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Richard J.F. Day, Gramsci is Dead:
Anarchist Currents in the Newest
Social Movements (Toronto/London: Between the Lines/Pluto Press,
2005)
Reviewed by Roger Farr
The Rain 4:1 (Winter 2006): 8
It appears that Antonio Gramsci’s death certificate has been signed by
anarchists.
In Gramsci is Dead: Anarchist
Currents in the Newest Social Movements, Richard Day reassesses
from an anarchist perspective the “logic of hegemony” that unites
classical Marxism and liberalism, and declares that this logic has been
“exhausted” by recent social movements. To support his argument that
certain strains of contemporary struggle have broken with this logic in
favour of “direct affinity” and “structural renewal”, terms he recovers
from Landauer and Kropotkin, Day examines several examples of
autonomous organizing and offers new readings, informed by
post-structuralism and autonomist theory, of classical anarchism.
Achieving an admirable balance between the demands of high-theory and
the need to make his argument comprehensible, Day makes an important
contribution to social theory in general, and to “post-anarchist”
theory in particular. While this book is certain to be controversial
among activists (the critique of “the politics of demand and
recognition”), academics (the truncated argument and polemical tone)
and anarchists of every stripe (the authority granted to Marxist theory
at the expense of the diverse, contemporary anarchist movement), in
short, Day’s entire audience, it should nevertheless be read by anyone
who is serious about creating radical, anti-authoritarian alternatives
to the market and the state.
Gramsci is Dead is organized
inductively. The first chapter examines a number of “do-it-yourself”
tendencies, from crusty punks to social centres to direct action
casework. Here Day draws extensively on interviews, conducted as part
of the Affinity Project
(affinityproject.org) at Queen’s University in
Ontario, with people actually involved in these struggles. This
information and context is then put on the back burner for a couple of
chapters, while Day surveys the theory of hegemony from Gramsci and
Lenin to Laclau and Mouffe. Chapters four and five evaluate “Utopian
Socialism Then ... and Now”. Chapter four offers a reading of classical
anarchist theory that reasserts much of Engels’ criticism brought
against anarchism in “Socialism: Utopian and Scientific”, while chapter
five uses concepts derived from Deleuze and Guattari and Foucault to
rescue select anarchists (Landauer and Kropotkin) from the old dustbin.
The last two chapters link this new “post-anarchist” subjectivity
(exemplified in the figure of Deleuze and Guattari’s “smith”) to “the
coming communities” (Agamben). The book culminates in a call for a
post-hegemonic “affinity of affinities”—a “groundless solidarity” (18)
between the global North and South; the latter, Day argues, has already
provided the initiative and guidance for how to realize the coming
“exodus” from neoliberalism (148-9).
Rather than analyze the details of Day’s argument, it would be more
practical in this short review to focus on the two terms that provide a
structure to his discussion: “hegemony” and “affinity”. The preliminary
definition of hegemony Day offers is “a process through which various
factions struggle for meaning, identity and political power” (6).
Hegemonic political strategies are those which seek to achieve their
effects over the widest terrain possible, and as such they are closely
bound to the nation state. While the term hegemony tends to be equated
with words like “domination”, “subjugation”, “coercion” and
“oppression”, carrying negative connotations, it is important to note
that in Gramsci’s work, hegemony is used positively, because it is
always consensual and “popular”. Whereas early uses of the term refer
only to the political domination of one group by another, perhaps by
the use of military force, the Gramscian theory, which makes some
significant departures from objectivist Marxism, holds that hegemony
must constantly be reproduced through the coordination and maintenance
of voluntary social alliances to ensure that antagonistic classes
internalize a set of perceived “common interests”. An example might be
unions fighting to keep a factory open to protect jobs, while the state
acts as “neutral” mediator between workers and owners. Here, the
hegemony of production is secured through a perceived coincidence of
interests (jobs) between labour and capital, even though such an
arrangement clearly perpetuates the exploitation of one group by the
other. For Gramsci, and many of his later “post-Marxist” followers,
this meant that it was necessary to develop political and cultural
“strategies” to help the proletariat to assert its hegemony over
society. If successful, this proletarian hegemony would in turn
dominate all forms of cultural and political expression, providing a
“correct” hegemonic social relation.
Day believes that the logic of hegemony has itself assumed a hegemonic
function in social and cultural theory, leading to what Jeremy
Valentine has called “the hegemony of hegemony”. This is not simply a
clever coinage: Day is convincing when he returns to Locke and to Marx
and Engels to show how the logic of hegemony has made it difficult to
imagine modes of opposition outside its scope. For example, Day shows
how the “reform or revolution” debate between Marxists and liberals is
in fact animated by a shared logic of hegemony (as always,
interlocutors need some sort of common ground to carry out a debate).
While reform-oriented struggles (Day includes post-Marxist calls for
“radical democracy” here) demand that the state “recognize” various
individual “rights” in the form of laws or policies intended to cover a
national terrain in one massive sweep, such struggles leave the
sovereignty or legitimacy of the state intact. More specifically, such
juridico-democratic initiatives, in Day’s analysis, actually help to increase
the state’s hegemony. With
each “compromise” it makes, the state (on behalf of capital) redeems
itself as “responsive” and “inclusive”; meanwhile, it uses this
improvement to its “legitimate” power to further combat and/or capture
anti-statist autonomy wherever it appears. Likewise, when revolutionary
leftists imagine overthrowing, or seizing, the state or its
apparatuses, they also, in Day’s analysis, are working within the logic
of hegemony. At best, such revolutionary schemes can aspire to develop
“counter-hegemonic” strategies that basically substitute one form of
hegemony with another. Insofar as they both seek to universalize, or hegemonize,
their political
programs en masse via
institutional, national and even supranational structures, liberalism
and Marxism have much more in common than they might wish to recognize.
So what is the alternative to the logic of hegemony? To answer this
question, Day turns to German anarchist Gustav Landauer to recover the
concepts of “affinity” and “structural renewal”. In a remarkably
prophetic tract published in 1910, titled “Destroying the State by
Creating Socialism”, Landauer declares that radicals should “under no
circumstances have anything to do with politics”, which he defines as
“the rule of the privileged with the help of fictions” (a formulation
which precedes Gramsci’s use of “hegemony” by several decades).
In place of such “politics”, Landauer calls for a “direct affinity of
real interests”, an anti-political defection from any dependence on, or
expectations of, the state or the party, a decisively anarchist
sentiment one could trace back further to Kropotkin’s 1887 essay “Act
for Yourselves”. Although it presents itself as a “thing”, for Landauer
the state was more effectively resisted when it was understood as “a relationship
between human beings,
a way by which people relate to one another”. Anarchists can destroy
this thing-that-is-not-a-thing, Landauer argues, by “entering into new
relationships, by behaving
differently, [because] we are the state—and are it as long as we
are not otherwise, as long as we have not created the institutions that
constitute a genuine community and society of human beings.”
Day believes that Landauer’s call for “direct affinity of real
interests” is being answered a century later. Arguing that the tactics
of the “newest social movements” (i.e. post-1980s) are “not oriented to
allowing a particular group of people [read “class”] to remake a nation
state or a world in its own image”, Day concludes that such movements
are attempts to “determine the conditions of [our] own existence, while
allowing and encouraging others to do the same” (13). While this might
sound like wishy-washy relativism, it is important to note that by
“others”, Day means other projects that are rooted in autonomy,
de-colonization, and “affinity-based practices” (13). His examples of
such projects include “asambelistas
in Argentina, LPM activists in South Africa, Zapatista villagers in
Chiapas, Mohawk warriors within/against North America, squatters in
London” (203).
In the end, Day wants his readers to affirm the “groundless solidarity”
which links these various struggles for autonomy and self-determination
to one another, across or beyond any central axis of identity (19). In
this respect, his conclusion resembles the one made by the autonomist
Marxists, where social groups struggle to overcome their decomposition
by normalized categories and divisions (class, gender, race) through a
shared opposition to capitalist accumulation, except that here, the
concept of “infinite responsibility”, a rather heady ethico-political
form of contract borrowed from Derrida and Levinas, facilitates the
articulation of linkages across “decentralized networks of
alternatives” (210).
I wish that at this crucial point, instead of returning to the
post-structuralists, Day had found a way to integrate into his
concluding chapters the diverse perspectives of the contemporary
anarchist milieu he
touches on in the first chapter. In particular, I would have liked to
have seen a discussion of the affinity-based projects he uses as
examples (asambelistas,
Zapatistas, indigenous warrior societies) in the context of the often
overlooked green, insurrectionary and post-situationist critiques of
technology, organization and the spectacle. This was a missed golden
opportunity in a book that otherwise makes a significant contribution
to anarchist theory. Hopefully subsequent writers will be able to add
this component to the valuable spade-work Day has done for us.