Slavoj ZIZEK
The Spectre Is Still Roaming Around!
The Spectre Is Still Roaming Around!
An introduction to the 150th anniversary edition of The Communist Manifesto
(excerpts): [3].[of 4].[of 10].[Chapter 04]:
The point of our insisting that we are dealing with Bill Gates as an
icon is that it would be mystifying to elevate the "real" Gates
into a kind of Evil Genius who masterminds a plot to achieve global control
over all of us. Here, more than ever, it is crucial to remember the lesson
of the Marxist dialectic of fetishization: the "reification"
of relations between people (the fact that they assume the form of phantasmagorical
"relations between things") is always redoubled by the apparently
opposite process, by the false "personalization" ("psychologiozation")
of what are effectively objective social processes. It was already in the
30s that the first generation of Frankfurt School theoreticians drew attention
to how - at the very moment when global market relations started to exert
their full domination, making the individual producer's success or failure
dependent on market cycles totally out of his control - the notion of a
charismatic "business genius" reasserted itself in the "spontaaneous
capitalist ideology", attributing the success or failure of a businessman
to some mysterious je ne sais quoi which he possesses. (Adorno
pointed out how the very emergence of psychology as "science",
with the individual's psyche as its "object", is strictly correlative
to the predominance of impersonal relations in economic and political life.)
And does the same not hold even more today, when the abstraction of market
relations that run our lives is brought to extreme? The book market is
overflowing with psychological manuals advising us how to succeed, how
to outdo our partner or competitor - in short, making our success dependent
on our proper "attitude". So, in a way, one is tempted to invert
the famous formula of Marx: in contemporary capitalism, the objective
market "relations between things" tend to assume the phantasmagorical
form of pseudo-personalized "relations between people". No,
Bill Gates is no genius, good or bad, he is just an opportunist who knew
how to seize the moment, and as such the result of the capitalist system
run amok. The question to ask is not "How did Gates do it?" but
"How is the capitalist system structured, what is wrong with it, so
that an individual can achieve such disproportionate power?". Phenomena
such as Bill Gates thus seem to point towards their own solution: once
we are dealing with a gigantic global network formally owned by a single
individual or corporation, is it not that ownership becomes in a way irrelevant
to its functioning (there is no longer any worthwhile competition, profit
is guaranteed), so that it becomes possible simply to cut off this head
and to socialize the entire network without greatly perturbing its functioning?
Does such an act not amount to a purely formal conversion that simply brings
together what de facto already belongs together: the collective of individuals
and the global communicational network they are all using, and which thus
forms the substance of their social lives?
The overtly "irrational" prospect of concentrating quasi-monopolistic
power in the hands of a single individual or corporation, like Rupert Murdoch
or Bill Gates, is thus an index pointing towards the necessity of some
kind of politicization of the economy. If the next decade brings the unification
of the multitude of communicative media in a single apparatus reuniting
the features of interactive computer, TV, video- and audio-phone, video
and CD-player, and if Microsoft effectively succeeds in becoming the quasi-monopolistic
owner of this new universal medium, controlling not only the language used
in it but also the conditions of its application, then we obviously approach
the absurd situation in which a single agent, exempted from public control,
will effectively dominate the basic communicational structure of our lives
and will thus in a way be stronger than any government. This effectively
opens up the prospect of paranoiac scenarios: since the digital language
we shall all use will nonetheless be man-made, constructed by programmers,
is it not possible to imagine a corporation that owns it installing in
it some special secret programme-ingredient which will enable it to control
us, or a virus which the corporation can trigger and thus bring our communication
to a halt? When biogenetic corporations assert their ownership of our genes
through patenting them, they also give rise to a similar paradox of owning
the innermost parts of our body, so that we are already owned by a corporation
without even being aware of it. The prospect we are confronting is thus
that both the communicational network we use and the genetic language we
are made of will be owned and controlled by corporations (or even a corporation)
out of public control. Does the very absurdity of this prospect - the private
control of the very public base of our communication and reproduction,
of the very network of our social being - again not impose as the only
solution a kind of socialization? In other words, is the impact of the
so-called informational revolution on capitalism not the ultimate exemplification
of the old Marx's thesis that
"at a certain stage of their development,
the material productive forces of society come into conflict with the existing
relations of production, or - what is but a legal expression of the same
thing - with the property relations within which they have been at work
hitherto"?
Furthermore, does the antagonism contained in the notion
of owning (scientific) knowledge since knowledge is in principle
neutral towards its propagation, i.e. it is not worn by its spread and
universal use not explain why today's capitalism has to resort to ever
more absurd strategies to sustain the economy of scarcity in the sphere
of information, and thus to contain within the frame of private property
and market relations the demon it has unleashed (e.g., by way of inventing
ever new modes of preventing the free copying of digitalized information)?
In short, does the prospect of the informational "global village"
not signal the end of market relations (which is by definition based on
the logic of scarcity), at least in the sphere of digitalized information?
The paradox of the US administration's legal action against the monopoly
of Microsoft is in this respect very indicative: does this action not demonstrate
how, far from being simply opposed, State regulation and market are mutually
dependent? If left to itself, the market mechanism would lead to the full
monopoly of Microsoft and thus to the self-cancellation of competition
- it is only through direct state intervention (which, from time to time,
orders overly large companies to break up) that market competition can
be maintained...
Chapter 10 >>
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