| A multiple name is "a name that anyone
can use": those who introduced it, whether they are
known or unknown, single persons or groups expressly claim
neither a monopoly on its use nor any kind of copyright.
Yet a name like this can be more than simply the expression
of the fact that its users wish to remain anonymous: while
the name as an expression of anonymity can also be merely
a lacuna, a sign without a meaning of its own, it can
still become a powerful signifier if it is linked with
a certain, recognizable and identifiable praxis. It then
designates not only this (artistic, political, religious)
praxis, but also binds it simultaneously to the figure
of an imaginary person. As the praxis becomes recognizable
and filled with life, this person also comes alive. The
figure gains contours, attains a history, a myth. As people
enter into this history and take part in the practices
that are linked with the multiple names, they actually
become part of the imaginary and collective person: the
praxis of the individual is imbued with power through
the collective myth and simultaneously reproduces it.
And conversely, if this praxis loses its contours and
signifying power, the collective person, in which it is
embodied, also dies.
The multiple name cancels out the separation between
the individual and the collective. It magically grants
a share in the collective figure of the imaginary person,
in which the movement and power of an invisible mass
are embodied. The mass attains shape, becomes an active
subject in the form of the imaginary person. The name-less
oppressed have made use of this principle again and
again. It comes up, for example, in the peasant revolts:
in 1514 peasants in southern Germany went to fight in
the name of "Poor Konrad".
Yet it was not a leader that the revolting mass that
was thus embodied: every one of them was "Poor
Konrad", who now stood up against his oppression.
In early 19th century England, the multiple name of
"General Ludd" embodied the oppressed. As
the imaginary leader of attacks against the new machines,
he directly his rarely empty threats against the capitalist
agents of modern forms of exploitation. Although (or
specifically because) "General Ludd's" movement
had no fixed organizational form, it was able to continue
to strike fear in the hearts of the exploiters for years.
Whereas "General Ludd" was neither a real
person, nor did he stand for a fixed organization, later
forms of workers' organization followed the bourgeois
separation between the individual and collective praxis.
The collective (the proletariat, etc.) becomes an abstract
and hierarchically managed affair. Its symbolic power
is no longer manifested directly in the praxis of each
individual. The carriers of this power are, at best,
a small few "outstanding" individuals, who
function as leaders, heroes, role models. At the present,
it is not a coincidence that the idea of multiple names
appears where the bourgeois cult of the outstanding
individual is most pronounced, specifically in the field
of art. When a multiple name is used as an artist's
name, this precludes the attribution of a work to an
individual author. The Neoists made logical and
consistent use of this principle. In this case, artist
names such as Harry Kipper were transformed into multiple
names, whereas other names like Monty Cantsin, along
with the concomitant myths, are to be regarded as conscious
products of the Neoist art praxis. Finally, the creation
of the collective myth of Luther Blissett should
be mentioned as the most important postsituationist
art work, whereby recourse is taken, as in the case
of Karen Eliot, to the name of an existent person. A
particularly insidious attack on bourgeois subject concepts
is to transform real individuals into collective persons
without their knowledge of it or even against their
will. A popular example of this: a praxis that is relatively
easy to learn is to sing badly wearing a blonde wig
and sunglasses. It was thus inevitable that the first
Heino [a well-known German singer] was followed by a
second (the real ...) and then many others. Another
example is the attempt to abruptly transform the bourgeois
election candidate for the mayor of Zurich, Andreas
Müller, into a collective person - to become part of
this person, it was sufficient to be named Müller and
appear on a ballot under this name.
A multiple name also comes up in a current political
context. On of the most brilliant media-strategic achievements
of the Zapatista guerillas of Chiapas was to make the
name of their speaker Subcomandante Marcos a collective
name ("We are all Marcos").
In this way, they not only continued the deconstruction
of the principle of the revolutionary or guerilla leader,
which was already incipient in the title "subcomandante",
at the same time they also created a new form of collective
myth: the person of the real guerrilla remains without
a determinable, defined history. The recognizable attributes
such as ski mask and uniform do not disguise his true
role as an empty sign, but instead even emphasize it.
This void can be filled with innumerable narratives
and legends, specifically because the real person remains
blurred. In this process, the collective myth "Marcos"
became the omnipresent carrier of the most diverse meanings,
an expression and point of identification for subversive
and sexual fantasies (These may express the symbolic
potency of the collective person most clearly: although
neither his face nor his body was ever to be seen, Marcos
was voted the "most attractive" man in Mexico).
Ultimately, with the cry "We are Marcos too",
tens of thousands of people were able to take to the
streets and articulate themselves politically.
Here the myth of "El Sub" clearly differs
from that of an individual hero such as Che Guevra:
a statement like "I am Che Guevara too" would
be merely nonsensical. The rulers in Mexico understood
exactly how the collective myth and its concomitant
magical praxes functioned. This is evident in their
desperate (and unsuccessful) attempts to find the individual
that was "really" behind the name Marcos and
show his face, in order to reduce the collective myth
to a bourgeois individual.
The origin of multiple names is lost in the mists of
history, referring to ancient religious and magical
practices. The oldest of these names that is still living
already demonstrates the principle perfectly clearly:
everyone has always and naturally been Buddha. At the
same time, however, participation in the collective
person is mediated through a praxis: "By realizing
the praxis of Buddha, you are the same as Buddha. You
see with the same eyes, hear with the same ears, and
speak with the same mouth. There is not the slightest
difference."
The use of multiple names is thus almost a pristine
way of taking recourse to archaic forms, which question
the separation between the individual and the collective:
multiple names are not primarily forms of anonymity
(as such they are not better than no name at all), but
rather the most radical attack imaginable on modern
concepts of bourgeois subjectivity and identity. They
vividly demonstrate that these concepts are only illusions
that are alien to the nature of the human being. In
this way, they manifest the timeless truth of the ideas
that human identity is nothing other than the articulation
and intersection of collective praxes, that there is
no human nature outside these. However, the real subversive
power of the multiple name only shows itself, of course,
in concrete praxis: You become Luther Blissett too!
Translated by Aileen Derieg
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