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): [4].[of 4].[of 10].[Chapter 10]:
This, then, is the reason why The Communist Manifesto is still alive,
perhaps more than ever, since the predicament it describes is heightened
today to a new level of unbearable tension. The lesson of The Communist
Manifesto for us today is that the dilemma "global market-liberalism
or fundamentalism" is a false one. On the one hand, any hope that
social antagonisms will be resolved through the further development of
capitalist economy and its political counterpart, multiculturalist liberal
democracy, is misleading: antagonistic tension is inscribed into the very
notion of capitalism and thus cannot be attenuated through "more consequent"
multicultural tolerance, struggle against ethnic or sexist fundamentalism
and other "remainders of the past", etc. On the other hand, any
return to traditional values (from Catholic or Islamic fundamentalism to
Oriental New Age wisdom) is doomed to fail - not only because it is impotent
in face of the thrust of Capital, but because attempts to reassert the
old ways already by their very form reinforce the New (is today's televangelist,
preaching the return to authentic traditional values, in the very form
of his activity not already a mediatic show-man?).
Perhaps there is a grain of truth in its detractor's claims; perhaps
the answers offered by The Communist Manifesto are no longer pertinent.
However, in its very deficiency, The Communist Manifesto continues to address
us, imposing upon us the task of reinventing the way out of the vicious
cycle of capitalism. And why are we, from the "post-Communist"
Eastern European countries, the ones to assume this task? Because we are
compelled to live out and sustain the contradiction of the global capitalist
New World Order at its most radical. The ideological dream of a unified
Europe aims at achieving the (impossible) balance between the two components:
full integration into the global market; retaining the specific national
and ethnic identities. What we are getting in the post-Communist Eastern
Europe is a kind of negative, distopian realization of this dream - in
short, the worst of both worlds, unconstrained market combined with ideological
fundamentalism.
The passage from really-existing Socialism to really-existing capitalism
in Eastern Europe brought about a series of comic reversals of sublime
democratic enthusiasm into the ridiculous. The dignified East German crowds
gathering around Protestant churches and heroically defying Stasi
terror suddenly turned into vulgar consumers of bananas and cheap pornography;
the civilized Czechs mobilized by the appeal of Havel and other cultural
icons suddenly turned into cheap swindlers of Western tourists The disappointment
was mutual: the West, which began by idolizing the Eastern dissident movement
as the reinvention of its own tired democracy, disappointedly dismisses
the present post-Socialist regimes as a mixture of corrupt ex -Communist
oligarchy and/or ethnic and religious fundamentalists; even the dwindling
numbers of liberals are mistrusted as insufficiently "politically
correct": where is their feminist awareness? etc.) The East, which
began by idolizing the West as the model of affluent democracy, finds itself
in the whirlpool of ruthless commercialization and economic colonization.
So was all this worth the effort? The hero of Dashiell Hammett's Maltese
Falcon, the private detective Sam Spade, narrates the story
of his being hired to find a man who had suddenly left his settled job
and family and vanished. Spade is unable to track him down, but,
a few years later, he accidentally encounters the man in a bar in another
city. Under an assumed name, the man leads there a life remarkably similar
to the one he fled from (a regular boring job, a new wife and children).
However, in spite of this similarity, the man is convinced that his beginning
again was not in vain, that it was well worth the trouble to cut his ties
and start a new life Perhaps the same goes for the passage from really-existing
Socialism to really-existing capitalism in ex-Communist East European countries:
despite the betrayal of enthusiastic expectations, something did take place
in-between, in the passage itself, and it is in this Event which took place
in-between, in this "vanishing mediator", in this moment of democratic
enthusiasm, that we should locate the crucial dimension obfuscated by later
capitalist renormalization.
It is clear that the protesting crowds in the gdr , Poland and the Czechoslovakia
did wanted "something else", an utopian object of impossible
Fullness designated by a multiplicity of names ("solidarity",
"human rights", etc.), not what they actually got. Two reactions
are possible towards this gap between expectations and reality; the best
way to capture them is via reference to the well-known opposition between
fool and knave. The fool is a simpleton, a court-jester who is allowed
to tell the truth precisely because the "performative power"
(the socio-political efficiency) of his speech is suspended; the knave
is a cynic who openly states the truth, a crook who tries to sell the open
admission of his crookedness as honesty, a scoundrel who admits the need
for illegitimate repression in order to maintain social stability. After
the fall of Socialism, the knave is a neoconservative advocate of the free
market who cruelly rejects all forms of social solidarity as counterproductive
sentimentalism, while the fool is a multiculturalist "radical"
social criticist who, by means of his ludic procedures destined to "subvert"
the existing order, actually serves as its supplement. With regard to Eastern
Europe, a knave dismisses the "third way" project of Neues Forum
in ex-ddr as hopelessly outdated utopia and exorts us to accept the cruel
market reality, while a fool insists that the collapse of Socialism effectively
opened up a Third Way, a possibility left unexploited by the Western re-colonization
of the East.
This cruel reversal of the sublime into the ridiculous was, of course,
grounded in the fact that there was a double misunderstanding at work in
the public (self-)perception of the social protest-movements in the last
years of Eastern European Socialism (from Solidarity to Neues Forum). On
the one hand, there were the attempts of the ruling nomenklatura to reinscribe
these events in their police/political framework, by distinguishing between
"honest critics" with whom one could discuss, but in a calm,
rational, depoliticized atmosphere, and a bunch of extremist provocateurs
who serve foreign interests. The battle was thus not only for higher wages
and better conditions, but also and above all for the workers to be acknowledged
as legimitate partners in negotiating with the representative of the regime
- the moment that power was forced to accept this, the battle was in a
way already won. When these movements exploded in a broad mass phenomenon,
their demands for freedom and democracy (and solidarity and) were also
misperceived by Western commentators who saw them confirmation that the
people of the East also want what the people in the West already have:
they automatically translated these demands into the Western liberal-democratic
notion of freedom (the multi-party representational political game cum
global market economy). Emblematic to the point of caricature was the figure
of Dan Rather, the American news reporter, on Tienanmen Square in 1989,
standing in front of the copy of the Statue of Liberty and claiming
that this statue says it all about what the protesting students demand
(in short, if you scratch the yellow skin of a Chinese, you find an American).
What this Statue effectively stood for was a utopian longing having nothing
to do with the actual usa (incidentally, it was the same with the original
immigrants to America, for whom the view of the Statue stood for a utopian
longing soon to be crushed). The perception of the American media thus
offered another example of the reinscription of the explosion of what Etienne
Balibar has called egaliberté (the unconditional demand for
freedom-equality which explodes any positive order) within the confines
of a given order.
Are we then condemned to the debilitating alternative of choosing between
a knave or a fool, or is there a tertium datur? If The Communist
Manifesto still has something to say to us, then there is still hope for
a tertium datur.
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