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Three years after its publication, "Empire"
has achieved the status of a pop classic. The book by
Michael Hardt and Antonio Negri can look back on sales
figures like no other radical book could in decades, and
also has succeeded in circulating various slogans and
labels. Its tone is quite academic for a bestseller,
though. Whereas the general discussion and the reception
in the feuilleton has been largely positive, if not
euphoric, the academic debate about "Empire"
has been rather critical.
The attention "Empire" has received can be
told from the vast amount of reviews: Apparentlyno political
journal could do without publishing a review. After
three years, it seems about time to make an interim
assessment of the debate. What are, apart from applause
and enthusiasm, the most important critical points of
critique having been brought forward against Hardt and
Negri? The following survey presents some of the central
theses of "Empire" and confronts them with
critique of its reviewers.
The multitude of critique
-"Empire": The nation state changes
its function, sovereignty is increasingly transferred
to a global empire, in which nation states are only
parts.
Criticism: The decline of nation states, above all the
US, is exaggerated (Henwood, Hirsch), the exposition
of the emerging empire is not very precise (Wissel/Buckel).
The phase of imperialism is not over, especially considering
the conduct of the USA after 9-11 (Brand, Brennan, Castronovo,
Callinicos, Chingo, Jahnke, Petras, Post, Wark).
-"Empire": Empire is a new phase of
capitalism, which is characterised by postmodern ways
of living, postfordist modes of production and the rule
of control society.
Criticism: There is no new phase replacing an old one,
but old ways of exploitation and domination continue
to exist alongside new forms (Bensaid, Hauer, Lemke).
The division of capitalist development in distinct phases
and paradigms suggests a stability, order and inner
cohesion within these paradigms, which downplays their
contradictions and instability (Bonnet, Hauer, Holloway).
By calling out a new phase, the criticism of left movements
of the past is cleverly circumvented: What happened
then was right for its time, according to Empire. It
is only today thateverything has changed, that old theories
lose their relevance. This discursive strategy makes
learning from the past impossible (Bernhard).
-"Empire": There is no clear distinction
between first and third world any longer, wealth and
poverty can be found everywhere.
Criticism: There are still drastic geographical differences,
capital attaches different importance to different areas.
The global south is underanalysed in "Empire",
it overgeneralises too much from conditions in the industrialised
countries (Arrighi, Boron, Callinicos, Chingo, Diefenbach,
Ludmer, Moore, Mutman). In general, "Empire"
underestimates the geograhical embeddedness of power
(Kirsch).
-"Empire": Empire follows a logic which
can be derived from the US constitution (openness, ability
to integrate the new).
Criticism: This paints a one-sided picture of the US
constitution as well as its use in practice (Panitch).
In addition, this line of reasoning declares political-juridical
theory instead of political economy or social forces
the moving principle of real phenomena (Bamyeh, Beasley-Murray,
Dyer, Hartmann, Jessop).
-"Empire": The evolution of capitalism
is driven by the resistance of the multitude, which
forces capital to reorganise production over and over
again.
Criticism: The emphasis on the conflict between labor
and capital (or multitude and empire) neglects competition
between capitalists as an important driving force behind
innovation and development (Callinicos, Chingo, Coates,
Kittsteiner, Panitch, Wolf). The sole emphasis on struggle
denies the existence of laws of movement of capitalism
(Callinicos, Jahnke). Apart from that, the thesis is
not applied consistently on all historical phases in
the book (Panitch).
The definition of the multitude is unclear and changes
within the book (Rapp). With the shimmering concept
of "multitude" every detailed engagement with
the composition, the contradictions, the origin and
the potential of resistance is neglected, the concept
does not provide any criteria for a discussion and assessment
of movements (Bernhard, Panitch, Wildcat). The necessity
of organisation and leadership for the movement is downplayed,
as well as the potential beneficial role of the state
(Bischoff, Marchart, Proyect).
-"Empire": Multitude and Empire stand
antagonistically against each another.
Criticism: Capital or rather Empire is not a subject,
but a social relation(ship), in which all subjects are
interwoven (Hirsch). Therefore the multitude can not
be a clean subject, which goes its way unpolluted by
dominant relationships. As can be seen in real life,
not all resistance is emancipatory, but often aspects
of domination like will to power, racism and sexism
are to be found within oppositional movements (Anne,
Arrighi, Dyer, Hauer, Lemke, Ricos). The restructuring
of capitalism also produces new divisions and hierarchies
between working people. The success of neoliberal ideology
and competition between individuals is underestimated
(Coates). "Empire"avoids engagement with regard
to historical fascism as well as with current right
wing populist movements (Benl, Bischoff, Olma).
By constructing two neatly separated opposing blocks,
"Empire" claims that power is something external
to people. This thesis is in contradiction to another
argument in the book – namely that we live in
an era of "real subsumption", in which all
areas of life are permeated by capitalism (Balakrishnan,
Hauer, Thoburn).
"Empire" goes so far as to argue that Empire
is not more than a parasite which steals profit from
the productive multitude – an argument that approaches
structural antisemitism (Benl, Hartmann, Kurz). In general,
"Empire" tends to employ simple dichotomies
instead of analysing things in their ambivalence (Lemke).
Maybe potential for change can rather be found in circumstances
and constellations which are typical for today as described
by Hardt/Negri, than in certain subjects (Diefenbach).
-"Empire": Civil society as an autonomous
sphere has withered away, Empire and multitude are positioned
against each other without any mediation.
Criticism: Intermediaries are still very important (Coates),
struggles within institutions are important, because
they prepare the terrain for more comprehensive and
aggressive struggles (Brand).
-"Empire": Immaterial labour is central
to today's production process. Cooperation, one of its
main features, has liberating potential for self organisation.
Criticism: The importance of immaterial labour is overstated
and is not statistically proved. "Empire"'s
argument relies too much on unchecked appropriation
of management propaganda of the new economy period,
Negri/Hardt's own analysis of the information society
is at times rather weak (Brennan, Galagher, Hauer, Henwood,
Panitch, Wildcat).
The concept of immaterial labour tries to subsume too
many heterogeneous practices (Diefenbach, Dyer, Levinson).
The centrality of immaterial labour for today's capitalism
does not necessarily imply its centrality for resistance
(Dyer).
The thesis has an elitist touch,which downplays the role
of the masses of material workers (Callinicos, Dörhöfer,
Olma).
The question of the content of the producing multitude's
creativity is not posed, the potential for self organisation
in communicative capabilities is overvalued, aspects
of domination within communication are neglected (Benl,
Hauer, Jappe, Kurz, Thoburn, Wassmer).
-"Empire": "Basic income for all"
is a key demand of the multitude.
Criticism: On the one hand, "Empire" is cricital
against groups defending the nation state against globalisation.
On the other hand, it propagates a basic income for
all. Who should pay out this basic income if not the
state? (Henwood, Rapp)
-"Empire": Capital shall acknowledge
the reality of migration and its dependence on it by
establishing a form of world citizenship.
Criticism: Negri/Hardt try to justify the demands for
a basic income and world citizenship with the productivity
of the multitude. This justification does not take the
individual and her needs as its starting point, but
her usefulness for capital, which is reactionary thinking
(Hauer, Kurz, Wissel/Buckel).
The call for world citizenship neglects the fact that
the illegalisation of migrants is the precondition for
their extreme exploitability by capital. Celebrating
the liberatory potential of migration overlooks a number
of things: its forced character in many cases (Anne,
Raunig), that the majority of people is not mobile (Mishra),
and that the experience of migration does not lead to
emancipatory thinking in many cases (Jappe). The reality
of the much appraised poor is barely analysed (Brennan).
-"Empire": The distinction between production
and reproduction is getting blurred, affective labour
formerly ascribed to women is now a requirement for
most jobs.
Criticism: Negri/Hardt idealise women's labour as egalitarian
and community oriented, but they do not provide an analysis
of gender relationships and sexual division of labour
(Schultz). The continuity resp. the extension of unpaid
reproductive work, which is mainly done by women, is
ignored (Schultz). Specifics of the everyday as basis
or impediments to political activity remain unanalysed
(Bernhard).
-Optimistic and visionary language of "Empire"
Criticism: Instead of criticising power, "Empire"
just reinterprets it and tries to attach optimistic
potential to it. But optimism is not appropriate and
just leads to an apology of existing power relations
(Brand, Castronovo, Callinicos, Conert, Fülberth), because
"Empire" proposes going with and going beyond
the existing society instead of rejecting it (Hartmann).
Too many metaphors, inaccuracies, exaggerations, religious
overtones and theory (and some of the theory engaged with in a misleading
way, above all Foucault (Hartmann)), not enough political
economy and empirics (Arrighi, Balakrishnan, Benl, Brand,
Burgio, Conert, Flood, Panitch, Wissel/Buckel). Theories
are employed by Hardt/Negri only selectively to justify
their theses, not as means of political analysis (Maniglier).
The five lines of critique
The first phase of debates about "Empire" is
now more or less over – the central points of
critique have been made. Within the left, critics can
be grouped into several categories:
First, there are those whose main difficulty is the
style of the book. The manifesto character of
"Empire", its visionary wording and its
sometimes rather free-wheeling use of citations stand in
contrast to a view of science which prefers acribic
stock taking and critique of the state of the world as
well as authentic use of classics, as well as to a
school of thought which locates itself in a minor and
powerless position vis à vis the the existing
power relations. In contrast, the style of Hardt/Negri
with its exaggerations and its drawing of sketches is an
attempt to consider scope of action within the struggles
going on in the world and to locate oneself as part of
political movements and contribute to shaping them
– a completely different approach to theory.
A second group of critics raises empirical arguments
against the theses put forward in "Empire",
some of them plausibly, some of them not quite.
A third line of critique is represented by competing
schools of thought, whose arguments are dominated by
defenses against new interpretations of reality (other
marxist schools, critics oriented on the party, trade
union and the state etc.). In the view of some of them,
the very success of "Empire" seems a sign for
its lack of quality and opportunism. The best of these
critiques serve the useful function of marking and
highlighting the differences between their and Hardt/Negri's
approaches and
thereby showing to the unaccustomed reader what is new
in "Empire".
An interesting fourth group highlights internal
contradictions within the book. No wonder that such an
ambitious work as "Empire" shows
inconsistencies - sometimes they are also just
ambivalences. To highlight these sometimes looks like
beancounting, but often provides valuable hints for
further thinking.
Up to now a fifth strand is still underdeveloped
– one that takes insights from "Empire"
for further thought and applies the concepts developed
therein on different areas, complements them and
develops them further.
How to proceed
A final judgement on "Empire" in the light
of criticism goes beyond my abilities. But does "Empire"
needto be defended after all?
Partly the authors have answered their critics (above
all in the special issue on "Empire" in the
journal "Rethinking Marxism" as well as in
countless interviews): The claim of the centrality of
immaterial labour does not refer to the number of
immaterial jobs, but to its centrality in qualitative
terms. "Empire" does not claim the decline of
the nation state, but its changing function. The thesis
of the dissolution of the Third World does not imply the
growing homogeneity of the world, but the claim that
hierarchies are not developing along national boundaries
any more. And finally: Yes, after 9-11 there has been an
imperalist backlash in the USA (the crisis which 9-11
implies for "Empire" can be told from a
strange article that Michael Hardt has published in The
Guardian. There he calls on global elites to realise
that a decentralised Empire is a better form of rule
than an imperialist war. Funny, in a way.). Partly, the
lines of thought presented in "Empire" has
found followers in political movements and theory
circles which now argue with critics in different fora
and contexts. On top of that, Hardt/Negri work on a
sequel to their book – Empire, part two. As it
should be for a blockbuster...
But why should one expect from the two to present a
complete and consistent explanation of the world today,
which convinces everybody? A lot is shaky in their
theoretical building, like in all other theories –
that's the way it is in the business of social theory.
Not every proposition in "Empire" has to be
defended – but the principal approach and the
central impluses well enough. Because "a theory is
as good as the things one can do with them", Katja
Diefenbach reminds us citing Deleuze/Guattari, "and
you can do a lot of things with
"Empire"." The call to unrest, the
constant search for ruptures and connections, the
exploration of possibilities and proposition of
political projects in new constellations – these
impulses are well worth pursuing.
Now it remains to be seen whether the first phase of
critique will be followed by a second phase of
productive engagement, further development and political
effects of the "Empire" impulse. Such a
process can not be confined to books. Because the
fundamental questions can only be answered by political
movements. Multitude, get moving!
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