>so, what do you think of deleuze and guattari's book 'communists like
>us'?
>
>angela

In the translator's foreword to "A Thousand Plateaus", Brian Massumi tells
us that the philosopher Gilles Deleuze was prompted by the French
worker-student revolt of 1968 to question the role of the intellectual in
society. Felix Guattari, his writing partner, was a psychoanalyst who
identified with R.D. Laing's antipsychiatry movement of the 1960's. Laing
created group homes where schizophrenics were treated identically to the
sane, sort of like the Marxism list. Guattari also embraced the protests of
1968 and discovered an intellectual kinship with Deleuze. Their first
collaboration was the 1972 "Anti-Oedipus". Massumi interprets this work as
a polemic against "State-happy or pro-party versions of Marxism". "A
Thousand Plateaus", written in 1987, is basically part two of the earlier
work. Deleuze and Guattari state that the two books make up a grand opus
they call "Capitalism and Schizophrenia". 

I read the chapter "1933" in "A Thousand Plateaus" with as much
concentration as I can muster. Stylistically, it has a lot in common with
philosophers inspired by Nietzsche. I am reminded of some of the reading I
did in Wyndham Lewis and Oswald Spengler in a previous lifetime. These
sorts of authors pride themselves in being able to weave together strands
from many different disciplines and hate being categorized. Within a few
pages you will see references to Kafka, American movies, Andre Gorz's
theory of work and Clausewitz's military writings. 

Their approach to fascism is totally at odds with the historical
materialist approach. Thinkers such as Marx and Trotsky focus on the class
dynamics of bourgeois society. Bonapartism is rooted in the attempt of the
French bourgeoisie in 1848 to stave off proletarian revolution. Trotsky
explains fascism as a totalitarian last-ditch measure to preserve private
property when bourgeois democracy or the Bonapartist state are failing. 

Deleuze and Guattari see fascism as a permanent feature of social life.
Class is not so important to them. They are concerned with what they call
"microfascism", the fascism that lurks in heart of each and every one of
us. Ooooh, scary stuff. When they talk about societies that were swept by
fascism, such as Germany, they totally ignore the objective social and
economic framework: depression, hyperinflation, loss of territory, etc. 

This is wrong. Fascism is a product of objective historical factors, not
shortcomings in the human psyche or imperfections in the way society is
structured. The way to prevent fascism is not to have unfascist attitudes
or live in unfascist communities, like the hippies did in the 1960's. It is
to confront the capitalist class during periods of mounting crisis and win
a socialist victory. 

In a key description of the problem, they say, "The concept of the
totalitarian State applies only at the macropolitical level, to a rigid
segmentarity and a particular mode of totalization and centralization. But
fascism is inseparable from a proliferation of molecular focuses in
interaction, which skip from point to point, before beginning to resonate
together in the National Socialist State. Rural fascism and city or
neighborhood fascism, youth fascism and war veteran's fascism, fascism of
the Left and fascism of the Right, fascism of the couple, family, school,
and office: every fascism is defined by a micro-black hole that stands on
its own and communicates with the others, before resonating in a great,
generalized central black hole." 

This is a totally superficial understanding of how fascism came about. What
is Left fascism? It is true that the Communist Party employed thuggish
behavior on occasion during the ultraleft "Third Period". They broke up
meetings of small Trotskyist groups while the Nazis were breaking up the
meetings of trade unions or Communists. Does this behavior equal left
Fascism? Fascism is a class term. It describes a mass movement of the
petty-bourgeoisie that seeks to destroy all vestiges of the working-class
movement. This at least is the Marxist definition. 

Fascism is not intolerance, bad attitudes, meanness or insensitivity. It is
a violent, procapitalist mass movement of the middle-class that employs
socialist phrase-mongering. 

I want to conclude with a few words about Felix Guattari and Toni Negri's
"Communists like Us". Unlike Deleuze/Guattari's collaborations, this is a
perfectly straightforward political manifesto that puts forward a basic
challenge to Marxism. It is deeply inspired by a reading of the 1968
struggle in France as a mass movement for personal liberation. Students and
other peripheral sectors move into the foreground while workers become
secondary. It is as dated as Herbert Marcuse's "One Dimensional Man". 

The pamphlet was written in 1985 but has the redolence of tie-dyed paisley,
patchouli oil and granny glasses. Get a whiff of this: 

"Since the 1960's, new collective subjectivities have been affirmed in the
dramas of social transformation. We have noted what they owe to
modifications in the organization of work and to developments in
socialization; we have tried to establish that the antagonisms which they
contain are no longer recuperable within the traditional horizon of the
political. But it remains to be demonstrated that the innovations of the
'60s should above all be understood within the universe of consciousnesses,
of desires, and of modes of behaviour." 

I have some trouble understanding why Deleuze and Guattari are such big
favorites with some of my younger friends. My friend Catherine who works in
the Dean of Studies office at Barnard was wild about Derrida when I first
met her four years ago. She started showing more of an interest in Marxism
after Derrida did. But she is not reading the 18th Brumaire. She is reading
Bataille, Deleuze/Guattari and Simone Weil. My guess is that a lot of
people from her milieu feel a certain nostalgia for the counterculture of
the 1960's and in a funny sort of way, Deleuza/Guattari take that nostalgia
and cater to it but in an ultrasophisticated manner. They wouldn't bother
with Paul Goodman and Charles Reich, this crowd. But French and Italian
theorists who write in a highly allusive and self-referential manner: Like
wow, man! 

 


Louis Proyect

(http://www.panix.com/~lnp3/marxism.html)



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