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by Fing
Saturday, Nov. 02, 2002 at 3:55 PM
fing@uts.cc.utexas.edu
A development of two lines of thought on the nature of power
based on the work of Michel Foucault
The Power. Speaking Truth to Power.
Sketches of a post-Foucauldian anarchism
The majority of anarchist literature I read seems to have yet to absorb the analytics of power left as the legacy of the French historian Michel Foucault. A brilliant philosophical scholar, Foucault left us not with a system of analysis, but rather a series of critiques and suggestions that ultimately demolish all systems of thought.
He presents two lines of thought that I'd like to develop here, for their relevance to anarchism. First is to deepen the understanding of power, an understanding that is frequently lacking among anarchists. The other is to counter claims made by some anarchists to be recovering some fundamental aspect of human nature by clearing away authoritarian or heirarchical institutions that impede the expression of an anarchic, nonauthoritarian true human nature. Human nature does not exist indepedent of the cultural institutions and practices that construct it: as anarchists our goal might better be described as instituting practices that create humans as anarchic. We are growing a collection of fluid and free institutions and organizations that will replace those institutions (such as the corporation and the nation-state) which produce persons as obedient workers and obedient masters.
Often the anarchist position is spoken of as "speaking truth to power." In speaking truth to power, we will dispel the myths which power uses to keep people enslaved. Sometimes our struggle is framed as a confrontation with "The Power," a loosely defined enemy but certainly includes corporate executives, heads of state, leaders of restrictive churches, in short, any political, economic, or social elite. We thus identify with the "powerless." Our language suggests that power is a thing that some people hold or have or own, and others don't. Power is a commodity, that can be exchanged or seized or donated; or it is a position one can have in society.
The first thing to consider, then, is that power is none of these things: power is not a thing one can have, power is not a position, nor is it control over particular institutions. What is it, then? Consider a conception of power not as a thing, but as a relationship. Further, consider that *any* human relationship can be seen as having power relations as a component. This relationship may be symmetrical, with both parties dominating and submitting to a roughly equal degree (as between friends); or one person may clearly dominate another (as the employer dominates the employee). Power is not outside our relationships: it is part of our relationships.
We must replace this concept of The Power. All too often, we forget that there is no secret cabal of powerful people meeting and intentionally plotting to maintain poverty and hunger. The activities of organizations like the IMF or the WTO clearly result in an increase of poverty and a greater concentration of wealth, which tempts us to be suspicious of their claims to have the elimination of poverty as a goal. But we should be sure to be suspicious of our suspicions: I find it more likely that the delegates of the WTO or IMF earnestly and honestly want to help, but are constrained both materially (for example, by corporate interests) and intellectually (for example, by thinking as capitalists, with fundamental ideas like the "creation of wealth" which are taken as absolute truths or facts). In fact, we all know that there is no cabal, yet our language may often be mistaken as though we think there is. This is partly a consequence of our employment of institutional analysis, a mode of analysis that ignores the individual, personal actors within the institution and instead considers the institution itself as an actor with interests and strategies.
Let us replace this concept of The Power with Foucault's notion of the "infra-power." He writes of a power infrastructure, composed by the state, the hospital, the asylum, the corporation, the factory, the prison, the school, the family. Power is implicit in every one of our relationships: there are local centers of power, like the parent/child or employer/employee or teacher/student. The asymmetries of domination in these relationships add up to the global power structures, which may be given names like The Establishment or The System. In using those names, we forget that these systems of domination are not imposed upon us by some elite, rather they are implicit in the arrangements of our relationships. Viewed in these terms, the goal of anarchism shifts from the elimination of power to the redistribution of power; from the eradication of The Power to the re-organization and re-arrangement of social relations so that power relations are symmetric.
The System is composed of our personal interactions. It is something like the sum total or composite of every one of our relationships. This fact has been known to anarchists for some time, and is the impetus for "civil rights" movements such as the feminist or anti-racist causes. We understand that "the personal is the political," and that the first step towards building an anarchist society is to examine our own personal relations for asymmetries in domination. This is not easy: a single relationship between a particular man and a particular woman, embedded in a global sexism, requires great care in order to be locally egalitarian. The global power structure reinforces local power relations. The good news is, of course, that local power relations reinforce global power structures as well, so if a man and a woman to achieve equality in a sexist society, that society is ever so slightly less sexist. It becomes more difficult when interacting in an institution like the employer/employee relationship: this relationship has been structured so that the employer cannot help but be exercising power over the employee.
.oOo.
The other point I'd like to elaborate is the conception of human nature. Humans are naturally competetive, the capitalists insist, and they claim capitalism best expresses human nature. No, the answer comes from various economic philosophers opposed to capitalism, human nature is naturally cooperative, and capitalist or statist institutions impede the cooperation humans naturally seek. Both of these beliefs rest on a basic fallacy: the independence of "human nature" from the social institutions.
To whatever extent we can speak of human nature (that is, to whatever extent a particular society allows us to collect certain human behaviors and declare them to be "human nature" and talk about this object thus defined), this human nature is constituted by social relations. Whatever capacities may be available to us biologically, our understanding and use of them is determined by society; this means the social, political, and economic institutions.
People born and raised in capitalist society are naturally competetive. And people born and raised in the state find themselves placed within a network of relationships of domination and submission. Our goal as anarchists is not to destroy those institutions that impede the expression of cooperative creativity that is our true nature; our goal as anarchists is to create new practices and organizations (I hesitate to use the word "institution," hesitate to connect the coming anarchy to the fossils that are raping our world) that constitute new human beings, create new human natures. As people leave the power structures of the capitalist state, and work their way into the power structures of anarchist groups (like Food Not Bombs or an Indymedia Collective, for example), they leave behind their competetive natures and are transformed. They learn new habits--habits of sharing, habits of neither being submissive or dominating.
My vision, as an anarchist, is that these groups that re-create persons into sharing, loving beings will grow; that eventually they will offer an attractive enough alternative to the people currently plugged into the great state machine that those people will disconnect, and let themselves be transformed.
Perhaps these notes were obvious. Perhaps I've wasted your time. In any case, thanks for your time.
Love, Fing
austin.indymedia.org/
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by T-Mex
Saturday, Nov. 02, 2002 at 4:24 PM
people on the Right are often ridiculed as having a "black and white" view of the world. . . yet here comes this "post-Foucauldian" suggesting that "capitalists see people as competive but anarchists see humans as cooperative".
Talk about a "black and white" view of things.
Capitalism of course thrives heavily on cooperation. A corporation is simply a group of people cooperatively creating products.
The key to capitalism is not competition, but VOLUNTARY CONDUCT.
Don't get it?
Lemme xplain.
In a capitalist economy, people are free to purchase their goods and services from whoever the want.
That is the key.
As a result of this. . . people will compete for the publics business, so that people will use their free will to buy, say Nikes over Reeboks.
The result is competition -- but the key is voluntariness. Without that, it doesn't work.
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by KPC
Saturday, Nov. 02, 2002 at 4:29 PM
..the Right is not ridiculed for having a black and white view of the world...the Right is ridiculed for being racist, facist stooges who put the profits of the few above the welfare of the country and its people.
...which is entirely accurate, of course...
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by Michael Gomez
Sunday, Nov. 03, 2002 at 11:30 AM
T-Mex, you use a rhetorical strategy common on the right. Put words in someone's mouth, and proceed to make an argument that distracts and misses the point entirely.
I think that the last few paragraphs of Fing's article could be misunderstood by someone looking to defend capitalism. The analogies of "competition" and "cooperation" were given in simple terms to illustrate the value judgments people often make when arguing for inherent "human natures." We make institutions and institutions continually remake us.
No more saying "that's the way it is and that's the way it's always been," anymore -- because no one buys it.
austin.indymedia.org
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by T-Mex
Sunday, Nov. 03, 2002 at 11:36 AM
which system of government has been better for the common man?
Capitalism, where workers enjoy the hightest standard of living in the world. . . where millions have gone from poverty to affluence. . . where Blacks enjoy the highest standard of living of Black people anywhere in the world. . .
Or communism, which resulted in poverty, enslavement and 100 million dead.
So, as for capitalism being racist, facist and putting profits above welfare. . . you just have checked the facts.
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by KPC
Sunday, Nov. 03, 2002 at 12:25 PM
Gee, douchebag, some choices...how about I pick "None of the Above"?
Tell me, SheMex, since you seem to have such close tabs on the deaths that Communism is responsible for, how many deaths is Capitalism responsible for over the last 500 years?
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