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Vienna December 8-10,2000
What is to be Done?
[Burning questions for our movement]
Nova Scotia College of Art and Design
Please forgive me for being a little provocative in
titling this short paper after the famous pamphlet by V.I. Lenin published
almost a century ago. In his text Lenin outlined in detail several problems
within the social democracy and labour movements in pre-Revolutionary
Russia, and argued strenuously for the institution of an all-Russian political
newspaper. In so doing, he affirmed the signal role of the media: writers,
artists, designers, photographers, the bourgeois intelligentsia, in fomenting
revolutionary activity on the part of the masses. On some important levels
Lenin echoes the thought of the utopian socialist Fourier, who was among
the first to argue that artists should form the advance wing of the (political)
avant-garde, a position that you may agree has become increasingly hollow
in recent years. In What is to be done, Lenin discussed also the problems
of organization within the social democracy movement, struggle and political
agitation, what today we would call patterns of resistance, action and
intervention in the public sphere. He affirmed that "without revolutionary
theory there can be no there can be no revolutionary movement (practice)"(28).
Following the example of Frederick Engels (Der Deutsche Bauernkrieg,
(The German Peasant War 1875), he reinforced the need for theoretical
struggle to be placed on par with the political and economic. "Three
co-ordinated and interconnected sides, the theoretical, the political
and the practical/ economic"(31).
In this paper I will briefly explore the terms and conditions of oppositional,
what I prefer to call operative art practice. This will necessitate
a negotiation of the political efficacy of strategic (exemplary), interventionist,
instrumental and communicative actions. Unfortunately, there is no time
here to link this discussion to the practical problems of the historical
avant-garde as these have been constituted within the past century but
perhaps there will be opportunities to engage with these issues in discussions
during throughout the symposium.
Strategic (exemplary) actions, as forms of agitational protest and/or
resistance, were criticised by many groups who participated in the events
of May 1968, in Paris, Nanterre, and other so-called countercultural demonstrations
in various urban contexts throughout the 1960's. These actions were criticized,
not only for their implicit absence of theory, but also their anarcho-individualistic,
heroic and spectacular character. Advocates argued that the exemplary
action has a symbolic use value that is only fully understood after the
event - usually as a result of mediation (framing) through the media -
and that its spontaneous unprogrammed character encourages the fusion
of various political tendencies that otherwise would not coalesce as collective
protest. Exemplary subversive actions however often precipitated the reproduction
of the vicious cycle of provocation-repression, ironically identified
to those engaged
in this form of social protest, as a mark of success. Like the union tactic
of the wildcat strike (the-illegal strike), the repression precipitated
by such actions is usually so severe that it blocks the formation of all
other types of legitimate protest. Furthermore, these subversive actions
often serve to reproduce the very mechanisms of authority at which they
are aimed.
By way of contrast, intervention (instrumental action), allow a range
of critical and/or resistant strategies to be attempted without (usually)
precipitating a crisis or "culture war" of the kind evident
recently in the U.S., Canada and elsewhere. In the form of a interruption
or mediative action. a cultural intervention within a context characterized,
for example, by its resistance to change, may encourage several positions
(and responses) to be adopted by those engaged in the enactment or performance
of social protest, as well as those at which it is aimed. The major problem
is that the intervention may simply remain at the level of theory, instead
of engendering (and engineering) an authentic state of praxis on the part
of those participating.
The origin of the use of the term intervention in the discourse of art
can be traced to the writings of Karl Marx, specifically his famous "11th
Thesis on Feuerbach" (1845). Here Marx argued that "The philosophers
have only interpreted the world in various ways; the point is to change
it." Almost a century later Bertolt Brecht paraphrased Marx with:
"The theatre became an affair for philosophers, but only for those
philosophers as wished not just to explain the world, but also to change
it." In his famous essay "The Author as Producer" Walter
Benjamin, Brecht's contemporary, extolled the virtues of the operative
artist, providing as his example the communist author Sergei Tretiakov
"whose mission was not to simply report but to struggle; not to play
the spectator but to intervene actively" (Benjamin, W 1969: 223;
emphasis added). Benjamin's prognosis for the political project of the
photographer was similar: "What we should demand of the photographer
is the text that would wrench his (sic) work from modish commerce and
give it some revolutionary useful values." Benjamin's concept of
the operative artist "intervening actively" implies both the
subordination of any impulse to aestheticise and the ordination of critical
agency. In other words it could be characterised as a post-aesthetic strategy,
one which nonetheless could contain those values nominally subsumed under
several aesthetic ideologies.
In the late 1950's the International Situationists (I.S)
endorsed Brecht's and Benjamin's operative/interventional projects for
artists committed to social change. In the very first issue of the I.S.
review outlining the situationist project, they endorsed the fundamental
importance of intervention as a post-theoretical and practical aspect
of their critique of the (Debordian) society of the spectacle.
The constructed situation is bound to be collective both in its inception
and development. However it seems that at least during an initial experimental
period, responsibility must fall on one particular individual. This individual
must, so to speak, be the 'director' of the situation. For example, in
terms of one particular situationist project - revolving around the meeting
of several friends one evening - one would expect (a) an initial period
of research by the team, (b) the election of a director responsible for
the co-ordinating the basic elements for the construction of the decor
etc., and for working out a number of interventions, all of them unaware
of all the details planned by the others), (c) the actual people living
the situation who have taken part in the whole project both theoretically
and practically, and (d) a few passive spectators not knowing what the
hell is going on should be reduced to action
If exemplary actions, are without theory; interventions
attempt to put theory into action, to wed theory to practice. Both are
intrinsically related to one another, as was understood clearly by those
who participated in the occupations, sit-ins, teach ins, theatrical agit-prop
events and other forms of protest evident during the 1960's. However,
the intentions and ultimately the "audience" response are different.
The exemplary action consists, instead of intervening in an overall way,
in acting in a much more concentrated way on exemplary objectives, on
a few key objectives that will play a determining role in the continuation
of the struggle.
Fig.6
Fig.6 GENERAL CHARACTERISTICS OF ACTIONS
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EXEMPLARY/STRATEGIC ACTION
Anarchic/individualistic action
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INTERVENTION/
INSTRUMENTAL ACTION
collective/collaborative or participatory in form
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spontaneous
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Planned
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dynamic/direct/focused action
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exhibits less dynamism/ indirect
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absence of theory
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theory laden/movement toward praxis
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induces repression/
confrontation
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integrative, mediative/ interruptive/provocative
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cathartic
provocative
dialectical
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non-cathartic
attempts to lessen provocation/encourage dialogue
usually undialectical
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theatrical
spectacular
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Performative
non-spectacular
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The table of oppositions above represents general differences
between two types of political action [performance], configured as acts
of protest or resistance. Depending upon the circumstances and the type
of event, intervention can become an exemplary action, and thus devolve
into a form of political posturing, closely implicated in extreme versions
of behaviour characterised by violence, anarchic rejection or destructive
nihilism.
The meaning of these distinctions becomes patently clear, of course, when
we consider the use of the terms direct/strategic action and intervention
in either the power vocabularies of the State and special interest (terrorist)
groups. Intervention as indirect action is usually precipitous, and as
historical events have testified, intervention as a euphemism for neo-colonial
incursion can lead to forms of local resistance that will eventually lead
to armed struggle and ultimately war. Intervention as (strategic interruption),
particularly when it is used by a group attempting to counter or resist
the power exhibited by another group, that is in control, is very different
from the interventions used by a controlling group attempting to reinforce
its control. When employed as political rhetoric by the state, intervention
is usually synonymous with incursion, an action that will reproduce/reform,
or transform already existing or previously extant power relations. C.I.A.
incursions (interventions) in Chile in the early seventies, Nicaragua,
Bermuda and elsewhere in Central America, as well as more recently Russian
intervention in Chechnya and its other republics, attest to the major
differences between the two. Interventionist strategies employed by the
left attempt to interrupt the passive consumption of the dominant ideologies
and contest the hegemony of the state, whereas the interventionist strategies
used by the right tend to reproduce them, thus exercising or maintaining
their control.
Communicative action is very different from direct action or intervention,
although it may seem to employ some of the characteristics of both. Jurgen
Habermas, who has arguably done more than anyone to theorise various forms
of political action within the public sphere, distinguishes between strategic,
instrumental and communicative actions. The distinction, he argues, between
actions that are oriented toward success and those toward understanding
is crucial.
in strategic actions one actor seeks to influence the behaviour
of another by means of the threat of sanctions or the prospect of gratification
in order to cause the interaction to continue as the first actor desires,
Whereas
in a communicative action one actor seeks rationally to motivate another
by relying on the illocutionary binding/bonding effect (Bindungseffekt)
of the offer contained in the speech act (Habermas, 1990:58).
Habermas distinguishes between openly strategic actions and those that
are covertly strategic; the first involves the systematic distortion of
an event and unconscious deception on the part of the participants, the
second involving various types of conscious deception, is manipulative
and therefore inherently propagandistic.
In another passage Habermas asserts that:
communicative actions (occur) when social interactions are co-ordinated
not through the egocentric calculations of success of every individual
but through co-operative achievements of understanding among participants.
(Habermas in Thompson and Held 1982:264)* (emphasis added)
He argues that art has an important place as a critical mediating agent
in what he terms "the decolonising process"; How art could,
or should mediate decolonisation is less clear in his work. If science,
philosophy and art are thoroughly institutionalised and therefore subjected
to increasing ideological incursion by what he terms "the legitimating
practices of the state", how can any one `sphere' - such as art -
become the privileged site for communicative action? The question then,
he wrote in 1983 "is how to overcome the isolation of science, morals
and art and their respective expert cultures" (1983,90:19), and return
them to the public sphere.
Habermas has consistently affirmed that art, along with philosophy, law,
politics and economics, are important sites for mediation, communicative
rationality and pragmatic action. He is somewhat ambivalent however about
the extent to which this can occur in an institution that the forces of
an increasingly technocratic and bureaucratic modernity have rendered
into increasing autonomy from the life world. As a Kantian, he has remained
somewhat resolute in his defence of the separation of pure and practical
reason from aesthetic judgement.
In modern societies, the spheres of science, morality, and law have crystalised
around these forms of argumentation (instrumental reason). The corresponding
cultural systems of action administer problem solving capacities in a
way similar to that in which the enterprises of art and literature administer
capacities for world disclosure. (Habermas,1987:207).
It is clear from this last statement, employed in his extended critique
of Derrida's purported collapsing of the genre distinction between literature
and philosophy, that while Habermas views art and culture generally as
an important locus for theoretical attention, he maintains a boundary
between forms of communicative action that can occur within the spheres
of political, legal or philosophical discourse, and those that can occur
within the domain of art and literature. For Habermas art remains at the
level of representation, distanced from the material reality and "spatio-temporal
structures" of the life world, and as such, can not be considered
as ideal a site as is language - or rather speech - for the deployment
of communicative action.
At an early stage in the development of his communication theory, Habermas
recognised the inherent problematic of communicative actions that do not
offer the possibility of their own (dialectical) transformation. While
his system/lifeworld paradigm could adequately describe the instrumental
logic behind the progressive development of administrative bureaucratisation
and the economic forces driving the conflict(s) between the system and
the lifeworld, communicative actions, wrongly used, could have, as his
intellectual mentor Walter Benjamin himself understood, wholly undesirable
consequences.
With his Frankfurt School mentors, Habermas does recognise a important
place for art as a critical mediating agent in the decolonising process;
however, how art could, or should mediate is less clear. "The issue
now", he writes in 1983 "is how to overcome the isolation of
science, morals and art and their respective expert cultures" (1983,90:19),
and return them to the pubic sphere. By the early 1980's it seemed as
if Habermas was beginning to heed Marx's injunction in his Theses on Feuerbach.
And by this time he had fully articulated the restrictions wrought upon
life world activities by the hegemony of expert cultures and their rarefied
exclusive esoteric languages. However Habermas' own work as a philosopher
still remained somewhat distanced from that very life world which he so
wished to protect.
I agree, somewhat, with Terry Eagleton's prognosis that as an academic
Habermas is "aloofly remote from the sphere of political action"
but that his work as an intellectual represents a "political strike
for the life-world against administrative rationality." Eagleton
however, also generously admits that:
...art itself is for Habermas one crucial place where the jeopardized
resources of moral and affective life may be crystalized; and in the critical
discussion of such art, a kind of shadowy public sphere may be re-established,
and so mediating between the separate Kantian spheres of the cognitive,
moral and aesthetic. (Eagelton, 1990:402)
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