte Bardot, the nouveau roman, the 4-horse
Citroen, spaghetti, mescal, miniskirts, the UN, the classics,
nationalization, thermonuclear war and hitchhiking. Everyone
is asked their opinion about every detail in order to prevent
them from having one about the totality.18
Vaneigem’s list is dated: in the early 1990s it might include Acid
House, satellite TV, the blasphemy laws, Saddam Hussein, and
Ecstasy. But it is not that dated, and the observation that its general
categories of concern remain unchanged supports Vaneigem’s
suggestion that the value and significance of such issues comes a
distant second to the social purpose they fulfil.
In their own efforts to spark a movement capable of resisting
accommodation within spectacular relations, the situationists
attempted to build a critique which would bow to none of the
distinctions, fragmentary perspectives, or classifications recognised
by the spectacle. Taking elements from a variety of often
contradictory perspectives and treating theories, vocabularies,
movements, and gestures as a huge toolbox from which anything
useful might be selected, they tried to construct a revolutionary
theory whose only claim to validity would lie in the possibility of its
practical realisation. Theirs was to be a unitary critique which
would transgress distinctions between theory and practice, a
separation which it was argued ‘provides the central basis for
recuperation, for the petrification of revolutionary theory into
ideology’ and transforms ‘real practical demands […] into systems
of ideas’.19 What prevents the recuperation of situationist theory,
declared the SI, is not its claim to universal validity, but ‘the fact
that all situationist ideas are nothing other than faithful
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‘A single choice’
81
developments of acts attempted constantly by thousands of people
to try and prevent another day from being no more than twenty-four
hours of wasted time’. 20 Only such an engagement allows a theory to
retain some critical negativity in the midst of the spectacle’s bland
affirmations.
The situationists adopted some aspects of the forms of
organisation developed by their avant-garde predecessors. Together
with the internationalism and eclecticism of Dada, the internal
discipline exercised by the surrealists was carried into the SI where
it served the primary purpose of constituting a group in control of
its own destiny, a movement impossible to define in terms other
than its own. The SI resisted all attempts to institutionalise its
theory as an ideological ‘ism’, and insisted that the group should
have ‘nothing in common with hierarchical power, no matter what
form it may take. The SI is thus neither a political movement nor a
sociology of political mystification […] the SI holds to a permanent
revolution of everyday life.’ 21 Confident that their analyses were of
lasting significance and would always reach those who sought to
negate the totality of capitalism, the situationists also refused all
exhortations to populism and mass appeal. ‘Let us spit in passing’,
declared René Viénet, on those who ‘have the nerve to claim that the
workers are incapable of reading Internationale Situationniste, that
its paper is too slick to be put in their lunchbags and that its price
doesn’t take into account their low standard of living.’ 22 Cultural
definition was spurned just as readily. ‘We are artists only insofar as
we are no longer artists: we come to realize art,’23 they insisted,
refusing to confine themselves to any specialised area of operation,
and mixing theoretical development with a variety of scandals,
partisan propaganda, and cultural interventions.
Defining themselves as the ‘last of the professions’, the
situationists declared:
The role of the Situationist, the amateur-expert, the antispecialist, will remain a form of specialisation until the
moment of economic and mental abundance when everyone
will become an artist in a sense which artists have never before
achieved—in the sense that everyone will construct his own
life.24
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The most radical gesture
In response to a questionnaire (‘a form of pseudodialogue…to elicit
people’s happy acceptance of passivity under the crude guise of
“participation”’ 25), the situationists claimed that what distinguished
them from every other movement was their development, ‘from a
revolutionary perspective, of a new, coherent critique of the society
as it is developing now’, a project which obliged them to ‘make a
practice of breaking completely and definitively with all those who
oblige us to do so’ and initiate ‘a new style of relations with our
“partisans”: we absolutely refuse disciples. We are interested only
in participation at the highest level; and in setting autonomous
p e o p l e l o o s e i n t h e wo r l d . ’ 26 D e s c r i b i n g t h e m s e l ve s a s a
‘Conspiracy of Equals, a general staff that does not want troops’, 27
the situationists argued that they were articulating an everyday
resistance recognisable and familiar to those who experienced and
exercised it but which otherwise received no expression. The SI
clearly saw itself marching way ahead of other revolutionary groups
and cultural movements. Nevertheless, it was not a vanguard in the
Leninist sense. Although the situationists recognised that a social
revolution could only proceed on the basis of a mass organisation,
they did not pretend to be its nascent form.
We don’t claim to be developing a new revolutionary
programme all by ourselves. We say that this programme in the
process of formulation will one day practically contest the
ruling reality, and that we will participate in that contestation.28
The central role of any propagandist movement was rather to open
up ‘the “Northwest Passage” toward a new revolution that must
surge over that central terrain which until now has been sheltered
from revolutionary upheavals: the conquest of everyday life. We will
only organise the detonation’, they declared; ‘the free explosion
must escape us and any other control forever.’ 29
Just as they wanted no followers and insisted that the
revolutionary moment would sweep them away along with the rest
of the old world, the situationists declared their hostility to leaders,
celebrities, and all forms of hierarchical control. Since ‘one of the
classic weapons of the old world, perhaps the one most used against
groups delving into the organisation of life, is to single out and
isolate a few of their participants as “stars”’,30 Debord refused all
t h e a t t e n t i o n s u s u a l l y l av i s h e d o n Pa r i s i a n i n t e l l e c t u a l s .
Nevertheless, together with the impassioned confidence of his
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‘A single choice’
83
writing, the mantle of dogmatic leadership he seems to have
assumed did little to free the situationists from the star system they
wished to undermine. Debord remains surrounded by mysteries and
intrigue encouraged by the murder of his publisher, Lebovici, in
1987, his refusal to show any of his films in France, legal wrangles
over the translation and reproduction of situationist texts, and the
general atmosphere of obscure conspiracy cultivated around the
entire situationist milieu. Indeed, this air of secrecy increasingly
became the means by which the situationists tried to satisfy their
double need for both splendid isolation and impeccable
participation in the spectacle. Debord’s readings of Clausewitz and
his fondness for war games and military metaphor encouraged the
group’s guerrilla mentality, and the situationists carried a kudos
which ran counter to every condemnation of the spectacle. The
group’s extravagant claims for the social revolution and its own
theories almost seemed to come from some mysterious inside
source, as though the SI had a privileged access to the truths of
spectacular society. But to a large extent, this atmosphere merely
arose from the combination of intelligent analysis and a deliberate
attempt to avoid accommodation within spectacular relations. ‘It’s
not the monopoly of intelligence that we hold’, wrote Vaneigem,
‘but that of its use.’ 31
One of the more unfortunate results of this strategy was the
weaving of a web of personal intrigues and hostilities which
continues to entrap those engaged in many post, pro-, or
neosituationist tendencies. Refusing disciples, followers, and the
slightest hint of divided loyalty, the situationists tolerated no
fellow-travellers and reserved the most damning of their
condemnations for the ‘pro-situs’, spectators whose passive
admiration of the SI was said to leave them both resentful and
‘dazzled by the success’32 of the movement which would not admit
them. Of some seventy people who passed through its ranks, sixtysix resigned or were expelled; in the journal, some 540 other people
were jeered at for their complicity with the spectacle (although the
large number of people insulted should be set against the 940 who
were mentioned altogether).33 Some later groups inherited the worst
aspects of the situationists’ desperation to be the most extreme and
sophisticated of revolutionaries, realising tendencies to cynicism,
personal recrimination, soul-searching, and a perverse moralism
which condemns anything that does not promise to produce the
revolutionary moment. Attempts to refuse any compromise have
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The most radical gesture
often led to an insidious holier-than-thou attitude which delights in
the slightest personal slip or the first hint of selling out, buying in,
doubt, or personal interest; a generation of radicals fell over
themselves to establish their own autonomy, exorcising and denying
their own spectacular seduction by situationist theory, and busily
condemning one another as pseudo-revolutionaries and agents of
the spectacle.
T h e c o l l a p s e o f t h e m ove m e n t wa s f o l l ow e d b y b i t t e r
recriminations and an extreme reaction against Vaneigem’s poetic
pleas for the radical subject, with many subsequent interpretations
and developments of situationist ideas positioning themselves in
either Debordist or Vaneigemist camps. Some of Vaneigem’s own
later work reinforced the view that his position tended towards a
politics of personal liberation, and the question of the extent to
which desires can be fulfilled within capitalist social relations had
surfaced throughout the group’s existence. In the early 1960s, bitter
arguments led to the exclusion of eight German situationists
grouped around the journal Spur, and a group of Scandinavian
members disparagingly referred to as ‘Nashists’. Besides an
unknown quantity of personal disputes, the central argument was
over the compatibility of individual artistic creation with the
situationist demand for a unified and uncompromising struggle.
Similar differences had surfaced in the expulsion of Alexander
Trocchi who, excluded from the SI in 1962, had established his own
Project Sigma, a network designed to ‘alert, sustain, inform, inspire,
and make vividly conscious of itself all intelligence everywhere’.34
Debord’s insistence that the SI should remain as uncontaminated as
possible by any involvement in the spectacle of alienated
production and consumption was matched by those, including
Heimrad Prem, Asger Jorn, and Jorgen Nash, who argued that
demands for the realisation and suppression of art in everyday life
could not preclude the continuation of struggles with and against
artistic practice. Nash and a number of those who left the SI with
him established the ‘Situationist Bauhaus’ in Sweden, turning his
farm into a centre for artistic experimentation from which a journal,
Drakabygget, was published and some scandals were organised,
most famously the decapitation of the mermaid in Copenhagen
harbour. Jacqueline de Jong, a Dutch situationist also expelled in
the same fracas, published the Situationist Times from 1962 until
1967. Both projects returned to the situationists’ artistic roots and
were dismissed by Debord who, according to a persistent but
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‘A single choice’
85
unsubstantiated rumour, nevertheless continued to finance the SI’s
activities with sales of Jorn’s paintings. It was after this split that the
situationists developed a coherent critique of the society of the
spectacle and adopted a more recognisable political stance, But
artistic intervention continued to characterise the practices of the
movement, with a number of situationists developing their own
cultural adventures and avant-garde tactics continuing to inform the
situationists’ subversive response to the recuperative powers of the
spectacle.
Although all those involved in the movement were dismayed by
the variety of recuperative pitfalls which faced them, their
observations on the subject were not intended as nostalgic laments
for the days when the rhetoric of revolution had a significance
beyond the advertising slogan. Arguing that such inversions are
possible only because they face no rival, the situationists were
willing to admit that developments in washing-machine technology
can be described as revolutionary only ‘because the possibilities of
a central desirable change are no longer expressed anywhere’. 35
Only when it is abandoned on the battlefield is the vocabulary of
liberation vulnerable to recuperation, and the situationists did not
consider it inevitable that arms should be lost forever. ‘After
dadaism, and in spite of the fact that the dominant culture has been
able to recuperate a sort of dadaist art, it is far from certain that
artistic rebellion in the next generation will continue to be
recuperable into consumable works.’ 36 The absorption and
fragmentation of Dada and surrealism had not prevented the tactics
of these movements from informing the situationists’ own
revolutionary programme, and the situationists suggested that
recuperations are not necessarily effected ‘without risk for the
system’.
The endless caricaturing of the most deeply felt revolutionary
desires can produce a backlash in the shape of a resurgence of
feelings, purified in reaction to their universal prostitution.
There is no such thing as lost allusions.37
Recuperation is a dangerous game. There is always a chance that the
promise of revolution on a billboard will be taken literally in the
streets: even adverts for ‘flaming tasty’ burgers on hoardings set
alight by rioters assume a meaning lost in the routine of their usual
appreciation. ‘Even when it is co-opted and turned against itself,
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The most radical gesture
poetry always gets what it wants in the end,’ wrote Vaneigem. The
“Proletarians of all lands, unite” which produced the Stalinist State
will one day realise the classless society.’ 38
But reappropriations must be made with some care. Although it
is, of course, still possible to speak of revolution after the term has
been used to sell a washing machine or bank account, it cannot be
used in the belief that such recuperations have been without effect.
Every aspect of the meanings and struggles recuperated by the
spectacle must be reinjected with the subjectivity that has been
emptied from them. Language must be reinvested with desire,
theory with its realisation, and gestures with the spontaneous
pleasure of their creation. For the situationists, the tactics and
subversions of spectacular relations did not need inventing, but only
a name. The subjectivity which produces, consumes, and is itself
produced and consumed by the spectacle is already busy looting it
as well. It does not passively consume and obediently produce as
the spectacle ostensibly intends: it sabotages, steals, plays in the
supermarkets, and sleeps on the production line. The spectacle
feeds on this energy at the same time as it denies its dependence on
the imagination and creativity which sustain it, but as soon as the
subject realises that power ‘creates nothing, it recuperates’, 39 the
spectacle’s myth of its own self-sufficiency collapses. The
situationists were convinced that the only legitimate tactics of
revolutionary criticism are therefore those which heighten this
awareness, raising the desire for forms of autonomous action, selfrealisation, and subjective expression denied by commodity
relations. In ‘Basic Banalities’, Vaneigem declared:
the spontaneous acts we can see everywhere forming against
power and its spectacle must be warned of all the obstacles in
their path and must find a tactic taking into account the
strength of the enemy and its means of recuperation. This
tactic, which we are going to popularise, is détournement.40
The closest English translation of détournement lies somewhere
between ‘diversion’ and ‘subversion’. It is a turning around and a
reclamation of lost meaning: a way of putting the stasis of the
spectacle in motion. It is plagiaristic, because its materials are those
which already appear within the spectacle, and subversive, since its
tactics are those of the ‘reversal of perspective’,41 a challenge to
meaning aimed at the context in which it arises. The notion was first
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87
developed by the Belgian surrealist Marcel Mariën, who wrote
alongside Debord and Bernstein in the 1950s journal Les Lèvres
Nues, and described détournement as a sort of embezzlement of
convention. 42 The subversions of comic strips which the lettrists
claimed as their own were perfect examples of such appropriation:
in the pages of Internationale Situationniste, true love stories were
confused with bubbles of political propaganda, and soft porn pinups declared, ‘I love to sleep with Asturian miners, they’re real
men’, 43 or insisted that the ‘emancipation of the workers will be the
work of the workers themselves’.44 These methods were essentially
reworkings of those employed by the dadaists and surrealists,
extended by the situationists to every area of social and discursive
life. For Debord, a ‘dadaist-type negation’ must be a feature of ‘any
later constructive position as long as the social conditions that
impose the repetition of rotten superstructures—conditions that
have intellectually already been definitively condemned—have not
been wiped out by force.’ 45 The dadaist critique of language must
become ‘a permanent practice of the new revolutionary theory’, 46
since it is ‘impossible to get rid of a world without getting rid of the
language that conceals and protects it, without laying bare its true
nature’. 47 Convinced that the poetry and desire revealed by the
détoumement of the language of information, bureaucracy, and
functional control was vital to the success of the revolutionary
project, the situationists proposed a situationist dictionary as ‘a sort
of codebook enabling one to decipher information and rend the
ideological veils that cover reality’, and considered it ‘essential that
we forge our own language, the language of real life’. 48
Set free by their détournement, commodified meanings reveal a
totality of possible social and discursive relations which exceeds the
spectacle’s constraints. Poetic discourse presages a world in which
language plays with meanings the spectacle cannot understand;
although it can be bought and sold like any other commodity, the
desires and freedoms of poetry can never be completely flattened.
‘In spite of what the humorists think, words do not play,’ wrote
Debord. ‘Nor do they make love, as Breton thought, except in
dreams. Words work, on behalf of the dominant organisation of life.
And yet…they embody forces that can upset the most careful
calculations.’ 49 The situationists were not interested so much in
poems themselves as the free relationships invoked by poetic
expression, which ‘wants to reorient the entire world and the entire
future to its own ends’. 50 Whereas surrealism ‘in the heyday of its
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assault against the oppressive order of culture and daily life could
rightly define its arsenal as “poetry without poems if necessary”, it
is now a matter for the SI of a poetry necessarily without poems’.51
As the poet gleans the world and juxtaposes every element in the
making of a poem, so the revolutionary should use the entire
‘literary and artistic heritage of humanity…for partisan propaganda
purposes’.52 Respect for the inspired works of the past should be
transformed into a respect for the ways in which they can be
plundered and subverted: ‘Any elements, no matter where they are
taken from, can serve in making new combinations.’53 Debord’s use
of Marx, Hegel, and Lukács in The Society of the Spectacle offered
the possibility of freely constructed theory in the same way that
Lautréamont’s plagiaristic reworkings in Les Chants de Maldoror
presented that of a poetry made by all.
Demanding a complete reversal of the spectacular perspective,
the situationists argued that the critical theory which struggles
against alienation must itself ‘be communicated in its own
language—the language of contradiction, dialectical in form as well
as in content’. 54 A dynamic and fluid theory must place the
meanings and vocabularies of the spectacle in a perspective which
negates it, a dialectical totality in which the subversive qualities of
‘past critical judgements that have congealed into respectable
truths’ are restored. 55 Détournement, the ‘antithesis of quotation’, is
the ‘fluid language of anti-ideology. It occurs within a type of
communication aware of its inability to enshrine any inherent and
definitive certainty.’56
Even the style of exposition of dialectical theory is a scandal
and an abomination to the canons of the prevailing language,
and to sensibilities molded by those canons, because it
includes in its positive use of existing concepts a simultaneous
recognition of their rediscovered fluidity, of their inevitable
destruction.57
Attempts to invest the language of the spectacle with difference and
interruption were central to the situationist project, and their
subversive plagiarisms of the existing world were both playful and
purposeful. The Hegelian ‘inversion of the genitive’, which might,
for example, turn ‘the poverty of theory’ into ‘the theory of
poverty’, or ‘consciousness of desire’ into the ‘desire for
consciousness’, was characteristic of all situationist writing, and,
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putting détournement into immediate practice, Debord wrote:
‘ I d e a s i m p r ove . T h e m e a n i n g o f wo r d s h a s a p a r t i n t h e
improvement. Plagiarism is necessary. Progress demands it.’ 58
Détournement surfaced in the situationists’ use of comic strips and
Asger Jorn’s irreverent repaintings of kitsch reproductions. The
industrial paintings made by Pinot-Gallizio and exhibited in Milan
in 1958 challenged all ideas of artistic value when they were sold by
the metre, made into clothes, and used to line the walls of the ‘antimaterial cave’ shown in Paris in 1959. Buildings were appropriated
by graffiti; a plethora of texts, graphics, and images were incorporated into Debord’s films; the language of scientific discourse
found its way into the SI’s psychogeographical research; and
détournement characterised the upsetting of relationships with
people, cities, and ideas with games, derives, and constructed
situations. Détournement became the ‘signature of the situationist
m o ve m e n t , t h e s i g n o f i t s p r e s e n c e a n d c o n t e s t a t i o n i n
contemporary cultural reality’, 59 and was ultimately the sense in
which the situationists conceived the social revolution: a gigantic
turning around of the existing social world.
This continuity between the means and ends of revolutionary
practice presented the situationists with the task of developing a
consciousness, forms of organisation, and tactics of struggle which
anticipate the possibilities of life in the post-revolutionary world.
Although they recognised that anything short of total contestation is
doomed to the fragmentation, equivalence, and mediocrity of the
commodity, this merely encouraged the situationist conviction that
the means by which the revolutionary moment is achieved must be
c o n t i n u o u s w i t h i t s a i m s , avo i d i n g a l l c o m p r o m i s e a n d
collaboration with the old world and sacrificing nothing to the
moment of total contestation. The world in which the creation of
situations would become an everyday reality must be continually
anticipated in attempts to realise it. With a lovely sense of
completion, the situationists effectively argued that situations must
be created which facilitate the creation of the revolutionary
situation which in turn produces the world in which the creation of
situations is possible.
Although the situationists were convinced that everything arising
in spectacular society is subject to representation within its
commodified and alienating relations, their insistence on the
necessity of developing a unitary critique of the spectacle implied
that pockets of post-revolutionary consciousness can somehow arise
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in the pre-revolutionary present. The paradox of this position,
equally present in the situationists’ councilist demands for
alternative systems of workers’ organisations, is really that the
revolution demands a consciousness which only the revolution can
produce. Any critique of the spectacle as a dehumanising force is in
danger of falling into self-contradiction if it admits that it is
possible to play and enjoy some autonomy and control over one’s
own life within capitalist society. Moreover, the forms of alternative
organisation and practice in which this consciousness appears
within and against capitalist society are invariably vulnerable either
to repression or some reformist form of peaceful co-existence.
These misgivings were raised in Jean Barrot’s What is Situationism,
which complained that ‘the S.I. did not know whether it was a
matter of living differently from now on or only of heading that
way’.60 When Vaneigem declared: ‘I want to exchange nothing—not
for a thing, not for the past, not for the future. I want to live
intensely, for myself, grasping every pleasure’, 61 he was not merely
giving an account of how life should be, but declaring his intention
to take it in the here and now as a means of achieving a world in
which such supreme self-satisfaction would be realised. And for
Barrot, this conflation of the means and the ends of revolutionary
activity could only lead to one of two dead ends. ‘Either one
huddles in the crevices of bourgeois society, or one ceaselessly
opposes it to a different life which is impotent because only the
revolution can make it a reality.’62
Vaneigem’s Revolution of Everyday Life was originally entitled
Traité de savoir-vivre à l’usage des jeunes générations, and, as
Barrot disparagingly commented, it is indeed a handbook or guide
to ‘violating the logic of the market and the wage system wherever
one can get away with it.’ 63 One of Vaneigem’s later books
continued this line of attack with calls for industrial sabotage as a
first step to the development of councils and self-management, 64
and workplace rebellion of the ‘go on, phone in sick’ variety has
since been advocated by groups such as Processed World, for whom
tactics of confusion and theft serve both to enliven work and
undermine the logic of labour. 65 But are such tactics means of
coping with capitalism or destroying it? Were the situationists more
concerned with finding ways for real life to survive within the
spectacle, or with the contestation of the spectacle itself? At their
worst, they seem to have believed that the degeneration of the
spectacle is ‘in the nature of things’ 66 so that any revolutionary
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organisation needs only to help it on its way. Convinced that the
spectacle had reached saturation point and could go no further, they
saw it producing its own antagonists and presenting the choice
between life and survival with unprecedented clarity. But they also
recognised that although the spectacle may not be capable of
integrating its members forever, the act of choosing life was by no
means inevitable, and at the very least required the dissemination of
a great deal of enthusiastic propaganda to raise expectations,
desires, demands, and consciousness of the possibilities already
present. And although their awareness of the spectacle’s tendency to
recuperate all criticism teetered on the brink of conspiracy theory, a
recognition of the flexible ability of capitalism to survive every
earlier assault still enabled the situationists to insist that all present
activity should be judged on its ability to raise the revolutionary
stakes.
Agitations akin to those promoted by the situationists
proliferated during the 1960s and have continued to emerge in
subsequent years. But although the situationists supported those
‘perpetrators of new radical acts’ like the British ‘Spies for Peace’
scandal,67 few of the adventures with which they were contemporary
met with their approval. The SI attacked all those it considered to be
agitating for an enjoyable life in the here and now without
developing a coherent revolutionary critique as hopeless reformists.
The ‘revolution for the hell of it’ attitude of the American yippies,
the counter-cultures of play power, happenings, be-ins, and dropouts were all haughtily rejected on the grounds that they left
themselves open to recuperation and the miserable totality of
society untouched.
The situationists were particularly critical of the Dutch Provos,
who were followed by the Kabouters in their practices of Dada-like
provocations and subversions. The Provo movement appeared in
1965, dedicating itself to the provocation of Dutch society and the
‘Dreary People of Amsterdam’. Roel van Duyn, author of a book on
Kropoktin, 68 was among those whose activities earned an initially
repressive response from the authorities and an extraordinary level
of popular support for attempts to construct a ‘counter-society’, a
notion made famous by the ‘white plans’ for free bicycles, streets,
and housing. The Provos won 13,000 votes and one seat in the
municipal elections in Amsterdam, and regarded themselves as the
manifestation of a new, heterogeneous class: the Provotariat.
‘Happenings’, participatory events at which the Provos excelled,
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The most radical gesture
were described as attempts ‘to seize at least the little part in things
that you ought to have and that the authorities try to take away from
you’, and ‘a demonstration of the power you would like to have—
influence on events’. 69 The Provos were united by little—‘“We
agree to disagree”, they said’70 — beyond ‘imagination, which they
could neither express in their daily lives and work in the factory, nor
in their jobs, nor at the university, nor in traditional politics and
opposition movements.’71 But although from a situationist point of
view the Provos were confined to demonstrating rather than
contesting the power that one ‘would like to have’, they did pursue
their attacks to the very pillars of Dutch society, particularly the
church, the royal family, the security forces and, symbolically, the
Lieverdje statue in Amsterdam, subverted to epitomise the ‘addicted
consumer’.72 Their unprecedented displays of irony and absurdity
did, of course, meet with the customary opposition of the police,
which the Provos countered with the foundation of the Society of
Friends of the Police, a tactic also used by the members of
Kommune 1, a Berlin group in which one of the Spur group of exsituationists was involved. (Kommune 1 established a Save the
Police Committee in 1967 which called for a 35-hour week to give
the police ‘spare time for reading, leisure activities with their wives
and girlfriends and time for giving vent to their aggressions by
making love, and also time for chats with elderly passers-by to
whom they can explain democracy’. 73)
‘By our acts of provocation’, wrote the Provos, ‘we force
authority to tear off its mask.’74 Like Dada, however, they soon
‘realised that their actions lost their meaning after they had lost
their originality’, 75 and the Provos declared their own dissolution at
a 1967 happening. Their provocative tactics nevertheless appeared
sporadically until their re-emergence with the Kabouters in 1970.
Developing the theme of the development of an alternative, or
counter-society, the Kabouters dressed as gnomes, produced
numerous papers, organised happenings, and declared the
foundation of the Orange Free State. They produced alternative
plans and imaginative reforms for every area of Dutch life, many of
which prefigured the demands of the later green movement. Legal
protection for squatters, a newspaper, and networks of free services
and cheap shops were established with the help of a large sum of
money which mysteriously found its way into the bank account held
by the Kabouters’ free radio station, Radio 2000, and the Orange
Free State was formally proclaimed as an autonomous network of
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self-managed councils. ‘The revolution is in a hurry,’ declared its
protagonists.
So the new society will have to make the most of its knowledge
of sabotage techniques to hasten the transition from an
authoritarian and dirty society to an anti-authoritarian and
clean one. In fact, the existence of an autonomous, new
community in the heart of the old order is the most effective
sabotage. But whatever techniques the people’s army of
saboteurs may use, it will always remember that it cannot
resemble the old world’s armies in anything, anything,
anything.76
Playfully standing in the 1970 election, the Kabouters were
themselves completely thrown to find that they had won 11 per cent
of the vote, five council seats in Amsterdam, and twelve others
throughout the country.
For the situationists, the Kabouters’ mixture of revolutionary
propaganda and democratic participation revealed their essential
faith that the system was fundamentally resistant to change and
could be only be prodded, provoked, and cajoled into allowing some
freedoms in the present. A Provo text, for example, had spoken of
t h e ‘ i n ev i t a b l e p o l i t i c a l a n d m i l i t a r y h o l o c a u s t ’ , a n d t h e
situationists saw the movement as
an aspect of the last reformism produced by modern
capitalism: the reformism of everyday life…the Provo
hierarchy think they can change everyday life by a few wellchosen improvements. What they fail to realise is that the
banality of everyday life is not incidental, but the central
mechanism and product of modern capitalism. To destroy it,
nothing less is needed than all-out revolution. The Provos
choose the fragmentary and end by accepting the totality.77
The situationists were convinced that Provo and Kabouter actions
would merely decorate and enliven the system they despised;
i n d e e d , t o t h i s d a y A m s t e r d a m b e a r s t h e l eg a c y o f t h e s e
improvements. But was the value of such tactics confined to the
reinforcement of the tolerant image of the society which contained
them? The problem raised by Vaneigem’s hedonism emerges again:
is there any point in revolutionaries trying to make life more
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The most radical gesture
bearable within the society they wish to destroy? If the fatalism of
‘after the revolution’ is to be avoided, there clearly is. But people’s
attempts to live in the here and now must also undermine the system
which condemns them to survival, and it was on these grounds that
the situationists did of course give full support to what was also
their own moment of glory: the May events of 1968.
It is difficult to ascertain the extent of the situationists’ influence
on those who took to the streets during this extraordinary
revolutionary moment. But whether one considers that the
movement had a direct impact on the events or had merely voiced
the experiences of those involved for long enough to make this
appear to be the case, 1968 certainly came close to a vindication of
the situationists’ insistence that their ideas were ‘in everyone’s
mind’.78 In the vocabulary, the tactics, and the aims expressed in the
events, situationist theory seemed to come into its own barely a
decade after the movement’s inception.
Although the events were by no means confined to the
universities, the immediate sparks flew within the French student
milieu. In November 1966, a group of radical students took
advantage of their colleagues’ apathy and got themselves elected to
the Strasbourg section of the UNEF, the French Student Union.
They collaborated with the situationists on the production of a
pamphlet later translated as ‘Of Student Poverty Considered in its
Economic, Political, Psychological, Sexual, and Particularly
Intellectual Aspects, and a Modest Proposal for its Remedy’, a
publication produced with union funds and described in a local
newspaper as ‘the first concrete manifestation of a revolt aiming
quite openly at the destruction of society’. 79 ‘Of Student Poverty’
placed a devastating attack on the role of the student in the context
of the best expositions of situationist theory. Designed to provoke
an extreme response, the pamphlet declared that capitalism
demands the ‘mass production of students who are not educated and
have been rendered incapable of thinking’. 80 Although the student is
‘close to the production-point’ of knowledge, it argued,
access to the Sanctuary of Thought is forbidden, and he is
obliged to discover ‘modern culture’ as an admiring spectator.
Art is dead, but the student is necrophiliac […] a conspicuous
consumer, complete with induced irrational preference for
Brand X (Camus, for example), and irrational prejudice against
Brand Y (Sartre, perhaps).81
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The pamphlet ridiculed the students’ privileges and belittled the
manifestations of rebellion expected of them by their elders. ‘They
must understand one thing’, it declared: ‘there are no “special”
student interests in revolution. Revolution will be made by all the
victims of encroaching repression and the tyranny of the market.’ 82
The launch of the pamphlet was marked by a number of
disruptions, including the display of a comic strip, The Return of the
Durutti Column, and its provocative distribution at the university’s
official opening ceremony. The university authorities took the union
to court for its illegal use of funds, and the judge’s summation of the
case is often cited as one of the most illuminating accounts of the
pamphlet’s contents. ‘The accused’, he stated, ‘have never denied
the charge of misusing the funds of the student union. Indeed’, he
continued, ‘they openly admit to having made the union pay some
£500 [sic] for the printing and distribution of 10,000 pamphlets, not
to mention the cost of other literature inspired by the Internationale
Situationniste.’ Rejecting ‘all morality and restraint, these cynics do
not hesitate to commend theft, the destruction of scholarship, the
abolition of work, total subversion, and a world-wide proletarian
revolution with “unlicensed pleasure” as its only goal’. 83 The
scandal gave some notoriety to the situationists, who nevertheless
tried to distance themselves from the role of ‘leaders’ of the
Strasbourg students imposed by the media, later claiming that they
‘had to defend themselves from being recuperated as a “news item”
or an intellectual fad…as anyone can well imagine, the pitiful
student milieu is of no interest to us’. 84
The media’s response to the Strasbourg scandal was mixed: the
Italian Gazetta del Popolo, evidently unable to ‘well imagine’ this
last point, reported that ‘the Situationist International, galvanised
by the triumph of its adherents in Strasbourg, is preparing to launch
a major offensive to take control of the student organisations’. 85 Le
Monde, however, related the situationists’ ‘messianic confidence in
the revolutionary capacity of the masses and in their aptitude for
freedom’ 86 with some amusement, and it is true that ‘Of Student
Poverty’ expressed the situationists’ boundless faith in the
impending ‘revolutionary celebration’ with great enthusiasm, as its
closing passages reveal:
To transform the world and to change the structure of life are
one and the same thing for the proletariat…. As its maximum
programme it has the radical critique and free reconstruction of
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all the values and patterns of behaviour imposed by an
alienated reality. The only creativity it can acknowledge is the
creativity released in the making of history, the free invention
of each moment and each event: Lautréamont’s poésie faite par
tous —the beginning of the revolutionary celebration. For the
proletarian revolt is a festival or it is nothing; in revolution the
road of excess leads once and for all to the palace of wisdom. A
palace which knows only one rationality: the game. The rules
are simple: to live instead of devising a lingering death, and to
indulge untrammelled desire.87
The popularity of the pamphlet—quickly reproduced and translated
into more than ten languages—encouraged the unprecedented
discussion of situationist analyses and the avant-garde heritage
which informed them, developments hastened by the 1967
publications of Vaneigem’s The Revolution of Everyday Life and
Debord’s The Society of the Spectacle. The student agitations begun
at Strasbourg continued throughout 1967: students at Lyon, Nantes,
and Nanterre were involved in disruptions and occupations
culminating in the formation of the situationist-inspired enragés in
January 1968 and the heterogeneous mouvement du 22 mars in
which Daniel Cohn-Bendit and Jean-François Lyotard were
involved.
These developments culminated in the dramatic events of May
and June 1968 which, regardless of their repeated characterisation
as a mere ‘student revolt’, constituted an extraordinary social,
political, and cultural crisis involving a sustained—and wildcat—
general strike and the practical critique of every aspect of capitalist
life in roughly the terms prefigured in a decade of situationist texts.
They were by no means confined to France, but formed part of a
wave of revolutionary action which spread across eastern and
western Europe, South-east Asia and the United States.
Nevertheless, as it arose in France, the crisis appeared to many to
have come out of the proverbial blue. In 1967, for example, Henri
Lefebvre ridiculed the situationist insistence that revolution was
just around the corner. ‘Do they really imagine’, he wrote,
that one fine day or one decisive evening people will look at
each other and say, ‘Enough! We’re fed up with work and
boredom! Let’s put an end to them!’ and that they will then
proceed to the eternal Festival and the creation of situations?
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Remembering the Paris Commune, Lefebvre conceded that
although such a situation ‘happened once, at the dawn of 18 March
1871, this combination of circumstances will not occur again’.88 Six
months later, of course, he was proved profoundly wrong: those
involved in the May events did indeed make impossible demands
irreducible to higher wages or the details of workplace organisation.
But if his statement bears a particular irony, he was not alone in his
view. Sherry Turkle spoke for many when she commented: ‘In terms
of traditional economic and political analysis, the events were
impensable, “unthinkable”; they should not have happened.’89
A great deal did, of course, happen. After large student
demonstrations in early May, the Latin Quarter of Paris was
occupied by the police and the student protests spread in a matter of
days to factories and workplaces of all kinds. In some cases, this
extension was spontaneous; in others, the students who had
effectively disbanded the universities realised that they were
powerless without the reproduction of their actions throughout all
areas of social life and asked the workers for support. A general
strike, called for 13 May, brought the country to a standstill and was
prolonged by a series of wildcat strikes and occupations which
amounted to some three weeks of action by more than 10 million
workers. For one participant,
A whole new epoch has just come to an end: the epoch during
which people couldn’t say, with a semblance of verisimilitude,
that ‘it couldn’t happen here’. Another epoch is starting: that in
which people know that revolution is possible under the
conditions of modern bureaucratic capitalism.90
The size and the extremism of the movement took everyone by
surprise. Describing its protagonists as ‘guerrillas’, the Observer
correspondent wrote:
With bewildering speed, these political guerrillas have been
hurtled into politics by an anonymous surge of student unrest.
By taking to the streets, they have set themselves against every
organised political force in France. Both Government and
Opposition last week tried desperately to contain them. Both
failed. 91
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Indeed, the strikes and occupations of 1968 were largely effected
against the advice and orders of the Communist Party and the largest
trade union, the CTG. Mainly through its paper L’Humanité, itself
subject to strike action on 15 May, the Party condemned the revolt,
warning urgently against ‘provocateurs’ and urging people to return
to work or confine their demands to economic or organisational
issues. Beyond this, it did all it could to institute bureaucratic control
over the factory occupations, demonstrations, and the events
themselves. Participants in the mouvement du 22 mars recognised
that revolution ‘is as much of a threat to the Communist Party as to
the factory owners’, 92 and pamphlets produced in the occupied
factories show that the warnings and entreaties of the established
organs of dissent went unheeded: an Air France leaflet declared,
‘Like the students, we must take the control of our affairs into our
own hands’,93 and a leaflet from the Rhône-Poulenc workers asserted:
The action of the students has shown us that only rank and file
action could compel the authorities to retreat…the students are
challenging the whole purpose of bourgeois education. They
want to take the fundamental decisions themselves. So should
we.94
Gestures to previous revolutionary situations were made: in a tribute
to the Kronstadt revolt, the crew of the liner France took control of
the ship in Le Havre, and the barricades and the festival air
recollected the Paris Commune. On 19 May, the Observer reported:
‘This is revolution…a total onslaught on modern industrial society.’
In a staggering end to a staggering week, the commanding
heights of the French economy are falling to the workers. All
over France a calm, obedient, irresistible wave of working-class
power is engulfing factories, dockyards, mines, railway depots,
bus garages, postal sorting offices. Trains, mails, air-flights are
virtually at a standstill. Production lines in chemicals, steel,
metalworking, textiles, shipbuilding and a score of industries
have ground to a halt…. Many a baffled and impotent manager is
being held prisoner in his own carpeted office.
The following Sunday found the paper in more reflective mood,
describing the ‘great upheaval through which France is passing’ as
‘above all a crisis of the State. And not simply of the French State but
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99
of the State as it has been conceived in the Western industrial world
and its offshoots since the eighteenth century.’
It was the breadth of the dissent which was so remarkable. Art
students demanded the realisation of art; music students called for
‘wild and ephemeral music’; footballers kicked out managers with
the slogan: ‘football to the football players’; gravediggers occupied
cemeteries; doctors, nurses, and the interns at a psychiatric hospital
organised in solidarity with the inmates. The national radio and
television networks were gripped by strike action that lasted well in to
July 1968 as a result of government restrictions on the reporting of
the street battles of May. The Odéon theatre was occupied and, like
the Sorbonne, which was evacuated by the police and taken over by
the students on 13 May, served as a forum for an extraordinary variety
of discussion and debate. Costumes were stolen and worn for street
fighting and, in the university, ‘Young workers who “wouldn’t have
been seen dead in that place” a month ago now walked in groups, at
first rather self-consciously, later as if they owned the place, which of
course they did’. 95 Incitements to disaffect permeated the armed
forces, and when de Gaulle ordered troops to head for Paris, he had to
appeal to those based in Germany. The mass demonstrations, some of
which numbered more than a million people, were remarkable for
their diversity; nothing, it was said, could contain the ‘row upon row
upon row of them, the flesh and blood of modern capitalist society, an
unending mass, a power that could sweep everything before it, if it but
decided to do so’.96
The situationists were among the few who were not taken by
surprise by the strength and ubiquity of the uprising. In 1971, a
correspondent for Le Nouvel Observateur wrote: ‘When one reads or
rereads the Internationale Situationniste issues it is quite striking to
what degree and how often these fanatics have made judgements or
put forward viewpoints that were later concretely verified.’97 Later in
the same year the paper stated that The Society of the Spectacle ‘has
led the discussion of the entire ultraleft since its publication in 1967.
This work, which predicted May 1968, is considered by many to be
the Capital of the new generation.’98 For their part, the situationists
modestly insisted, ‘we had prophesied nothing. We had simply
pointed out what was already present,’99 and the movement delighted
in its refusals of all attempts to characterise it as responsible,
victorious, or prophetic. ‘What thus came to the light of
consciousness in the spring of 1968 was nothing other than what had
been sleeping in the night of “spectacular society”, whose spectacles
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The most radical gesture
showed nothing but an eternal positive façade.’100 At the same time,
however, they were quite happy to see the confirmation of their theses
in the events themselves.
The fact that the strike had…extended to activities which had
always escaped subversion in the past radically affirmed two of
the oldest assertions of the Situationist analysis: that the
increasing modernisation of capitalism brings with it the
proletarianisation of an ever-increasing part of the population,
and that as the world of commodities extends its power to all
aspects of life, it produces everywhere an extension and
deepening of the forces that negate it.101
The situationists, who had ‘denounced and fought the “organisation
of appearances” of the spectacular stage of commodity society, had
f o r y e a r s v e r y p r e c i s e l y f o r e s e e n t h e ex p l o s i o n a n d i t s
consequences’,102 declared the SI, insisting that the events were an
affirmation of its view that ‘the proletariat had not been abolished;
that capitalism was continuing to develop its own alienations; and
that this antagonism existed over the entire surface of the planet,
along with the social question posed for over a century’.103
The situationists’ view of the events is largely contained in The
Enragés and the Situationists in the Occupation Movement—France,
May—June 1968, in which René Viénet wrote:
in the space of a week, millions of people had broken with the
weight of alienating conditions, the routine of survival,
ideological falsification and the inverted world of the
spectacle…. The festival finally gave real holidays to people
who had only known working days and leaves of absence. The
hierarchical pyramid had melted like a lump of sugar in the May
sun…. The streets belonged to those who were digging them
up.104
‘Everyday life’, he continued, ‘suddenly rediscovered, became the
centre of all possible conquests. People who had lived their whole
lives in offices declared that they could no longer live in the way they
had before.’105 This was a perspective shared by the British papers. An
article in the Observer concluded: ‘As petrol dries up, people
rediscover their legs. Everybody turns hitch-hiker. The spring air is
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‘A single choice’
101
intoxicating. “Salut camarade!”’, 106 and an earlier edition of the
paper had identified the object of the revolutionary critique as
the society organised for efficiency at the expense of liberty, the
system which ‘offers the people consumer goods and calls them
freedom.’ It is the system which adapts education…to the mass
production of docile technocrats. It is the party system posing as
true democracy, repression masked as tolerance.107
‘Capitalised time stopped’, wrote Viénet, and without any ‘trains,
tubes, cars or work the strikers recaptured the time so sadly lost in
factories, on motorways and in front of the t.v. People strolled,
dreamed, learned how to live. Desires began to become, little by little,
reality.’108 Another eye-witness account reported that a ‘tremendous
surge of community and cohesion gripped those who had previously
seen themselves as isolated and impotent puppets, dominated by
institutions they could neither control nor understand’.109
There was indeed a great deal of talk about desire, unity,
participation, and the liberation of spontaneous creativity in 1968,
and the events of 1968 are often described as ‘surrealism in the
streets’.110 With neither a transport system nor the urgency to get
anywhere, the dérive became an aspect of everyday life; without the
usual saturation of mass media, people chatted as never before. Alain
Jouffroy recalled the ‘great joy that we experienced for the first time
in the streets of Paris during May 1968, that joy in the eyes and on the
lips of all those who for the first time were talking to each other’.111
Paying tribute to Fourier’s identification of the building of barricades
as the quintessential example of passionate work, Viénet noticed that
the general strike unleashed new forms of playful activity.
Fourier had already remarked how it took workers several hours
to put up a barricade that rioters could erect in a few minutes.
The disappearance of forced labour necessarily coincided with
the free flow of creativity in every sphere: slogans, language,
behaviour, tactics, street-fighting techniques, agitation, songs
and comic strips. Everyone was thus able to measure the amount
of creative energy that had been crushed during the time of
survival, the days condemned to output, shopping, television,
and to passivity erected as a principle.112
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The most radical gesture
This was indeed a critique of the totality of lived experience which
challenged even the traditional expressions of dissent and organised
political activity, and found its expression in the council communism
beloved of the situationists. General assemblies allowed for a
maximum of participation, and strike committees, occupation
councils, and a host of tiny spontaneously formed organisations did
all they could to avoid the mediations of representation, bureaucracy,
and hierarchy. Viénet was convinced that a ‘manifestly Councillist
attitude’113 prevailed, and the Observer noted that this challenge to
organisational methods was perhaps the most alarming aspect of the
revolution. In mid-May, Neal Ascherson claimed that the
‘revolutionaries dream of a republic of workers’ councils, a selfgoverning society…in which the “new human being” will emerge’,114
and two weeks later, the paper reported that ‘the embattled strikers’
had
raised the cry for a ‘government of the people’. It was horribly
clear that the spark of revolution, struck by the student
extremists, had found tinder on the shop floor. Suddenly,
revolution seemed everywhere in the air, feared or hoped for.115
Although the situationists and the enragés formed the ‘Council for
the Continuation of the Occupations’ and put out some of the best
propaganda of the events, the situationists were far too small to
constitute a very influential grouping. But their tactical refusals of
categorisation were pursued by the entire movement. The events
appeared to be completely spontaneous, with forms of organisation
and strategies developing according to particular circumstances and
orchestrated by no one. The overwhelming feeling was that the
identification of a set of demands, a leader, or a simple purpose,
would weaken and fragment the movement, leaving it vulnerable to
accommodation and recuperation within existing social structures. In
1968, the demands of both workers and students arose out of
discontent with specific situations, but almost instantaneously found
their expression in impossible demands made of the social whole. The
revolutionary moment passed only when their expectations were
reduced to those with which the system could cope, such as the
reform of the universities, greater freedom of the press, higher wages,
and more worker—management co-operation.
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‘A single choice’
103
Most commentators agreed with the Observer that one of the most
significant strengths of the revolutionary movement was that ‘it
cannot be clearly identified…. It is raw explosive power.’ 116 But
attempts were also made to identify the leaders, ‘stars’, and
organisers of the events. ‘If leaders didn’t exist, then they had to be
invented. The press itself went on to install the Spokesmen, the
Representatives, the Leaders. Obscure bureaucrats, vigorous
professors, outspoken militants, were transformed by the press into
the Lenins, the Maos and the Ches of the Revolution.’117 ‘Students in
Revolt—and two of the men responsible’, declared the Guardian in
an article on Marcuse and Cohn-Bendit.118 Alain Geismar, a Maoist
student leader, and Jacques Sauvageot, head of the UNEF, were also
cast in the role of leaders of the movement and, in the British press, it
was the Trotskyist Alain Krivine who was most frequently identified
as being in charge. Viénet observed that these three became
the apparent leaders of a leaderless movement. The press, radio,
and television, in their search for leaders, found no-one besides
them. They became the inseparable and photogenic stars of a
spectacle hastily pasted over the revolutionary reality…. This
trio of ideological charm of 819 varieties could obviously only
say the acceptable—and therefore the deformed and
recuperated—tolerated by such a means of transmission. While
the real meaning of the void which had propelled them out of the
void was purely unacceptable.119
In situationist terms, the identification of leaders was an attempt to
deny the possibility that people are capable of organising themselves;
a r e c u p e r a t ive t a c t i c r e t u r n i n g s t r u c t u r e s o f d o m i n a t i o n ,
specialisation, and mediation to the movement and turning 10 million
strikers into passive spectators of events over which they had no
control. The News of the World held the situationists responsible
when it reported: Their general headquarters is secret but I think it is
somewhere in London. They are not students, but are what is known
as situationists; they travel everywhere and exploit the discontent of
students.’120
Certainly both the slogans of the period and the means by which
they were communicated—graffiti on the walls and often on
treasured statues and works of art—had a situationist air about them.
The slogans which appeared in May declared: ‘Live without dead
time!’, ‘Play without shackles!’, ‘They’re buying your happiness.
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The most radical gesture
Steal it!’, and ‘I came in the cobblestones’. Later, some became more
angry but no less surreal: ‘Society is a man-eating flower’, and
‘Comrades, if everyone was doing this…’ were joined in the
Sorbonne by ‘I take my desires for reality because I believe in the
reality of my desires’ was sacrilegiously painted across a wall, along
with ‘What if someone burnt down the Sorbonne?’, ‘Art is dead!
Don’t consume its corpse’, and ‘Run for it! The old world is behind
you’. 121 Arguments abound as to whether these were displays of
situationist or surrealist influence; when the issue was raised with the
surrealist Jean Schuster in 1987, his response to the suggestion that
‘the situationists stole the surrealists’ thunder in 1968’ was pert: ‘If
you read their revue and Raoul Vaneigem’s writings attentively you’ll
see that there isn’t a single new idea in them.’122 But when had the
situationists ever claimed originality? Theirs was a patchwork of
materials stolen from everywhere, and if surrealism’s contribution to
the revolutionary moment was particularly strong, it was obviously
particularly useful. In 1968, surrealism was subject to a détournement
of its own, taken out of the galleries and acted in the streets. Perhaps
the most famous and significant of the slogans read: ‘Under the
cobblestones, the beach’, an expression which captured both the
tactics of the revolutionaries, for whom the cobblestones provided the
most obvious weapons against the police, and the symbolic meaning
of this détournement of the streets. Another slogan read, ‘The most
beautiful sculpture is the sandstone cobble, the heavy square cobble,
the cobble you throw at the police’, and André Fermigier pointed out
that Duchamp’s ‘“ready-made” finally realised its revolutionary
potential when it took the form of paving-stones which the students
threw at the CRS [riot police]’.123 For Michel Ragon, ‘the city once
again became a centre of games’:
the great permanent theatre of the Odéon, the poster studio of the
ex-Ecole des Beaux-Arts, the bloody ballets of the CRS and
students, the open-air demonstrations and meetings, the public
poetry of wall slogans, the dramatic reports by Europe No. 1 and
Radio Luxembourg, the entire nation in a state of tension,
intensive participation and, in the highest sense of the word,
poetry.124
Anonymous, cheap, and immediate, the use of graffiti in the May
events epitomised the avant-garde dream of art realised in the practice
of everyday life. A transformation of its environment, graffiti was as
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‘A single choice’
105
powerful a form of subversion and engagement as the larger
détournement of the city it inspired and reported.
If the tactics of détournement were present in the events, elements
of recuperation peppered their aftermath. Thousands of accounts and
explanations of the successes and failures of 1968 appeared in the
following two years, collections of posters and photographs were
published, and legend has it that souvenir cobblestones were on sale
within days of the rioting. The twentieth anniversary of the May
events was greeted with a blaze of publicity and enthusiasm quite
different from the rather muted reception given to the tenth, and
something of a media extravaganza brought endless
representationsand reconsiderations of 1968 to the 1980s. In a ‘pullout colour supplement’, the New Statesman declared: ‘In 1988 the
revolution will be televised’ and predicted that the year would contain
‘Something for everybody. Biff cartoons will have a field day; diehard situationists will denounce recuperation on a grand scale;
Marxism Today will produce T-shirts decorated with tanks and
warning us against provocateurs.’125 More books appeared, the ‘stars’
of the movement were engaged in a plethora of radio, television, and
newspaper reports, and references to the events appeared in 1988
advertisements. Publicity from the National Westminster Bank made
use of the visual similarity of ‘68’ and ‘88’ in posters and leaflets
which rather ironically offered ‘a range of services to help you handle
your money, so that you can get on with your work while still
enjoying student life’, packaging them in a series of political images
with lettering reminiscent of the ink blocking of an ad hoc printshop.
Such appropriations do not go unnoticed. But, more than twenty
years on, they are again accepted as part of an inevitable cycle in
which fashions and styles come and go with a mysterious autonomy
on which historical events are one influence among many. From this
perspective, anti-art is bound to be integrated into art, radical theory
will always become institutionalised and respectable, and real
experience cannot but pass into spectacle. There is room for regret,
but not for analysis, and it is to the situationists’ credit that they
delved beneath this superficial acceptance in their attempts to
develop a theory of recuperation.
But the situationists’ analysis of the fate of the dissenting voice
does tend to conjure visions of some Orwellian ‘Ministry of
Recuperation’, giving the impression that all criticism is deliberately
taken into the realm of commodity relations and disarmed by
conscious decision. As Barrot argued, the ‘counterrevolution does not
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The most radical gesture
take up revolutionary ideas because it is malign or manipulative, let
alone short of ideas, but because revolutionary ideas deal with real
problems with which the counterrevolution is confronted.’ 126 But
although the situationists’ view of recuperation can be read rather too
conspiratorially, the shift of ideas they described was merely intended
to express the effects of commodity relations throughout all
knowledge, culture, and political discourse. For sure, talk of
recuperation presupposes a central split or separation at the heart of
the social world; an alienation to which everything, from subjective
experience to revolutionary theory, is vulnerable. But the situationists
did not conceive this as a static division between the subject and the
power structures which oppose it. Invoking a dialectical and shifting
play between the two, they argued that it is the logic of the
commodity, rather than the existence of a particular set of rulers or
government, which maintains the capitalist system. And just as the
notion of recuperation implies no definitive distinction between the
rulers and the ruled, so it precludes the possibility that the spectacle is
a totalitarian and all-encompassing whole. If this were the case, there
would be no sense of a realm from which critique could be
recuperated; no ‘us’ who create and ‘them’ who recuperate; no good
and evil of subjectivity and power. By definition, commodity
relations are based on the appropriation of something from the
workers and consumers to whom all subjects of capitalism are
reduced, and unless it is accepted that modern society is no longer
determined by the circulation of commodities, the situationist
spectacle can never completely circumscribe reality.
Nevertheless, the view that late capitalism has indeed cut loose
from commodity production and consumption gained great currency
in the intellectual aftermath of the 1968 events. That the events
happened at all showed that rebellion was still possible in spite of the
sophisticated exercises of power effected within capitalist society,
valorising situationist claims that subjective forces could overturn the
logic of the commodity with the free play of desires, pleasures, and
created situations. On the other hand, the failure of the events seemed
to indicate that in spite of the extraordinary uprising against it,
capitalist society was resistant to revolutionary upheaval. And the
system’s ability to withstand the challenges of 1968 led many radical
theorists to wonder if their intellectual energies had not been devoted
to the criticism of structures and institutions peripheral to the real
functioning of society.
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‘A single choice’
107
Although the rhetoric of both situationist propaganda and the
events themselves was that of a radical distinction between classes,
the treachery of the unions and many of the party organisations which
claimed to represent both workers and students contributed to the
difficulties of a simple account of who was on which side and
whether, indeed, there were two sides at all. To the situationists, of
course, the behaviour of the organised Left came as no surprise:
‘Humanity won’t be happy until the last bureaucrat is hanged with the
guts of the last capitalist’, 127 declared one of their slogans, and
Debord was later to argue that it remains the spectacle’s ‘highest
a m b i t i o n ’ t o ‘ t u r n s e c r e t a g e n t s i n t o r evo l u t i o n a r i e s a n d
revolutionaries into secret agents’.128 But the confusion between the
appearance and the reality of political commitment was compounded
by the indeterminate nature of the forces they were trying to
overthrow. Where was the true locus of the power which dominated
and repressed? Was it in the government, the police, the official
opposition, the factories, the media, moral restraint, cultural values,
the system of education, the love affair, all, or none of these? And
what was the nature of the force contesting power? A radical
subjectivity, opposing all forms of mediation and organising itself
into cells of direct democratic control? Or a more shadowy subversive
force unable to realise the revolutionary dream and capable only of
aimless interruption and nihilistic festivity? The activists had of
course contributed to this doubt themselves, running free from
participation in all the forms and structures of the old world,
sidestepping categorisation, and resisting definition within the
conventions of organisation, leadership, and identifiable demands.
And although the revolutionaries’ provocative tactics of imaginative
subversion had allowed an unprecedented challenge to conventional
political action, even these attempts to challenge the established order
were thrown into doubt in the intellectual debates which followed the
events.
The post-68 philosophies developed by Jean-François Lyotard,
Félix Guattari, Gilles Deleuze, and Michel Foucault suggested that
the failure of the events necessitated new accounts of how society is
organised and subverted. They introduced radical frameworks which
subjected traditional conceptions of capitalism and revolutionary
criticism to an unprecedented challenge. The activists’ rejection of all
forms of representation and leadership found its intellectual
expression in the poststructuralist distrust of the authority of theory,
and demands for direct democracy and the insistence that everyone
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The most radical gesture
should have a say about the detail of their everyday lives were
transcribed into a concern for the specificity of experience. That both
the representatives of the state and those of the working class had
tried to maintain their power by denying the cacophony of dissenting
voices pointed to discourse and knowledge as the real sites of power,
and the fact that the social relations implicit in everything from sex to
the management of football teams had been contested threw up the
possibility that power was exercised differently in every area of life
and could not be explained in terms of a single contradiction in the
economic functioning of society. Such observations problematised all
notions of critical practice and, in some cases, made them seem quite
impossible. But none of these philosophers set out to prove that this
was so. Like the situationists, their starting point was the observation
that the most radical of gestures could somehow be absorbed within
the existing structures of power, and the effort to expose and subvert
the real mechanisms underlying these structures continued to
motivate their work.
These theoretisations were not merely developed in the aftermath
of the May events, however, but in the wake of structuralism as well, a
perspective which had already displaced the notions of subjectivity,
history, meaning, and reality central to revolutionary theory.
Structuralism developed out of a linguistic theory to suggest that all
experience arises within pre-existing structures, reducing all meaning
to an effect of language and removing any sense of correspondence
between language and the world. In the work of de Saussure,
language was theorised as a system of signs which take their meaning
from relations with one another rather than a reference to the world.
The subject who had previously used language to interpret and
communicate with the world became a subject constructed by this
system of signs, and the idea that the world itself could be represented
by language was superseded by the realisation that it is actually
produced by it.129 Although structuralism excited a renewed political
debate which allowed contemporary capitalist society to be analysed
as a complexity of interdependent relations, many theorists were
dissatisfied with its inability to account for human agency, change,
and interruption. The ahistoricism of a system of pre-existing social
and linguistic structures allowed for no understanding of how it
arises, maintains itself, or comes to suffer challenges of the order of
those mounted in 1968, and the poststructuralist philosophies of the
1970s tried introduce some notion of historical fluidity into the
system of signs which order and produce the world.
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‘A single choice’
109
In part, this instability was provided by the Nietzschean
conception of the world as ‘a monster of energy without beginning,
without end…a play of forces and waves of forces.’130 Nietzsche’s
influence can be read in the work of Foucault, for whom this
dynamism is populated by endless networks of power and knowledge,
and Lyotard, whose development of a philosophy of multiple and
positive desires was shared by Deleuze and Guattari. Championing a
world of incessant flux and becoming which underscores but is
nevertheless dominated by reason’s insistence on the stability of
being, Nietzsche saw an endless movement of becoming, difference,
chance, and chaos washing against the categories of reason to pose a
recurring threat to the structures of unity, being, and universal truth.
And in their rejections of any Hegelian conception of historical
progress in favour of some sort of permanent contestation between
order and its subversion, the poststructuralist philosophers opened up
the possibility of new and productive frameworks in which to
consider political action. But they also began to lose any sense of
purpose and meaning, and struggled with the dilemma of Nietzsche’s
own work, in which a refusal to identify any realm of true meaning
and reality conflicts with the desire to privilege the underlying world
of chaos, force, and flow. And although this tension, from which
neither Dada nor surrealism had escaped, was eventually collapsed in
the postmodern philosophy later espoused by Lyotard and
Baudrillard, the 1970s work of Foucault, Lyotard, Deleuze, and
Guattari was all caught on a bridge between declarations that reality
is a chaotic whirl and the certainty that it cannot be identified at all.
The postmodernity into which Lyotard later drifted escaped this
dilemma at the price of a political despondency and celebration of
meaninglessness. From the postmodern perspective, the demands
made in situationist theory and the May events themselves were quite
impossible. The immediacy of pure representation, direct
communication and democracy, and the end of all separation,
mediation, and alienation, were completely misguided dreams which
believed it possible to express the inexpressible: true desires,
immediate experiences, spontaneous emotions, and the reality of
pleasures and angers. In the postmodern context, it is in the very act
of articulation that such realities slip away; even the most imaginative
means of communication remains trapped within the network of
social and discursive relations which is the true ground of the exercise
of power. It may be true that the party is more constraining than the
workers’ council, or the theoretical text less immediate than graffiti
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The most radical gesture
on a wall, but these are merely quantitative differences which cannot
contribute to the qualitative goal of social transformation. The
mediations of discourse are inescapable, and it is in them that the
power and domination against which the revolutionarystruggles are
really exercised. Such observations make situationist condemnations
of recupera- tion seem pointless and naïve. Believing they were
attempting to avoid accommodation within structures of spectacular
repre- sentation, the situationists failed to realise that all
representation, and not just the forms peculiar to capitalism, is
spectacular and recuperative.
With the contradictions of production and consumption losing
their determining role, the essential distinction between life and its
representation dissolves, and representation becomes the only realm
in which the reality of experience can be known. Any sense of hidden
values and meanings must be abandoned: reality is merely that which
appears in discourse, and it is no longer possible to speak of the
underlying authenticities of the individual, the intrinsic value of the
commodity, or the real meaning of the recuperated text. Recuperation
and détournement cannot be conceived as the strategies of opposing
forces, but the eternal passage between equivalent contexts, so that
the revolutionary posters printed in 1968 were no more real or
authentic than their 1988 advertisers’ simulation; the simulation is
not a recuperation, since the original was never outside the play of
discursive networks in the first place. Indeed, from this perspective
there is a sense in which the 1988 poster is more honest than its 1968
counterpart: at least it does not pretend to refer to anything other than
another poster, whereas the original carried the implicit claim that it
was a faithful representation of the real desires of the people. The
brute force of real events lives only through the images and
appearances it assumes in the discursive world and has no reality
outside the sum of all that is said, sung, painted, and filmed of it.
Among the postcards produced for the 1988 exhibition of the
Situationist International at the ICA was one declaring, ‘Humanity
won’t be happy until the last bureaucrat is hanged with the guts of the
last capitalist.’ A tragedy, or an amusing irrelevance? From the
vantage point at which much post-68 theory eventually arrived, such
developments are just a fact of life; expressions of the human
condition against which any struggle is doomed to unhappy despair.
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Chapter 4
‘Victory will be for those who create
disorder without loving it’
The May events have served as the common springboard for a great deal
of subsequent intellectual enquiry. The line of imaginative dissent to which
Dada, surrealism, the situationists, and the activists of 1968 belong
continually reappears in the poststructuralist and desiring philosophies
of the 1970s, and the postmodern world view to which they have led is
itself laced with the remnants of this tradition. But it was the failure of
the revolutionary movement which preoccupied this trajectory of post68 philosophy, culminating in the postmodern insistence that criticism is
impossible, subversion futile, and revolution a childish and reactionary
dream. And as France returned to some sort of political normality, the
possibility that the most basic and heartfelt presuppositions of
revolutionary thought were fundamentally mistaken was raised over and
again.
A c u r s o r y r e a d i n g o f p o s t s t r u c t u r a l i s t t h o u g h t l e av e s
revolutionary theory without a leg to stand on. The situationist
distinction between the real and the spectacle is rendered
meaningless by the claim that there can be no real existence beyond
that which appears in discourse, and the assertion that the desires
and experiences of the subject are somehow more authentic than
those represented in the spectacle collapses in the face of
suggestions that subjectivity is itself produced by the networks of
discourse in which we live. Notions of class, totality, and historical
progress are completely undermined, and the idea that all social
relations are somehow answerable to a single principle of economic
functioning is rendered untenable. But although poststructuralism is
in some senses a radical break with the situationist project, a host of
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The most radical gesture
continuities makes it impossible to oppose the two world views
completely. The interests, vocabulary and style of the situationists
reappear in Lyotard’s railings against theory and Foucault’s
maverick intellectualism, and the desiring philosophies invoked by
Deleuze and Guattari continue to offer words on the ‘art of living’.1
The breadth of situationist theory and its magpie tactics of
appropriation and détournement find their expression in the
deconstructive eclecticism of poststructuralist writing, which
similarly has no scruples about taking ideas, examples, and forms of
expression from anywhere. Many poststructuralist texts are
mixtures of poetry and philosophy, fiction and journalism;
distinctions between disciplines, styles, and media are removed,
and rigorous argument sits alongside unfounded speculation and
unanswerable polemic. Like the situationists, they observe that the
world now seems to be a decentred and aimless collection of images
and appearances, characterise consciousness as fragmented,
dispersed, and constructed by the social relations in which it arises,
and declare the apparent impossibility of future progress and
historical foundation. Situationist vocabularies of play, pleasure,
and subversion reappear, and the politics of the everyday,
consumerism, the media, the avant-garde, the city, language, and
desire are themes common to both. Moreover, many theorists
writing in the wake of 1968 continued the situationist search for
some irrecuperable perspective from which an increasingly
complex and all-encompassing social system could be opposed.
But these similarities do not extend to their conclusions. The
situationists took the fragmentations of modern consciousness and
the free-floating aimlessness of modern society as qualities specific
to the spectacle, arguing that capitalism is largely maintained by its
ability to present itself as a chaotic society which has broken free
from all sense of historical progress. The spectacle appears as a
moment with neither beginning nor end, a world of appearances
which has no underlying realities to conceal, a society which is
purely and simply as it appears to be. Fragmentations, confusions,
and uncertainties were seen as the peculiar consequence of a society
organised on the principles of commodity production and
consumption, a stance which merely encouraged the situationists’
search for the real mechanisms underlying these appearances. And
although the poststructuralist philosophers clearly set out to
undermine capitalist social organisation, the trajectory of their
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search for its underlying mechanisms led them dangerously close to
agreement with capitalism’s own self-image.
Lyotard’s own doubts about the legitimacy of revolutionary
politics prefigured the May events. He left Socialisme ou Barbarie
in 1966 amidst worries about the validity of many of the
philosophical presuppositions of Marxist theory. The group’s
emphasis on alienation and the necessity of developing a critical
subjectivity had increasingly cut it adrift from the economic
imperatives of its Marxist roots, and without this material base,
revolutionary theory was revealed as a moral critique of capitalism
based only on an act of faith in humanity and the impossible desire
for a future society of harmony and good will. Lyotard had no wish
to return to the patient economism of orthodox Marxism, and
retained his affection for the analysis thanks to which ‘we
were…able to hope to modify the course of capitalism, perhaps to
put an end to it, by placing the force of radical critique at the
disposition of the struggle of the oppressed, and on their side’.2 But
what if the foundations of this critique were quite misplaced,
implying an impossible faith in the progress and reconciliation of
dialectical thought? What if ‘there wasn’t any Self at all to
experience contradictorily the moments and thus to achieve
knowledge and realisation of itself? What if history and thought did
not need this synthesis; what if the paradoxes had to remain
paradoxes’? 3
Questions of this order carried enormous political implications,
the most disturbing of which suggested that the position of the
oppressed was actually reinforced by the theories of liberation
intended to transform it. Later observing that revolutionary
struggles and their instruments ‘have been transformed into
regulators of the system’,4 Lyotard wrote:
It is absolutely obvious today, and has been for quite some time
that…the reconstitution of traditional political organisations,
even if they present themselves as ultra-leftist organisations is
bound to fail, for these settle precisely into the order of the
social surface, they are ‘recovered’.5
Was it really possible that the tactics and struggles of revolutionary
politics were serving to maintain the systems they sought to
ove r t u r n , s o t h a t r e c u p e r a t i o n wa s a c o n s e q u e n c e o f t h e
r evo l u t i o n a r i e s ’ u n w i t t i n g p a r t i c i p a t i o n i n t h e g o a l s a n d
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The most radical gesture
presuppositions of the status quo? At first, Lyotard observed, such
questions ‘frightened me in themselves because of the formidable
theoretical tasks they promised, and also because they seemed to
c o n d e m n a ny o n e w h o g ave h i m s e l f ove r t o t h e m t o t h e
abandonment of any militant practice for an indeterminate time’.6
Soon, however, ‘the danger of political regression of which the
Marxists warned, had ceased to frighten me’, 7 and Lyotard
embarked on a deconstructive adventure which raised the
possibility that the forces of social revolution and those of the
establishment were really not so far apart.
As a member of the mouvement du 22 mars, Lyotard’s
engagement in the 1968 events confirmed his doubts about
traditional conceptions of revolutionary politics. The spontaneous
upsurge of a multitude of perspectives, interests, and desires
suggested that the attempt to reduce every manifestation of dissent
to a single project belied a dangerous tendency to totalitarianism,
squashing and concealing the real variety of differences and
subversive forces which contribute to the revolutionary moment.
Lyotard developed this position to argue that totalising theory, of
which Marxism is a perfect example, is itself an agent of oppression
and domination. His 1979 report on The Postmodern Condition
suggested that theories are little more than good stories which make
illegitimate claims to truth and universal validity and, in the
process, deny the validity of all events, voices, and experiences
which do not conveniently fit their analyses. Theories can appeal
only to larger meta-narratives such as the belief in progress towards
the truth, the discovery of the real, or the emancipation of the
o p p r e s s e d : s t o r i e s c o m m o n t o r e l i g i o u s , s c i e n t i fi c , a n d
philosophical discourse, yet quite unsupportable except by an
appeal to themselves. There is no law which says that the oppressed
will be freed; there is no reason why alienation should come to an
end. These are fictions, acts of faith, and expressions of desire
concealed by scientific pretension and secreted in the rigour of
theory. None of this would matter if theories acknowledged their
fictional status. Instead, they insist on their ability to represent
reality, providing an accurate reflection of the external world. For
Lyotard, however, what they really reflect is their own assumption
that such representation is possible. Theories are circular and selfreferential; they tell particular stories about the world and can claim
no universal validity.
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Any theory answers its critics with the demand for replacement:
one theory must always be countered by another, and better,
totalisation which accounts for everything its rival explains, and
more besides. But, for Lyotard, it was not a matter of challenging
the content of the theory which occupies the throne of truth, but the
very assumption that such a throne exists. This position led to a
hostility to all attempts to criticise theory, since the act of criticism
itself assumes that a theory must be perfected: ‘we have already said
and repeated that we don’t give a damn for criticizing, since to
criticize is to remain in the field of the thing criticized and in
dogmatic or even paranoid relations of knowledge’. 8 Dialectical
criticism, the act of negating and opposing a body of thought or
system of social relations, poses contradictions not for the pleasure
or disruptive effect of making a difference in the world, but as a
means to their resolution: the synthesis of opposites into a new and
single unity. It is a ‘deeply rational’ and ‘reformist’ activity which
challenges nothing and is ‘deeply consistent with the system’ since
it shares the presupposition that a better theory is both desirable and
necessary. The critic ‘remains in the sphere of the criticised, he
belongs to it, he goes beyond one term of the position but doesn’t
alter the position of terms’. And it is also
deeply hierarchical: where does his power over the criticised
come from? he knows better? he is the teacher, the educator? he
is therefore universality, the University, the State, the City,
bending over childhood, nature, singularity, shadiness, to
reclaim them? The confessor and God helping the sinner save
his soul?
‘This benign reformism’, he concluded, ‘is wholly compatible with
the preservation of the authoritarian relationship.’ 9
Unhappy with the very idea of a totalising world view, Lyotard’s
deconstructions of revolutionary theory were not attempts to
produce a better theory, a more coherent body of thought, or a more
rational perspective. On the contrary, they were intended to reveal
the extent to which certain hidden intensities, desires, and
assumptions interrupt the apparent rigour of theory. We should
‘fight the white terror of truth with and for the red cruelty of
singularities’, 10 declared Lyotard, finding new and non-dialectical
ways to challenge the dominion of theory, interrupting its unity, and
breaking the consensus it demands. Taking up the situationist
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The most radical gesture
vocabulary of an economy of desires, Lyotard argued that the flux
and becoming of the Nietzschean world is a realm of real intensity
and desire allowed to exist only in the theoretical frameworks which
deny and conceal its essential dynamism. But intensities continually
break through the codes of theoretical discourse, interrupting its
claims to intellectual rigour and revealing the extent to which the
world is shaped and dominated by its discursive order. Thus in
1968, Lyotard saw the subversive explosion of eroticism, creativity,
and the spontaneity of the prevalent ‘attitude of here-now’ 11 as an
attack on both the social and discursive codes of existing order and
the unifying dialectic of revolutionary theory. He argued that this
‘politics of desire’ prefigured new forms of social critique
subversive of capitalist and revolutionary values, both of which
codify desire and refuse to let it speak in its own voice.
This idea that the same underlying forces, intensities, and desires
produce both order and its subversion was also present in Foucault’s
own ‘non-critique’ of dialectical thought, which presents networks
of power as the underlying mechanisms with which social and
discursive organisation and its resistance are constructed. Foucault
argued that in its treatment of particular issues, local conflicts, and
specific events, dialectical thought evades the ‘always open and
hazardous reality of conflict’, 12 denying divisions and differences
any meaning other than that they assume in the context of the whole.
‘Dialectic does not liberate differences; it guarantees, on the
contrary, that they can always be recaptured’, 13 he argued,
suggesting that although the identification of differences and
contradictions is intrinsic to dialectical thought, they are only
important for the sake of their future resolution rather than their
intrinsic and immediate significance. In its search for fundamental
contradictions and radical oppositions at the heart of social
organisation, dialectical thought expects the plethora of other
differences and antagonisms to ally themselves with the two great
camps necessary to revolutionary change: if the central opposition
is that of class, differences between men and women, gays and
straights, students and teachers, and so on, must be subsumed
within a class analysis. Otherwise, society would be construed as a
multiplicity of separate areas of local antagonisms, each operating
its own autonomous power struggle without hope of growth or
resolution.
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This is precisely the characterisation of social relations with
which Foucault worked. His postulation of a framework in which
dialectical thought is no longer possible conjured a totality so allencompassing that it must properly be seen as a web of fragments
without necessity, or origin. Social relations can no longer be
defined in terms of a cohesive whole, and the analysis of the totality
must be superseded by the study of an enormously complex series
of specific power relations which manifest themselves throughout
the social body. Foucault engaged with the overriding question
thrown up by the failure of the May events: where, how, and to what
ends power is exercised. To him, the events showed that the areas in
which power needed to be contested were not confined to the
economy, but extended to all social institutions and, beyond this, to
cultural assumptions, structures of knowledge, systems of ideas,
and forms of communication. The exercise of power is less
homogeneous than a theory of spectacular society suggests: power
is not reducible to a single cause or origin, but operates differently
in each of a plethora of areas of life and discourse freed from any
determining principle. Relations of power arise at every conceivable
moment: at work, in bed, in the classroom, and the prison,
individuals are continually exercising and responding to the
exercise of power. There is therefore no essential dualism between
the ‘haves and have-nots’ of power; power does not issue from a
single source or move in one direction, and cannot be opposed en
bloc but only in the particular areas of social and discursive life in
which it manifests itself. Power is ‘quite different from and more
complicated, dense and pervasive than a set of laws or a state
apparatus’, 14 and it is not possible to identify a single dualism
between those who exercise power and those who resist it.
Neither is it possible to consider power merely in the negative
terms of domination and oppression: it is a positive force at work in
a world which it actually produces. This enabling role is made
possible through its exercise as knowledge, which does not arise in
some independent realm from which it is appropriated and used by
mechanisms of power, but engages in a ‘perpetual articulation’ with
power to produce the world to which we wrongly assume our
discourses refer. Brought into the public realm of language and
meaning, all aspects of life are constituted by the discourse in which
they are known, so that even the most definite of foundations is
constructed and produced. Reason, society, history, and all
conceptions of reality receive their existence within the discourses
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The most radical gesture
which seem to represent them; meaningless and lifeless without
their representation, we cannot say that they have a reality which is
later subject to the manipulations and distortions of power. The
sovereign subject presupposed throughout western philosophy is
itself a product of discourses which emphasise the negative,
repressive, and dominating aspects of power: it has long been
assumed that power exerts a negative and forbidding force which
constrains and prevents the free functioning of some real or natural
subjectivity. Power does not merely dominate individuals, who
‘circulate between its threads; they are always in a position of
simultaneously undergoing and exercising power. They are not only
its inert or consenting targets; they are also the element of its
articulation.’15 The subject actually arises out of the networks of
power and knowledge in which it lives, and all our conceptions of
subjectivity are themselves the products of the discontinuous
development of power relations in a variety of areas of social life.
For both Foucault and Lyotard, there is no ‘self’ to achieve
knowledge and realisation in the world, and no subjectivity capable
of acting on the world in order to transform it. Neither is there a
world ‘out there’ to be transformed: history is a series of
discontinuous struggles in a plethora of areas of social life, and
society is merely the general effect of these particulars. Everything
arising within the networks of power and knowledge which
constitute the social makes some contribution to it: voices of dissent
and assent, acts of defiance and complicity, theories of revolution
and stability are equally the products of the relations of power to
which they bring apparently contradictory perspectives. Political
opposition is integrated within the structures it thinks it is opposing
because the forms, mediations, and discourses in which it operates
constitute the very relations of power it imagines itself capable of
negating. Struggles are never pitted against power; they demand it,
whether this demand is expressed in terms of calls for liberation,
higher wages, justice, or rights. And it is in the course of this
struggle for power that the world comes into being. Demands for
sexual liberation, for example, bring sex and sexuality into the
discursive realm and the networks of relations of power and
knowledge which actually produce them. The very idea of sex as a
reality later subject to the repression of taboos and silences is itself
a discursive construction. This is not to say, of course, that sexual
activity did not exist before it was spoken of. But when one comes
to delve beneath layer upon layer of representations of sexuality for
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‘Those who create disorder’
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the ‘real thing’, Foucault’s point that sex is actually produced and
reproduced in the huge range of discourses in which it is shown
seems far from absurd.
The same difficulty haunts the search for the truth we imagine is
concealed under layers of ideology. For Foucault, the trouble with
‘analyses which prioritise ideology is that there is always
presupposed a human subject on the lines of the model provided by
classical philosophy, endowed with a consciousness which power is
then thought to seize on’. 16 Truth, like the promise of pleasure or
revolution, is discursively produced as well. Indeed, all the
meanings and realities to which we refer, and those we use as
foundations for our criticisms of existing social relations, are
constructed in the process of their representation, to the extent that
representation itself becomes a meaningless term. For if reality only
exists in discourse, there is nothing to be represented, and nothing,
beyond an endless series of other discursive constructions, to which
our discourses refer. We live within networks of messages, signs,
information, and knowledge which produce our experience of
ourselves, society, and all that we consider real. And, as power
produces its subjects, so it gives birth to antagonists and the forms
of resistance with which it is irreducibly implicated. Resistance is
always already constituted by the relations of power it opposes; its
means and ends of struggle are defined by the nature of the
particular exercise of power it opposes, and all resistance inevitably
arises in an internal relation to its object.
For the revolutionary, the implications of this position are
profound and disturbing. If power is really exercised in discourse,
so that the chimerical realities of experience, subjectivity, and the
social world are only ever produced and never represented, it is not
possible to say or do anything which undermines power itself. By
virtue of its very articulation, dissent is always already recuperated,
and all antagonisms and contradictions merely occur within the
inescapable networks of power which constitute reality, society, and
individuality. The paradigms of alienation, domination, and
repression on which the revolutionary project has always relied all
presuppose some lack, absence, or constraint, in which power is
conceived as a negative force which merely inhibits that which
already exists. But Foucault’s conception of power as a productive
and enabling force challenged all notions of the negativity required
by dialectical thought. There can be no perspective from which
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The most radical gesture
power can be opposed, since power produces all perspectives,
including that of its own resistance.
But although resistance is produced by power and cannot be seen
as the authentic expression of some prediscursive subjective desire,
the Nietzschean idea that there is a perpetual contest between
reason and the raw events it circumscribes provides a perspective
from which new forms of resistance are possible. ‘To say that one
can never be “outside” power does not mean that one is trapped and
condemned to defeat no matter what,’ 17 and although forms of
resistance derive their very ‘means of struggle’ from the power
relations with which they engage, it remains true that the ‘analysis
of power-mechanisms has no built-in tendency to show power as
being at once synonymous and always victorious’.18 The immediate
political task must be to establish ‘the positions occupied and
modes of actions used by each of the forces at work, the
possibilities of resistance and counter-attack on either side’. 19 Like
Ly o t a r d , t h e r e f o r e , Fo u c a u l t a rg u e d t h a t t h e t e n d e n cy t o
universalisation inherent in dialectical thought must be abandoned
to allow for the development of forms of knowledge which
minimise and interrupt prevailing codes of domination. He
advocated forms of counter-discourse, in which localised and
specific forms of knowledge are pitted against the totalising
theories which would claim them. Championing the subjugated and
particular knowledges of those on the receiving end of power, he
gave a voice to the hidden and excluded experiences which are the
ground of the resistance which these configurations of power
produce. This project surfaced throughout Foucault’s work. One of
t h e n e g l e c t e d c o n s e q u e n c e s o f t h e 1 9 6 8 eve n t s w a s t h e
imprisonment of more than a hundred activists, many of whom were
involved in the widespread prison riots in France during 1971, after
which Foucault helped to establish the Groupe d’Information sur les
Prisons, a network developed to enable prisoners to speak counterdiscursively of their own experiences from ‘the underside of
power’. It was out of this experience that Discipline and Punish,
one of Foucault’s most powerful studies of the development of the
histories of the exercise of power, emerged. 20
As the situationists had hunted among the remnants of
specialised theories and particular practices for components of a
new and totalising world view, Foucault’s own use of moments of
totalising theories reflected his idea that theories should be treated
as tool-kits, from which conceptualisations and frameworks useful
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‘Those who create disorder’
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to particular struggles can be taken. And, far from developing
theories which legislate for the people, he argued that intellectuals
should likewise concern themselves with specific issues and
particular struggles without seeing them as means to the end of a
universal framework or examples of a theoretical stance. In 1968, he
wrote, the ‘intellectual discovered that the masses no longer need
him to gain knowledge’:
they know perfectly well, without illusion; they know far better
than he and they are certainly capable of expressing
themselves. But there exists a system of power which blocks,
prohibits, and invalidates this discourse…. Intellectuals are
themselves agents of this system of power.21
Shunning the traditionally public life of the Parisian intellectual,
and resisting the imperative to develop a clear theoretical or
political stance, Foucault’s unorthodox forms of detailed
genealogical enquiry and localised research problematised both his
life and work. ‘I think I have in fact been situated in most of the
squares on the political checkerboard, one after another and
sometimes simultaneously,’ he wrote, listing the roles of ‘anarchist,
leftist, ostentatious or disguised Marxist, nihilist, explicit or secret
anti-Marxist, technocrat in the service of Gaullism, new liberal ’ as
examples of the roles foisted upon him. ‘None of these descriptions
is important by itself,’ he declared; but ‘taken together, on the other
hand, they mean something. And I must admit that I rather like what
they mean.’22
This gleeful sidestepping of convention and categorisation
reappears throughout poststructuralist writing as a vital form of
resistance to the ordered codes of discourse. Transcribing the
situationist dérive from the city street to the domain of theory,
Lyotard used the aimless playfulness of locomotion without a goal
to describe the sort of drifting thought with which dialectical
criticism can be abandoned, disallowing the arrogance of the
theorist who judges, reflects, and represents the world, and
providing the only honest form of intellectual practice.
Where do you criticise from? Don’t you see that criticising is
still knowing, knowing better? That the critical relation still
falls within the sphere of knowledge, of realisation and thus of
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The most radical gesture
the assumption of power? Critique must be drifted out of.
Better still: Drifting is in itself the end of all critique.23
Lyotard’s drifting thought upsets and interrupts the discourse which
uncritically assumes that it can represent the real, and it was for this
reason that he regarded the tactics of the cultural avant-garde more
useful than those of conventional politics: ‘“avant-garde” research,
etc., actually make up the only type of activity that is effective, this
because it is functionally…located outside the system; and, by
definition, its function is to deconstruct everything that belongs to
order’. 24 Since dialectical criticism can never challenge the rules of
the game in which it is engaged, a drifting sort of thought must be
able to engage with a theory, moving across and exposing its hidden
intensities without being dragged into the need to develop a better
and more thorough version.
These ideas were energetically pursued by Deleuze and Guattari.
Introducing a multiplicity of desires which traverse and threaten
both the organisation of society and its opposition, Deleuze and
Guattari abandoned all vestiges of progress and surrendered to a
world populated only by an ever more anarchic chaos of desires.
Psychoanalysis, dominated in the aftermath of the May events by
Jacques Lacan, had been crucial to the articulation of the
undercurrents of intensity so important to the development of ideas
about the deconstruction of the subject, and Deleuze and Guattari
pushed the Lacanian subject, a fundamentally decentred and
fragmented construct inevitably alienated by its positioning in the
symbolic realm of discursive structures and relations, to an
unprecedented extreme. 25 Promoting a positive, affirmative
conception of desire which abandoned all the dark, repressive, and
negative connotations it had previously borne, Deleuze and Guattari
shamelessly pitted Lacan’s imaginary, or pre-symbolic, realm
against the orders of discursive structures and normalising. Oedipal,
relations. An endless flux of desires takes the conceptual place of
Foucault’s relations of power, displacing the subject as the
fundamental building block of the world and bringing a whiff of
impassioned materialism to the otherwise somewhat rarefied
poststructuralist air.
Deleuze and Guattari’s ‘micro-politics of desire’ miniaturised
society, discourse, subjectivity, and the body into an anarchic series
of desiring machines which both produce and undermine the
identities on which traditional political philosophy has relied. The
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fluxes of energy which constitute the macropolitical world are
channelled and ordered by particular configurations of social codes,
and in every form of social organisation the processes by which
desires are coded and colonised are continually subverted by their
own internal movements of deterritorialisation. Codes are
established and scrambled in an endless play of stability and
destabilisation produced by the desires which traverse all social
relations, and Deleuze and Guattari presented a world of continual
play between order and its subversion, in which any form of
organisationis inevitably subject to the interruption of its own
components. This is, however, a process to which the development
of capitalist society brings an unprecedented acceleration. While
new territories are mapped and desires are colonised by giant webs
of production and consumption, the spiralling proliferation of
commodities simultaneously decodifies earlier forms of regulation
and allows the radical egalitarianism of their free circulation to
flourish. Thus
the very conditions that make the State or the World war
machine possible, in other words, constant capital (resources
and equipment) and human variable capital, continually
recreate unexpected possibilities for counterattack, unforeseen
initiatives determining revolutionary, popular, minority,
mutant machines.26
On one level, Deleuze and Guattari presented a sophisticated
reworking of the idea that capitalism produces its own gravediggers.
It is a system which ‘continually seeks to avoid reaching its limit
while simultaneously tending toward that limit’; 27 a system which,
in spite of all its systems of repression and dissuasion, and the
wisdom it gains from each previous onslaught, cannot resist the
lines of flight it produces and remains haunted by the question
‘where will the revolution come from, and in what form’?28 But
since both codes and their subversion are engaged in a perpetual
contest, one of Deleuze and Guattari’s central concerns was with the
ways in which gravediggers produce their own social order as well.
If desire is to be conceived as a positive force, attention must be
paid to the ways in which all the people, emotions, and experiences
previously conceived in negative terms of repression, alienation,
and domination, are in some sense always in a positive collusion
with both the desires and repressions which shape them. Questions
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The most radical gesture
of where the revolution comes from must be joined by those which
r eve a l t h e m e a n s b y w h i c h r evo l u t i o n s a r e b e t r a y e d , a n
interrogation which might suggest that remnants of
counterrevolutionary desire are invested in even the most radical of
gestures.
For Guattari, the immediate political consequences of this
perspective were that revolutionary struggles must ‘break away
from the dominant models, and especially from that model of
models, capital (which consists in reducing the multiplicities of
desire to a single undifferentiated flux—of workers, consumers,
etc.)’, rejecting the ‘black-and-white simplification of the class
struggle’ and accepting ‘the plurality of desiring commitments as
possible links between people in revolt and the revolution’. 29
Revolutionary struggles become ‘molecular’; configurations of
desires rather than solidarities between people or social groups.
Impossible to locate ‘on the dominant coordinates, they produce
their own axes of reference, establish underground, transversal
connections among themselves, and thus undermine older
relationships to production, society, the family, the body, sex, the
cosmos’. 30 Molecular struggles assert the multiplicity of those
desires, social groups, interests, and forms of expression which
have no place in existing society; they constitute a challenge to the
entire system of codes made by all those whose experiences are
excluded by it. In the 1970s Guattari wrote:
For the last decade, ‘battle lines’ widely different from those
which previously characterised the traditional workers’
movement have not ceased to multiply (immigrant workers,
skilled workers unhappy with the kinds of work imposed on
them, the unemployed, over-exploited women, ecologists,
nationalists, mental patients, homosexuals, the elderly, the
young etc.) … will their objectives become just another
‘demand’ acceptable to the system? Or will vectors of
molecular revolution begin to proliferate behind them?31
This search for forms of political organisation and social struggle
which would allow the proliferation of autonomous struggles runs
throughout Foucault’s philosophy of power and the desiring politics
advocated by Lyotard, Deleuze, and Guattari. In 1973, Deleuze
declared that ‘the problem for revolutionaries today is to unite
within the purpose of the particular struggle without falling into the
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despotic and bureaucratic organisations of the party or state
apparatus’, 32 a trap to which he opposed the freedom of a
‘deterritorialised’ thought of the sort developed by Nietzsche,
whose discourse is ‘above all nomadic; its statements can be
conceived as the products of a mobile war machine and not the
u t t e r a n c e s o f a r a t i o n a l a d m i n i s t r a t ive m a c h i n e r y, w h o s e
philosophers would be bureaucrats of pure reason’. 33 Nietzsche,
wrote Deleuze, ‘made thought into a machine of war—a battering
ram— into a nomadic force’. 34
Conceived by Deleuze and Guattari in terms of a refusal of the
Oedipal family unit and, by extension, the hierarchies of state and
discourse, this idea of the nomadic subversion of well-mapped
territories of thought, code, and convention has always been
characteristic of artistic and revolutionary currents in which the
situationists were placed. The dadaist Francis Picabia had declared,
‘One must be a nomad, pass through ideas as one passes through
countries and cities,’ 35 and the dadaist disregard for the boundaries
of discourse, media, morality, cultural property, and intellectual
originality reappears in surrealist transgressions of cultural
convention and many later moments in which desires are pitted
against the orders of state and society. The nomad bears a disruptive
power and raises the spectre of individuals, social groups, and forms
of action which derive their strength from their very elusiveness.
The outlaw, the mad, and the disenfranchised; the unemployed, the
dispossessed, and all those whose desires and behaviour are refused
by the conventions of the established order, begin to constitute an
unidentifiable ‘class’, threatening not because of the place it
assumes within in capitalist society, but by virtue of its refusal of
any place. This development of groups unable and unwilling to play
the game of conventional protest and criticism has found an overt
expression in the British free festival movement, where the idea of
the nomad has been taken literally. The ‘peace convoy’ of the early
1980s has developed into a band of travellers whose demands for
the right to congregate on ancient sites and common land have
excited extraordinary levels of police repression. The travellers’
contempt for property rights, their autonomous forms of
organisation and exchange, and their imaginative refusals of work,
acceptable social identities, moral and legislative codes, constitute a
threat which is magnified by their refusal of all tidy and
conventional forms of social criticism. Like Deleuze’s nomads, they
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The most radical gesture
challenge the very existence of the codes through which events and
desires are channelled and formed.
It is this ability to sidestep categorisation and remain a force
unidentifiable within the existing structures of knowledge and
power that gives the nomadic strategy its strength. And it is not
merely in the lives of those who actually take to the roads that this
evasive power is displayed. The defiance of identity was also
cultivated to great effect by the Angry Brigade, an unorthodox
terrorist group which engaged in a series of bombings in Britain
during the late 1960s and early 1970s. Influenced by the tactics and
propaganda of the situationists, the Angry Brigade made
unequivocal demands for the immediate realisation of the radical,
desiringsubject within and against capitalist society. They promoted
a sense of anonymity and ubiquity which earned them an inflated
notoriety and sidestepped all attempts at easy definition, and
although the majority of the attacks for which they claimed
responsibility only involved the destruction of property, this was a
strategy which also ended with long prison sentences. Their targets
were symbolic and usually had some specific relevance: the
Minister of Employment, Robert Carr, had his house bombed during
strikes and demonstrations against the Industrial Relations Bill;
Bryant’s home was bombed during the builders’ strike in 1971; and
the Miss World contest was attacked in 1970. Many of the Brigade’s
communiqués were published in national newspapers, and all
explained the reasons behind the group’s actions and advocated the
destruction of the mechanisms of control.
‘To believe that OUR struggle could be restricted to the channels
provided to us by the pigs, WAS THE GREATEST CON. And we
started hitting them’,36 stated one proclamation, and a communiqué
coinciding with the bombing of the Biba boutique in Chelsea read:
‘If you’re not busy being born you’re busy buying’ …
The future is ours.
Life is so boring there is nothing to do except spend all our wages
on the latest skirt or shirt.
Brothers and Sisters, what are your real desires?
Sit in the drugstore, look distant, empty, bored, drinking some
tasteless coffee? Or perhaps BLOW IT UP OR BURN IT
DOWN.37
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Against all external controls and structures, the Brigade put its faith
in the spontaneity of the ‘autonomous working class’ and
propagandised in favour of immediate action and the realisation of
desires. Its ability to use the media and the efficiency of its attacks
ensured it a serious reception. An editorial in the Evening Standard
spoke of the ‘red badge of revolution creeping across Britain’, and
declared: ‘These guerrillas are the violent activists of a revolution
c o m p r i s i n g wo r ke r s , s t u d e n t s , t e a c h e r s , t r a d e u n i o n i s t s ,
homosexuals, unemployed and women striving for liberation. They
are all angry.’38 For its own part, the Brigade cultivated an image of
a large, diffuse, and unidentifiable collection of dissenters: ‘The AB
is the man or woman sitting next to you. They have guns in their
pockets and anger in their minds.’ 39
Now we are too many to know each other.
Yet we recognise all those charged with crimes against property as
our brothers and sisters. The Stoke-Newington 6, the political
prisoners in Northern Ireland are all prisoners of the class war. We
are not in a position to say whether any one person is or isn’t a
member of the Brigade. All we say is: the Brigade is everywhere…
Let ten men and women meet who are resolved on the lightning of
violence rather than the long agony of survival; from this moment
despair ends and tactics begin.40
This last statement, taken from The Revolution of Everyday Life,
was provocative in the extreme. The idea of a ubiquitous but
unidentifiable threat was effective in that it allowed anyone to
consider themselves ‘members’ and gave the impression to the
authorities that the capture of a few individuals would do little to
undermine the Brigade: THEY COULD NOT JAIL US FOR WE
DID NOT EXIST’, 41 they boasted. Reminiscent of the situationist
insistence that ‘our ideas are in everyone’s minds’, the Angry
Brigade’s tactics were cleverly designed to avoid the
spectacularisation and hierarchy characteristic of more orthodox
terrorist activities.
Although the Angry Brigade’s greatest strength lay in the elusive
air they cultivated, the identification of sites of power and resistance
problematised by poststructuralist philosophies was further
confused by other forms of terrorism. In Italy, the activity of the
Red Brigades put the possibility of a clear distinction between the
established order and its detractors into unprecedented disarray.
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The most radical gesture
Indeed, the Red Brigades have since become the reference point for
debates developed by both Debord and Baudrillard on the whole
issue of who it is that exercises power. The situationists’ hostility to
terrorist activity (‘From the strategical perspective of social
struggles it must first of all be said that one should never play with
terrorism’ 42) was later developed by Gianfranco Sanguinetti, an
Italian situationist much admired by Debord, with whom he wrote
much of The Veritable Split in the International in 1972. Sanguinetti
had caused a major scandal in Italy when he published his True
Report on the Last Chance to Save Capitalism in Italy under the
pseudonym Censor. When this text appeared in 1975, it was first
circulated among government ministers and then figures of the
literary establishment; this tactic convinced everybody that the text
was the work of a government official since, as the newspaper
L’Europeo commented, ‘the things he knew were too important and
too precise’ to be the work of an outsider.43 The revelation that it was
the work of a young situationist caused a major scandal. Criticising
the institutionalised Italian Communist Party as an agent of
hierarchical control, the text also alleged that the Italian secret
services were behind the huge Piazza Fontana bombing in 1969 for
which several anarchists had been imprisoned (and one killed in the
course of police enquiries). It is now widely accepted that state
intelligence organisations and a variety of right-wing groups have
infiltrated some left-wing and libertarian terrorist outfits,
established others, and carried out a number of activities later
blamed on anarchists and the Left.
Sanguinetti’s 1978 text, On Terrorism and the State, developed
these ideas to argue that the wave of Red Brigade activity in Italy
was itself manipulated by the secret services. Pointing to the ease
with which existing terrorist cells could be infiltrated or initiated by
the secret services who would then be able to recruit genuine
activists, Sanguinetti indicated the efficacy of such tactics for the
entrenchment of the state. The spectacle of terrorism provides a
socially cohesive common enemy, legitimises needs for vigilance,
security, and new forms of police repression, and encourages the
opinion that even the faultiest of democracies is superior to the
reign of terror. And although the Brigades had first emerged out of
the widespread industrial unrest of the early 1970s, they became
increasingly dogmatic, hierarchical, and separated from these roots.
From this perspective, the Red Brigades, or at least those activities
carried out in their name, acted as a brake on the ongoing ‘strategy
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129
of refusal’44 which had characterised Italian political and industrial
life since the 1950s. State violence of an extraordinary degree was
indeed unleashed by the wave of terrorist activity in Italy during the
period which culminated in the kidnapping and murder of Aldo
Moro in 1978, and the awareness that some, if not all, of the terrorist
activity was being deliberately propagated merely contributed to the
sense of disorder and paranoia on the Left and the widespread panic
in Italian society as a whole. The 1975 Legge Reale legalised the
shoot-to-kill policy adopted towards terrorist suspects and resulted
in the deaths of 150 people between May 1975 and December 1976;
according to one commentator, there were some 3,500 ‘political
prisoners’ in Italy in 1980,45 and the wave of terrorism produced a
crackdown on all dissenting forces.
But the authorities were also reacting to a rather more ambiguous
wave of protest which culminated in the huge demonstrations and
widespread university and factory occupations in Rome and Milan
in March 1977. The diffuse autonomists who gathered in the
‘Movement of ’77’ enjoyed the active support of Deleuze, Guattari,
and a number of other intellectuals appalled at the Italian state’s
repressive behaviour, epitomised by the imprisonment of sociology
professor Toni Negri, tried as a ‘leader’ of the terrorists on the
grounds that his published criticisms of the Red Brigades were a
cover for his involvement. And in many respects, the politics of
evasion and deterritorialisation implicit in the philosophies of
desire found an immediate realisation and renewed developments in
the Italian events of the late 1970s. The autonomists abandoned
orthodox political and terrorist activity in favour of the tactics of
‘cultural transformation, mass creativity, and refusal of work’, 46 and
although they displayed some affectionate admiration for the
Brigades, they nevertheless refused the centralism of the terrorist
cells in favour of a desiring politics and the guerrilla warfare of
groups like those dubbed the Metropolitan Indians. It was the media
which gave these rebels their name, largely because the only
identifiable features of their paradoxical statements and disruptive
actions were that they painted their faces and subverted city life.
The Metropolitan Indians, wrote one sympathiser, ‘habitually break
into shops and appropriate useless goods…. They also frequently
appear at the most elegant movie theatres in groups of about thirty
people, naturally after visiting the most expensive restaurants where
they obviously did not pay.’ 47 ‘Autonomous price setting’ and the
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The most radical gesture
other ‘guerrilla’ tactics in which the Indians indulged posed a threat
to all the conventions of social practice.
Whoever paints his face taking the marks as an arbitrary
characterisation of a future people; whoever appropriates in an
exhaustive way all possible terms and treats language as a
science of imaginary solutions; whoever refuses to explain
himself and, despite this omission, doesn’t stop robbing, nor in
fact engages in any collective practice—such a person is the
agent of subversions which have great significance.48
The Metropolitan Indians were secret agents playing in disguise,
defining themselves as nomads and refusing to set identifiable
goals. Their détournements of language, the commodity, and the
city placed them in a firm relation to Dada, surrealism, and the
whole tradition of satirical violence which the situationists had
brought into the political realm. ‘We hypothesise, then, the coming
of an era which replaces the bearers of truth (divided unions,
political groups with their identifying signs and their banners) with
intelligence and shrewdness,’ they wrote. ‘This era will be based on
the social possibilities of falsehood, on the technological
possibilities resulting from the destruction of rules, on the free
exchange of products, simulation, the game, the nonsense
argument, the dream, music.’ 49
In Italy, the imaginative and subversive use of technology
envisaged by situationist calls for an economy of desires was
epitomised by the use of free radio stations. Radio Alice ran from
February 1976 to March 1977, and was later described as a ‘symbol
of this period, of that unforgettable year of experimentation and
accumulation of intellectual, organisation, political, and creative
energies’.50 In 1968, Radio Luxembourg had played a vital role in
its running commentaries of the riots in Paris, and in Italy, Radio
Alice used ‘taped “subversive” cultural infills combining music,
poetry and comment that were used as sandwiching between phonein programmes…the radio station was used to inform insurgents of
police manoeuvres’.51 Free radio came to epitomise ‘the design, the
dream of the artistic avant-garde—to bridge the separation between
artistic communication and revolutionary transformation or
subversive practice’.52 In the immediacy of the pirate broadcast, the
autonomists saw the possibility of an irrecuperable form of
communication. ‘Alice looks around, plays, jumps, wastes time in
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the midst of papers illuminated by the sun, runs ahead, settles down
elsewhere.’53 A broadcast arises and disappears in one movement, so
that ‘desire is given a voice’, 54 and the awareness that ‘everything
functions in the order of discourse’55 no longer poses a regretful
problem but opens the doors to a wider and subversive conception
of this ‘everything’. For Guattari, Radio Alice and the Movement of
’77 showed that the ‘economic, political and moral order of the
twentieth century is breaking up everywhere, and the people in
power hardly know which way to turn’.
The enemy is intangible—you hear a twig snap beside you, and
you find your son, your wife, even your own desire is betraying
your mission as guardian of the established order. The police
got rid of Radio Alice…but its work of revolutionary deterritorialisation still goes on unabated, even affecting the
nerves of the opposition. 56
Radio Alice’s optimistic appropriation and détournement of media
confirmed the situationist insistence that new possibilities for the
assertion of the imagination, spontaneity, and desires of subjectivity
continually arise. The practice of happiness is subversive when it
becomes collective,’ declared Radio Alice. ‘To conspire means to
breathe together.’ 57 The potential for subversion, sabotage, and
détournement grows and changes with the means by which power is
exercised and consolidated: as forms of communication and the
dissemination of knowledge, culture, and information assume a
greater sophistication and significance to the maintenance of the
established capitalist order, so, in principle, at least, the possibilities
of their appropriation increase.
Détournement does, nevertheless, depend on the possibility of
some strategic sense of its purpose and an analysis of the nature of
the social relations it contests. The exposure and appropriation of
the exercise of power requires an understanding of where and how
power functions: workplace sabotage and industrial action
presuppose the importance of the economy; pirate radio and avantgarde action that of culture and media. The situationists’ conviction
that commodity relations can assert themselves anywhere led to an
open-ended search for these loci of power and, for the SI, they were
manifest in language, sexuality, art, the city, the factory, the
university, and every aspect of individual, social, and discursive
life. But these were always conceived as areas of commodification,
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The most radical gesture
producing and reproducing the alienated relations on which the
economic system is based. It was the situationists’ identification of
an antagonism at the heart of society—a central principle of
dualism, separation, mediation, or alienation—which enabled them
to posit an unproblematised unified social experience as the goal of
revolutionary practice.
The separation between the classes, power and pleasure, or the
spectacle and the real on which the situationists relied was not
conceived as a static division. Although it might be possible to
distinguish between the progressive forces of contestation and the
spectacle’s forces of commodification at any given time, the battlelines are by no means permanent. The recuperated can be reclaimed,
and the subverted can be recuperated; that which bears the
appearance of contestation might support the status quo, and the
appearance of conformity may well conceal the reality of
subversion. Nevertheless, in the Italy of the 1970s, the web of
contradiction and ambiguity surrounding the roles of the Red
Brigades and the Italian authorities was indicative of the growing
difficulties of distinguishing between reality and its simulation: the
questions of who is fighting whom, and which ‘side’ is served by
any given action, becomes open-ended in a situation in which
capitalist society loses the simplicity of its economic structure.
Struggles over legitimacy and meaning begin to take place in the
realms of the mass media and the popular imagination as well as in
the courts and on the streets; the black and white distinctions
between the haves and the have-nots of power collapse as
domination is increasingly exercised in a multiplicity of areas of
social and discursive life. The situationists’ own identification of a
multiplicity of relations of power itself begins to undermine the
existence of a central contradiction at the heart of capitalist society.
The Italian events were refusals of a system of domination which
could no longer be simply identified or cleanly opposed; a
perspective from which the dream of unity and the resolution of
contradictions were themselves denials of difference and dissent.
For the Italians, as for Foucault, the development of social relations
in which the exercise of power is increasingly dispersed and covert
necessitated new forms of resistance and dissent which could no
longer operate on the assumption that society was organised solely
around the reproduction of commodity relations. Paul Virilio
insisted that the praxis of the Movement of ’77 ‘cannot be
understood through an identity principle founded on categories of
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commodity’, 58 and another observed: ‘we stand before the paradox
of a domination which is exercised without any government, a
controlling of the system without a governing of the system’. 59
Guattari also insisted that ‘capitalism does not aim at a systematic
and generalised repression of the workers, women, youth,
minorities’. 60 Far more flexible and varied than the scenario of
simple domination suggests, the development of capitalism requires
its endless response to the multiplicity of demands made upon it.
‘Under these conditions, a semi-tolerated, semi-encouraged, and
co-opted protest could well be an intrinsic part of the system.’ 61
Guattari nevertheless defended those forms of protest which
recognise this flexibility and threaten ‘the essential relationshipson
which this system is based (the respect for work, for hierarchy, for
State power, for the religion of consumption…)’. 62 And although his
calls for an awareness of the recuperative and co-optive powers of
modern capitalism were qualified by an insistence that it is
‘impossible to trace a clear and definitive boundary between the
recuperable marginals and other types of marginals’, Guattari’s
recognition that the ‘frontiers actually remain blurred and
unstable’ 63 did not stop him hoping that the new networks of
r e s i s t a n c e m a d e p o s s i b l e b y t h e fi n e - t u n e d f l ex i b i l i t y o f
contemporary social relations would converge in unforeseen forms
of revolutionary struggle. There was still a sense that the struggles
of particular desires and intensities might one day coalesce in a
revolutionary movement
But the reluctance to impose meanings on events, desires, and the
raw immediacy of experience produced a hostility to all attempts to
see desire and contestation as anything other than ends in
themselves, with the consequence that the sole purpose of political
agitation was merely to unleash desires, particularities, and
intensities without entrapping them in some other purpose or
project. And while the politics of desire which emerged in the
Italian events made contestation a permanent feature of life, this
very permanence carried the danger that all sense of reason and
purpose is removed from political struggle. For Toni Negri, only the
eternal return of forces of disorder could constitute the
revolutionary milieu.
There is only one way that I can read the history of capital—as
the history of a continuity of operations of self-reestablishment that capital and its State have to set in motion in
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The most radical gesture
order to counter the continuous breakdown process, the
permanent provocation-towards-separation that the real
movement brings about. 64
The situationist conviction that even the most sophisticated forms of
capitalism produce their own subversions was translated into a
vocabulary of simple reaction and permanent contestation: if the
politics of desire allowed for new and exuberant forms of revolt, the
moment of revolution became endlessly deferred.
The hopelessness of this permanent provocation left the radical
politics of desire vulnerable to a theoretical crisis of its own. The
wild and dissolute forces it invoked were seen to embody new
foundations and essences to which the orders of capitalist relations
could be opposed, rekindling the danger of a new essentialism in
which resistance and contestation become the mere effects of a
system already incapable of containing itself. And eventually, just
as the situationist development of economic contradiction had been
undermined by poststructuralist support for a multiplicity of sites of
power, desire, and pure intensity, these invocations of flowing
differences and instabilities were themselves undermined by claims
that they too merely sustained the attempt to establish
contradictions and prediscursive meanings. Baudrillard’s later work
is one of the main sites of this final critique, although the passage to
the full-blown postmodernism for which he is best known took him
through a line of thought parallel to poststructuralism which also
allowed him to defend some underlying point of reference from
which capitalist society might be undermined.
After his initial critiques of the consumer society, Baudrillard
soon abandoned the Marxist perspective of his early works to argue
that modern society was no longer vulnerable to a critique based
solely on the production and consumption of commodities. In a
system of overproduction and accelerated circulation, objects begin
to function as pure signs, the components of a hyperreal world in
which all sense of real value and meaning is lost. Reality exists only
in its reproduced and represented forms; it is ‘always already’ a
simulation of its non-existent self, and it is no longer possible to
catch a glimpse of original realities behind the veils of copies and
appearance. By itself, the observation that we are surrounded by
copies does not dispense with the real; it can even encourage the
search for a ‘real’ real beyond the ‘apparent’ real, as it had for the
situationists. But Baudrillard wanted to show the impossibility of
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the existence of such an underlying reality, insisting that the real
that is apparently represented has itself disappeared in the midst of
accelerating processes of simulation and reproduction, requiring us
to speak of the copy without the original; appearance without a
corresponding reality. The signs and images with which we are
surrounded merely sustain our belief that something is being
represented. But signs circumscribe the world. They represent no
other, or better, or more real reality to which we can appeal: things
are simply as they appear to be.
This position ultimately led Baudrillard to a complete rejection
of any possibility of criticism, negativity, or political contestation:
the hyperreal world is seamless and complete, allowing no
contradictionor challenge to emerge. Yet even in the later works in
which this position is taken to an extreme, some sense of
antagonistic strategy emerges, and in The Mirror of Production and
a number of other essays written in the 1970s, this discontinuity was
given a relatively solid foundation in the notion of symbolic
exchange. Baudrillard presented symbolic exchange as the ground
of disruption and resistance, arguing that in the acts of giving,
sacrifice, waste, and destruction, there is a form of exchange which
completely ignores the imperative to value assumed by both
capitalist relations and Marxist theory. This was a position which
owed something to George Bataille and Marcel Mauss, both of
whom had invoked notions of gift and sacrifice, with Bataille giving
the sun as an example of an entity which gives light and warmth to
the world without asking for anything in return, and Mauss
remembering that sacrifice plays an important part in even such a
unilateral giving. Baudrillard’s conception of this sacrificial ‘solar
economy ’ invoked a primitive and precapitalist form of exchange
which judges objects and experiences solely in terms of their
symbolic value: the value assigned by those who give and receive
them. It also resonated with Vaneigem’s argument that the gift
represents a realm of uncommodified activity which presaged postcapitalist forms of exchange, and the LI’s journal Potlatch had taken
its name from American Indian systems of exchange.
For Baudrillard, symbolic exchange opened up new possibilities
of resistance to an ethic of productivism embraced by both
revolutionary theory and capitalist society. Marxism, he argued,
merely wants to achieve better relations of production and happier
workers able to consume more useful and authentic goods. Its
claims are purely quantitative, demanding not a revolution against
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political economy, but a transformation which nevertheless remains
within the realm of labour, production, and consumption. Marxist
theory reflects capitalism but does not challenge its values and
foundations; it is the ‘mirror of production’ which inverts existing
relations but offers them no fundamental challenge. But blatant
waste, gratuitous consumption, extravagant gifts, and orgies of
destruction offend everything sacred to the ethic of production and
its mirror. The insistence that everything—objects, experiences, and
people alike—has a value, whether it is that imputed by exchange or
use, is central to both political economy and its critique; neither can
tolerate its transgression. But symbolic values count for nothing;
they generate no wealth and indicate no use, and it is precisely in
this symbolic realm that the possibilities of a subversive ridicule of
political economy emerge. It was possible for neither Left nor Right
to understand why the Metropolitan Indians stole worthless goods,
just as mindless violence and meaningless graffiti are gestures
incomprehensible to the world of use and exchange. Free gifts can
have a shocking and disorienting effect: in a post office queue, a
man hands round a punnet of strawberries; waiting in a bank, a
woman takes it into her head solemnly to distribute the leaflets on
display. Both terrify the customers. Everyone takes the leaflets, but
very few strawberries are eaten.
For Baudrillard, symbolic exchange was a point of essential
opposition to a system of social relations which privileges value,
meaning, and worth. Anything which refuses these attributes is
subversive of a society which insists that meaning is invested in the
multitude of signs, images, commodities, and messages which
surround us. It follows that any real subversion or interruption of
the values of existing social relations must itself proclaim its lack of
value and worth; its refusal to engage with the very processes by
which meaning is produced. Baudrillard clearly intended this
refusal of meaning to be a refusal of orthodox meaning: an
insistence that validity and worth must be self-generated and
autonomously calculated, just as Dada’s defiant attitude to all
attempts to define it was an insistence that it would determine its
own meaning rather than an absolute rejection of meaning per se.
But Baudrillard’s position soon collapsed into a complete nihilism
with the claim that it is meaning itself which is the guilty party of
social relations to which only the complete absence of meaning can
be truly opposed. From this perspective, the dadaist who had sought
disorder and absurdity as a means of exposing the horrors of the
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First World War was merely playing at nihilism, using the absence
of meaning as a tactic in the struggle for better meanings and real
value. Increasingly equating subversion with meaninglessness,
Baudrillard finally argued that any form of activity which
participates in the production of meanings, values, social relations,
or revolutionary perspectives was doomed by its very participation
to the dead end of reformism.
Like many of his contemporaries, the Baudrillard of the 1970s
was convinced that the great fault of Marxism was that it reduced
pleasure, spontaneity, and all the energies which make the
revolutionto mere components of a grand revolutionary plan. The
really powerful events are those which cannot be transcribed into
purposeful frameworks, those which are essentially meaningless,
and refuse to be represented.
The real revolutionary media during May were the walls and
their speech, the silk-screen posters and the hand-painted
notices, the street where speech began and was exchanged—
everything that was an immediate inscription, given and
returned, spoken and answered, mobile in the same space and
time, reciprocal and antagonistic. […] Institutionalized by
reproduction, reduced to a spectacle, this speech is expiring.65
Pursuing situationist demands for forms of expression which
sidestep the recuperation of representation within the spectacle,
Baudrillard’s nostalgia for some authentic immediacy and real
communication later carried him to an extreme at which he was able
to declare that May 1968 was ‘a kind of pure object or event’,
completely irreducible to the representations and simulations of
discourse. ‘May ’68 is an event which it has been impossible to
rationalize or exploit, from which nothing has been concluded. It
remains indecipherable. It was the forerunner of nothing.’ 66 But
Baudrillard’s search for the irrecuperable had not yet reached the
point at which authentic representation was inconceivable, and, in
The Mirror of Production, he developed these claims for the
immediacy of pure communication in a bitter attack on the stifling
effects of Marxist theory. Invoking the spirit of Dada and
surrealism, he wrote:
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The most radical gesture
The cursed poet, non-official art, and utopian writings in
general, by giving a current and immediate content to man’s
liberation, should be the very speech of communism, its direct
prophecy. They are only its bad conscience precisely because
in them something of man is immediately realized, because
they object without pity to the ‘political’ dimension of the
revolution, which is merely the dimension of its final
postponement.67
With claims reminiscent of Debord’s attack on the collapse of the
Marxist tradition into a ‘graveyard of good intentions’, Baudrillard
argued that Marxist theory operates as a brake on the symbolic
value and radical immediacy of revolutionary forces.
In the name of an always renewed future—future of history,
future of the dictatorship of the proletariat, future of capitalism
and future of socialism—it demands more and more the
sacrifice of the immediate and permanent revolution. Ascetic
in relation to its own revolution, communism in effect
profoundly suffers from not ‘taking its desires as reality’.68
For the ‘idealists of the dialectic’, he continued, ‘the revolution
must be distilled in history; it must come on time; it must ripen in
the sun of contradictions.’
That it could be there immediately is unthinkable and
insufferable. Poetry and the utopian revolt have this radical
presentness in common, this denegation of finalities; it is this
actualisation of desire no longer relegated to a future
liberation, but demanded here, immediately, even in its death
throes, in the extreme situation of life and death. Such is
happiness; such is revolution. It has nothing to do with the
political ledger book of the Revolution.69
This privileging of the immediate spirit of revolt over the
bureaucratic fatalism of revolution would have been at home in any
situationist text: ‘Those who have not yet begun to live, but are saving
themselves for a better epoch’, Debord had written, ‘expect nothing
less than a permanent paradise.’ 70 But the extent of Baudrillard’s
departure from the entire dialectical tradition is clear in his attack on
the entire vocabulary of separation, contradiction, and alienation.
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‘Instead of deluding men with a phantasm of their lost identity, of
their future anatomy, this notion itself must be abolished,’ 71 he
declared, setting himself against all analyses which portray ‘man as
dispossessed, as alienated and relates him to a total man, a total Other
who is Reason and who is for the future’.72
What an absurdity it is to pretend that men are ‘other’, to try to
convince them that their deepest desire is to become
‘themselves’ again! Each man is totally there at each instant.
Society also is totally there at each instant.73
Marxist theory is incapable of grasping the pure intensity of revolt,
‘or even the movement of society except as an intricate ornament of
the revolution, as a reality on the way toward maturation’.74 Reduced
to an endless deferral and totalitarian dreams of a final resolution, it
cannot accept that ‘utopia is here in all the energies that are raised
against political economy’.75 It is in the very nature of these energies
that all attempts to mould them into a revolutionary project or store
them for some future moment of contestation are rejected: the
strength of this ‘utopian violence’ is that it ‘does not accumulate; it is
lost’.76 The desire for revolution is also the desire for an autonomy,
singularity, and pure intensity which renders it impossible. The
energies of revolt and the legislating project of revolution are
irrevocably pitted against each other.
This respect for true moments of pure existence, immediacy, and
unchannelled desire is the same energy which excited Lyotard’s
defence of forms of knowledge which would respect the pure event,
Foucault’s faith in the possibility of counter-discursive rescues of lost
and subjugated knowledges, Deleuze’s nomadic forays into the
territories of codes, and Guattari’s molecular desires. Each of these
positions betrayed some nostalgia for an authentic, natural realm, no
matter how irrevocably lost or impossible to articulate, which is only
later betrayed by codes and representations. The recognition that
discourse forges and shapes the world of which it speaks had
certainly brought an unprecedented confusion to notions of reality
and subjectivity, but it had not yet necessitated the abandonment of
all senses of some prediscursive existence. And although each of
these perspectives faced the problem, particularly strong in
Foucault’s work, that it is impossible for subjugated desires, events,
and knowledges to come into their own without themselves assuming
a dominant role in the network of power relations which had curtailed
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them, the philosophies of the post-68 period still carried the
possibility of a politics which would allow them to flourish.
Lyotard’s complaint against theory was really a distrust of all
meaning and conceptualisation: it is the very act of naming, the
incorporation of a moment or experience into the world of symbolic
representation, that violates and corrupts its special singularity.
Dialectical criticism and theoretical discourse might be guiltier than
most, but any attempt to bring an event out of the real world into the
world of signs imposes structures and codes on its immediacy, robs it
of its vitality and gives it a meaning which it did not previously bear.
Deleuze’s work was also marked by pleas for a return to
those states of experience that, at a certain point, must not be
translated into representations or fantasies, must not be
transmittedby legal, contractual, or institutional codes, must not
be exchanged or bartered away, but, on the contrary, must be
seen as a dynamic flux.77
Any attempt to articulate experience is bound to entrap and curtail the
essential fluidity, which is ‘what underlies all codes, what escapes all
codes, and it is what the codes themselves seek to translate, convert,
and mint anew’. 78 And although Foucault intended to deny the
possibility of some sense of reality prior to its discursive existence,
his work is also marked by traces of some wild and untamed natural
world on which discourse imposes itself. Foucault devoted himself to
showing that we have ‘employed a wide range of categories—truth,
man, culture, writing, etc. —to dispel the shock of daily occurrences,
to dissolve the event’, 79 presenting this immediacy as the reality
which his strategies of counter-discourse sought to reclaim. At times
he even argued that it was still possible to speak of ‘the body and its
pleasures’ as the ground of real experiences later subjected to
domination and control.80
So although the overt message of the poststructuralist and desiring
philosophies of the 1970s was that the search for the beach under the
cobblestones made famous by a piece of 1968 graffito is hopeless,
there was still a sense in which some memory of the beach persists.
Arguing that the real is always that which escapes representation, so
that more cobblestones are always found under the first layer, and
truth, authenticity, and reality are the ever-receding horizons of our
search, their attempts to undermine all appeals to prediscursive
meanings continued to produce new sets of foundations. To be sure,
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these were posed as free-flowing bases, placed in an immanent and
dynamic relation to the codes and powers they resisted. But it is clear
that longings to preserve and protect at least a glimpse of the beach in
moments untouched by language, the structures of knowledge, or the
articulation of discourse shone through overt poststructuralist
declarations that the immediacy of real experience is an impossibility,
something that all discourse tries to convey but can never reach. It
was the tension between these positions, which had also marked
Nietzsche’s identification of two orders of reality, which finally led
both Lyotard and Baudrillard to a complete rejection of the latent
naturalism which marked the work of Deleuze, Guattari, Foucault,
and their own early writings.
In a discussion of the mouvement du 22 mars, Lyotard wrote that
the activists with whom he had been involved had developed a
critique of bureaucratic capitalism which had encompassed not only
‘the State apparatus against society, not only of the party
(revolutionary) in the face of the masses, not only of productive work
in opposition to free creativity, but the whole of alienated life in the
place of—what?’81 In the movement’s search for ‘the other of the
system of mediations, the other of all possible recuperation’,82 it
found itself referring to ‘an image (to a representation?) of nonrepresentative life, of the spontaneous, natural, immediate, savage,
“non-referential”’.83 By the mid-1970s, Lyotard had unequivocally
rejected this paradoxical nostalgia for the pure event, the real
experience, the wild and untamed naturalism of immediate life and
liberated desire. Increasingly unhappy with any faith in the return of
the repressed, he eventually attacked even the memory of a lost
immediacy and all remnants of hope in the possible re-emergence of a
distant authenticity. In his 1979 Economie Libidinale, Lyotard
emphatically insisted that there is no natural self or world to be lost or
rediscovered:
there is no external reference, even were it immanent, from
where the separation of that which belongs to capital (or
political economy) and that which belongs to subversion (or
libidinal economy) can always be properly made; where desire
would be cleanly legible, where its proper economy would not
be scrambled.84
Convinced that the proposal of any ‘other’ to capitalism, be it
symbolic exchange or the negativity of desire, is fraught with
insuperable difficulties, Lyotard argued that the assertion of some
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real desire or authentic subjectivity places us on the slippery slope to
totalitarianism. Any search for contradictions assumes the possibility
of their resolution; the identification of gaps and separations in the
social order assumes that it represses, alienates, and falsely represents
a reality which will one day return. Like Baudrillard, Lyotard argued
that a dangerous and illusory dream of wholeness and completion is
postulated by any theory based on alienation, which cannot but carry
some conception of the true creativity, spontaneity, and autonomy of
the human subject.
Against situationist theory, Lyotard’s later work insists that the
distinction between the spectacle and the real is finally collapsed.
There is no possibility of finding the real object behind the
commodity, and real meaning is inseparable from its spectacular
representation. True creativity cannot be distinguished from the
representation it receives in capitalist society, and authentic desires
cannot be extricated from their commodified reality. But while there
is no sense in which desire can be placed in opposition or
contradiction to any system of domination, Lyotard was far from
abandoning all notions of desire. With Deleuze and Guattari, he
argued that there is some sense in which even the most exploitative
and alienating forms of production are invested with the desires of
those apparently passively subjected to them.
In a vicious attack on the patronising sentimentality of the
revolutionary movement, Lyotard insisted that the language of
suffering, pity, and redemption betrays a misplaced nostalgia for a
golden age of free creativity which never existed. He showed the
continuity between the revolutionary project and its religious
equivalent, and argued that revolutionary politics inevitably portrays
the working class as helpless victims who can do nothing to help
themselves. Rejecting all notions of lack, want, and negativity,
Lyotard’s positive conception of desire allowed him to argue that
people’s desires are never stolen away or distorted, but produced and
reinvested in the mechanisms of their own domination. People were
not dragged screaming to the factory, he argued: at some level, they
must have wanted to go; in some sense, they had enjoyed the
privations and labours of capitalist life. This was a position made
possible by Lyotard’s provocative engagements with both Marxism,
on which Economie Libidinale is in part a devastating commentary,
and Lacanian psychoanalysis, which itself presupposed some sense
of absence or negativity, albeit one impossible to conceptualise. But it
was most immediately derived from his insistence that there is no
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essential difference or discontinuity between the economy of desires
which had previously been set up as the ‘other’, the negation, of
political economy, and the social and discursive relations of
capitalism. In the endless generation of commodities, capitalism
fulfils the desire for a multiplication of sites of pure intensity which
had once served the revolutionary project
With these renewed claims that there is a continuity between
capitalist relations and even the most radical point of opposition to
them, Lyotard finally abandoned the search for any ‘other’ to
capitalism. There is complicity at every point, and nothing, not even a
purely negative and non-existent point, nor the memory of a lost
referent, can be spoken against it without becoming a contributory
factor. At last, there is ‘no need for declarations, manifestos,
organisations, provocations’. Nor, he continued, in knowing
anticipation of the situationist who glimpses one last hope, is there
‘even any need for exemplary actions’.85
But even with the final collapse of their purpose and validity,
subversion and interruption continue to emerge. Lyotard may have
removed the purpose, but the processes persist. Anticipating
Baudrillard’s later claims that the meaninglessness of commodity
exchange can be sabotaged by a nihilistic strategy which outstrips
even the most frantic moments of capitalist relations, Lyotard
declared that ‘the dissolution of forms and individuals in the socalled “consumer society” should be affirmed’.86 If the continuity of
capitalism and its opposition is finally inescapable, the attempt to
criticise it on grounds of mediation, alienation, domination, and
separation merely sustains the rules already presupposed by the
orders of capitalism. By joining in the race for better theories, more
logical social relations, more immediate forms of expression and
more authentic lives, revolutionaries only perpetuate the grand social
myth of a final resolution and perfect unification; a myth which fixes
our sights on an ever-receding horizon and prevents us from turning
our attention to the immediacy of life in the here and now.
The possibilities for political and cultural contestation would
appear to be bleak. If even the most radical gesture is doomed to
reproduce the emptiness and vacuity of commodity relations, all
sense of opposition and dissent becomes untenable and, as Lyotard
insists, the only strategy it is possible to adopt is one which
encourages and affirms the ‘dissolution of forms and individuals’.
But if opposition to capitalism is no longer an issue, this is only
because Lyotard, like Deleuze and Guattari, sees it heading for its
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own inexorable destruction. And the loss of meaning inevitably
achieved by capitalist social relations can itself be encouraged,
accelerated, and appropriated in such a way that the limits of
irrationality and vacuity to which capitalism continually tends are
transgressed in a destructive excess of themselves. In the emergence
of punk in the late 1970s, for example, lay the possibility of a
threatening political response to the vacant superficiality of
contemporary society. Contemptuous of earlier attempts to develop
forms of association and activity in some sense better, more
worthwhile, or more meaningful than capitalism, punk replied with a
renewed emptiness and lack of meaning which turned the tables on all
those who busily insisted that capitalism must be opposed by
something better than itself. An attack on the established values and
institutions of music, culture, and society, punk provided a vehicle for
the growing disaffection of the postsixties generation. It attacked
royalty, the culture industry, and the political authorities, shocking
the bourgeoisie and antagonising the establishment. But it also came
to operate as a social safetyvalve: once used to ripped jeans, safety
pins, and mohican haircuts, the public became almost thankful that
t h e r e b e l l i o n w a s n o t m o r e i n t r u s ive . I n d e e d , p u n k wa s
accommodated so swiftly that the possibility was raised that it was in
some sense already recuperated before it had even begun.
Two of punk’s leading protagonists, Jamie Reid, a graphic artist,
and Malcolm McLaren, manager of the Sex Pistols, were well-versed
in situationist ideas. Reid’s Suburban Press, six issues of which
appeared in 1970, had ‘a shit-stirring format, with thorough research
into local politics and council corruption, mixed with my graphics
and some Situationist texts’.87
My job, graphically, was to simplify a lot of the political jargon,
particularly that used by the Situationists. Far from being an
obscure group in the mid 1960s, by the time of the Paris riots in
1968 they had captured headlines around the world and the
imagination of a generation.88
Much of punk continued the tradition in which the situationists had
worked. Operating musically as art that could be made by anyone,
punk re-established the dadaist critique of culture and broke down the
distinctions between art and life. Its graphics, for which Reid was
largely responsible, cut up newspapers, safetypinned clothes, rewrote
comics, and parodied official notices. A Belgian holiday brochure
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was appropriated for the sleeve of Holidays in the Sun, on which its
cartoon characters no longer said ‘It’s just a short excursion to see
wonderful historic cities’, but ‘A cheap holiday in other people’s
misery’.
Although some of these détournements were either meaningless or
reactionary, many of Reid’s attacks on the culture of new towns,
supermarkets, and superstars were ingenious. Authentic-looking
stickers read: ‘Buy now while stocks last’; ‘This store will soon be
closing owing to the pending collapse of monopoly capitalism and
the world-wide exhaustion of raw materials’; and ‘This store
welcomesshoplifters’. ‘Lies’, was stuck onto newspapers; ‘Save
petrol, burn cars’ onto vehicles; and, during the miners’ strike,
‘Switch on something for the miners’ replaced ‘Save It’. An
apparently official invitation to move to a new town declared: ‘A New
Town like the Old Town-but NEW!’
New Towns are being built, in the middle of the countryside,
away from strikes, tenants’ committees, claimants’ unions,
occupations, shoplifters, vandals, smog, dirt and noise. Away
from all distractions, so you can get on with the job.89
Conscious of the problem of recuperation, Reid made many of his
graphics refer to specific incidents or themes to prevent them from
becoming ‘decor for trendy Lefties’ bedrooms’.90 Punk was also a
détournement of the culture industry and an attack on the notions of
originality, genius, and talent Undermining the music industry’s
monopolistic overproduction of ‘superstars’, punk generated the
confidence that anyone could make music in the same way that Dada
had insisted that everyone could be a poet or an artist. Informed by
the situationist critique of the star system, punk spawned a generation
of little bands, small studios, and independent record companies, as
well as some very big corporations.
The most incisive critique of the punk milieu and its dissipation of
dissent was The End of Music, a pamphlet circulated in 1978. It
described punk as ‘a bowdlerised realisation of Lautréamont’s maxim
“Poetry made by all”’,91 arguing that the movement carried ‘no desire
to negate music […] merely to make it free, but leaving intact the
antagonistic structure which turns audience against performer,
creator against consumer and vice versa in a relationship of near
reciprocal alienation’.92 McLaren’s shop ‘Sex’ sold the trappings of
rebellion; some of the customers it attracted were formed into the Sex
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Pistols and a tide of nihilistic refusal of the spectacle was initiated.
The End of Music suggested that McLaren had helped to recuperate
the situationist critique which, ‘after being suitably doctored’, was
used
as a force able to keep pop and music kicking as pacification
agent of the young proletariat both in terms of channelling
energy into hierarchical aspiration, fake liberation from
drudgery and the goal of a higher level of wage slavery with all
its alluring but alienated sexual appeal.93
T-shirts bearing slogans like ‘Be reasonable, demand the impossible’,
now meant ‘buy some of my kinky gear…and help make me a rich
man’.94 So, just as Dada anti-art hangs in the galleries and surrealist
dreams sell cars, the situationists joined every other failed critique
and abandoned their weapons on the battlefield where their slogans
were captured for T-shirts.
But The End of Music’s claims that punk was a recuperation of
situationist theory are not definitive. It is certainly true that some of
those who made their names and fortunes from the movement were
quite aware that situationist-style agitation could be marketed to great
effect. McLaren’s acquaintence with the ‘pro-situ’ group King Mob
had made him aware of situationist readings of recuperation and
dissent, and on one level he probably did cynically cash in on
working-class rebellion without a care for the effects of its
commodification. But there is also a sense in which McLaren’s tactics
can be read as a rather more astute response. Aware that punk would
i n a n y c a s e b e r e c u p e r a t e d , h i s ow n a n t i c i p a t i o n o f i t s
commodification did at least ensure that punk had some control over
its own recuperation. By the time the dissatisfaction it expressed had
grown into a marketable force, it had already been marketed. And if
punk did recuperate anything, it was not situationist theory, but the
possibility of effective dissent, a danger which, as The End of Music
points out, punk shares with the spectacle of revolution presented in
reggae and any other rebel music.
It is certainly interesting to note that so many of the good and great
developed their all-too-easily transferable skills in the situationist
milieu. Of those involved in the emergence of punk, media star Tony
Wilson opened Manchester’s ‘Hacienda’ in 1982 as a ‘disco,
videotheque, and venue’ which aimed to ‘restore a sense of place:
“the Hacienda must be built”’. 95 Malcolm McLaren continues to
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make stars, and Richard Branson is now a knight. But punk’s do-ityourself ethic also produced a host of self-published fanzines and
autonomous organisations, and the observation that fortunes were so
easily made cannot belittle the sincerity, anger, and achievements of
those involved in punk and its later manifestations. Punk provided a
much-needed shot in the arm for the anarchist movement, with Class
War’s ‘Stop the City’ and ‘Bash the Rich’ campaigns providing some
light entertainment and heavy policing during the 1980s and squats,
the travellers, and a hundred and one imaginative and provocative
phenomena developing out of the punk milieu.
There are clearly senses in which punk can be seen as an example
of the affirmation of the nihilistic equivalence of capitalist social
relations which Lyotard and Baudrillard had begun to advocate in the
mid-1970s. It certainly did take the loss of intrinsic value to its own
extreme and turn it back on itself. But if there was a theoretical
resonance anywhere, it was with the situationists’ insistence that the
spectacle can be subverted by being taken literally. And although this
may appear to be the same exhortion as that made by Lyotard and
Baudrillard, the situationist insistence that such détournements of
existing values are tactics in a larger strategy distances the two
positions. For the situationists, nihilism was not to be applauded in
itself, but as a moment in the contestation of the spectacle, a tactical
response to a particular configuration of spectacular relations which
could not be invoked as an end in itself. To respond to the reification
of commodity relations with the declaration, ‘Yes, I’m an ugly and
worthless thing too’, is to make merely one of a thousand subversive
replies to the spread of commodity relations. Meaninglessness and
lack of purpose are useful only to the extent that they operate with
some other end in sight: chaos and absurdity are tactics appropriate to
particular moments rather than steadfast rules of engagement. The
post-68 interrogation of every point of exteriority or contradiction
previously posed to capitalism was phrased in terms of another order
of ‘others’: pre-social networks of power, the prediscursive flux of
desires, pre-capitalist systems of symbolic exchange. And the danger
of this passion to search ever deeper for the basis of social
organisation is that it spawns a paradoxically dogmatic insistence on
the realm of the real it uncovers. Thus Baudrillard’s invocation of
symbolic exchange appeared as an immobile point of exteriority to
capitalist social relations and forced him into a position from which
any recuperation of this last realm would finally destroy all hope of
presenting an ‘other’ to capitalism.
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Nevertheless, the philosophies developed after 1968 alert us to the
very real dangers of imposing meanings, structures, and teleologies on
events, desires, and experiences which must speak for themselves. The
critic who ‘knows best’, the theorist who seeks an ever-improved
theory, and the intellectual who represents the true interests of those
who cannot speak for themselves are utterly discredited by its
insistence that there is no single perspective which can hold the world
still enough to understand it And yet this stance is not completely
absent from poststructuralist thought. It is Lyotard who insists that
there can be no more manifestos; Baudrillard who declares that there
can be no repre- sentation without spectacle. Certainly this is an
argument rather too easily made, and an effect which the writers
considered here have done much to avoid: Foucault was not alone in
insisting that his work too should be treated as a tool-kit which some
people might find useful for particular purposes. In Italy, for example,
this was certainly the sense in which the Movement of ’77 ap- proached
the work of the philosophers of desire. As one account of the Italian
events explains, the ‘end of politics’ postulated by the poststructuralists
was ‘immediately translated into the Movement’s language, that is, into
concrete struggle’, where it facilitated a search for ‘new political areas
of struggle, new territories for the massification of the struggle’.96 And
although the old dangers of deferment and dogmatism immediately
assert themselves with the development of new connections and
solidarities between the multiplicity of desires, interests, and social
positions antagonistic to one another and the capitalist relations in
which they arise, the warnings and provocations made by
poststructuralist and desiring philosophies by no means invalidate
purposeful political action.
The situationists were not at all reluctant to identify purposes and
reasons to sift through and subvert the complexities of modern life.
And for all the dangers implicit in the project to transform the totality
of social and discursive relations, they were convinced that every
gesture in the world tends towards such grand designs. Ultimately, the
intensities and singularities which poststructuralism wanted to preserve
cannot be conceived in isolation from some wider purpose;
deconstructions are impossible without some intention, some search
for meaning, improvement, truth, and reality. The absence of purpose
and meaning cannot be championed as an end in itself: there is always
some reason for any act of construction, deconstruction, or simple
destruction.
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In the late 1980s, however, a movement emerged which might seem
to fit the poststructuralist bill. Orange Alternative brought a kind of
Dada provocation to Poland; with tactics reminiscent of those adopted
by the Dutch Provos and Kommune 1, it made no attempt to produce a
coherent set of demands and introduced a maverick element into the
political currents which have since transformed Polish society.
Avoiding the ‘star system of the official (Solidarity) opposition’,97
Orange Alternative, its heirs and allies will undoubtedly find
themselves as out of step with the new regime as the old, but its satirical
refusals of purpose and coherence were certainly provocative at the
time. Orange Alternative celebrated International Children’s Day in
1987 with an event in which ‘dozens of participants dressed as gnomes
or smurfs with red hats danced in the streets and distributed sweets’.98
Poland’s Official Day of the Police and Security Service, 7 October,
was marked by an enthusiastic march in Wroclaw to ‘thank’ the police,
in which they were showered with flowers, and embraced by the
participants who were later arrested. The streets ‘were flooded with
Santa Clauses’ at Christmas 1987, leading to the arrest of both bogus
and ‘real’ Santa Clauses and a 2,000-strong demonstration calling for
the ‘release of Santa’. (King Mob had pulled a similar trick when a
pseudo-Santa distributed ‘presents’ in Selfridges. ‘Soon afterwards the
shoppers were witness to the edifying spectacle of policemen arresting
Father Christmas and snatching back toys from small children.’99)
These subversions of the everyday extended to distributions of free
toilet paper, sanitary towels, and an appeal to everyone to ‘Vote Twice!’
in the 1987 Referendum on social policy. There also were rumours of
plans for a European happening in which people in every country
dressed up as policemen.
Orange Alternative flourished ‘by outwitting and embarrassing the
authorities who maintain a system which relies on a single version of
the truth for its survival and who are used to a more direct form of
protest’,100 and it suffered with the increasing sophistication of police
responses to its provocations. But its real strength was clearly its
refusal to assume the mantle of an identifiable political or cultural
force. When one of its protagonists was asked, ‘Do you set up
happenings in order to expose the totalitarianism of the system under
which we live?’, he replied, ‘I do them because I do them, but one does
things because of, or for something’. Another victory for the
situationist perspective? Well maybe not. For he continued: ‘Well, yes,
when I was preparing for the gnome happening, I assumed that we
would have a good time with sweets and streamers’.101
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Chapter 5
‘Flee, but while fleeing, pick up a
weapon’
For all its problems, the playful breaking of codes and subversion of signs
facilitated by much poststructuralist philosophy has had a powerful
political effect. This has, however, been dissipated in more recent years
by the incorporation of all poststructuralism into the heady hyperbole of
the postmodern world view. And one consequence of this development is
that postmodernism’s abandonment of any critical perspective is still
conducted with the language, tactics, and style of the entire tradition
considered in this book. The postmodern condition is like Dada without
the war or surrealism without the revolution; postmodern philosophers
are the sold-out situationists who wander without purpose, observing
recuperations with a mild and dispassionate interest and enjoying the
superficial glitter of a spectacular life. Naïvely offering an uncritical home
to the notion of the spectacle, postmodern discourse is filled with
chatterings about a concept it never imagines was once saturated with
revolutionary intent.
The situationists had always been aware that the term ‘spectacle’
could easily be robbed of its critical force, recuperated as a
descriptive concept and appropriated to serve the ends of
spectacular society itself. ‘Without a doubt’, Debord had declared
in The Society of the Spectacle, ‘the critical concept of the spectacle
is susceptible of being turned into just another empty formula of
sociologico-political rhetoric designed to explain and denounce
everything in the abstract—so serving to buttress the spectacular
system itself.’ 1 This has indeed been the fate of the situationist
critique of the spectacle which, twenty years after its initial
development, now appears in a spectacular form of its own: a
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context which precludes all critical appraisal and is content to
describe and celebrate the ahistorical world of image, sign, and
appearance.
In the midst of these affirmations, Debord spoke out again in
1988. His Comments on The Society of the Spectacle charted the
recent development of the spectacle, reintroducing the possibility of
its criticism to the postmodern world and asserting the continuing
validity of situationist theory. Since the 1967 publication of The
Society of the Spectacle, he wrote, and following the failure of the
events of 1968, ‘the spectacle has continued to gather strength’.
Indeed, in ‘all that has happened in the last twenty years’, Debord
argued, ‘the most important change lies in the very continuity of the
spectacle’.2 It has ‘learnt new defensive techniques, as powers under
attack always do’,3 and is now stronger as a result of its success ‘in
raising a whole generation moulded to its laws’. 4 Only two explicit
changes have occurred. The first, observed by Debord in his 1974
Preface to the Fourth Italian Edition of The Society of the Spectacle,
and reiterated in the Comments, is that a new and cynical honesty
has entered the spectacle’s representation of itself.
The society of the spectacle had begun everywhere in coercion,
deceit, and blood, but it promised a happy path. It believed
itself to be loved. Now it no longer says: ‘What appears is
good, what is good appears.’ It simply says: ‘It is so.’ It admits
frankly that it is no longer essentially reformable, though
change be its very nature in order to transmute for the worst
every particular thing. It has lost all its general illusions about
itself.5
The spectacle no longer pretends its world is happy, unified, and
capable of fulfilling every desire. ‘Going from success to success,
until 1968 modern society was convinced it was loved. It has since
had to abandon these dreams; it prefers to be feared. It knows full
well that “its innocent air has gone forever”.’6 And the end of this
illusion is accompanied by the increasing homogeneity of the
modern world. Debord’s early distinction between the concentrated
and diffuse forms of spectacular organisation is abandoned in
favour of a single category: the integrated spectacle, to which cold
war differences between bureaucratic totalitarianism and capitalist
pluralism are increasingly insignificant. ‘When the spectacle was
concentrated, the greater part of surrounding society escaped it;
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The most radical gesture
when diffuse, a small part; today, nothing. The spectacle has spread
itself to the point where it now permeates all reality.’7 Without any
sense of difference or opposition in the world, ‘this reality no longer
confronts the integrated spectacle as something alien.’ 8
This would appear to mark a significant departure from the
revolutionary optimism of The Society of the Spectacle. ‘Beyond a
legacy of old books and old buildings’, writes Debord, ‘there
remains nothing, in culture or in nature, which has not been
transformed, and polluted, according to the means and interests of
modern industry.’ 9 Possessing ‘all the means necessary to falsify the
whole of production and perception’, the spectacle ‘is the absolute
master of memories just as it is the unfettered master of plans which
will shape the most distant future’. 10 Its discourse ‘isolates all it
shows from its context, its past, its intentions and its consequences.
It is thus completely illogical. Since no one may contradict it, it has
the right to contradict itself, to correct its own past.’ 11 These
Orwellian references—books and buildings being the only vestiges
of the old world to encroach on the Winston of 1984 as he stumbles
through falsified histories and manufactured revolution—bode ill
for the revolutionary project. The essential opposition between the
real and the spectacle would seem to be lost forever, drowned in a
flow of images which ‘carries everything before it’ and leaves the
spectator with neither the time nor the space to think, reflect,
remember, or judge.
Convinced that the spectacle is no longer the hidden quality of
modern capitalist society, Debord argued that the ‘vague feeling
that there has been a rapid invasion which has forced people to lead
their lives in an entirely different way is now widespread’. But the
encroachment of spectacular relations is ‘experienced rather like
some inexplicable change in the climate, or in some other natural
equilibrium, a change faced with which ignorance knows only that
it has nothing to say’. And what is more, he adds, ‘many see it as a
civilising invasion, as something inevitable, and even want to
collaborate’. 12 Expressions of ‘hypocritical regret’ for the passing
of real life and superficial concerns with the technological and
cultural developments which accelerate the cycles of reproduction
and simulation are voiced in an ‘empty debate’ conducted ‘by the
spectacle itself: everything is said about the extensive means at its
disposal, to ensure that nothing is said about their extensive
deployment’.13
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Yet Debord still insists that an understanding of the consolidation
of spectacular society is vital, for the sole reason that ‘it is under
such conditions that the next stage of social conflict will necessarily
be played out’.14 And, if we are to believe him, there is a great deal
more to Comments than sits on the page. ‘These comments are sure
to be welcomed by fifty or sixty people’, he observes at the outset ‘a
large number given the times in which we live and the gravity of the
matters under discussion’. 15 But ‘a good half of this interested elite
will consist of people who devote themselves to maintaining the
spectacular system of domination, and the other half of people who
persist in doing quite the opposite.’ 16 Encouraging the air of
mystique already surrounding him (‘An anti-spectacular notoriety
has become something extremely rare’17), Debord insists that he
cannot therefore speak freely in the text. ‘Above all’, he declares, ‘I
must take care not to give too much information to just anybody.’ 18
As a consequence, silences, secrets, and cryptic moments will have
to prevail, with some elements ‘intentionally omitted; and the plan
will have to remain rather unclear’. 19 It is evidently up to the
twenty-five or thirty revolutionary readers to put the text together
for themselves. And although Comments is as pessimistic as the age
in which it arises, the picture it paints is by no means closed and
hopeless.
If history should return to us after this eclipse, something
which depends on factors still in play and thus on an outcome
which no one can definitely exclude, these Comments may one
day serve in the writing of a history of the spectacle; without
any doubt the most important event to have occurred this
century, and the one for which the fewest explanations have
been ventured.20
It was clearly the conjunction of ubiquitous chatter about the
spectacle with the complete absence of its serious critique which
encouraged Debord to write still further. ‘In other circumstances’,
he maintained, ‘I think I could have considered myself altogether
satisfied with my first work on this subject, and left others to
consider future developments. But in the present situation, it
seemed unlikely that anyone else would do it.’ 21 But if no one has
developed the situationist project, there has been no shortage of
inversions, appropriations, and recuperations of the critique of
spectacular society.
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The most radical gesture
Baudrillard’s trips through hyperreality take both situationist
theory and poststructuralist discourse to an untenable extreme.
Although Baudrillard’s early nostalgia for some authentic relation
between people and things left him vulnerable to the more strident
rhetoric of Lyotard’s Economie Libidinale, his more recent works
have been beyond reproach from even the most insistent claims that
reality, the human subject, and all senses of meaning, history, and
purpose have forsaken the world. In Baudrillard’s writing, we
finally step into the postmodern with the same sense of giddiness
and trepidation that accompanies the first step onto a boat. The deck
shifts and sways beneath us; for a while there seems to be nothing to
hold onto since everything is moving, and we look back with
longing and fear as the land disappears. But after a while, we relax
enough to turn our attention to the horizon, forgetting what dry land
was ever like, so that the shore becomes as strange and mobile as the
boat itself first seemed when we tread on it again. Baudrillard
encourages us to believe that this is also the case for postmodernity.
At first the postmodern world seems impossibly free and
unbalanced, but soon we adapt so well to the perpetual motions that
surround us that we can no longer remember how we ever lived on
the solid foundations of the modern world. The only point at which
the metaphor fails is that of the return to land. Both ‘watchers and
watched sail forth on a boundless ocean’,22 observes Debord: the
postmodern voyager is doomed to be lost at sea.
In his writings of the late 1970s and 1980s, Baudrillard combined
a sense of done-it-all-be fore world-weariness with a joyful
enthusiasm for the disappearance of reality he discerns in every
moment of contemporary life. The world of hyperreality and
simulation is recorded and celebrated, and the possibility of making
any sort of political intervention is happily dismissed. And this
world is identical to the situationist spectacle: both are realms in
which the real and the meaningful have slipped away amidst a
confusion of signs, images, simulations, and appearances. But
Baudrillard is content to take the spectacle at face value, removing
all sense in which it can be considered as an inversion of the real.
The spectacle must be believed: it has no mysteries, no secrets, and
no underlying realities. Nothing is concealed, repressed, denied, or
turned against itself; there is nothing to be represented, alienated, or
separated, and mediations no longer stand between the subject and
the world but circumscribe all meaning and reality. Baudrillard
defined postmodernism as ‘the characteristic of a universe where
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there are no more definitions possible’; 23 a world in which
everything has ‘been done’ and all that remains is to play with the
fragments. ‘Playing with the pieces—that is postmodern’. 24 The
pieces with which the postmodernist toys are the theories, ideas,
and vocabularies in which the remnants of the lost modernist belief
in the possibilities of progress, liberation, and meaning remain.
Postmodernity is ‘a game with the vestiges of what has been
destroyed. This is why we are “post” — history has stopped, one is
in a kind of post-history which is without meaning.’25 In a doubly
ironic reversal of the situationists‘ argument that the choice of life
over survival allows for the free construction of situations ‘on the
ruins of the modern spectacle’, Baudrillard characterises
postmodernity as the attempt ‘to reach a point where one can live
with what is left. It is more a survival among the ruins than anything
else.’26
One of Baudrillard’s central concerns is with the media; the
realm of simulation and reproduction in which every aspect of
contemporary life is forced to appear. Observing the accelerated
reproduction of the real, he argues that postmodernity is the point at
which the real, the meaningful, and the authentic are finally and
irrevocably confused with representations which become more real
than reality itself. Ubiquitous images, simulations, and
reproductions no longer distort or conceal the real; reality has
slipped away into the free-floating chaos of the hyperreal. But the
representations of the hyperreal world are not without effect Media
representation gives events and experiences a power which they no
longer carry in themselves while at the same time perpetuating our
faith that there must be something behind the representation—a real
event, a true moment, an authentic expression, a meaningful
experience—which has only later been transmuted into the
spectacular existence from which nothing seems able to escape.
Representations seduce us into believing in a reality which has long
since disappeared. Images encourage the conviction that they are
images of something, rather than the components which entirely
constitute the world.
Baudrillard certainly turns conventional wisdom about both the
media and their audiences upside-down. Conjuring a bleakly
passive and homogeneous picture of ‘the silent majorities’, he
nevertheless offers some sort of defence of the stupid apathy he has
already imputed to ‘the masses’. In the Shadow of the Silent
Majorities insists that the media impose imperatives of reason,
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The most radical gesture
communication, meaning, and reality on a mass which cares for
nothing. ‘They are given meaning: they want spectacle,’ 27 he
declares. In effect, they prefer pushpin to poetry or, in Baudrillard’s
terms, football to politics. The drama of the political cannot
compete with the spectacle of football; continually cajoled into
appreciating ‘high culture’ and discerning real meaning, the masses
refuse point-blank to participate in the real world provided for
them. For Baudrillard, this indicates that the media are actually
overpowered by the mass, which absorbs and envelops them,
accepting them with a proud and complete lack of interest or
engagement. The masses are neither manipulated nor involved; their
relation to the media is the entirely passive role of the object, and it
is only in the ideology of the media itself that the insistent fears of
manipulation and distortion are raised. ‘Are the mass media on the
side of power in the manipulation of the masses, or are they on the
side of the masses in the liquidation of meaning?’ 28 asks
Baudrillard, overturning earlier radical convictions that ‘resistance
consists of reinterpreting messages according to the group’s own
codes and for its own ends. The masses, on the contrary, accept
everything and redirect everything en bloc into the spectacular,
without requiring any other code.’ 29
Far from signifying the extent of its alienation and domination,
Baudrillard argues that the apathetic silence of the mass, which
‘never participates’, is its ‘absolute weapon’,30 the means by which
it continually verges on the destruction of all forms of power.
Apathy is a problem only for those already in power or the
revolutionaries who would seize it, both of whom are desperate to
identify meaning, reality, and purpose in every aspect of social
experience. ‘Despite having been surveyed to death’, however, the
mass always refuses to answer: ‘it says neither whether the truth is
to the left or to the right, nor whether it prefers revolution or
repression. It is without truth and without reason.’ 31 This,
Baudrillard argues, is the mass’s answer to the overproduction of
meaning which characterises the modern world and of which the
Left is particularly guilty. ‘Basically, what goes for commodities
also goes for meaning,’ he explains.
Fo r a l o n g t i m e c a p i t a l o n l y h a d t o p r o d u c e g o o d s ;
consumption ran by itself. Today it is necessary to produce
consumers, to produce demand, and this production is
infinitely more costly than that of the goods. […] For a long
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time it was enough for power to produce meaning (political,
ideological, cultural, sexual), and the demand followed it; it
absorbed supply and still surpassed it. Meaning was in short
supply, and all the revolutionaries offered themselves to
produce still more. Today, everything has changed: no longer is
meaning in short supply, it is produced everywhere, in ever
increasing quantities—it is demand which is weakening. And it
is the production of this demand for meaning which has
become crucial for the system.32
In the absence of this demand, ‘power is nothing but an empty
simulacrum’,33 vainly insisting that it bears a significance which the
masses, on whom it supposedly imposes its manipulations and
oppressions, refuse to acknowledge. And whereas the demand ‘for
objects and services can always be artificially produced’, the ‘desire
for meaning, when it is in short supply, and the desire for reality,
when it is weakening everywhere, cannot be made good.’ 34 In an
a p p a r e n t v i n d i c a t i o n o f s i t u a t i o n i s t o b s e r va t i o n s o n t h e
transformation of the real into a distant spectacle, Baudrillard
argues that we are ‘already at the point where political, social events
no longer have sufficient autonomous energy to move us, and hence
unfold like a silent film’. 35
It is this effect of distance and disappearance which brings us to
postmodern declarations of the end of history, a moment which, as
Marx, Lukács, and Debord insisted, is inevitably presented as a
permanent feature of capitalist social organisation. The loss of
memory, purpose, and meaning which the end of history implies is
signified for Baudrillard by the empty vacuity of the masses, who
‘have no history themselves, no meaning, no consciousness, no
desire’.36 In the face of this inert and silent force, ‘history cools, it
slows down, events succeed each other and vanish in indifference’.37
History stops here, and we see in what way: not for want of
people, nor of violence (there will always be more violence,
but violence should not be confused with history), nor of
events (there will always be more events, thanks to the media
and information!), but by deceleration, indifference, and
stupefaction. History can no longer outrun itself, it can no
longer envisage its own finality, dream of its own end; it is
buried in its own immediate effect, it implodes in the here and
now.38
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The most radical gesture
And this disappearance of real experiences, events, and historical
meanings is not a matter for regret. It is only the ‘beautiful souls’ of
the revolutionary Left who still believe in the real and deplore the
fact that ‘the media are putting an end to the real event’. 39
Lamenting the ubiquity of the spectacle, the silence of the
majorities, and the lack of interest in the meaningful, the
revolutionaries of the modern world merely perpetuate the nostalgia
f o r t r u t h , m e a n i n g , i m m e d i a cy, a n d l i b e r a t i o n w h i c h h a s
characterised the critical tradition.
‘We have always had a sad vision of the masses (alienated), a sad
vision of the unconscious (repressed),’ writes Baudrillard. ‘Upon
our entire philosophy lies the heavy weight of these sad
correlations.’ 40 And against this collective melancholia, the
spectacle must be celebrated for its refusal of reality, its ability to
make meaning appear and disappear in one move. The postmodern
age is one in which we must finally accept that the ‘will to spectacle
and illusion’ is stronger than the ‘will for knowledge and power’ to
which it is opposed:
tenacious, deep in man’s heart, it haunts nonetheless the
process of events. There is, as it were, a desire for pure event,
objective information, the most secret facts and thoughts, to be
commuted into spectacle, to attain ecstasy in a scene instead of
being produced as something really happening. 41
The spectacle is not to be decried, but celebrated as the inevitable
theatre of all existence. Events have no reality in themselves; there
is no raw material of experience later subject to spectacularisation.
Reality is something achieved by events and experiences only
through their presentation in a scene. ‘For something to be
meaningful, there has to be a scene’, he wrote, ‘and for there to be a
scene, there has to be an illusion, a minimum of illusion, of
imaginary movement, of defiance to the real, which carries you off,
seduces or revolts you.’ 42 Meaning can only arise in the moment of
its representation, when it assumes an appearance which
immediately destroys its postulated reality. ‘Without this properly
esthetic dimension, mythical, ludic, there is not even a political
scene where something can happen.’ 43 Indeed, ‘even Revolution can
happen only if its spectacle is possible’. 44
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Such observations suggest that the real is only made possible in
the moment of its reproduction, a position which Baudrillard
reinforced with innumerable references to the copies and
appearances ubiquitous in the postmodern world. Charting the
historical movement of images from reflections to distortions and
finally to equivalencies and perfections of the real, Baudrillard
eventually identified a point at which it is no longer possible to
speak of the image in terms of representation, but as a simulation
which produces a reality more real than reality itself. Simulation
‘threatens the difference between “true” and “false”, between “real”
and “imaginary”’ with an unprecedented force. ‘Since the simulator
produces “true” symptoms, is he ill or not?’45 he asks, challenging
an increasingly untenable reality to assert itself in the midst of such
confusion. Indeed, the image, he argues, has never merely
threatened to distort or manipulate the real: rather, it has always
been in danger of revealing the essential absence of that which it
represents; it has always threatened to make the real disappear. Thus
the iconoclasts’ fear of images
arose precisely because they sensed this omnipotence of
simulacra, this facility they have of effacing God from the
consciousness of men, and the overwhelming, destructive truth
which they suggest: that ultimately there has never been any
God, that only the simulacra exists, indeed that God himself
has only ever been his own simulacrum. 46
Today it is representations of the real world and the meaningful
message which threaten their disappearance amidst an ecstasy of
communication, information technology, screens, and virtual
realities. Television, ‘the most beautiful prototypical object of this
new era’,47 is the medium in which simulation really comes into its
own, confusing reality and its representation by becoming a reality
in itself. The case of the Louds, a family whose life was filmed and
broadcast on American TV in the early 1970s, is used to illustrate
the eradication of the difference between fiction and reality,
epitomising ‘the dissolution of TV into life, the dissolution of life
into TV’.48 As Baudrillard points out, the Louds lived ‘as if TV
wasn’t there’, a claim which actually translates as ‘as if you, the
viewer, were really there’. The Louds became a hyperreal family:
not only was their representation their entire reality, but the family
without the cameras disappeared—in this case, more literally than
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The most radical gesture
the example requires, since the family broke up in the process. They
really did sacrifice themselves to television: the cameras
constructed and destroyed the family in one moment.
Examples such as this suggest that it is no longer sufficient to
speak of television as spectacle, a medium which represents the real
and provides for it a theatrical backdrop or mediation. The language
of spectacle, theatre, and scene still conjure a sense of underlying
reality, a world of meaning which is only later represented and
brought into the realm of meaning. For Baudrillard, this perspective
is merely a step on the road to the full obscenity of the postmodern
world; the era in which the scene is truly and finally all that there is.
In the moment at which images make the real disappear, we have
made an irrevocable leap over a border of simulation which brooks
no return. It is no longer possible to seek out the real under the
manipulations and distortions of the image and the apparent: reality,
and the entirety of social, political, and historical meanings
dependent on it collapses in on itself in an implosive disappearance.
Just as we ‘can no longer discover music as it was before stereo
(unless by an effect of supplementary simulation)’, so ‘we can no
longer discover history as it was before information and the media’.
The original essence (of music, of the social…), the original
concept (of the unconscious, of history…) have disappeared
because we can never again isolate them from their model of
perfection, which at the same time is their model of simulation,
of their forced assumption in an excessive truth, which at once
is their point of inertia and their point of no-return. We will
never know what was the social, or what was music before their
present exacerbation in useless perfection. We will never know
what history was before its exacerbation in the technical
perfection of information or its disappearance in the profusion
of commentary—we will never know what anything was
before its disappearance in the completion of its model….
Such is the era of simulation.49
And, in the absence of any referent of meaning and reality from
which the spectacular world of scenes and appearances might be
distinguished, the notions of spectacle and scene finally drop into
obsolescence. Winding his way through the convictions of the
ava n t - g a r d e , s i t u a t i o n i s t t h e o r y, t h e eve n t s o f 1 9 6 8 a n d
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poststructuralist philosophy, Baudrillard tells the story of this
achievement.
In the beginning was the secret, and this was the rule of the
game of appearance. Then there was the repressed, and this
was the rule of the game of depth. Finally comes the obscene,
and this was the rule of the game of a world without
appearance or depth—a transparent universe.50
‘So the consumer society was lived under the sign of alienation, as
society of the spectacle; but still the spectacle is only spectacle, it is
never obscene.’ It is only necessary to speak of the obscene ‘when
there is no longer a scene, when everything becomes inexorably
transparent’, when it is finally possible to say, ‘We are no longer in
the drama of alienation, we are in the ecstasy of communication’.51
Baudrillard presents the passage from the real to the scene and
finally to the obscene as a consequence of power’s long history of
distorting reality, concealing the truth, and dominating the masses.
In effect, he portrays a world in which this strategy has been
destroyed by its own success. Continual denials of meaningful
participation and subjective expression have finally eradicated the
very possibility of their assertion. We are in a position in which the
slaves, to return to Hegelian categories which Baudrillard has
supposedly left far behind, completely undermine the power of their
masters by refusing to recognise their dominion. So efficient has the
exercise of power over meaning and subjectivity become, that these
referents are no longer merely concealed and repressed, but actually
eradicated. The masses no longer recognise or respond to the power
relations which need them to participate as oppressed and
manipulated victims. The master has destroyed the slaves and, with
them, his own power. There is no longer any active force to be
dominated or repressed, and power too is revealed as a chimerical
simulation of itself: a vacuous, almost mystical category which only
ever existed by virtue of its own ability to construct an effective and
convincing image of power.
The only weapon of power, its only strategy against this
defection, is to reinject realness and referentiality everywhere,
in order to convince us of the reality of the social, of the gravity
of the economy and the finalities of production. 52
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The most radical gesture
The image which continually threatens to reveal the vacuity of the
real must be invested with this strategy; used as a means to reinforce
reality where it really eradicates it And so, rather paradoxically,
Baudrillard argues that the image now becomes the guardian of the
real. This is a strategy epitomised by Disneyland, an imaginary
America, which conveniently convinces us of the reality of
everything outside it.
Disneyland is there to conceal the fact that it is the ‘real’
country, all of America, which is Disneyland (just as prisons
are there to conceal the fact that it is the social in its entirety, in
its banal omnipresence, which is carceral). Disneyland is
presented as an imaginary in order to make us believe that the
rest is real, when in fact all of Los Angeles and the America
surrounding it are no longer real, but of the order of the
hyperreal and of simulation.53
The imaginary worlds which threaten the real are therefore
appropriated for its protection. But this too is a fictional scenario, in
which it is merely the image of the real which is safeguarded while
the real entirely evaporates. Just as subjectivity has been emptied
from the masses, which finally stand revealed as the object they
always were, so reality is emptied from the image, which now
represents nothing but its own, and simulated, reality.
This circularity, in which the image is engaged in an eternal
return upon itself, marks not only the ends of reality, meaning and
history, but also signifies the impossibility of critical thought and all
political engagement. Contradiction and negation are finally
redundant in a world in which it is possible neither to distinguish
between the real and the apparent, the true and the false, nor, to
privilege one term over another.
Simulation, the generalised passage to the code and the
signvalue, was at first described in critical terms, in the light
(or shadow) of a problematic of alienation. It was still the
society of the spectacle, and its denunciation, which was the
focal point of the semiological, psychoanalytical, and
sociological arguments. Subversion was still sought in the
transgression of the categories of political economy: usevalue, exchange-value, equivalence.54
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All such possibilities of subversion are now removed if struggles for
meaning and power persist only in simulated versions of
themselves.
And yet Baudrillard, declaring the impossibility of opposition
and critique, still insists on some sense of contradiction in his own
work. His entire emphasis on the overwhelming matrixes of images,
information, and communication systems in modern society is itself
conducted in an effort to dispense with the metaphors of production
which have characterised both Marxist and many poststructuralist
philosophies. To production, a framework in which the world is
always produced in some sense by some privileged and ‘other’
force—the subject, relations of power, or desire—Baudrillard
counterposes seduction, a term which replaces all sense of
fundamental relations at work in the world with strategies of
disappearance and concealment engaged in a meaningless play.
Production brings things into view, makes them real, meaningful,
and purposeful; seduction comes into play at the moment when
meanings and events are overproduced in the midst of accelerating
circuits of image, message, and representation to the point at which
they disappear. Seduced by the ubiquity of images to believe that
the real still exists, the postmodern consciousness is then
abandoned in a world from which any sense of reality has
evaporated.
With the establishment of seduction as the new principle of the
postmodern world, Baudrillard inverts the entire strategy of the old,
modern, revolutionary project. In place of desires for truth and real
experience, the ‘“liberation” of meaning and the destruction of
appearances’, 55 he promotes secrecy and mediation, artifice and
objectification, arguing that the attempt to unveil the world’s secrets
and achieve some sense of immediate engagement with the world is
misplaced and misguided. Positioning itself on the side of
subjectivity, real events, meanings, and immediacy against
commodified representations, images and experiences, the
revolutionary tradition to which the situationists belonged has been
fighting not merely a losing battle, but one which was always
already lost. Struggles against recuperation were always doomed,
argues Baudrillard: moments of authenticity have never preceded
their recuperation, and the desire for their realisation has always
been naïve. For such senses of acute reality are merely the seductive
fictions which have deceived us into working and waiting for their
fulfilment for more than a century. Still absorbed in the project to
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produce the world—to make it do, make, and mean more—and
continuing to participate in linear and ideological conceptions of
time and history which impute a purpose, direction, and sense of
progress to every event, the revolutionary critique has merely
contributed to the overproduction of meaning and reality which has
finally made them disappear. The masses no longer pretend to be
interested: objectified they have been, and objects they become.
Things no longer presume to bear some use-value or purpose:
commodified out of meaningful existence, they merely exist as dead
weights, happily proclaiming their inert futility. In the face of
simultaneous and simulating representations, ideas, events, and
experiences can no longer be really felt, and even the most intimate
emotions and the most radical gestures are irretrievably confused
with their spectacular inversions. The great events of the day are
subjected to endless media exposure,
but still we can’t really imagine them. All of that, for us, is
simply obscene, since images in the media are made to be seen
but not really looked at, hallucinated in silhouette, absorbed—
like sex absorbs the voyeur: from a distance. Neither
spectators, nor actors—we are voyeurs without illusion.56
Such are the pessimistic reflections which mark Baudrillard’s later
work, leading him to commend the honesty of the meaningless, the
superficial, the secret, and the artificial in a world saturated with
impossible searches for truth, revelation, depth, and authenticity. At
least the surfaces and appearances of the world do not pretend to be
more than themselves, and it is in them that we should place our
faith.
Contrary to our residual faiths in an irreversible progress towards
resolution and realisation, history has turned back on itself in a
reversal which calls for a new and inverted strategy: ‘For critical
theory one must therefore substitute a fatal theory, to bring this
objective irony of the world to completion.’ 57 Like Lyotard,
therefore, Baudrillard insists that the ‘only radical and modern
answer’ to the ubiquity of the commodified image lies in ‘the
deepening of negative conditions’,58 the attempt to ‘potentiate what
is new, original, and unexpected in the commodity—for example,
its formal indifference to utility and value, the preeminence given to
circulation’. 59 Here ends the attempt to defend the subject against
the encroachment of commodity relations: alienation and the entire
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world of appearances theorised by the situationists is to be
celebrated and encouraged; pushed beyond itself and accelerated
until it subverts and exposes itself. Subversion and dissent lie not in
the subject but its reified form: the object which refuses to bear
meaning, the image which represents nothing, the sign which fails
to signify, the commodified and silenced mass which refuses to
participate.
This marks the complete inversion of situationist theory, with
which Baudrillard remains engaged throughout his work.
Convinced that all desires for participation in created situations
have been replaced by the drive for spectacle, Baudrillard pours
scorn on the situationist dream. ‘That things exhaust themselves in
their spectacle—in a magic and artificial fetishism—is the
distortion that serious minds will always oppose, in their utopian
expurgation of the world in order to deliver it exact, intact, and
authentic for the day of the Last Judgement.’ 60 Against situationist
claims that struggles against alienation would reveal a new world of
immediacy and participation, Baudrillard insists that the boredom
of contemporary life, far from being counterrevolutionary, is not at
all a problem. Rather, ‘the essential point is the increase of
boredom; increase is salvation and ecstasy’.
How could we suppose that people were going to disavow their
daily life and look for an alternative to it? On the contrary,
they’ll make a destiny out of it: intensify it while seeming to do
the opposite, plunge into it to the point of ecstasy, seal the
monotony of it with an even greater monotony.61
And against both the ‘serious minds’ and the ‘beautiful souls’ of the
situationist tradition, Baudrillard implores us to throw in our lot
with the winning side, abandoning all claims for the subject and
accepting that the object has a power and irreducibility which
subjectivity can never attain:
the object does not believe in its own desire; the object does not
live off the illusion of its own desire; the object has no desire. It
does not believe that anything belongs to it as property, and it
entertains no fantasies of reappropriation or autonomy.62
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Why swim against the tide of commodification any longer,
Baudrillard seems to be asking. ‘Why privilege the position of the
subject, why support this fiction of a will, a conscience, even of an
unconscious for the subject?’ 63 Years of defence and definition of
the subject have called it into question to such an extent that it has
become quite untenable. It is no longer possible to declare, with
Vaneigem, that the subject is the unproblematic locus of desire,
individuality, poetic experience, and creativity. ‘We arrive then at
this paradox, at this conjuncture where the position of the subject
has become untenable, and where the only possible position is that
of the object. The only strategy possible is that of the object.’64
In much of this work, Baudrillard assumes the role of the lone
seer, desperately warning us of the hopelessness of our attempts to
hang on to some conception of real life and meaningful experience.
And because of this, there is a sense in which he continues the task
of the critical theorist and still conveys some drive for opposition
and negation. For although the substance of his work is quite alien
to any critical tradition, Baudrillard admits his debt and attachment
to situationist theory. ‘I was very, very attracted by Situationism,’ he
declares. ‘And even if today Situationism is past, there remains a
kind of radicality to which I have always been faithful. There is still
a kind of obsession, a kind of counterculture, which is still there.
Something that has really stayed with me.’65
And while he scorns and inverts the situationist dream,
B a u d r i l l a r d c o n t i n u e s , l i ke g e n e r a t i o n s o f r o m a n t i c s a n d
revolutionaries before him, to counterpose the world’s self-image to
some other, more real reality. His battle lines are drawn between all
pretenders to truth, subjectivity, meaning, and the whole gamut of
desiring and impassioned struggles for real experience on the one
hand, and all blatant declarations of simulation, commodification,
seduction, and artifice on the other. The world has in some sense
shifted to this last camp, and it is here, in the surfaces and secrets of
mediation, that the truly irrecuperable gestures are finally to be
found. ‘The present system of dissuasion and simulation succeeds
in neutralizing all finalities, all referentials, all meanings, but it fails
to neutralize appearances. It forcefully controls all the procedures
for the production of meaning. It does not control the seduction of
appearances. No interpretation can explain it, no system can abolish
it. It is our last chance.’66 Baudrillard insists that the struggle of the
subject against the world of objects has finally been reversed purely
as a consequence of its own history, by a simple twist of fate.
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Our all-too-beautiful strategies of history, knowledge, and
power are erasing themselves. It is not because they have failed
(they have, perhaps, succeeded too well) but because in their
progression they reached a dead point where their energy was
inverted and they devoured themselves, giving way to a pure
and empty, or crazy and ecstatic, form.67
This sense of there being nowhere left to go and nothing new to say
is a message which even the most optimistic readings of
postmodernism are hard-pressed to avoid. For the postmodern age
into which Baudrillard’s work ushers us is above all characterised
by a reworking of previous styles, vocabularies, ideas, and
experiences; a representation of earlier moments from which all
critical force and political momentum are excluded. Dada’s cut-ups
reappear in the fragmented texts of postmodern discourse, and
surrealism’s collages resurface on advertisement hoardings. Works
of art more real than reality itself practise a struggle for the
hyperreality of the over-commodified object and the disappearance
of all aesthetic meaning, and many of those art forms characterised
as postmodern appear as vacuous realisations of the situationist
project. Boundaries between art and everyday life are eradicated,
and distinctions between disciplines and styles are challenged with
a new blossoming of discursive forms. Cultural references are
glued, sometimes literally, onto the façades of factories and offices
redundant even before their completion, and a curiously glamorous,
classical, and superficial aesthetic, which is precisely that of the
commodity, is painted over every remnant of the modern world. In
gallery, street, and shop, the integrated environment has come into
its own, and new technological developments continue to clear the
way for holograms, laser lighting, and virtual reality to produce
ever-more ecstatic forms of communication.
That situationist dreams of a freely constructed environment
should be so subtly displaced comes as no surprise. ‘The only thing
that can be expressed in the mode of the spectacle is the emptiness
of everyday life,’ wrote Vaneigem. ‘And indeed, what better
commodity than an aesthetic of emptiness?’ 68 Neither was it
difficult to anticipate the re-emergence of the critical theory of the
spectacle in Baudrillard’s aimless excursions through a moment of
history mistaken for its final realisation. Baudrillard’s work is
sophisticated and provocative: persuasive in the extreme, it is
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difficult to resist his exhortations and virtually impossible to contest
them. But even at their best, his ideas are always and quite literally
pointless. Devoid of both direction and origin, his most astute
observations are mere descriptions made from some indeterminate
realm too shifting and diffuse to constitute a critical perspective. As
such, his texts are a perfect example of Debord calls ‘lateral critique’,
a writing
which perceives many things with considerable candour and
accuracy, but places itself to one side. Not because it affects
some sort of impartiality, for on the contrary it must seem to find
much fault, yet without ever apparently feeling the need to reveal
its cause, to state, even implicitly, where it is coming from and
where it wants to go.69
Likening this kind of groundless criticism to ‘those facsimiles of
famous weapons, which only lack the firing-pin’,70 Debord awakens
the notion of recuperation from the slumber induced by postmodern
denials of its existence. Spectacular discourse ‘isolates all it shows
from its context, its past, its intentions and its consequences’,71 he
writes. And from the pages of Comments, Baudrillard’s work appears
as a perfected and spectacular description of the spectacle, confirming
its implicit insistence that history has ended, political action is futile,
and subjective experience is always already commodified and
recuperated.
Comments on the Society of the Spectacle observes many of the
characteristics of the modern world described by Baudrillard. With
and after situationist theory, Debord recognises the apparent
impossibility of strategies of opposition, contradiction, or
transgression with which the ‘fragile meta-stability’,72 as Baudrillard
describes American capitalist society, or Debord’s conception of the
spectacle as a state of ‘fragile perfection’73 might be contested. For
Debord, ours is a society which ‘must no longer be exposed to attacks,
being fragile; and indeed is no longer open to attack, being perfect as
no other society before it’.74 Baudrillard observes the ‘evaporation of
any real alternative’, describing an ‘uncontested and uncon testable’
society to which there is ‘no real opposition any more’,75 and Debord
describes the spectacle’s ability to dispense ‘with that disturbing
conception, which was dominant for over two hundred years, in which
a society was open to criticism or transformation, reform or
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revolution. Not thanks to any new arguments, but simply because all
argument has become useless.’76
But the similarities of their contemporary positions are
underwritten and undermined by radical political differences.
Debord’s writing is purposeful and deliberate: he remains bitterly
unhappy that simulations and appearances are emptying the world of
meaning and reality and, still waiting for history to return to us, he
decries the spectacular domination of the world as surely as in his
earlier texts. For Baudrillard, however, it is not merely the case that
we seem to have forsaken historical reality for a matrix of signs and
simulations: this passage is complete, and the suggestion that history
is at an end is ‘by no means a despairing hypothesis, unless we regard
simulation as a higher form of alienation—which I certainly do not’. 77
From Baudrillard’s perspective, Debord’s laments are reactionary
and nostalgic, still contained by struggles for production and the
uncovering of more meaning, historical reality, and subjective
experience. And to Debord, Baudrillard’s work is based on a
fundamental error, signalled, perhaps, by his specialised obsession
with the media. Mistaking the appearances, simulations, and signs of
reality for reality itself, Baudrillard has happily accepted the
spectacle’s own account of itself. As Debord had written in The
Society of the Spectacle: ‘Understood on its own terms, the spectacle
proclaims the predominance of appearances and asserts that all human
life, which is to say all social life, is mere appearance.’78 And indeed,
for Baudrillard, modern society is entirely circumscribed by its
superficial characteristics. If we are led to believe that history has
ended then it must be so; if dissent is always recuperated it must
inevitably be lost; if events and experiences seem confused amidst a
welter of spectacles and reproductions, they must truly have
disappeared.
Like Baudrillard, Debord argues that ‘the tendency to replace the
real with the artificial is ubiquitous.’
In this regard, it is fortuitous that traffic pollution has
necessitated the replacement of the Marly Horses in place de la
Concorde, or the Roman statues in the doorway of SaintTrophime in Arles, by plastic replicas. Everything will become
more beautiful than before, for the tourists’ cameras.79
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The growth of theme parks and the entire heritage industry
substantiates Debord’s claims that the false ‘reinforces itself by
knowingly eliminating any possible reference to the authentic’, while
the genuine ‘is reconstructed as quickly as possible, to resemble the
false’. 80 For Debord, this remains a matter for angry regret. The
endless reproductions and representations of the spectacular world
inspire no celebration, and privilege is still accorded to that which is
spectacularised. There is still, in other words, a theatre into which real
meanings and events are displaced and transported; a spectacle which
remains an inversion of the real.
For Baudrillard, however, priority must now be given to
appearance and artifice. And a nostalgic faith in the moment of
liberation is not the only consequence of such pleas for the authentic.
Taking nuclear war as his example, Baudrillard points out, as the
situationists had also done, that the spectacle of war is more effective
a display of power than its reality. And for Baudrillard, this merely
proves that the appearance is infinitely preferable to the reality: ‘this
spectacle that the moralists disapprove of’, he argues, ‘is possibly the
lesser evil. For God knows where unleashed meaning would lead to
when it refuses to produce itself as appearance.’81 This may be true of
the nuclear spectacle, and coal mines converted for tourist
appreciation are certainly safer than their earlier ‘real’ incarnations.
But what of other realities and meanings? What of the love and poetry
invoked by the situationists? Are mediations and simulations of the
desires of Vaneigem’s radical subject really preferable to struggles for
their reality? Baudrillard clearly feels that they are. ‘When nothing
moves you any more’, he writes, ‘you must find a sign to stand in for
passion.’
I have played at passion, I have played at tenderness….
Sometimes it even seems to me that I have never done anything
but provide the semblance of ideas. But that is the one and only
way out we have to take in a speculative world with no way out:
to come up with the most successful signs of an idea. Or in an
emotional world with no way out: to come up with the most
successful signs of a passion.82
It is from a strangely misogynistic sexual experience and metaphor
that Baudrillard derives much of his work on the seductive power of
objects and artifice. The sexual object is said to be ‘powerful in its
absence of desire’ just as the masses are ‘powerful in their silence’.83
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The extent of the differences between Baudrillard’s endorsements
of superficiality and the situationist perspective from which Debord
still writes revolves around the question of whether the illusions
encouraged by the spectacle have now become more real than the
reality they once concealed, or whether, with Debord, they remain
illusions to be unmasked. Does the modern world remain vulnerable
to negation, merely appearing to make realities and meanings
disappear by a sleight of hand to which commentators like Baudrillard
fall happy victim, or have the spectacle’s earlier denials of history
really blossomed into a true end of history, bringing the absolute
impossibility of meaningful change or social transformation? For
Debord, the introduction of this last position into contemporary, and
apparently radical, discourse, is a ‘welcome break’ for power, which
is now guaranteed success ‘in all its undertakings, or at least the
rumour of success’.84 The end of history is the eradication of any
meaningful context in which the fragments of the contemporary world
can be measured and assessed. ‘History’s domain was the memorable,
the totality of events whose consequences would be lastingly
apparent’; 85 without historical knowledge, the possibility of
judgement and evaluation is removed. ‘When the spectacle stops
talking about something for three days, it is as if it did not exist For it
has then gone on to talk about something else, and it is that which
henceforth exists.’86
The precious advantage which the spectacle has acquired
through the outlawing of history, from having driven the recent
past into hiding, and from having made everyone forget the spirit
of history within society, is above all the ability to cover its own
tracks—to conceal the very progress of its recent world conquest
Its power already seems familiar, as if it had always been there.
All usurpers have shared this aim: to make us forget that they
have only just arrived.87
The end of history abandons us in an eternal present, in which events
‘retreat into a remote and fabulous realm of unverifiable stories,
uncheckable statistics, unlikely explanations and untenable
reasoning’.88 Devoid of meaning and purpose, events and experiences
have neither past nor future, and significance is attributed ‘only to
what is immediate, and to what will be immediate immediately
afterwards, always replacing another, identical, immediacy’ in a
media-generated ‘eternity of noisy insignificance’.89 The spectacle is
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sustained by the ‘manufacture of a present where fashion itself, from
clothes to music, has come to a halt, which wants to forget the past and
no longer seems to believe in a future’; an eternity of meaninglessness
‘achieved by the ceaseless circularity of information, always
returning to the same short list of trivialities, passionately proclaimed
as major discoveries’.90
The end of history facilitates the dissemination of an unverifiable
discourse; a series of unanswerable lies and mystifications.
The spectacle proves its arguments simply by going round in
circles: by coming back to the start, by repetition, by constant
reaffirmation in the only space left where anything can be
publicly affirmed, and believed, precisely because that is the
only thing to which everyone is witness.91
This circularity of media, messages, and audience means that the
spectacle skilfully ‘organises ignorance of what is about to happen
and, immediately afterwards, the forgetting of whatever has
nonetheless been understood’. 92 And our entire society, writes
Debord, is ‘built on secrecy’,
from the ‘front’ organisations which draw an impenetrable
screen over the concentrated wealth of their members, to the
‘official secrets’ which allow the State a vast field of operation
free from any legal constraint; from the often frightening secrets
of shoddy production hidden by advertising, to the projections of
an extrapolated future, in which domination alone reads off the
unlikely progress of things whose existence it denies, calculating
the responses it will mysteriously make.93
On one level, this secrecy is manifest in quite obvious areas: Debord
points to areas of increasing inaccessibility—the quasi-military
establishments and anonymous government departments which
pepper the cities and countryside, and the prevalence of ‘people
trained to act in secret’ —to suggest that ‘under the rule of the
integrated spectacle, we live and die at the confluence of innumerable
mysteries’.94 But Debord’s secrecy is a more profound characteristic
of spectacular organisation; one which, unlike Baudrillard’s
observations on the subject, continues to suggest that there are still
things which are hidden. Insisting that secrecy is the exception to a
free society of abundant information, the spectacle makes a virtue out
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of its concealed knowledges. ‘Everyone accepts that there are
inevitably little areas of secrecy reserved for specialists; as regards
things in general, many believe they are in on the secret,’ writes
Debord. But this secrecy runs deeper still; it ‘dominates this world,
and first and foremost as the secret of domination’,95 since it is always
the very existence of any system of domination which is perpetually
denied.
Debord also suggests that our obsession with the media, surely
epitomised by Baudrillard’s work, is itself a distraction which
precludes any critical engagement with the spectacle itself.
Rather than talk of the spectacle, people often prefer to use the
term ‘media’. And by this they mean to describe a mere
instrument, a kind of public service which with impartial
‘professionalism’ would facilitate the new wealth of mass
communication through mass media.96
The spectacle complains of its own abuses, criticises its spectators for
being too stupid to see through its own propaganda, and organises a
wonderful display of internal debate so that the excesses of particular
spectacles conceal the ubiquity of spectacular life itself. The spectacle
becomes ‘merely the excesses of the media, whose nature,
unquestionably good since it facilitates communication, is sometimes
driven to extremes’.97 But the spectacle is more than this: it is a world
in which appearances are organised and lived experience eradicated.
And likewise the media is much less: it is merely the realm in which
orders are communicated ‘with perfect harmony’, for ‘those who give
them are also those who tell us what to think of them’.98
The apathy and stupidity of spectators is not the consequence of
some ineluctable drive towards spectacle and reification, as
Baudrillard would have us believe. It is the spectacle which stupefies
and commodities, forcing us to live in its truly ‘global village’, full of
the ‘conformism, isolation, petty surveillance, boredom and repetitive
malicious gossip about the same families’ which characterise every
other sort of village.99 When respect is demanded for the most banal of
celebrities and stars, ‘when they are held to be rich, important,
prestigious, to be authority itself’, it is little wonder that ‘the
spectators tend to want to be just as illogical as the spectacle’.100 And
meanwhile, ‘news of what is genuinely important, or what is actually
changing, comes rarely, and then in fits and starts. It always concerns
this world’s apparent condemnation of its own existence, the stages in
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its programmed self-destruction.’ 101 Ours is a world in which
‘everything which can be done, must be done’,102 a society which has
lost its reason103 at the very moment in which thoughtful and strategic
responses to enormous questions of environmental disaster, for
example, are urgently required.
It is indeed unfortunate that human society should encounter
such burning problems [writes Debord] just when it has become
materially impossible to make heard the least objection to the
language of the commodity; just when power…believes that it no
longer needs to think, and indeed can no longer think. 104
Debord paints a scenario in which everyone is busily watching
everyone else in a spiralling web of purposeless surveillance which
‘spies on itself, and plots against itself’. 105 And so there is ‘a
contradiction between the mass of information collected on a growing
number of individuals, and the time and intelligence available to
analyse it’,106 until it becomes possible to ‘speak of domination’s
falling rate of profit, as it spreads to almost the whole of social space
and consequently increases both its personnel and its means’.107 A
host of ‘professional conspirators are spying on each other without
really knowing why…. Who is observing whom? On whose behalf,
apparently? And actually? The real influences remain hidden, and the
u l t i m a t e a i m s c a n b a r e l y b e s u s p e c t e d a n d a l m o s t n eve r
understood.’ 108 And the final contradiction of the all-pervasive
surveillance of contemporary society is that it is ‘spying on,
infiltrating and pressurising an absent entity: that which is supposed
to be trying to subvert the social order’.109 This subversive force does
not exist: ‘Wherever the spectacle has its dominion the only organised
forces are those which want the spectacle,’110 and both revolutionary
organisations and their theoretical developments appear to have
exhausted themselves. ‘Certainly conditions have never been so
seriously revolutionary,’ argues Debord, but, ironically, ‘it is only
governments who think so. Negation has been so thoroughly deprived
of its thought that it was dispersed long ago. Because of this it remains
only a vague, yet highly disturbing threat.’ 111 Having taken the
infiltration and provocation of negative forces to a limit at which it is
no longer possible to distinguish the real elements of subversion from
their simulated versions, the spectacle is now forced into the
construction of its own enemies, developing ‘an interest in organising
poles of negation itself’.112 But these manipulations, epitomised by the
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fabricated terrorist outrages in Italy, are no longer confined to such
brutal manifestations. Now it is theoretical and ideological opposition
which needs to be constructed and manipulated so that the reality of
its disappearance is concealed.
Here Debord seems remarkably close to Baudrillard. Negation is
absent; it has disappeared under the weight of discourses still
desperately insisting on its existence. And Debord’s penultimate
observations in Comments reinforce this pessimism. The spectacle, he
writes, has developed beyond the consciousness of those operating
within it: spectacular society has still to become conscious of its own
vacuity and meaninglessness.
Not only are the subjected led to believe that to all intents and
purposes they are still living in a world which in fact has been
eliminated, but the rulers themselves sometimes suffer from the
absurd belief that in some respects they do too…. This
backwardness will not last long. Those who have achieved so
much so easily must necessarily go further.113
But although Baudrillard’s hyperreality seems to be waiting just
around Debord’s last corner as an ineluctable horizon at which the
spectacle will one day meet its own image, there is still a sense in
which Debord refuses to follow Baudrillard to the point at which the
social world spirals off in to a free-floating chaos of meaningless flux.
There remains something confused by modern society; there are still
realities to be secreted and revealed, gestures to be recuperated and
recuperations to be subverted. The spectacle’s obsession with
surveillance may entrap itself in absurd webs of internal observation
and the fabricated threat of subversion, but it still operates its fictional
deterrence in anticipation of an outbreak of real dissent. The
integrated spectacle has ‘driven its critique into genuine clandestinity,
not because it is in hiding but because it is hidden by the ponderous
stage-management of diversionary thought’, and ‘provocation,
infiltration, and various forms of elimination of authentic critique in
favour of a false one…have been created for this purpose’.114 And
although memories of the past and hopes for the future have left the
agenda of the integrated spectacle, the consequence of a perpetual
present is that ‘once the running of a State involves a permanent and
massive shortage of historical knowledge, that State can no longer be
led strategically’.115 If the forces of negation are devoid of purpose,
meaning, and reality, so too are those which support the spectacle. We
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return to the point at which ‘order reigns and does not govern’116
identified by Vaneigem; the moment at which all sense of strategy and
direction is removed from spectacular organisation which endlessly
and aimlessly reproduces itself.
For Baudrillard, this is all true, and there is nothing to be done
about it. It is a comforting message, and postmodernism does of
course relieve us of many exhausting burdens—not least the
imperatives to seek the truth, to make the best, to create the new, and
change the world—and frees us to enjoy the pleasures of the texts, the
games among the vestiges. Without purpose and meaning, anything
can be said and done. The cities look pretty, shopping is fun,
commodities are friendly, and all sorts of dreams come true with
barely a touch of a button. Superficially, everything is fine. And it is
indeed tempting to assert the impossibility and undesirability of
critical thought in such an apparently seamless world. In the face of
the ubiquity of image and representation, unprecedented
sophistications of the contemporary world, and the failure of a century
of revolutionary critique, it is also far easier to swim with the tide and
declare the end of all negation and dissent. Baudrillard’s story fits like
a glove; rather ironically, it is a faithful representation of the selfimage promoted by capitalist social organisation.
And yet the seductive ease of such a world view is no reason to
accept it It has certainly become extremely difficult to introduce
contradiction and negation into a discourse which has written out the
possibility of a critical perspective or a world in which even the most
radical gesture is immediately disarmed. But it is quite possible to
assert that appearances are not, in fact, everything; that the spectacle
has not spiralled off into an uncontrollable space; that the workings of
contemporary society are not arcane; the masses continue to love,
fight, work, and riot; and that history, contrary to decades of
propaganda, is not dead, but merely sleeping. Nowhere, it is true, is
there a critical project able to wield such observations as weapons of
negation. But Comments on the Society of the Spectacle at least proves
that it is possible to say all that Baudrillard has said without
positioning oneself in the postmodern, and while there is no longer a
flurry of revolutionary activity in which such a work can be received,
it is also true that the age in which we live is far from the blind
circularity of passive affirmation invoked by postmodern theory.
It fortunately remains the case that the networks of subversion
which continue to arise in even the most postmodern pockets of the
postmodern world are too numerous to detail here. And even in the
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midst of the ‘aesthetic of emptiness’ prevailing in the artistic milieu,
recognition of the immense difficulties facing any critical engagement
with an increasingly absorbent system of social relations has not led
all cultural production to the aestheticisation of a spectacular
environment. The radical trajectory begun by Dada has not accepted
the petrifying conclusions of postmodern theory, and the awareness
that even the most radical of gestures can be disarmed continues to
encourage a search for irrecuperable forms of expression and
communication. That a great deal of cultural agitation is hidden from
the public gaze is sometimes indicative of its tactics rather than its
absence. Radical artists have learnt from the ‘horizontal’ and antihierarchical networking characteristic of the contacts, with mail art
networks establishing loose, transitory systems of information
exchange which evade hierarchy and sidestep bureaucratic control. A
flourishing samizdat tradition continues to produce music, magazines,
performance, and political interventions in the spirit of ironic
violence perfected by Dada; plagiarism, détournement, and
provocation remain the hallmarks of a thriving and sophisticated
world of agitation.
The 1980s were marked by a series of ‘assaults on culture’,
culminating in calls for an art strike in 1990. Challenging all
conventions of identity, originality, and the very nature of cultural
production, the Praxis project convened a Festival of Plagiarism
which reworked situationist notions of détournement and challenged
the hypocrisy of high art distinctions between the plagiarism and
evolutionary development of techniques and ideas. Plagiarism, wrote
Stewart Home, ‘saves time and effort, improves results, and shows
considerable initiative on the part of the individual plagiarist As a
revolutionary tool it is ideally suited to the needs of the twentieth
century.’ 117 But Praxis distanced itself from the purposeless
reproductions of postmodern culture with definitions of plagiarism as
‘a collective undertaking far removed from the post-modern
“theories” of appropriation…. Plagiarism is for life, post-modernism
is fixated on death.’118 And the pamphlet accompanying the Festival
reinforced the plagiarists’ distance from the postmodern insistence
that progress is impossible and endless reiteration inevitable.
Plagiarism in late capitalist society articulates a semi-conscious
cultural condition: namely, that there ‘is nothing left to say’ ….
The practitioners of much post-modern theory have tended to
proclaim this feeling rather smugly; but if there is nothing to say,
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they yet demonstrate that there will always be something to sell.
On the other hand, there are practitioners active in many
disciplines who, recognising the necessity for collective action
demanded by media such as film and electronic tape, engage in
plagiarism in an attempt to expose and explode once and for all
the individualistic attitudes which tend to make all current
human activity seem redundant and increasingly alienated.119
The moves against individualism and originality made in the Festival
of Plagiarism were underlined by proposals for multiple names. Karen
Eliot, the most popular of these, was launched in 1985 as a name to be
‘adopted by a variety of cultural workers at various times in order to
carry through tasks related to building up a body of work ascribed to
“Karen Eliot”’ and so ‘highlight the problems thrown up by the
various mental sets pertaining to identity, individuality, originality,
value and truth’.120
When one becomes Karen Eliot one’s previous existence consists
of the acts other people have undertaken using the name.
When one becomes Karen Eliot one has no family, no parents, no
birth. Karen Eliot was not born, s/he was materialised from social
forces, constructed as a means of entering the shifting terrain that
circumscribes the ‘individual’ and society.121
Hundreds of people have adopted Karen Eliot for specific works and
projects precisely because recognition and reward—so often the
synonyms of commodification and recuperation—are provocatively
evaded by the anonymity of a multiple name. ‘Multiple names are
connected to radical theories of play. The idea is to create an “open
situation” for which no one in particular is responsible.’122
It goes without saying that few artists accepted the invitation to
refuse creativity extended by those calling for an art strike between
1990 and 1993 to which these interventions led. Carrying a
provocative ambiguity which incited confusion, the art strike
reintroduced a whole range of issues around questions of strategy,
recuperation, and the relation between culture and politics. Home
argued that ‘most “revolutionaries” have yet to realise the importance
of fighting the bourgeoisie on cultural, as well as economic and
political, fronts’ and expressed the hope that ‘the Art Strike will go
some way towards correcting this oversight’.123 Proposed as a means
of ‘intensifying the class struggle within the cultural, economic and
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political spheres’, and aiming ‘to demoralise a cross section of the
bourgeois class’,124 the importance of the art strike was said to lie ‘not
in its feasibility but in the possibilities it opens up for intensifying the
class war’.125 For Home, art has never been a progressive political
force, and the art strike was in part an attempt to demoralise those
artists who believe their work to be oppositional or subversive.
Situationist demands for a poeticised and freely created environment
were only ever bourgeois dreams imposed on a disinterested
proletariat by an over-enthusiastic avant-garde. Situationist hopes for
an aestheticised daily experience have indeed come to ‘reinforce the
overall position of the bourgeoisie’,126 and situationist demands for
the suppression and realisation of art in the name of free creativity,
imagination, and pleasure are reactionary desires for a new cycle of
mediations which, ‘in the post-modern era…serve Power in the same
way that honesty, truth, progress &c., served the capitalist system in
the classical modern age’.127
To demand the destruction of art in the name of creativity is
merely a reform of Power. To trade off art against creativity is to
take back with one hand what has been rejected by the other.
Those who genuinely oppose alienated social relations will not
only break with art but affirm the refusal of creativity.128
Desires for authenticity were condemned as ‘the most cynical of all
the pseudo-needs’. Offering ‘the spectacle of its own inadequacy’ for
mass consumption, capitalism ‘uses this spectacle as the means of
reselling itself to those who “imagine” they have “progressed” beyond
bourgeois values in a “return” to the “authentic”’.129 Refusing all
mediation and values, Praxis declared: ‘ABOLISH PLEASURE/
REFUSE CREATIVITY/SMASH THE IMAGINATION/DESIRE IN
RUINS/THE PRESENT IS ABSOLUTE/ EVERYTHING NOW!’130
Raising questions of authorship, responsibility, and authenticity,
these adventures have contributed to debates dating back to Dada’s
collaborations, Tzara’s cut-up poems, Duchamp’s readymades, and
surrealism’s exquisite corpses. Surrealist arguments about who, or
what, constitutes the locus of artistic production and responsibility
were epitomised by an affair in which Louis Aragon, threatened with
prosecution for lines in Red Front which enthused, ‘Kill the cops,
comrades!’, was unwillingly defended by Breton on the grounds that
poets can never be held responsible for their own works when these
are merely transcripts of an uncontrollable unconscious.131 And it is in
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the cultivation of this sense of an anonymous, possibly ubiquitous,
and uncontrollable surge of interruptive and provocative desire that
those associated with Karen Eliot and the art strike have been most
successful.
The strike itself, however, is a different matter. The interventions
made around the Festival of Plagiarism were conceived as ‘the showdown that paved the way for the final conflict of Art Strike’,132 a last
attempt to subvert culture from within before the tactics of sabotage
come to an end with the recognition that any participation inevitably
enters into a relation of support with the system of values and
economic relations it seeks to undermine. ‘Only total opposition, both
theoretical and practical (i.e., silence), is irrecuperable,’133 declares
The Art Strike Handbook in an apparent vindication of Baudrillard’s
claim that art ‘no longer contests anything, if ever it did. Revolt is
isolated, the malediction “consumed”.’ Art ‘can parody this world,
illustrate it, simulate it, alter it’, but ‘it never disturbs the order, which
is also its own’.134 The only value of the art strike lay in its proposal of
silence, rather than silence itself; the propaganda rather than the deed.
It exposed the dangers of participating in a world to which it is
implicitly opposed, but the noise with which it resisted recuperation
was far more powerful than silence could ever have been.
Rather more optimistic responses to the circularity of all systems of
signification are those which adopt tactics of occupation rather than
strike. The possibilities of interrupting systems of communication and
information exchange accelerate with the potential for forgery, abuses
of copyright, anonymous production, and a whole new world of
simulation and reproduction generated by the accessibility of new
technology. ‘The problems of tactics and strategy revolve around the
question of how to turn against capitalism the weapons that
commercial necessity has forced it to distribute,’135 wrote Vaneigem in
The Revolution of Everyday Life, and the relentless democracy
imposed by commodity relations has indeed facilitated the
appropriation of photocopiers, fax machines, screen printers, and
desk-top publishers to a host of subversive, playful, and
deterritorialising ends. Goods produced by high-prestige
manufacturers are already faked by a booming industry of bootleggers
whose reproductions of Rolex watches and Adidas T-shirts are often
more prized than the mass-produced originals. ‘People don’t buy
these things because they believe that they’re real,’ said one
bootlegger. The shirts appeal to people because they know they’re a
rip-off. It’s a matter of taking the piss out of the multinationals.’136 On
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another front, the international Anticopyright network is busy
collecting, distributing, and fly-posting provocative posters. ‘When a
piece of alien information is placed in the sheer banks of a shopping
mall or office fax a fracture appears,’ declare its propagandists.
‘Instant and anonymous, splattered in a bus shelter or slipped into a
magazine rack it is an economic crime— enjoyment without
transaction.’ 137 Attempts to interrupt the seamless circularity of
equivalent signs continue to surface.
With both Baudrillard and the situation ists, it has to be accepted
that anything which is totally invulnerable to recuperation cannot be
used in contestation either. The recognition that weapons can be
turned against those who wield them is no reason to dispense with
them altogether. ‘Each word, idea or symbol is a double agent,’ wrote
Vaneigem. ‘Some, like the word “fatherland” or the policeman’s
uniform, usually work for authority; but make no mistake, when
ideologies clash or simply begin to wear out, the most mercenary sign
can become a good anarchist.’ 138 Nevertheless, calls for silence,
disappearance, suicide, and refusals to participate in a game so
difficult to play can have a powerful effect. The end of Dada, the death
of Provo, the dissolution of both the SI and the Italian autonomists all
testify that ‘only the movements which were able to cease, to stop by
themselves before dropping dead, have existed!’ 139 Absences—of
meaning, participation, reality, and identity—can constitute useful
tactics in the struggle to unmask the social and economic relations of
contemporary capitalist society. But their perpetration must be
deliberate and intentional: although the drift into meaninglessness and
the free acceptance of the commodification, silence, and apathy
invited by capitalist social relations can be provocative and
subversive, it cannot be turned into a universal principle which
expresses, with Baudrillard, the inescapable state of the world. It is
valid only as a meaningful gesture made against itself: Dada’s
absurdities were not performed without reason, and even its suicide
was a last bid for autonomy. And knowing when to stop must not be
confused with the tactics of despair: ‘Let us have no more suicides
from weariness, which come like a final sacrifice crowning all those
that have gone before,’140 wrote Vaneigem.
The despair invoked by the art strike has nevertheless engendered a
variety of parodies of the intensified search for the irrecuperable, the
truly radical gesture, introducing a measure of provocative humour to
the world in which nothing can be said or done. Proposals by Karen
Eliot for a ‘thought strike’ appeared in Here and Now, calling for ‘all
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theorists to pour coke on their word processors and cease to think’
between 3 January 1991 and 31 September 1994. Thought is a virus
let loose on the world by a self-perpetuating elite in order to market
the paraphernalia of the thinker—books, papers, pens, art films, word
processors, whiskey,’ the statement declared. ‘Thought-who needs it?
We proclaim the Thought Moratorium,’ to be launched at the Festival
of Stupidity. ‘Events already planned include short personal
statements of bewilderment by several passers-by. The Festival will be
immediately followed by a retrospective exhibition at the ICA entitled
“Thought: was it?”’141
The thought strike, actually taken seriously by some readers, was
quickly superseded by the ‘Post-Serious Internotional’, a movement
which ‘becomes functionally inevitable at that point on the cruciality
continuum when things have gone so far beyond a joke that all
appropriate responses have ceased to be appropriate’ and appeals for
more thought. ‘The mass Media will collapse in the face of a
population intensively contemplating the possible implications of a
magnetic potato for the future of furniture design.’142 One of the most
provocative of these détournements of calls for silence and suicide,
‘Metastasis’, was published in Leisure in 1990. Insisting that
‘revolutionary proletarians’ should ‘encourage the growth of cancer in
their bodies’, it argues that good health ‘is the technical realization of
cellular creativity exiled into a beyond; it is separation perfected
within the interior of the person’ and calls for a ‘fight against the
capitalist recuperation of the creative cell. Don’t let the rich get it
all.’143
We cannot, of course, hope that postmodernism might make such
witty or suicidal gestures. There is no movement, collectivity, or
purpose in the postmodern project which would legitimate its
disappearance, and since postmodernism has established itself as a
social condition with neither history nor direction, demands for a
postmodern suicide would be tantamount to asking the entire world to
disappear, and not just apparently. But Baudrillard’s insistence that all
senses of originality, meaning, authenticity, and reality have
abandoned us to a world of equivalent images and simulated
experience invalidates all attempts to discriminate between the real
Adidas logo and its copy, or the advertising hoarding and the
flyposter. Asked whether his descriptions of circuits of signifiers
without reference holds true not only for advertisements and TV
images but all systems of signification, Baudrillard said ‘Yes…all
signs enter into such circuits—none escape.’144 With the situationists,
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we can agree that everything arising in the spectacle assumes its
characteristics: interventions will always be forced to assume the
equivalence and vacuity of the commodity as long as an economic
system dependent on production and consumption persists: ‘when
images chosen and constructed by someone else have everywhere
become the individual’s principal connection to the world he formerly
observed for himself, it has certainly not been forgotten that these
images can tolerate anything and everything; because within the same
image all things can be juxtaposed without contradiction,’145 writes
Debord. But the recognition that even the most radical of gestures is
i m p l i c a t e d i n t h i s p r o c e s s c a n n o t b e a l l ow e d t o l e a d t o
petrificationand silence. It must, on the contrary, serve as a
springboard for subversive strategies of interruption and provocation.
With both the situationists and the postmodernists, it is certainly
true that we live in an age in which anything can be used for any
purpose. But it is only in the absence of any purpose that the will to
distinguish between plagiaristic détournements and recuperations
disappears; only in a world with neither domination nor resistance can
we give ourselves up to the endless ecstasies of purposeless
communication. Meanwhile, détournements, subversions, and
irreverent plagiarisms continue to match the assimilations,
dissipations, and recuperations which strengthen and protect capitalist
society.
An idiosyncratic path to the postmodern age has been followed in
this book. Uncovering some political and cultural histories, it has
neglected others: the passage through feminism, for example; or the
more familiar debates about postmodernity conducted in the work of
theorists like Jürgen Habermas and Frederic Jameson. The
structuralist and poststructuralist ideas of Roland Barthes and Jacques
Derrida, developments in and after Marxism by Althusserian
theorists, and more conventional analyses of the media, consumerism,
and the arts might all have been included. Psychoanalytic frameworks
could have been treated more thoroughly, and a host of other themes,
such as the influence of Antonin Artaud’s maverick surrealism, or
Alfred Jarry’s pataphysical adventures, have been left out of this tale.
It is, however, a book with a specific mission, which consideration of
all these neglected figures would only have reinforced. In telling the
story of the situationist influence on contemporary culture and
insisting on the pivotal significance of the movement to a century of
political, artistic, and philosophical debate, it has explored the
possibilities of critical thought revealed by this history and tried to
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reintroduce some sense of meaning, purpose, and passion to a
postmodern discourse of futile denial.
It is ‘the destiny of signs’, writes Baudrillard, ‘to be torn from their
destination, deviated, displaced, diverted, recuperated, seduced. It is
their destiny in the sense that this is what always happens to them; it is
our destiny in the sense that this is what always happens to us.’146 This
talk of destiny seems characteristic of the slumbering and reformist
fatalism which seems to dominate the political atmosphere.In Britain,
the Thatcher years have reinforced perceptions of a broader loss of
freedom, alleviated only by rare moments of optimism such as the
students’ occupation of Tiananmen Square in 1988 and the dissolution
of Stalinism in 1989, both of which seemed to herald a new age of
refusal and dissent which might find a resonance in western Europe as
well. But the massacre in China and the beginnings of eastern
European assimilation into a strengthened capitalist order have
merely reinforced Debord’s claims for the integrated spectacle: a
global order which conducts its wars and manages its famines with a
blind adherence to economic survival. ‘In a certain sense’, writes
Debord,
the coherence of spectacular society proves revolutionaries right,
since it is evident that one cannot reform the most trifling detail
without taking the whole thing apart But at the same time this
coherence has eliminated every organised tendency by
eliminating those social terrains where it had more or less
effectively been able to find expression: from trade unions to
newspapers, towns to books.147
It is difficult to dispel Debord’s assertion that the situation is unique:
this is ‘the first time in contemporary Europe’, he suggests, that ‘no
party or fraction of a party even tries to pretend that they wish to
change anything significant.’148
But it is precisely here, with the question of what is significant in
contemporary society, that the crises of critical thought and political
action inscribed in postmodern theory have arisen. The issue of what
really perpetuates existing social relations and, consequently, the
form their negation might take, has been posed with increasing
sophistication in every moment of twentieth-century contestation.
Every possibility of contradiction has been tried and interrogated until
the attempt to isolate a central contradiction between power and its
other has itself been seen as the bearer of dogma and control. And out
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of this awareness comes the prevailing insistence that all attempts to
transform the world are themselves responsible for the domination
and impoverishment which continue to mark our society. We find
ourselves in a morass, certain that there is nothing to be done,
overwhelmed by the failures of the past, and convinced of the
culpability of our theoretical frameworks.
With postmodernism, it is true that ours is a culture about which
there is nothing more to say. Baudrillard’s argument that the
revolutionary movements of the past have in a sense been too
successful, resulting in an overproduction of meaning, rings true. But
the endless cycles of reversibility, reproduction, and simulation in
which we play testify not to the redundancy of critical discourse, but
that of the culture it contests. Ours is a culture about which there is
nothing more to say precisely because it has outlived its discursive
possibilities: art, literature, philosophy, and politics can only implode
and return against themselves in spirals of everdecreasing
significance. And while everything is said about this imperative to
repetition and return, the possibility of moving beyond it is rarely
discussed. Postmodernity comes equipped with a refusal to
countenance the possibilities of social transformation on which its
supersession depends. Talk of revolution becomes embarrassing, and
the suggestion that history has ended is embraced with open relief.
Situationist desires for ‘a rise in the pleasure of living’149 have become
the dreams of another age and no longer have anything to say to us.
But this drastic fall in expectations which seems to mark our
approach to the end of the millennium is not something we are
powerless to confront. Certainly it is no longer obvious that truth
cannot be opposed to ideology, or life to survival; social groups and
classes do not conveniently line up on opposite sides of the barricades,
and the multitude of transgressive and often conflicting desires which
constitute individuals and systems of social organisation can never
again be ignored for the convenience of some revolutionary plan. But
just as it is most useful to conspirators that the conspiracy theory of
history is thoroughly discredited,150 so it is very convenient for all
those who would deny the possibility of social change to usher in a
world in which subversion is impossible. Caught in a web in which all
possibilities of dissent are countered by the immediate thought of
their defeat, it is indeed more difficult than ever before to reintroduce
any sense of negativity to the systems of power in which we live. No
longer sure of the causes, we are more willing to dispense with them
altogether than renew our search. But the scenario in which theorists
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trip over people asleep on the streets on their way to declare the
impossibility of changing anything is merely the tip of an absurd and
tragic iceberg with which we cannot continue to live. As the world
spirals into senseless, devastating cycles of war, oppression, and
environmental disaster, strategies which call for even less meaning,
reason, and impassioned engagement seem increasingly redundant. It
may be difficult to assert the possibility of wholesale change, but it is
by no means certain that the necessity to do so has disappeared.
We have, of course, been warned off such a project—and not
without reason—by poststructuralist suggestions that the search for
causes and contradictions depends on an untenable world view
populated by a ideological understanding of history, essentialist
conceptions of the subject, and illegitimate references to something
better, more real, more true, and more desired than the present. There
are, indeed, huge dangers here. But those associated with the blanket
refusal to develop a critical engagement with these positions are
greater still, for they ultimately leave us unable to say, do, or speculate
about anything. It is little wonder that the world appears chaotic and
boundless when we have so thoroughly denied ourselves the critical
tools with which to understand it.
So where can we look for the causes, the determining principles, of
this apparently indeterminate world? For the situationists, the only
place to look was to the spectacle, a space privileged above all others
as the organising principle of the world and its critique. And for
Debord, this remains true: in the midst of all our chatterings about
codes, signs, and networks of purposeless domination, the one
possibility we fail to confront is also that which might allow a
renewed burst of negativity. It is the commodity, he writes in
Comments, which is always ‘beyond criticism’.151 To be sure, the
situationists were naïve and sometimes arrogant in their determination
to find some ‘other’ to the ubiquity of commodity relations. And the
proliferation of sites of complex domination and resistance which
now characterise capitalist social relations may indeed have
outstripped the usefulness of a critique of the spectacle. But albeit in
circumstances very different from our own, they too were writing
against a world of uncanny and petrifying circularity, similarly devoid
of any locus of negation and all too aware of the failures of past
revolutionary projects. And the overriding merit of their project was
its ability to develop a historical and material analysis of the world we
now call postmodernity. Seduced only by the possibilities of
challenging and negating capitalist social relations, the situationists
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were able to give some meaning to the apparently autonomous and
incomprehensible dominion of its signs, the ubiquitous affirmation
and fragmentation of its discourse, and the confusion and
fragmentation of its rapid and purposeless change. For all its problems
and absences, the identification of commodified relations in every
area of social, individual, and cultural life threw up the possibility of
new solidarities between social groups, desires, and experiences. It
allowed the situationists to pose a freely constructed other to capitalist
relations and inject an exuberant propaganda of the possible into a
world of mundane despair and superficiality.
Spectacular discourse, writes Debord, ‘isolates all it shows from its
context, its past, its intentions and its consequences’.152 Garbled
versions of situationist imagery, attitudes, and theory pepper
contemporary cultural discourse without a trace of their origins in the
critique of commodity relations, and it is only too easy to characterise
postmodernism—in art, philosophy, and politics—as a wholesale
recuperation of the century’s radical currents. And because the
situationists were so aware of the dangers of recuperation, it is
tempting to imagine that there are mines laid in the terrain which has
been captured from them. They certainly fostered the idea that their
critique would re-emerge regardless of the obstacles and
recuperations it might face: ‘like the proletariat’, they wrote, ‘we
cannot claim to be unexploitable in the present conditions; we must
simply work to make any such exploitation entail the greatest possible
risk for the exploiters’.153 In many respects, the arrogant confidence of
such statements remains one of the movement’s most attractive
features. Perversely dogmatic, the situationists still wanted the world
to have fun, and although their hostility to any of the qualities of
spectacular society produced a tradition as glamorous and mystified
as the commodified relations it opposed, there is still something
inspiring about their declared faith in the imminence of revolution and
the extravagance of their propaganda. And perhaps such arrogance is
an inevitable feature of any intervention, be it in the form of political
action, theoretical discourse, or transgressive deconstruction. At the
extreme, it is always possible to ask with what right, rhyme, or reason
anyone has for saying, doing, or imagining anything. Against doubtful
poststructuralist and uncompromisingly negative postmodern
responses to this question, the situationists have left a legacy of
assertive confidence in the possibility of the collective construction
not only of a playful discourse but impassioned forms of living too.
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Notes
Note on Guy Debord, The Society of the Spectacle. An unpublished translation by
Donald Nicholson-Smith has been used throughout this text in preference to the
published translation, The Society of the Spectacle, Detroit, Black & Red, 1977.
All references to this text refer the reader not to page numbers, but the numbered
theses common to all editions.
Quotations from French texts are translated by the author.
‘The most radical gesture’ of the title of this book is a phrase from a comic strip
advertising Internationale Situationniste 11. In French, the phrase is ‘Il n’est pas
de geste si radicale que l’idéologie n’essaie de recupérer’.
1 ‘NOW, THE SI’
‘Now, the SI’ is the title of an article in Internationale Situationniste 9, August
1964, and Ken Knabb (ed.), Situationist International Anthology, Berkeley, Bureau
of Public Secrets, 1981.
1 Vaneigem’s holiday is a completely unsubstantiated rumour which nevertheless
captures the spirit of this debate.
2 Guy Debord, Preface to the Fourth Italian Edition of The Society of the
Spectacle, London, Chronos, 1979, pp. 8–9.
3 Ibid., p. 24.
4 Guy Debord, ‘Critique of Separation’, Ken Knabb (ed.), Situationist
International Anthology, Berkeley, Bureau of Public Secrets, 1981, p. 37.
5 Karl Marx, ‘Economic and Philosophic Manuscripts of 1844’, Karl Marx and
Frederick Engels, Collected Works, vol. 3, London, Lawrence & Wishart, 1975,
p. 274.
6 Guy Debord, The Society of the Spectacle, unpublished translation, 1990, 20.
7 Ibid.
8 Ibid., 12.
9 Ibid., 42.
10 Ibid., 212.
11 Ibid., 213.
12 Ibid., 1.
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P. 200
Notes
189
13 The Pleasure Tendency, Life and its Replacement with a Dull Reflection of
Itself, Leeds, 1986.
14 The Society of the Spectacle, 30.
15 Ibid., 12.
16 Ibid., 47.
17 Karl Marx and Frederick Engels, ‘Manifesto of the Communist Party’, Karl
Marx and Frederick Engels, Collected Works, vol. 6, London, Lawrence &
Wishart, 1976, p. 490.
18 The Society of the Spectacle, 72.
19 Paul Cardan, Modern Capitalism and Revolution, London, Solidarity, 1974,
p. 11.
20 The Society of the Spectacle, 26.
21 Raoul Vaneigem, The Revolution of Everyday Life, n.p., Left Bank Books and
Rebel Press, 1983, p. 48.
22 Ibid., p. 50.
23 The Society of the Spectacle, 114.
24 Ibid., 115.
25 Ibid.
26 George Lukács, History and Class Consciousness, London, Merlin Press, 1983,
p. 93.
27 Ibid., p. 86.
28 Ibid., p. 85.
29 Ibid., p. 93.
30 The Society of the Spectacle, 122.
31 Ibid., 84.
32 Ibid., 122.
33 Ibid., 119.
34 Ibid., 114.
35 Ibid., 121.
36 Ibid., 117.
37 History and Class Consciousness, p. 80.
38 Ibid., p. 89.
39 Ibid., p. 181.
40 Cf. Peter Wollen, ‘The Situationist International’, New Left Review 174, March/
April 1989, pp. 67–95.
41 Ibid., p. 91.
42 Ibid., p. 197.
43 ‘Questionnaire’, Internationale Situationniste 9, August 1964, and Situationist
International Anthology, p. 138.
44 Jean-Paul Sartre, Being and Nothingness: An Essay on Phenomenological
Ontology, London, Methuen, 1969, p. 489.
45 Ibid.
46 Preface to the Fourth Italian Edition of the Society of the Spectacle, pp. 23–4.
47 ‘Ideologies, Classes and the Domination of Nature’, Internationale
Situationniste 8, January 1963, and Situationist International Anthology, p.
101.
48 Guy Debord, ‘Introduction to a Critique of Urban Geography’, Situationist
International Anthology, p. 6.
49 The Society of the Spectacle, 40.
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P. 201
190
The most radical gesture
50 Ibid.
51 Raoul Vaneigem, ‘Basic Banalities I’, Internationale Situationniste 7, April
1962, and Situationist International Anthology, p. 92.
52 Guy Debord, ‘Perspectives for Conscious Alterations in Everyday Life’,
Internationale Situationniste 6, Aug. 1961, and Situationist International
Anthology, p. 70.
53 The Society of the Spectacle, 44.
54 ‘Basic Banalities I’, p. 90.
55 The Society of the Spectacle, 43.
56 Ibid., 42.
57 Ibid., 43.
58 Ibid., 1.
59 Ibid., 62.
60 Ibid., 69.
61 Ibid., 67.
62 Ibid.
63 Ibid.
64 Ibid., 69.
65 Ibid., 70.
66 Karl Marx, ‘The Poverty of Philosophy’, Collected Works, vol. 6, p. 174;
History and Class Consciousness, p. 48; and The Society of the Spectacle,
143.
67 The Society of the Spectacle, 141.
68 Ibid., 143.
69 Ibid.
70 Ibid.
71 Ibid., 150.
72 Ibid.
73 Ibid., 155.
74 Ibid., 153.
75 Ibid., 152.
76 History and Class Consciousness, p. 90.
77 The Society of the Spectacle, 168.
78 Ibid., 173.
79 Ibid., 174.
80 Ibid., 177.
81 ‘Of Student Poverty, Considered in its Economic, Political, Psychological,
Sexual, and Particularly Intellectual Aspects, and a Modest Proposal for its
Remedy’, Ten Days that Shook the University, London, Situationist
International, n.d., p.11.
82 ‘Perspectives for Conscious Alterations in Everyday Life’, Internationale
Situationniste 6, Aug. 1961, and Situationist International Anthology, p. 74.
83 History and Class Consciousness, p. 181.
84 The Society of the Spectacle, 75.
85 Ibid., 203.
86 Ibid., 7.
87 Ibid., 8.
88 Ibid., 52.
89 Ibid., 68.
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P. 202
Notes
191
90 ‘The Decline and Fall of the Spectacle-Commodity Economy’, Internationale
Situationniste 10, March 1966, and Situationist International Anthology, p.
155.
91 Guy Debord, ‘Report on the Construction of Situations and on the International
Situationist Tendency’s Conditions of Organization and Action’, Situationist
International Anthology, p. 25.
92 The Society of the Spectacle, 203.
93 ‘Instructions for Taking up Arms’, Internationale Situationniste 6, Aug. 1961,
and Situationist International Anthology, p. 64.
94 Preface to the Fourth Italian Edition of The Society of the Spectacle, p. 23.
95 Situationist International, The Veritable Split in the International, London,
Chronos, 1990, p. 77.
96 Preface to the Fourth Italian Edition of The Society of the Spectacle, p. 9.
97 Ibid., p. 11.
98 Herbert Marcuse, One Dimensional Man: Studies in the Ideology of Advanced
Industrial Society, Boston, Beacon Press, 1966, p. 9.
99 The Society of the Spectacle, 201.
100 Ibid.
101 Ibid., 202.
102 Ibid., 5.
103 Ibid., 4.
104 Ibid., 6.
105 Jean Baudrillard, Le système des objets, Paris, Denoel-Gonthier, 1968, p.
217.
106 Mark Poster (ed.), Jean Baudrillard: Selected Writings, Cambridge and Palo
Alto, Polity Press and Stanford University Press, 1988, p. 31.
107 Ibid., p. 33.
2 ‘…A WORLD OF PLEASURES TO WIN, AND NOTHING TO
LOSE BUT BOREDOM’
‘…a world of pleasures to win and nothing to lose but boredom’ is taken from
Raoul Vaneigem, The Revolution of Everyday Life, n.p., Left Bank Books and
Rebel Press, 1983.
1 A phrase taken from Charles Russell, Poets, Prophets, and Revolutionaries:
The Literary Avant-Garde from Rimbaud through Postmodernism, Oxford
University Press, 1985.
2 Raoul Vaneigem, The Revolution of Everyday Life, n.p., Left Bank Books and
Rebel Press, 1983, p. 150.
3 Hugo Ball, in Hans Richter, Dada: Art and Anti-Art, London, Thames &
Hudson, 1978, pp. 13–14.
4 Marcel Janco, ‘Dada at Two Speeds’, Lucy Lippard (ed.), Dadas on Art,
Englewood Cliffs, NJ, Prentice-Hall, 1971, p. 36.
5 Tristan Tzara, ‘Dada Manifesto, 1918’, Seven Dada Manifestos and
Lampisteries, London, John Calder, 1984, p. 12.
6 Maurice Nadeau, The History of Surrealism, Harmondsworth, Penguin, 1978,
p. 47.
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P. 203
192
The most radical gesture
7 Arthur Rimbaud, Collected Poems, Harmondsworth, Penguin, 1986, pp. 10–
11.
8 Guillaume Apollinaire, in Franklin Rosemont (ed.), André Breton, What is
Surrealism? Selected Writings, London, Pluto, 1978, p. 373.
9 Jacques Vaché, in A.Alvarez, The Savage God, A Study of Suicide,
Harmondsworth, Penguin, 1971, p. 248.
10 Tristan Tzara, ‘Dada Manifesto on Feeble and Bitter Love’, Seven Dada
Manifestos and Lampisteries, p. 39.
11 Raoul Hausmann, in Dada: Art and Anti-Art, p. 118.
12 Hugo Ball, in Rudolf E.Kuenzli, ‘The Semiotics of Dada Poetry’, Stephen
C.Foster and Rudolf E.Kuenzli, Dada Spectrum: The Dialectics of Revolt,
Madison, Wis., Coda Press, 1979, p. 67.
13 Louis Aragon, in Robert Short, ‘Paris Dada and Surrealism’, Richard Sheppard,
Dada: Studies of a Movement, Chalfont St Giles, Alpha Academic, 1979, p.
83.
14 Marcel Duchamp, in Dada: Art and Anti-Art, p. 88.
15 Anonymous, ‘The Richard Mutt Case’, Dadas on Art, p. 143.
16 Marcel Duchamp, in Dada: Art and Anti-Art, p. 90.
17 Gabrielle Buffet-Picabia, ‘Some Memories of Pre-Dada: Picabia and Duchamp’,
Robert Motherwell (ed.), The Dada Painters and Poets, An Anthology, New
York, Wittenborn Schultz, 1951, p. 255.
18 Hans Arp, ‘Dadaland’, Dadas on Art, p. 28. 19 Hans Arp, in Herbert Read,
Arp, London, Thames &: Hudson, 1968, pp. 38–9.
20 Hans Arp, ‘Dadaland’, p. 29.
21 Walter Mehring, in Dada: Art and Anti-Art, pp. 111–12.
22 Mustapha Khayati, ‘Captive Words: Preface to a Situationist Dictionary’,
Internationale Situationniste 10, March 1966, and Ken Knabb (ed.), Situationist
International Anthology, Berkeley, Bureau of Public Secrets, 1981, p. 172.
23 Pierre Canjuers and Guy Debord, ‘Preliminaries Toward Defining a Unitary
Revolutionary Programme’, Situationist International Anthology, p. 309.
24 George Grosz and Wieland Herzfelde, ‘Art is in Danger’, Dadas on Art, p. 81.
25 Tristan Tzara, ‘Monsieur Antipyrine’s Manifesto’, Seven Dada Manifestos
and Lampisteries, p. 1.
26 ‘Dada Manifesto, 1918’, pp. 10–11.
27 Ibid., p. 3.
28 Tristan Tzara, ‘Monsieur AA the Antiphilosopher Sends us this Manifesto’,
Seven Dada Manifestos and Lampisteries, p. 28.
29 ‘Dada Manifesto, 1918’, p. 13.
30 Dada: Art and Anti-Art, p. 61.
31 Cf. Roger Cardinal and Richard Short, Surrealism: Permanent Revelation,
London, Studio Vista, 1970, and Alvarez, The Savage God, for discussions of
Dada’s ‘suicide’.
32 Ben Vautier, ‘The Duchamp Heritage’, Dada Spectrum, p. 251.
33 Louis Aragon, Paris Peasant, London, Pan, 1987, p. 127.
34 Louis Aragon, in The History of Surrealism, p. 160.
35 André Breton, ‘Second Manifesto of Surrealism’, Manifestoes of Surrealism,
Ann Arbor, University of Michigan Press, 1972, pp. 123–4.
36 André Breton, Mad Love, Lincoln, Neb., and London, University of Nebraska
Press, 1987, p. 40.
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P. 204
Notes
193
37 Louis Aragon, in Surrealism: Permanent Revelation, p. 54.
38 André Breton, ‘Manifesto of Surrealism’, Manifestoes of Surrealism, p. 23.
39 Mad Love, pp. 13–15.
40 Walter Benjamin, ‘Surrealism: The Last Snapshot of the European
Intelligentsia’, One Way Street, London, New Left Books, 1979, p. 230.
41 Lautréamont (Isidore Ducasse), Poésies, London and New York, Allison &
Busby, 1980, p. 75.
42 André Breton, Surrealism and Painting, London, Macdonald, 1972, p. 288.
43 Paris Peasant, p. 64.
44 Louis Aragon, in Surrealism: Permanent Revelation, p. 60.
45 The last phrase of André Breton’s Nadja, New York, Grove Press, 1960.
46 ‘Second Manifesto of Surrealism’, p. 140.
47 André Breton, ‘Legitimate Defence’, What is Surrealism? p. 39.
48 Walter Benjamin, Charles Baudelaire: A Lyric Poet in the Era of High
Capitalism, London, Verso, 1983, p. 14.
49 Robert Desnos, in J.H.Matthews, Towards the Poetics of Surrealism, New
York, Syracuse University Press, 1976, p. 154.
50 André Breton, in Surrealism: Permanent Revelation, p. 122.
51 ‘Second Manifesto of Surrealism’, p. 125.
52 André Breton, ‘The Colours of Liberty’, Now 7, Feb-March 1946, pp. 33–4.
53 André Breton, ‘For Dada’, What is Surrealism? p. 3.
54 ‘Second Manifesto of Surrealism’, p. 139.
55 Henry Miller, ‘Open Letter to Surrealists Everywhere’, The Cosmological
Eye, Connecticut, New Directions, 1939, pp. 159–60.
56 Ibid., p. 163.
57 Paul Hammond, ‘Specialists in Revolt’, an interview with Jean Schuster, New
Statesman, 4 Dec. 1987, pp. 22–3.
58 Guy Debord, ‘Report on the Construction of Situations and on the International
Situationist Tendency’s Conditions of Organisation and Action’, 1957,
Situationist International Anthology, p. 19.
59 ‘Ideologies, Classes and the Domination of Nature’, Internationale
Situationniste 8, Jan. 1963, and Situationist International Anthology, p. 106.
60 ‘Report on the Construction of Situations’, p. 20.
61 ‘Preliminaries Toward Defining a Unitary Revolutionary Programme’, p. 309.
62 Theo van Doesburg and Cor van Eesteren, ‘Towards Collective Building’,
Ulrich Conrads (ed.), Programmes and Manifestos on Twentieth Century
Architecture, London, Lund Humphries, 1970, p. 67.
63 Ivan Chtcheglov, ‘Formulary for a New Urbanism’, Internationale
Situationniste 1, June 1958, and Situationist International Anthology, p. 1.
64 Attila Kotanyi and Raoul Vaneigem, ‘Elementary Programme of the Bureau of
Unitary Urbanism’, Internationale Situationniste 6, Aug. 1961, and Situationst
International Anthology, p. 66.
65 Ibid., p. 67.
66 Guy Debord, introduction to a Critique of Urban Geography’, Situationist
International Anthology, p. 5.
67 Ibid., p. 6.
68 Jacques Fillon, ‘New Games’, Programmes and Manifestos on Twentieth
Century Architecture, p. 155. Surrealist drifts and situationist derives clearly
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P. 205
194
The most radical gesture
resonate with the whole tradition of the flâneurs, the idle saunterers of the
European modernist city.
69 Guy Debord, ‘Theory of the Derive’, Internationale Situationniste 2, Dec.
1958, and Situationist International Anthology, p. 50.
70 ‘Report on the Construction of Situations’, p. 24.
71 Ibid., p. 19.
72 ‘Intervention Lettriste’, Potlatch 1954–57, Paris, Gérard Lebovici, 1985, p.
172.
73 André Breton, Les Pas Perdus, Paris, Gallimard, 1924, p. 12.
74 The History of Surrealism, pp. 106–7.
75 André Breton, ‘Experimental Researches’, What is Surrealism? pp. 95–6.
76 ‘Project d’Embellissements Rationnels de la Ville de Paris’, Potlatch 1954–
57, pp. 177–80.
77 ‘Report on the Construction of Situations’, p. 25.
78 Guy Debord and Gil Wolman, ‘Methods of Detournement’, Situationist
International Anthology, p. 11.
79 Attila Kotanyi and Raoul Vaneigem, ‘Elementary Programme of the Bureau of
Unitary Urbanism’, Internationale Situationniste 6, Aug. 1961, and Situationist
International Anthology, p. 67.
80 Cf. the reference to Manchester’s Hacienda club in Chapter 4.
81 Ivan Chtcheglov, ‘Formulary for a New Urbanism’, Internationale
Situationniste 1, June 1958, and Situationist International Anthology, p. 3.
82 Ibid., p. 4.
83 Ibid., p. 3.
84 ‘Report on the Construction of Situations’, p. 17.
85 Ibid.
86 Ibid., p. 25.
87 The Revolution of Everyday Life, p. 183.
88 Ibid., p. 87.
89 Ibid., p. 15.
90 Ibid., p. 190.
91 Ibid., p. 183.
92 Ibid., p. 189.
93 Ibid., p. 150.
94 Ibid., p. 187.
95 Guy Debord, ‘Perspectives for Conscious Alterations in Everyday Life’,
Internationale Situationniste 6, Aug. 1961, and Situationist International
Anthology, p. 69.
96 Henri Lefebvre published ‘La Signification de la Commune’ in Arguments
Nos 27–8, 1962; situationist accusations about its plagiarism appear in
Internationale Situationniste 12, Sept. 1969, pp. 107–11.
97 Henri Lefebvre, Everyday Life in the Modern World, London, Allen Lane,
Penguin, 1971, p. 204.
98 ‘Perspectives for Conscious Alterations in Everyday Life’, Internationale
Situationniste 6, Aug. 1961, and Situationist International Anthology, p. 75.
99 Ibid., p. 71.
100 Ibid., p. 72.
101 The Revolution of Everyday Life, p. 50.
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P. 206
Notes
195
102 Raoul Vaneigem, ‘Basic Banalities II’, Internationale Situationniste 8, Jan.
1963, and Situationist International Anthology, p. 122.
103 George Lukács, History and Class Consciousness, London, Merlin Press,
1983, p. 103.
104 ‘Basic Banalities II’, p. 125.
105 Raoul Vaneigem, ‘Basic Banalities I’, Internationale Situationniste 7, April
1962, and Situationist International Anthology, p. 98.
106 Guy Debord, The Society of the Spectacle, unpublished translation, 1990, 60.
107 Ibid., 61.
108 Ibid.
109 The Revolution of Everyday Life, p. 103.
110 Ibid.
111 ‘Basic Banalities II’, p. 129.
112 Alcester Chronicle, 4 July 1990.
113 The Revolution of Everyday Life, p. 85.
114 The Society of the Spectacle, 17.
115 Ibid., 59.
116 The Revolution of Everyday Life, p. 102.
117 Ibid., p. 97.
118 Ibid., p. 102.
119 Ibid.
120 ‘A New Idea in Europe’, Potlatch 1954–57, p. 46.
121 ‘Introduction to a Critique of Urban Geography’, p. 6.
122 André Breton, ‘What is Surrealism?’, What is Surrealism?, p. 113.
123 Ibid., p. 118.
124 Ibid.
125 The Revolution of Everyday Life, p. 189.
126 Ibid., p. 82.
127 Ibid., p. 202.
128 Ibid.
129 Ibid., p. 201.
130 ‘Report on the Construction of Situations’, p. 24.
131 The Revolution of Everyday Life, p. 201.
132 ‘Basic Banalities II’, p. 121.
133 The Revolution of Everyday Life, p. 59.
134 Ibid., p. 58.
135 Ibid., p. 59.
136 Ibid., p. 192.
137 Ibid., p. 194.
138 Ibid., p. 195.
139 Ibid., p. 91.
140 Ibid., p. 7.
141 The Society of the Spectacle, 52.
142 The Revolution of Everyday Life, p. 8.
143 Ibid., p. 149.
144 Ibid.
145 Ibid.
146 Ibid., p. 91.
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196
The most radical gesture
3 ‘…A SINGLE CHOICE: SUICIDE OR REVOLUTION’
‘a single choice: suicide or revolution’ is the point to which Vaneigem leads
readers of ‘Basic Banalities I’, Internationale Situationniste 7, April 1962, and
Ken Knabb (ed.), Situationist International Anthology, Berkeley, Bureau of
Public Secrets, 1981.
1 Herbert Marcuse, ‘Repressive Tolerance’, R.P.Wolf et al. (eds), A Critique of
Pure Tolerance, Boston, Beacon Press, 1965.
2 Raoul Vaneigem, The Revolution of Everyday Life, n.p., Left Bank Books and
Rebel Press, 1983, p. 74.
3 Guy Debord, The Society of the Spectacle, unpublished translation, 1990, 30.
4 ‘Instructions for Taking up Arms’, Internationale Situationniste 6, Aug. 1961,
and Situationist International Anthology, Berkeley, Bureau of Public Secrets,
p. 63.
5 The Society of the Spectacle, 87.
6 Mustapha Khayati, ‘Captive Words: Preface to a Situationist Dictionary’,
Internationale Situationniste 10, March 1966, and Situationist International
Anthology, p. 173.
7 ‘Instructions for Taking up Arms’, Internationale Situationniste 5, Dec. 1960,
and Situationist International Anthology, p. 63.
8 The Revolution of Everyday Life, p. 127.
9 Richard Huelsenbeck, in Hans Richter, Dada: Art and Anti-Art, London, Thames
&: Hudson, 1978, p. 211.
10 Marcel Duchamp, in ibid., p. 208.
11 J-F.Dupois, in Henri Béhar and Michel Carassou (eds), Le Surréalisme: Textes
et Débats, Paris, Librairie Générale Française, 1984, p. 69.
12 Philippe Soupault, in Dawn Ades, Dada and Surrealism Reviewed, London,
Arts Council of Great Britain, 1978, p. 162.
13 ‘Basic Banalities I’, Internationale Situationniste 7, April 1962, and Situationist
International Anthology, pp. 97–8.
14 ‘Captive Words’, p. 173.
15 Guy Debord, ‘Report on the Construction of Situations and on the International
Situationist Tendency’s Conditions of Organization and Action’, Situationist
International Anthology, p. 20.
16 ‘Response to a Questionnaire from the Center for Socio-Experimental Art’,
Internationale Situationniste 9, Aug. 1964, and Situationist International
Anthology, p. 144.
17 Raoul Vaneigem, ‘Basic Banalities II’, Internationale Situationniste 8, Jan.
1963, and Situationist International Anthology, p. 124.
18 Ibid.
19 ‘Captive Words’, p 173.
20 ‘Basic Banalities II’, Internationale Situationniste 8, Jan. 1963, and Situationist
International Anthology, p. 123.
21 ‘Questionnaire’, Internationale Situationniste 9, Aug. 1964, and Situationist
International Anthology, p. 139.
22 René Viénet, ‘The Situation is ts and the New Forms of Action against Politics
and Art’, Internationale Situationniste 11, Oct. 1967, and Situationist
International Anthology, p. 213.
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P. 208
Notes
197
23 ‘Questionnaire’, p. 139.
24 ‘Manifeste’, Internationale Situationniste 4, Aug. 1961, p. 38.
25 ‘Questionnaire’, p. 142.
26 Ibid., p. 140.
27 ‘The Countersituationist Campaign in Various Countries’, Internationale
Situationniste 8, Jan. 1963, and Situationist International Anthology, p. 113.
28 Attila Kotanyi and Raoul Vaneigem, ‘Elementary Programme of the Bureau of
Unitary Urbanism’, Internationale Situationniste 6, Aug. 1961, and Situationist
International Anthology, p. 65.
29 ‘The Countersituationist Campaign in Various Countries’, p. 113.
30 Ibid.
31 ‘Basic Banalities II’, p. 123.
32 Situationist International, The Veritable Split in the International, London,
Chronos, 1990, p. 44.
33 Cf. Jean-Jacques Raspaud and Jean-Pierre Voyer, L’Internationale
Situationniste: protagonistes, chronologie, bibliographie (avec un index des
noms insultés), Paris, Champ Libre, 1971.
34 Peter Stansill and David Zane Mairowitz (eds), By Any Means Necessary:
Outlaw Manifestos and Ephemera 1965–70, Harmondsworth, Penguin, 1971,
p. 39. An excellent article on Project Sigma is Howard Slater’s ‘Alexander
Trocchi and Project Sigma’, Variant 7, 1989, pp. 30–7.
35 ‘Instructions for Taking up Arms’, p. 63.
36 ‘Ideologies, Classes, and the Domination of Nature’, Internationale
Situationniste 8, Jan. 1963, and Situationist International Anthology, p. 107.
37 The Revolution of Everyday Life, p. 127.
38 Ibid., p. 75.
39 ‘Basic Banalities II’, p. 125.
40 ‘All the King’s Men’, Situationist International Anthology, p. 115.
41 The Revolution of Everyday Life, p. 137.
42 Cf. J.H.Matthews, Languages of Surrealism, Columbia, MO, University of
Missouri Press, 1986, pp. 156–7.
43 Internationale Situationniste 9, Aug. 1964, p. 21.
44 Ibid., p. 36.
45 ‘Report on the Construction of Situations’, pp. 18–19.
46 ‘Captive Words’, p. 170.
47 Ibid.
48 Ibid., p. 174.
49 ‘All the King’s Men’, p. 114.
50 Ibid., p. 116.
51 Ibid., p. 115.
52 Guy Debord and Gil Wolman, ‘Methods of Détournement’, Situationist
International Anthology, p. 9.
53 Ibid.
54 The Society of the Spectacle, 204.
55 Ibid., 206.
56 Ibid., 208.
57 Ibid., 205.
58 Ibid., 207.
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P. 209
198
The most radical gesture
59 ‘Detournement as Negation and Prelude’, Internationale Situationniste 3, Dec.
1959, and Situationist International Anthology, p. 55.
60 Jean Barrot, What is Situationism: Critique of the Situationist International,
London, Unpopular Books, 1987, pp. 23–4.
61 The Revolution of Everyday Life, p. 86.
62 What is Situationism, p. 26.
63 Ibid., p. 25.
64 Ratgeb, Contributions to the Revolutionary Struggle Intended to be Discussed,
Corrected and Principally Put into Practice without Delay, London, Bratach
Dubh Editions, 1977.
65 Chris Carlsson, with Mark Leger (eds), Bad Attitude: The Processed World
Anthology, London, Verso, 1990.
66 The Revolution of Everyday Life, p. 98.
67 Cf. Guy Debord, ‘The Situationists and the New Forms of Action in Politics
and Art’, Situationist International Anthology, p. 318, and ‘The Spies for Peace
Story’, Anarchy 29, July 1963, pp. 197–229.
68 Roel van Duyn, Message of a Wise Kabouter, London, Duckworth, 1972.
69 Rudolf de Jong, Provos and Kabouters, Buffalo, NY, Friends of Maltesta,
n.d., p. 11. This pamphlet is reproduced in David E.Apter and James Joll,
Anarchism Today, London, Macmillan, 1971.
70 Ibid., p. 14.
71 Ibid., pp. 10–11.
72 The statue had been donated to the city of Amsterdam by the Im-perial Tobacco
Company.
73 By Any Means Necessary, p. 127.
74 Ibid., pp. 22–3.
75 Provos and Kabouters, p. 14.
76 By Any Means Necessary, p. 239.
77 ‘Of Student Poverty, Considered in its Economic, Political, Psychological,
Sexual, and Particularly Intellectual Aspects, and a Modest Proposal for its
Remedy’, Ten Days that Shook the University, London, Situationist
International, n.d., p.13.
78 ‘Basic Banalities I’, p. 93.
79 Dernières Nouvelles, 4 Dec. 1966, quoted in Situationist International
Anthology, p. 206.
80 ‘Of Student Poverty’, p. 56.
81 Ibid., p. 7.
82 Ibid., p. 4.
83 This text is reprinted on the back cover of a number of editions of the pamphlet,
notably On the Poverty of Student Life, Detroit, Mich., Black & Red, 1973.
84 ‘Our Goals and Methods in the Strasbourg Scandal’, Situationist International
Anthology, p. 207 (no author).
85 Ibid.
86 ‘The Beginning of an Era’, Internationale Situationniste 12, Sept. 1969, and
Situationist International Anthology, p. 228.
87 ‘Of Student Poverty’, p. 23.
88 Henri Lefebvre, in ‘The Beginning of an Era’, p. 228.
89 Ibid., p. 229.
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P. 210
Notes
199
90 Paris: May 1968, An Eye-Witness Account, n.p., Dark Star Press and Rebel
Press, 1986, p. 5.
91 Observer, 25 June 1968.
92 Roger Gregoire and Fredy Perlman, Worker-Student Action Committees, France
May ’68, Detroit, Mich., Black & Red, 1970, p. 61.
93 Paris: May 1968, p. 33.
94 Ibid.
95 Paris: May 1968, p. 26.
96 Ibid., p. 19.
97 Le Nouvel Observateur, 8 Feb. 1971.
98 Ibid., 8 Nov. 1971.
99 ‘The Beginning of an Era’, p. 227.
100 Ibid.
101 Rene Vienet, The Enragés and the Situationists in the Occupation Movement,
May—June 1968, York, Tiger Papers Publications, n.d., p. 14.
102 Ibid., p. 3.
103 Ibid.
104 Ibid., p. 15.
105 Ibid.
106 Observer, 2 June 1968.
107 Observer, 26 May 1968.
108 The Enragés and the Situationists, p. 15.
109 Paris: May 1968, pp. 24–5.
110 Cf. Harold Rosenberg, The De-Definition of Art: Action Art to Pop to
Earthworks, London, Secker & Warburg, 1972.
111 Alain Jouffroy, ‘What’s to be done about Art?’, Jean Cassou et al., Art and
Confrontation: France and the Arts in an Age of Change, London, Studio
Vista, 1970, p. 199.
112 The Enragés and the Situationists, p. 15.
113 Ibid., p.16.
114 Observer, 19 May 1968.
115 Ibid., 2 June 1968.
116 Ibid., 26 May 1968.
117 Worker-Student Action Committees, France May ’68, p. 63.
118 Guardian, 23 May 1968.
119 The Enragés and the Situationists, p. 7.
120 News of the World, 16 Feb. 1969.
121 For a comprehensive collection of 1968 graffiti, see Walter Lewino,
L’Imagination au Pouvoir, Paris, Le Terrain Vague, 1968.
122 André Fermigier, ‘No More Claudels’, Art and Confrontation, p. 52.
123 Michel Ragon, ‘The Artist and Society’, Art and Confrontation, p. 27.
124 Ibid., p. 3.
125 Malcolm Imrie, in ‘Say it with Cobblestones’, supplement to the New
Statesman, 18/25 Dec. 1987.
126 What is Situationism, p. 39.
127 ‘Slogans to be Spread Now by Every Means’, Situationist International
Anthology, p. 344.
128 Guy Debord, Comments on the Society of the Spectacle, London, Verso,
1991, p. 11.
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P. 211
200
The most radical gesture
129 Cf. Ferdinand de Saussure, Course in General Linguistics, London, Fontana,
1974.
130 Friedrich Nietzsche, The Will to Power, Walter Kaufman (ed.) New York,
Random House, 1968, p. 550.
4 ‘VICTORY WILL BE FOR THOSE WHO CREATE DISORDER
WITHOUT LOVING IT’
‘Victory will be for those who create disorder without loving it’ is in Guy
Debord’s ‘Thèses sur la Revolution Culturelle’, Internationale Situationniste
1, June 1958.
1 Michel Foucault, ‘Preface’ to Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari, Anti-Oedipus:
Capitalism and Schizophrenia, London, The Athlone Press, 1977, p. xiii.
2 Jean-François Lyotard, ‘A Memorial of Marxism: for Pierre Souyri’,
Peregrinations: Law, Form, Event, New York, Columbia University Press, 1988,
p. 63.
3 Ibid., p. 50.
4 Jean-François Lyotard, The Postmodern Condition, A Report on Knowledge,
Manchester University Press, 1984, p. 13.
5 Jean-François Lyotard, ‘On Theory: An Interview’, Driftworks, New York,
Semiotext(e), 1984, p. 29.
6 ‘A Memorial of Marxism: for Pierre Souyri’, p. 50.
7 Ibid.
8 Jean-François Lyotard, Economie Libidinale, Paris, Minuit, 1974, p. 117.
9 Jean-François Lyotard, ‘Adrift’, Driftworks, p. 13.
10 Economie Libidinale, p. 287.
11 Jean-François Lyotard, ‘Nanterre: Ici, Maintenant’, Dérive à Partir de Marx et
Freud, Paris, Union Générale, 1973, p. 208.
12 Michel Foucault, ‘Truth and Power’, Michel Foucault: Power/Knowledge:
Selected Interviews and Other Writings, 1972–1977, Colin Gordon (ed.),
Brighton, Harvester, 1986, p. 115.
13 Michel Foucault, ‘Theatrum Philosophicum’, Michel Foucault: Language,
Counter-Memory, Practice. Selected Interviews and Essays, Donald F.
Bouchard (ed.), Oxford, Blackwell, 1977, p. 184.
14 Michel Foucault, ‘The Eye of Power’, Power/Knowledge, p. 158.
15 Michel Foucault, ‘Two Lectures’, Power/Knowledge, p. 98.
16 Michel Foucault, ‘Body/Power’, Power/Knowledge, p. 58.
17 Michel Foucault, ‘Power and Strategies’, Power/Knowledge, p. 142.
18 ‘Two Lectures’, p. 94.
19 Ibid.
20 Michel Foucault, Discipline and Punish, Harmondsworth, Penguin, 1977.
21 Michel Foucault and Gilles Deleuze, ‘Intellectuals and Power’, Language,
Counter-Memory, Practice, p. 207.
22 Michel Foucault, ‘Polemics, Politics, and Problematizations: An Interview’,
The Foucault Reader, Paul Rabinow (ed.), Harmondsworth, Penguin, 1986,
pp. 385–4.
23 ‘Adrift’, p. 13.
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P. 212
Notes
201
24 ‘On Theory: An Interview’, p. 29.
25 Cf. Jacques Lacan, Ecrits: A Selection, Alan Sheridan (ed.), London, Tavistock,
1977.
26 Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari, A Thousand Plateaux, Capitalism and
Schizophrenia, The Athlone Press, London, 1988, p. 422.
27 Anti-Oedipus, p. 34.
28 Ibid., p. 378.
29 Félix Guattari, Molecular Revolution: Psychiatry and Politics, Harmondsworth,
Penguin, 1984, p. 85.
30 Félix Guattari, ‘The Proliferation of Margins’, Semiotext(e) 9, Italy: Autonomia:
Post Political Politics, Semiotext(e), New York, 1980, p. 109.
31 Ibid.
32 Gilles Deleuze, ‘Nomad Thought’, The New Nietzsche: Contemporary Styles
of Interpretation, David B.Allison (ed.), Cambridge, Mass., MIT, 1985, p.
149.
33 Ibid.
34 Ibid.
35 Francis Picabia, in The Dada Painters and Poets, Robert Motherwell (ed.),
New York, Wittenborn Schultz, 1951, p. 206.
36 The Angry Brigade 1967–1984, Documents and Chronology, London, Elephant
Editions, 1985, p. 28.
37 Ibid., p. 31.
38 Stoke Newington Eight Defence Campaign, If You Want Peace, Prepare for
War, London, n.d., p. 13.
39 The Angry Brigade, p. 32.
40 Ibid., p. 37.
41 Ibid., p. 29.
42 ‘La Pratique de la Théorie’, Internationale Situationniste 12, Sept 1969, p. 98.
43 L’Europeo, 6 Feb. 1976, quoted in Ken Knabb, Situationist International
Anthology, Berkeley, Bureau of Public Secrets, 1981, p. 390.
44 Mario Tronti, ‘The Strategy of Refusal’, Semiotext(e) 9, Italy: Autonomia, pp.
28–34.
45 Cf. Chris Harman, The Fire Last Time: 1968 and After, London, Bookmarks,
1988, p. 218.
46 Bifo, ‘Anatomy of Autonomy’, Semiotext(e) 9, Italy: Autonomia, p. 156.
47 Maurizio Torealta, ‘Painted Politics’, Semiotext(e) 9, Italy: Autonomia, p. 102.
48 Ibid., pp. 102–3.
49 Ibid., p. 103.
50 ‘Anatomy of Autonomy’, p. 156.
51 Like a Summer with a Thousand Julys, London, Blob, n.d., p. 43.
52 ‘Anatomy of Autonomy’, p. 156.
53 Collective A/Traverso, ‘Radio Alice—Free Radio’, Semiotext(e) 9, Italy:
Autonomia, p. 131.
54 Ibid.
55 Ibid.
56 Molecular Revolution, p. 241.
57 ‘Radio Alice—Free Radio’, p. 133.
58 Paul Virilio, ‘Dreamers of a Successful Life’, Semiotext(e) 9, Italy: Autonomia,
p. 112.
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P. 213
202
The most radical gesture
59 ‘Anatomy of Autonomy’, p. 166.
60 Félix Guattari, ‘The Proliferation of Margins’, p. 108.
61 Ibid.
62 Ibid.
63 Ibid., p. 109.
64 Toni Negri, ‘Domination and Sabotage’, Semiotext(e) 9, Italy: Autonomia, p.
63.
65 Jean Baudrillard, For a Critique of the Political Economy of the Sign, St Louis,
Telos, 1975, pp. 176–7.
66 Jean Baudrillard, Forget Foucault, New York, Semiotext(e), 1987, pp. 114–
15.
67 Jean Baudrillard, The Mirror of Production, St Louis, Telos, p. 164.
68 Ibid., p. 161.
69 Ibid., pp. 164–5.
70 Guy Debord, ‘In Girum imus Nocte et Consumimur Igni’, Block, 14, Autumn
1988, p. 36.
71 The Mirror of Production, p. 166.
72 Ibid., p. 165.
73 Ibid., p. 166.
74 Ibid., p. 165.
75 Ibid., p. 166.
76 Ibid.
77 ‘Nomad Thought’, p. 146.
78 Ibid.
79 Language, Counter-Memory, Practice, p. 220.
80 Michel Foucault, The History of Sexuality, vol. I: An Introduction,
Harmondsworth, Penguin, 1978, p. 159.
81 Jean-François Lyotard, ‘Le 23 mars’, Dérive à Partir de Marx et Freud, p.
306.
82 Ibid., p. 308.
83 Ibid., pp. 307–8.
84 Economie Libidinale, p. 133.
85 Ibid., p. 311.
86 Jean-François Lyotard, ‘Notes sur le retour et le capital’, Des Dispotifs
Pulsionnels, Paris, Union Générale, 1973, p. 315.
87 Jamie Reid, Up They Rise: The Incomplete Works of Jamie Reid, London,
Faber, 1987, p. 35.
88 Ibid., p. 38.
89 Ibid., p. 43.
90 Ibid.
91 The End of Music, Glasgow, 1978, pp. 32–3.
92 Ibid., pp. 12–13.
93 Ibid., p. 9.
94 Ibid.
95 City Fun, Manchester, May 1982. When the Hacienda was opened, City Fun
also carried details of all the dimensions and colours of the club, the interior
of which is reminiscent of a city street, and similar details were posted in Dry,
a bar opened several years later in Manchester. Tony Wilson’s Factory Records
was one of the sponsors of the 1988 ICA Situationist exhibition. Among the
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P. 214
Notes
203
exhibits there was a T-shirt with the logo: ‘Well you’ve blown it now. You’ll
never see the Hacienda. It doesn’t exist Anywhere. THE HACIENDA MUST
BE BUILT.’ Chtcheglov’s statement was made even more ironic by the threat
of closure hanging over the Hacienda at the beginning of 1991. The club played
no small part in the ‘summers of love’ which swept Manchester at the end of
the 1980s, in which the ‘psychogeographical’ ambience of clubs, reinforced
by the popularity of LSD and Ecstasy, grew in significance.
96 Sylvere Lotringer and Christian Marazzi, ‘The Return of Politics’, Semiotext(e)
9, Italy: Autonomia, p. 12.
97 George Branchflower, ‘Oranges and Lemons’, Here and Now 7/8, 1989, p.
viii.
98 Ibid., p. vii.
99 Spectacular Times, Buffo! Amazing Tales of Political Pranks and Anarchic
Buffoonery, London, n.d., p. 29.
100 ‘Oranges and Lemons’, p. viii.
101 Ibid.
5 ‘FLEE, BUT WHILE FLEEING, PICK UP A WEAPON’
‘Flee, but while fleeing, pick up a weapon’ is a phrase from Gilles Deleuze and
Félix Guattari, On the Line, New York, Semiotext(e), 1983.
1 Guy Debord, The Society of the Spectacle, unpublished translation, 1990, 203.
2 Guy Debord, Comments on the Society of the Spectacle, London, Verso, 1991,
p. 7.
3 Ibid., p. 3.
4 Ibid., p. 7.
5 Guy Debord, Preface to the Fourth Italian Edition of The Society of the
Spectacle, London, Chronos, 1979, p. 22.
6 Comments on the Society of the Spectacle, p. 82.
7 Ibid., p. 9.
8 Ibid.
9 Ibid., p. 10.
10 Ibid.
11 Ibid., p. 28.
12 Ibid., p. 4.
13 Ibid., p. 6.
14 Ibid., p. 4.
15 Ibid., p. 1.
16 Ibid.
17 Ibid., p. 18.
18 Ibid., p. 1.
19 Ibid., p. 2.
20 Ibid., p. 73.
21 Ibid.
22 Ibid., p. 79.
23 Jean Baudrillard, L’Effet Beaubourg: implosion et dissuasion, Paris, Editions
Galilée, 1977, p. 24.
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P. 215
204
The most radical gesture
24 Ibid.
25 Ibid., p. 25.
26 Ibid.
27 Jean Baudrillard, In the Shadow of the Silent Majorities…or The End of the
Social and Other Essays, New York, Semiotext(e), 1983, p. 10.
28 Jean Baudrillard, The Ecstasy of Communication, New York, Semiotext(e),
1988, p. 105.
29 In the Shadow of the Silent Majorities, p. 43.
30 Ibid., p. 22.
31 Ibid., pp. 28–9.
32 Ibid., pp. 26–7.
33 Ibid., p. 27.
34 Ibid., p. 28.
35 Jean Baudrillard, ‘The Year 2000 Will Not Take Place’, Futur*fall: Excursions
into Postmodernity, E.A.Grosz et al. (eds), Sydney, Power Institute of Fine
Arts, University of Sydney, and Futur*fall, 1986, p. 20.
36 Ibid.
37 Ibid.
38 Ibid., pp. 20–1.
39 Jean Baudrillard, Fatal Strategies, Semiotext(e) and Pluto, New York and
London, 1990, p. 186.
40 Ibid., p. 99.
41 Ibid., p. 185.
42 Ibid., p. 65.
43 Ibid.
44 Ibid., p. 186.
45 Jean Baudrillard, Simulations, New York, Semiotext(e), 1983, p. 7.
46 Ibid., p. 8.
47 The Ecstasy of Communication, p. 12.
48 Simulations, p. 55.
49 ‘The Year 2000 Will Not Take Place’, pp. 22–3.
50 Fatal Strategies, p. 65.
51 Ibid., p. 67.
52 Simulations, p. 42.
53 Ibid., p. 25.
54 The Ecstasy of Communication, pp. 77–8.
55 Ibid., p. 63.
56 Fatal Strategies, p. 65.
57 The Ecstasy of Communication, p. 83.
58 Fatal Strategies, p. 184.
59 Ibid., p. 117.
60 Ibid., pp. 185–6.
61 Ibid., p. 184.
62 Ibid., p. 113.
63 Ibid., p. 112.
64 Ibid., p. 113.
65 Judith Williamson, ‘An Interview with Jean Baudrillard’, Block 15, 1989, p.
18.
66 The Ecstasy of Communication, p. 74.
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P. 216
Notes
205
67 Ibid., p. 86.
68 Raoul Vaneigem, The Revolution of Everyday Life, n.p., Left Bank Books and
Rebel Press, 1983, p. 85.
69 Guy Debord, Comments on the Society of the Spectacle, London, Verso, 1991,
p. 76.
70 Ibid.
71 Ibid., p. 28.
72 Jean Baudrillard, America, London, Verso, 1989, p. 116.
73 Comments on the Society of the Spectacle, p. 21.
74 Ibid.
75 America, p. 116.
76 Comments on the Society of the Spectacle, pp. 21–2.
77 ‘The Year 2000 Will Not Take Place’, p. 23.
78 The Society of the Spectacle, 10.
79 Comments on the Society of the Spectacle, p. 51.
80 Ibid., p. 50.
81 Fatal Strategies, pp. 185–6.
82 Jean Baudrillard, Cool Memories, London, Verso, 1990, p. 25.
83 Fatal Strategies, p. 114.
84 Comments on the Society of the Spectacle, p. 14.
85 Ibid., p. 15.
86 Ibid., p. 20.
87 Ibid., pp. 15–16.
88 Ibid., p. 16.
89 Ibid., p. 15.
90 Ibid., p. 13.
91 Ibid., p. 19.
92 Ibid., p. 14.
93 Ibid., p. 52.
94 Ibid., p. 55.
95 Ibid., pp. 60–1.
96 Ibid., p. 6.
97 Ibid., p. 7.
98 Ibid., p. 6.
99 Ibid., p. 33.
100 Ibid., p. 29.
101 Ibid., p. 13.
102 Ibid., p. 79.
103 Ibid., p. 39.
104 Ibid., p. 38.
105 Ibid., p. 84.
106 Ibid., p. 81.
107 Ibid., p. 84.
108 Ibid., p. 83.
109 Ibid., p. 84.
110 Ibid., p. 21.
111 Ibid., p. 84.
112 Ibid.
113 Ibid., p. 88.
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P. 217
206
The most radical gesture
114 Ibid., pp. 53–4.
115 Ibid., p. 20.
116 Raoul Vaneigem, ‘Basic Banalities II’, Internationale Situationniste 8, Jan.
1963, and Ken Knabb (ed.), Situationist International Anthology, Berkeley,
Bureau of Public Secrets, 1981, p. 125.
117 Stewart Home ‘Auto-Plagiarism’, Plagiarism: Art as Commodity and
Strategies for its Negation, London, Aporia Press, 1988, p. 6.
118 Praxis, ‘Desire in Ruins’, The Art Strike Handbook, Stewart Home (ed.),
London, Sabotage Editions, 1989, p. 10.
119 Tex Beard, ‘Plagiarism’, Plagiarism: Art as Commodity and Strategies for
its Negation, Stewart Home (ed.), p. 7.
120 ‘Art Strike: Karen Eliot interviewed by Scott MacLeod’, The Art Strike
Handbook, p. 5.
121 Karen Eliot, ‘Orientation for the Use of a Context and the Context for the
Use of an Orientation’, Plagiarism: Art as Commodity and Strategies for its
Negation, p. 9.
122 Stewart Home, ‘Multiple Names’, Plagiarism: Art as Commodity and
Strategies for its Negation, p. 20.
123 Stewart Home, ‘Introduction’, The Art Strike Handbook, p. 1.
124 ‘Art Strike: Karen Eliot interviewed’, The Art Strike Handbook, p. 7.
125 Stewart Home, ‘Art Strike 1990–1993’, The Art Strike Handbook, p. 3.
126 Stewart Home, ‘Oppositional Culture and Cultural Opposition’, The Art Strike
Handbook, p. 13.
127 ‘Desire in Ruins’, pp. 10–11.
128 Praxis, ‘The Art of Ideology and the Ideology of Art’, The Art Strike Handbook,
p. 17.
129 Ibid., p. 16.
130 ‘Desire in Ruins’, p. 11.
131 Cf. Maurice Nadeau, The History of Surrealism, Harmondsworth, Penguin,
1978, pp. 193–4.
132 Stewart Home, The Festival of Plagiarism, London, Sabotage Editions, 1989,
back cover.
133 Karen Eliot, ‘From Censorship to the Art Strike’, The Art Strike Handbook,
p. 24.
134 Jean Baudrillard, For a Critique of the Political Economy of the Sign, St
Louis, Telos, 1981, p. 110.
135 The Revolution of Everyday Life, p. 206.
136 Vaughan Allen, ‘Faking it’, The Face 23, Aug. 1990, pp. 40–3.
137 ‘Flyposter frenzy’, Leisure, 1990.
138 The Revolution of Everyday Life, p. 75.
139 Paul Virilio and Sylvere Lotringer, Pure War, New York, Semiotext(e), 1983,
p. 81.
140 The Revolution of Everyday Life, p. 81.
141 Karen Eliot, ‘Demolish Seriousness’, Here and Now 9, 1989, p. 19.
142 ‘Second Thoughts on the Thought Strike’, Here and Now 10, 1989, p. xv.
143 ‘Metastasis: Genetics and Ideology’, Leisure, 1990.
144 ‘An Interview with Jean Baudrillard’, p. 16.
145 Comments on the Society of the Spectacle, p. 27.
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P. 218
Notes
207
146 Jean Baudrillard, The Ecstasy of Communication, New York, Semiotext(e),
1988, p. 81.
147 Guy Debord, Comments on the Society of the Spectacle, London, Verso,
1991, p. 80.
148 Ibid., p. 21.
149 ‘Notice to the Civilized Concerning Generalized Self-Management’,
Internationale Situationniste 12, Sept. 1969, and Situationist International
Anthology, p. 285.
150 Comments on the Society of the Spectacle, p. 59.
151 Ibid., p. 21.
152 Ibid., p. 28.
153 ‘Now, the SI’, Internationale Situationniste 9, Aug. 1964, and Situationist
International Anthology, p. 136.
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P. 219
Bibliography
SITUATIONIST TEXTS AND LATER PUBLICATIONS
Debord, Guy, La Société du Spectacle, Paris, Buchet-Chastel, 1967, and Paris,
Editions Champ Libre, 1971. Translated as The Society of the Spectacle, Detroit,
Black & Red, 1977, and by Donald Nicholson-Smith, unpublished, 1990.
—— Oeuvres cinématographiques complètes: 1952–1978, Paris, Editions Champ
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imus Nocte et Consumimur Igni is forthcoming from Pelagian Press, Leeds. A
partial translation and introduction by Lucy Forsyth appears in Block, 14,
Autumn 1988, pp. 27–37, and two other scripts, On the Passage of a Few
Persons Through a Rather Brief Period of Time and Critique of Separation are
translated in the Situationist International Anthology.
—— Préface à la quatrième édition italienne de ‘La Société du Spectacle’, Paris,
Editions Champ Libre, 1979, translated by Frances Parker and Michael Forsyth,
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Chronos, 1979.
—— Considérations sur l’assassinat de Gérard Lebovici, Paris, Editions Gérard
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—— Panégyrique I, Paris, Editions Gérard Lebovici, 1989.
Debord, Guy, and Becker-Ho, Alice, Le Jeu de la guerre (Relevé des positions
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Gray, Christopher (ed.), Leaving the Twentieth Century: The Incomplete Work of
the Situationist International, London, Free Fall Press, 1974.
Internationale Situationniste, La Véritable Scission dans L’Internationale, Paris,
Editions Champ Libre, 1972, translated as The Veritable Split in the
International, London, Chronos, 1990.
—— Internationale Situationniste 1958–1969, complete facsimile edition, Paris,
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Knabb, Ken (ed.), Situationist International Anthology, Berkeley, Bureau of Public
Secrets, 1981.
De la misère en milieu étudiant, consideré sous les aspects economique, sexuel et
notamment intellectuel et de quelques moyens pour y remedier, Association
fédérative générale des étudiants de Strasbourg, 1966. Reprinted Paris, Editions
Champ Libre, 1977, and published in English as ‘Of Student Poverty,
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Intellectual Aspects, and a Modest Proposal for its Remedy’, Ten Days that
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di salvare il capitalismo in Italia, Milan, Ugo Mursia, 1975, translated by
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The most radical gesture
GENERAL WORKS
Adorno, Theodor and Horkheimer, Max, Dialectic of Enlightenment, London,
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Allen, Vaughan, ‘Faking it’, The Face 23, Aug. 1990, pp. 40–3.
Alquie, Ferdinand, The Philosophy of Surrealism, Ann Arbor, University of
Michigan Press, 1965.
Althusser, Louis, Essays on Ideology, London, Verso, 1984.
Alvarez, A., The Savage God, A Study of Suicide, Harmondsworth, Penguin, 1971.
The Angry Brigade 1967–1984, Documents and Chronology, London, Elephant
Editions, 1985.
Apollinaire, Guillaume, The Poet Assassinated and Other Stories, London,
Grafton, 1985.
Apter, David E. and Joll, James (eds), Anarchism Today, London, Macmillan,
1971.
Aragon, Louis, Paris Peasant, London, Pan, 1987.
L’Archibras 4, June 1968. Includes surrealist comment on the May events.
Atkins, Guy, Asger Jorn: The Crucial Years 1954–1964, London, Lund Humphries,
1977.
Bale, Jeffrey M., ‘Right-wing Terrorists and the Extraparliamentary Left in PostWorld War 2 Europe: Collusion or Manipulation?’, Lobster 18, Oct. 1989, pp.
2–18.
Barrot, Jean, What is Situationism: Critique of the Situationist International,
London, Unpopular Books, 1987.
Barthes, Roland, Mythologies, London, Paladin, 1973.
Baudelaire, Charles, The Complete Verse, London, Anvil Press, 1986.
Baudrillard, Jean, Le Systéme des objets, Paris, Denoel-Gonthier, 1968.
—— For a Critique of the Political Economy of the Sign, St Louis, Telos, 1975.
—— The Mirror of Production, St Louis, Telos, 1975.
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P. 230
Name index
Althusser, Louis 183
Apollinaire, Guillaume 42
Appel, Karel 54
Aragon, Louis 44, 47, 48, 50–1, 53,
179
Arp, Hans 45
Artaud, Antonin 183
Ascherson, Neal 101–2
Baj, Enrico 54
Ball, Hugo 41, 43
Bardot, Brigitte 80
Barrot, Jean 90, 105
Barthes, Roland 183
Bataille, Georges 135
Baudelaire, Charles 42
Baudrillard, Jean 5, 35–7, 109, 127,
134–8, 140, 141, 147, 148, 153–
70, 172–6, 179–80, 182–4
Bernstein, Michèle 55, 60, 86
Branson, Richard 146
Breton, André 42–3, 47–53, 59–60,
70, 78, 87
Camus, Albert 94
Canjuers, Pierre 15
Cardan, Paul, see Castoriadis
Carr, Robert 126
Castoriadis, Cornelius 14–15
Censor, see Sanguinetti
Chalieu, Pierre, see Castoriadis
Chaplin, Charlie 55
Chtcheglov, Ivan 57, 61
Clausewitz, Carl von 83
Cohn-Bendit, Daniel 96, 102
Constant, (Constant Nieuwenhuys)
54, 57
Comeille, (Van Beverloo) 54
Debord, Guy 5, 8–10, 12, 15–17, 27,
29, 32–3, 34–6, 38, 55–6, 60, 66,
73, 79, 82–9, 96, 106, 127, 137–8,
150–4, 157, 167–74, 182, 184
Deleuze, Gilles 107, 124, 125, 129,
139, 140;
and Guattari, Félix 108, 112, 122–3,
124–5, 142, 143
Derrida, Jacques 183
Desnos, Robert 52
Dotremont, Christian 54, 64
Ducasse, Isidore, see Lautréamont
Duchamp, Marcel 44, 49, 77, 104,
179
Duyn, Roel van 91
Eliot, Karen 177–9, 181
Engels, Friedrich 13
Fermigier, André 104
Fillon, Jacques 50
Foucault, Michel 107–9, 112, 116–
21, 124, 132, 139–40, 148
Fourier, Charles 42, 101
Freud, Sigmund 49
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P. 231
220
Name index
Gaulle, Charles de 99
Geismar, Alain 102
Gide, André 78
Gramsci, Antonio 14
Grosz, George 46
Guattari, Félix 123–4, 129, 130, 132–
3, 139; see also Deleuze, Gilles
Habermas, Jürgen 183
Hausmann, Raoul 43
Hegel, Georg Wilhelm Friedrich, 21,
40, 88; see also Hegelianism
Heidegger, Martin 20
Herzfelde, Wieland, 46
Huelsenbeck, Richard 77
Isou, Isidore 55
Magritte, René 54
Marcuse, Herbert 14, 33–4, 102
Mariën, Marcel 54, 84
Marx, Karl 2, 8, 9, 10, 11, 20, 21, 27,
40, 88, 157; and Engels, Friedrich,
13; see also Marxism
Mauss, Marcel 135
Miller, Henry 53
Moro, Aldo 128
Nadeau, Maurice 55
Nash, Jorgen 84
Negri, Toni 129,133
Nietzsche, Friedrich 108–9,115, 119,
124
Noiret, Joseph 54
Nougé, Paul 54
Jameson, Frederick 183
Janco, Marcel 41
Jarry, Alfred 42, 183
Jong, Jacqueline de 84
Jorn, Asger 54, 55, 84, 88
Jouffroy, Alain 101
Orwell, George 105, 152
Khayati, Mustapha 45
Kierkegaard, Søren 20
Krivine, Alain 103
Kropoktin, Piotr, 91
Ragon, Michel 104
Reid, Jamie 114–15
Richter, Hans 47
Rimbaud, Arthur 42, 70, 78
Rivière, Jacques 78
Péret, Benjamin 53
Picabia, Francis 125
Pinot-Gallizio, Guiseppe 54–5, 57, 88
Prem, Heimrad 84
Lacan, Jacques 122, 142
Lautréamont, Comte de (Isidore
Ducasse) 42, 50, 71, 78, 88, 95, 145
Lebovici, Gérard 82
Lefebvre, Henri 63–4, 96
Lefort, Claude 15
Lukács, George 8, 14, 16, 19–21, 27,
29, 65, 88, 157
Lyotard, Jean-François 5, 15, 96,
107–9, 112–16, 118, 120, 121–2,
124, 139, 140–3, 147, 148, 153,
164
Sade, Donatien Alphonse François
de 42
Sadoul, Georges 53
Sanguinetti, Gianfranco 127–8
Santa Claus 149
Sartre, Jean-Paul 20–1, 94
Saussure, Ferdinand de 108
Sauvegot, Jacques 102
Schuster, Jean 54, 103
Simondo, Piero 55
Soupault, Philippe 49, 78
McLaren, Malcolm 144–6
Trocchi, Alexander 84
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Name index
Trotsky, Leon 53
Turkle, Sherry 96
Tzara, Tristan 41, 43–4, 46–7, 53,
179
Vaché, Jacques 42, 43
Valéry, Paul 78
221
Vangeigem, Raoul 8, 9, 15, 23, 38,
62–74, 80, 83–6, 90, 93, 96, 103,
135, 165, 167, 170, 180, 181
Viénet, René 81, 100–3
Virilio, Paul 132
Wilson, Tony 146, 203n
Wolman, Gil 55, 60
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Subject Index
Alba 55, 57
Alcester 68
alienation 1–3, 6–7, 10–12, 14–20,
23–30, 33–4, 36, 62, 64–7, 100,
105, 109, 113, 114, 119, 131, 138,
141–3, 145, 154, 156, 158, 160–2,
164–5, 168, 177, 179
Amsterdam 54, 91–3
Angry Brigade 125–7
Anticopyright 180
art strike 177–81
Art Strike Handbook, The (Home)
179
automatic writing, see automatism
automatism 49, 59; see also dérive,
chance
autonomists, Italian 129–32, 148,
181; see also Metropolitan Indians
avant-garde 1, 17, 33, 40, 55–6, 60,
77, 81, 96, 101, 104, 112, 121,
130–1, 160, 178, see also Dada;
surrealism; futurism; lettrism; art
strike
Berlin 45, 92
bootlegging 180
Brussels 54
Capital (Marx) 11, 99
chance 43–5, 47–50, 70, 109
Chants de Maldoror, Les
(Lautréamont) 50, 88
Class War 146
cobblestones 103, 104, 140
Cobra 54
Cologne 45
comics 86–7, 88, 94, 101, 144
Comments on the Society of the
Spectacle (Debord) 151–3, 167–
8, 174, 176, 186
commodification, see commodity;
alienation; spectacle; recuperation
commodity 10–17, 23–6, 35–6, 38,
62–5, 69, 72, 77–80, 102–3, 106,
132, 134, 141–3, 156, 163–5, 166,
167, 168, 173, 175, 178, 181,
186–7
commodity relations, see commodity;
alienation; spectacle
Communist Manifesto, The (Marx
and Engels) 13
Copenhagen 54, 84
Cosio d’Arroscia 61
Council for the Continuation of the
Occupations 102
councils, workers’ 4, 18–19, 89, 90,
101–2, 109
creativity, see subject, radical;
situation
Critique de la Vie Quotidienne
(Lefebvre) 64
Dada 1, 3, 39–49, 53–4, 55, 56, 58,
77–9, 81, 85, 87, 91, 92, 109, 111,
125, 130, 136, 137, 144, 145, 146,
148, 150, 166, 176, 179, 181
dérive 58–9, 89, 101, 121
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Subject index
desire 2, 21–2, 24–6, 30–1, 38–9, 61,
68, 84, 96, 101, 103 108–9, 111–
12, 115–16, 122–5, 130, 133–4,
139, 141–2, 165, 179
détournement 86–9, 104, 110, 112,
129, 131, 144–5, 147–8, 176–7,
182–3
dialectical critique 29–30, 88, 113–
15, 116, 119–22, 138–9
Discipline and Punish (Foucault)
120
Disneyland 161–2
Drakabygget 84
dreams 48–52, 61 passim, 71, 72, 130
drugs 39, 43, 61, 80, 203n
Economie Libidinale (Lyotard) 141,
142, 153
ecstasy 39, 46, 158–9, 161, 165–7,
183
End of Music, The 145–6
enragés 100, 102
Enragés and the Situationists in the
Occupation Movement, May—
June 1968, The (Viénet) 100
l’Europeo 128
Evening Standard 126
everyday 5, 9, 11–17, 23–8, 33, 39,
44 passim, 50, 55–6, 58, 60–1,
63–9, 72, 100, 104, 140, 165, 167
festival 28, 70–1, 95, 96, 100, 125; of
Plagiarism 177–9; of Stupidity
181
First World Congress of Liberated
Artists 55
First World War, reactions to 40–2,
44, 136
football 67–8, 98, 107, 155
French Communist Party (PCF) 52–3,
97–8
Freudianism 48–9
Futurism 39
223
games 50, 62, 70–2, 95, 104, 130,
155, 175; see also play
Gazetta del Popolo 95
gestures, the most radical 11, 69, 75,
108, 163, 176, 181, 182
gifts 72, 130, 135–6
graffiti 89, 103–4, 109, 140
gravediggers 98, 123
Groupe d’Information sur les
Prisons 120
Guardian 102
hacienda 61, 203n
Hacienda, the 146, 203n
Hegelianism 8, 17, 88, 109, 161; see
also Hegel
Here and Now 181
history 26–9, 62, 74, 153, 155, 157,
160, 163–4, 166, 167–8, 170–1,
185
History and Class Consciousness
(Lukács) 16, 19
History of Surrealism, The
(Nadeau) 55
L’Humanité 97
hyperreality 5–6, 37, 134, 153–5,
162, 166, 174
ICA exhibitions 110, 181
Internationale Situationniste 1, 7,
81, 86, 95, 99
International Movement for an
Imagist Bauhaus (IMIB) 54
In the Shadow of the Silent
Majorities (Baudrillard) 155
Italian Communist Party 128
Kabouters 91–3
King Mob 146, 149
Kommune 1, 92, 148
Kronstadt 98
Le Havre 98
Leisure 182
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The most radical gesture
lettrism 55–61, 70
Lettrist International (LI), see lettrism
Lèvres Nués, Les 86
London 59, 60, 103
London Psychogeographical Society
55
Los Angeles 162
love 51–2, 61–3, 72–3, 87, 170
Lyon 96
mail art 176
Manchester 146
Marxism 3, 9–11, 13–14, 16–18, 34,
36, 113–14, 134–8, 142, 162, 183
Marxism Today 105
masses, the 23, 95, 120–1, 141–2,
155–6, 161–3
May 1968, see 1968
media, mass 9, 24, 43, 68, 98–9, 101–
3, 112, 132, 137, 155–7 163–4,
168–9, 172–3, 182
Metropolitan Indians 129–30, 136 see
also autonomists
Milan 88, 129
Mirror of Production, The
(Baudrillard) 36, 135, 137
Monde, Le 95
mouvement du 22 mars 5, 97, 114,
140
Movement of ’77, see autonomists,
Italian
multiple names 177–8
music 55, 98, 130, 144–6, 160
Nadja (Breton) 50, 51
Nanterre 96
Nantes 96
News of the World 103
New Statesman 105
new towns 28, 145
‘1918 Dada manifesto’ (Tzara) 53, 46
1968 5, 7, 9, 70, 93–105, 144;
and intellectual aftermath 106–10,
111–12, 114, 116, 117, 120, 122,
137, 139, 147, 151, 160
1984 (Orwell) 152
nomads 124–5, 129, 139
Nouvelle Revue Française 78
Nouvel Observateur 99
Nuclear Art 54
objects, ready-made 44, 104, 179;
found, 44, 49–50; poem, 49; see
also subject; masses; commodity
obscene 159–62, 164
Observer 97, 98, 100, 101, 102
‘Of Student Poverty’ 94–6
One-Dimensional Man (Marcuse)
33
On Terrorism and the State
(Sanguinetti) 128
Orange Alternative 148–9
Paris 47, 50–1, 53, 59–60, 97 passim,
101, 104
Paris Commune 64, 96, 98
Paris Peasant (Aragon) 50
participation 10, 19, 25, 28–9, 32,
38–9, 56, 62, 67–8, 71–2, 81, 91,
101, 164–5, 181
peace convoy, see travellers
plagiarism 8, 42, 44, 64, 86–8, 176–
7, 183
play 2, 8, 22, 31, 40, 50, 53, 60–2,
70–3, 87, 103, 112, 130, 154–5,
178, 187
pleasure, see love;
subject, radical; desire
poetry 39 passim, 43, 50, 56, 62, 70–
1, 78, 85, 87–8, 95, 112, 130,
137–8, 144, 170, 179
police 45, 57, 68, 92, 99, 104, 125,
130, 149
Postmodern Condition, The
(Lyotard) 114
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Subject index
postmodernism 5–7, 109–10, 134,
150, 153–5, 158, 160, 163, 166–7,
175–6, 177–8, 182–3, 184–7
poststructuralism 107–9, 111–25,
127, 134, 140, 147–8, 150, 153,
160, 162, 183, 187
Potlatch 55, 56, 59, 60, 135
power 11, 16, 18–19, 21, 52, 69, 74,
75–6, 78, 80, 81, 86, 106–9, 116–
21, 124, 131–2, 157, 161, 166,
170, 178–9
Praxis 177, 179
Preface to the Fourth Italian
Edition of the Society of the
Spectacle (Debord) 151
Processed World 90
Project Sigma 84
proletariat 14–16, 18–19, 27, 52, 100,
178, 182, 187
Proves 91–3, 148, 181
psychoanalysis 122, 142, 183; see
also dreams; Freud; Lacan
psychogeography 58–60, 89
punk 143–7
Radio Alice 130–1
Radio 2000 92
recuperation 4, 75–81, 85–6, 91,
104–6, 109–10, 113, 119, 131,
133, 137, 141, 144–5, 163, 167,
169, 175, 178–9, 181–3, 187
Red Brigades 127–9, 132
reification 16, 19–20; see also
alienation
revolution 4, 17–18, 26, 32, 37, 71,
52, 53, 56, 77, 82, 85, 89–90, 93–
8, 123–4, 133, 137–9, 158, 168,
174, 185
Revolutionary Surrealist Group 54,
64
Revolution of Everyday Life, The
(Vaneigem) 8, 38, 62, 65, 90, 96,
127, 180
225
riot 15, 30–1, 85, 120, 176; see also
1968
roles 13, 24–5, 65–7, 69–70
Rome 129
sabotage 32, 78, 86, 90, 92–3, 131;
see also détournement
secrets 31, 81–2, 78, 107, 128, 153,
154, 158, 160, 163 passim, 171–2,
175
seduction 162–4, 166
self-management, see councils,
workers’
Sex Pistols 144
shopping malls 28, 36, 57, 65, 180
simulation 110, 130, 132, 134, 154–
5, 158–62, 166, 168, 182
Situationist Bauhaus 84
Situationist International (SI),
formation of 1, 55, 61; nature of
1–2, 3–5, 7–9, 32–3, 40, 55–6,
61–2, 76, 80–5, 187; and 1968
93–4, 99–104; collapse of 9, 83–
4, 181
Situationist Times 84
situations 2, 20–2, 31–2, 38, 56–8,
61–2, 70, 89, 178
Socialisme ou barbarie 5, 14–15,
113
Society of the Spectacle, The
(Debord) 8, 9, 10, 16, 27, 32, 35,
38, 66, 88, 96, 99, 150, 151,
152, 169
specialisation 4–5, 16, 18–20, 29, 40,
56, 63–7, 81; see also roles; stars
spectacle 1–5, 8–14, 19, 22–37, 38–9,
63–70, 74, 75–80, 83, 86–91, 99–
100, 105–7, 111–12, 131, 141,
145–8, 150–3, 154–5, 157–8, 160,
162, 164, 167–75, 179, 182, 184–
7
Spies for Peace 91
spontaneity see subject, radical
Spur 84, 92
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The most radical gesture
stars 65–6, 82, 102–3, 153, 173
Strasbourg 94–5
structuralism 34, 108, 183
subject 111, 113, 117–19, 122, 141,
154, 161–6, 186; radical 8, 30, 38,
62–5, 72–4, 84, 86, 107, 170
Suburban Press 144
surrealism 1, 3, 39–40, 42–3, 47–54,
56, 59–60, 70, 72, 77–9, 81, 85,
87, 101, 103–4, 109, 111, 130,
137, 146, 150, 166, 179, 183
Surréalisme au service de la
révolution, Le 59
surveillance 173–4
survival 2, 7, 21–3, 62, 64, 72, 93,
155, 185
Système des objets, le (Baudrillard)
35
‘Theses on the Paris Commune’
(Lefebvre) 64
The Times 59
time 27–8
totality 11, 17, 19, 24–5, 29, 32, 66,
75, 79–81, 91, 93, 101, 106, 111,
114–17, 120, 148, 170
Traité de savoir-vivre à l’usage des
jeunes générations (Vaneigem),
see The Revolution of Everyday
Life
travellers 125, 146
True Report on the Last Chance to
Save Capitalism (Censor) 127
102
technology 2, 9, 31, 34, 38, 42, 55,
61, 68, 71, 85, 130–1, 180
television 67–8, 159, 182; see also
media, mass
terrorism 125–9, 174; see also Red
Brigades; Angry Brigade;
Sanguinetti
theme parks 28, 65, 169; see also
Disneyland
Veritable Split in the Situationist
International, The (Situationist
International) 127
virtual reality 159, 167
UNEF (French Students’ Union) 94,
unitary urbanism 56–8
What is Situationism (Barrot), 90
workers’ councils, see councils
Wroclaw 149
Zurich 41, 45