http://sacsis.org.za/site/article/1557

The Riotous Underbelly of the New Normal
By Richard Pithouse <http://sacsis.org.za/s/stories.php?iUser=20> · 30 Jan
2013
<http://sacsis.org.za/site/article/1557#>3<http://sacsis.org.za/site/article/1557#>
[image: Email this page] <http://sacsis.org.za/s/email.php?s=1557>
A+ <http://sacsis.org.za/site/article/1557#here>
A=<http://sacsis.org.za/site/article/1557#here>
 A- <http://sacsis.org.za/site/article/1557#here>
    [image: Print this page] <http://sacsis.org.za/site/article/1557/print>
      [image: 0 comments]
 0
<http://sacsis.org.za/site/article/1557#comments>
<http://sacsis.org.za/s/stories.php?iCategory=12>
[image: Picture credit: Steve
Crane/Flickr]<http://sacsis.org.za/s/story.php?s=1557>
Picture credit: Steve Crane/Flickr

Here we are, almost twenty years after apartheid and from the prisons, to
the shack settlements and the farms, the riotous underbelly of our society
is on television most nights. We're not even a full month into the year and
its been reported that the police have killed another protester in the
Boland and, depending on which newspaper you read, three, four or six
people in Zamdela in Sasolburg.

The new normal that we are being asked to accept after Mangaung has won
consent in some quarters by replacing a demagogic populist with an oligarch
and putting an end to the discussion about nationalisation.  Its basic
logic – crony capitalism greased with corruption, wrapped in an escalating
conflation of both the nation and the state with the ruling party and
defended with growing authoritarianism – can work well enough for capital.
In fact international capital often finds authoritarian states to be its
most attractive destinations for investment. And it's not unusual for the
middle classes to be quite comfortable with forms of authoritarianism that
restrict the basic democratic rights of the popular classes in defence of
the domination of society by an alliance between business and political
elites – after all, just look at how many South Africans think Dubai is a
great place to live.

Capital is not only comfortable with the sort of efficient party-state
machine that rules China. Other, and altogether messier, forms of
authoritarianism more dependent on popular participation can do just as
well. The Indian state of Gujarat is run by Narendra Modi of the far right
Hindu supremacist *Bharatiya Janata Party,* many of whose leading members
are little more than gangsters, and some of whose intellectuals are openly
pro-Nazi. In 2002 more than 10 000 Muslims were murdered in a horrific
pogrom that included gang rape, the mutilation of women and child murder
and clearly had active support from the political elite. But Gujarat, now
branded as 'Vibrant Gujarat', is attracting investment at a velocity seldom
seen outside of China's coastal cities and Modi's authoritarian populism
has the full support of legendary film actor Amitabh Bachchan, and key
people in India's business elite like Ratan Tata and Mukesh Ambani. British
business has successfully pressured its government to lift the diplomatic
ban it placed on Modi after the pogrom. It has been argued that the
anti-Muslim riot a decade ago laid the ground for Gujarat's economic
success by smashing democratic aspirations, normalising the mediation of
violence by party structures, allowing a ruthlessly predatory elite to
cloak itself in popular nationalism and creating a vulnerable scapegoat
onto which the dispossessed and exploited could project their frustrations.

But there are also cases where riots have laid the ground for an entirely
different sort of politics – a politics that is a democratising force with
regard to the state, civil society and capital. In a sequence of
insurrectionary moments in Bolivian cities from 2000 to 2003, and again in
2005, popular action, rooted in a democratic politics of assembly and
frequently taking the form of blockading roads with burning tyres,
overturned water privatisation in the city of Cochabamba, and then,
spreading to El Alto and La Paz, issued a major challenge to both the
subordination of society to corporate interests and the centuries long
subordination of indigenous people in Bolivia. A succession of governments
were overthrown and Evo Morales, the country's first indigenous president,
elected into office. It has been argued that popular emancipatory energies
have since been demobilised and even repressed by the Morales government
but, whether or not this is true, there's no question that Bolivia is now a
much more inclusive, democratic and hopeful place.

Most of the riots in contemporary South Africa are, more or less, what the
French philosopher Alain Badiou calls immediate riots – located in the
territory of the rioters, aimed at local symbols of power and often
inspired by seeing similar action elsewhere on television. These riots
usually burn themselves out after a few days and leave little in the way of
sustained organisation or the generation of emancipatory ideas that can
attain wider traction. But with the pace at which popular protest is
escalating, and the increasing tendency for it to become riotous, it is not
impossible that we may reach a point at which we begin to see what Badiou
calls historical riots – riots that occupy a central space, forge direct
connections between people from different areas and carry a clear and
compelling demand onto the national stage.

A state confronted by the degree of popular protest that we see in South
Africa has a fairly standard set of choices. It can make carefully
calibrated reforms, it can try to repress dissent with violence - be it the
vertical use of armed force by the police and the army or the mobilisation
of horizontal violence through party structures, it can try and contain
popular dissent spatially and ideologically, it can try to co-opt its
leading figures into the party, state or NGOs, it can try to bring popular
mobilisation into bureaucratic processes and it can try to capture popular
anger and redirect it against a vulnerable scapegoat. We've seen elements
of all of these strategies already but while they've had local success they
have not halted the rising tide of protest as a general phenomenon. As it
exhausts itself, is co-opted or beaten into submission in one area it
appears somewhere else. It seems likely that mass protest, much of it
disruptive, some of it riotous, is going to be with us until democracy is
undone in order to contain popular dissent more effectively or popular
dissent finds more effective ways to use democracy to overcome the politics
of contempt - the transit camps, mud schools, bucket toilets, systemic
unemployment, poverty wages, torture and all the rest - that the ANC has
carried over from colonialism and into the new order.

This reality requires us to address the question of the character of
popular protest in South Africa. There's no doubt that some popular action
undertaken outside of the law and authorised institutions is, like
xenophobic, homophobic and gendered violence – including rape and witch
burning, as well as some forms of vigilantism, horrific. These kinds of
actions could be drawn into a vastly more dangerous mode of authoritarian
populism than that to which we are currently subjected. And there are
certainly cases where popular anger is captured by opportunists and
demagogues of various kinds. In some instances this brings popular politics
firmly into the realm of clientalist politics organised around struggles
for power within the ruling party, which, while it can grant certain
rewards for fealty, imposes very narrow limitations on the horizon of what
is politically possible.

But it is also clear that popular protest is often directed towards urgent
and entirely just aspirations – some research shows land and housing to be
the two most common demands. It is equally clear that protest often emerges
from democratic or at least consultative processes in which it is not
unusual for women to take important roles and that it is often legitimated
by a moral economy rooted in a conception of dignity that insists that it
is unacceptable for people to be treated as animals, children or, in a
troubling formulation, foreigners. When this moral economy doesn't collapse
into a narrow conception of belonging it speaks to a deeper conception of
equality and democracy than those that are currently available via
authorised modes of politics and has been, and could continue to be, the
basis for emancipatory action. Moreover all sorts of material and political
victories, usually at the local level, have been won through protest. At
the national level, sustained protest has made it quite clear to a range of
constituencies that business as usual is simply not viable and that
something needs to shift.

But, with notable exceptions, the discussion about popular protest in the
elite public sphere is seldom rational or rooted in a solid grasp of its
realities. Across space and time elites have frequently presented popular
dissent as *a priori*irrational, violent, consequent to malevolent
conspiracy and even monstrous with little regard to the actual realities of
the particular events in question. Contemporary South Africa is no
exception. Experts and authorised representatives of elite organisations
are often given much more access to voice in discussions about protests
than people organising and participating in protests. Most reporting simply
assumes that popular protest, particularly if it involves disruption or
damage to property, is violent even when it is plainly not. Police
violence, on the other hand, is normalised to the point where even in cases
where the only violence has come from the police it is the protesters that
are likely to be reported as violent. *Much of the early coverage of the
Marikana massacre was simply disgraceful and gave a fresh charge to Karl
Marx's observation, back in 1871, that “The civilization and justice of
bourgeois order comes out in its lurid light whenever the slaves and
drudges of that order rise up against their masters.**”*

Engaging popular protest rationally will require a lot more careful
listening, a lot more sustained presence amongst the people organising this
ferment, a lot more attention to the particularities of each protest and a
lot less recourse to easy assumptions and pernicious stereotypes.
*Pithouse* teaches politics at Rhodes University.

Read more articles by Richard
Pithouse<http://sacsis.org.za/s/stories.php?iUser=20>
.


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



------------------------------------

---------------------------------------------------------------------------
LAAMN: Los Angeles Alternative Media Network
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Unsubscribe: <mailto:[email protected]>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subscribe: <mailto:[email protected]>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Digest: <mailto:[email protected]>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Help: <mailto:[email protected]?subject=laamn>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Post: <mailto:[email protected]>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Archive1: <http://www.egroups.com/messages/laamn>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Archive2: <http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/laamn/

<*> Your email settings:
    Individual Email | Traditional

<*> To change settings online go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/laamn/join
    (Yahoo! ID required)

<*> To change settings via email:
    [email protected] 
    [email protected]

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    [email protected]

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/

Reply via email to