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Introducing –
Pil and Galia Kollectiv,
one sixth of Mute's
ensemble music column

covering sonic adventures
across genres and time.
Email: info AT kollectiv.co.uk

Mute music column


No Room to Move
nils norman

No Room to Move: Radical Art and the Regenerate City
A fistful of research on the state of critical public art in the maelstrom of New Labour's regeneration programmes.
By Josephine Berry Slater and Anthony Iles


The Archipelago of Immateriality Editorial content | Articles
Submitted by mute on Monday, 8 May, 2006 - 16:55

The Melancholic Troglodytes, et al.

Last weekend Mute visited the dreaming spires of Kings College, Cambridge for the conference 'Immaterial Labour, Multitudes and New Social Subjects: Class Composition in Cognitive Capitalism'. With the high-priests (Negri and Lazzarato) jumping ship at the last minute, the conference struggled to bridge the divide between the historical legacy of the rigorous and innovative Autonomist and Post-Autonomist movements and the acolytes who inherit, but don't advance on, some of their key interests : immaterial labour, the multitude and the common. Over the next few weeks we will be collecting some short responses to the conference. The Melancholic Troglodytes kick off claiming that some Autonomist Marxists are openly making overtures to neo-social democracy and Richard Barbrook, whose response follows, concurs, but commends them for it! See also Chris Carlsson's report reposted here from his blog 'Attitude Adjustor' in which, amongst numerous other things, he laments the obliviousness of conference speakers and attendees to the ecological disaster currently unfolding and its systematic subordination to the more pressing questions of 'class, wages, structures of production'

Response 1.

By The Melancholic Troglodytes

The Melancholic Troglodytes felt there were two fundamental and interrelated problems with the Immaterial Labour Conference [henceforth ILC]: first, the mode of organising was (at best) a Zone of Bourgeois Development (ZBD), and second, the content of Autonomist Marxism seemed impoverished. We will elaborate on these two problems below:

Problem of organising

Neo-Vygotskians have made a distinction between two different ways of organising, the Zone of Bourgeois Development (ZBD) and the Zone of Proletarian Development (ZPD). The Zone of Bourgeois Development (ZBD) is a convergence space for modern science, technology and academia. Its endpoint is the creation of instrumentalist knowledge and bourgeois individualism. Its historical midwives were rationalism, positivism and empiricism. The ZBD has three main characteristics, namely, organisational dualism, organisational fetishism and organisational religiosity.

The ILC is not a party or a permanent organisation; it was just a weekend conference and a semi-permanent network of associates. Therefore it suffered more from organisational dualism than fetishism or religiosity. Organisational dualism manifests itself in a number of dichotomies as for instance the one between intellect and emotion which Leninist, Anarchist and Social Democratic parties have historically resolved through the mind-body metaphor. The mind or brain (the party’s central committee) takes care of decision making whilst the rank-and-file provide the emotional demiurge for enacting the committee’s decisions. It leads to the creation of specialisms and control of one-way (monologic) communication by experts.

Melancholic Troglodytes were not expecting anything other than a ZBD at Cambridge. We went there fully cognisant of what we were getting ourselves into. If you want a ZPD (characterised by Joint-Dialectical activity and organisational Heterogeneity and organisational Carnivalesque) you have to create it yourself. However, we were expecting a competent ZBD- one that delivers according to its own limited and anaemic criteria of communication and development. Sadly, we felt we did not even get that. What we had most of the time was a Zone of Bourgeois (under) Development. The reasons for this failure are connected to the second major problem of the ILC.

Impoverishment of thought

Autonomist Marxism is finished! That is not to say it was once a revolutionary trend because it was always enmeshed in leftism. But in the 1960s and parts of the 1970s it had life, ideas, dynamism and a real connection to the class struggle. Since then its various factions have become guardians of theoretical orthodoxies and keener to defend their territory than say or do anything new. Autonomist Marxism which made some genuine attempts to break free of structuralist Stalinism has today collapsed back onto the Leninist terrain. One faction - what we witnessed at Cambridge- has become the post-structuralist Stalinist wing which is now openly making overtures to neo-social democracy. The other faction (Negri, etc) is gravitating toward wishy-washy post-modernist Leninist-Trotskyism and is also making overtures to neo-social democracy but more covertly.

Conclusion

It saddens Melancholic Troglodytes to see this degeneration. We used to rely on Autonomism for a good deal of our thinking, since no one group can solve all the complex problems of the class struggle alone. We will continue to read and perhaps even learn from Autonomism in a limited way. But no amount of trendy vocabulary and no amount of super-celebrity performances can hide the fact that Autonomism as a viable project is now well and truly dead. Perhaps the onus is on the rest of us to create an alternative.


Response 2.

by Richard Barbrook

Kautsky in Cambridge

‘How was the conference?’, Simon asked. ‘Very interesting’, I replied. ‘The Autonomists have finally come out of the closet as reformists!’ At the opening session of the Immaterial Labour conference in Cambridge, Andrea Fumagalli had told us that Toni Negri and the other gurus of the movement now advocated a commendably pragmatic political programme: a guaranteed income for all citizens; employment rights for precarious workers; the democratisation of the European Union; and more environmental protection. ‘As left-wing members of the Labour party’, I pointed out, ‘we can no longer criticise the Autonomists. Their policies are also our policies!’ 

I continued, ‘It’s particularly good to see that – after 25 years – the Autonomists have at long last aligned their practice with their theory.’ Back in the early-1980s, Simon and I had both diligently studied the Red Notes booklets which had first made available the key texts by Negri, Tronti and their comrades to an English-speaking audience. What was then so striking about the writings of the Autonomists was their engagement with Marx’s critique of political economy. Unlike their Althusserian and Trotskyist peers, these Italian leftists did have something intelligent to say about the neo-liberal restructuring of capitalism. However, at this point, the Autonomists’ admiration for Marx’s theory didn’t extend to his practice. Far from being social democrats, they took pride in their revolutionary intransigence. Autonomism was the extreme left of the Ultra-Left.

‘What was the comrades’ reaction to Andrea Fumagalli’s speech?’ Simon asked. ‘As you might have guessed’, I replied, ‘it didn’t go down very well with most of his audience. For the old school, it was a betrayal of the holy precepts of Autonomism. For the younger generation, it was a bit like going to see Johnny Rotten and discovering that he had always been a Bee Gees fan!’ ‘What did they expect?’, Simon exclaimed. ‘It was obvious that Autonomism was reformist right from the beginning. Haven’t they ever read Negri’s article on Keynes from the mid-1970s? If you – correctly – point out that ‘effective demand’ is a euphemism for working class struggle, then you’re arguing in favour of social democracy!’

‘Maybe’, I mused, ‘their horrified reaction proves that the revolutionary image of Autonomism was always more important than its theoretical achievements? It can’t be an accident that its acolytes prefer reading the Grundrisse to Capital. If they carefully studied the chapter on the Factory Acts in Volume 1, they would realise that Marx himself was a social democrat!’

‘So was your visit to Cambridge worthwhile?’, Simon enquired. ‘Back in the early-1980s, we might have disagreed with their politics, but we always enjoyed going to their conferences.’ ‘Of course’, I responded. ‘It’s not just our politics which have converged. Do you remember the cyber-communism article which I wrote in the late-1990s for the McLuhan conference in New York? At the time, it was meant as a satirical piece: America invented the only working model of communism in human history – it’s called the Net! Well, you’ll be pleased to hear that there were two excellent papers at the conference which put forward the same argument.’ ‘Very good’, Simon said. ‘But do you think that anyone outside the academic Left is listening to what was said?’ ‘I do hope so since the conference was – rather appropriately – being held in Keynes hall at Kings. Looking at the current state of the Labour party, it certainly needs some fresh ideas. Maybe – as in the 1930s – Cambridge can again provide them?’ My comrade smiled somewhat sceptically, ‘I look forward to that day!’ ‘You never know’, I joked, ‘in a couple of decades time, we could be going to a similar conference in the Negri hall at Kings!’ ‘After Blairism’, Simon announced, ‘Autonomist reformism!’ ‘We should drink to this future!’, I concluded – and so we left for the pub to continue the conversation over a few pints…


Response 3.

By Chris Carlsson

(Reposted by him from his blog Attitude Adjustor to the discussion area of metamute, and now promoted to the Articles section)

May 03, 2006

Cambridge Conference

At King's College, Cambridge, England, April 29, 2006

Started out my trip by going to Cambridge to attend a conference on “Class Composition, Immaterial Labor and New Social Subjects”, which was ironically held under the bemused gaze of a bust of John Maynard Keynes.

What became clear even before the conference, but really sharpened as it proceeded, was how problematic the terms are, and how disparate the attendees were with respect to their emphases. I’m glad I went but I have to say it was a rather disappointing gathering. I was very glad to meet Steve Wright, Nick Dyer-Witheford and his wife Anne, Phoebe, Michel Bauwens, Richard Barbrook, and a variety of other interesting people (Bauwens and Barbrook both have posted comments on the conference at MetaMute.org). I rather enjoyed the first day of the conference since I was so committed to engaging with the material and other conferees, but after a couple of days have passed, Eddie and I have had a chance to digest it, and I have to conclude that on balance it was pretty weak.

I won’t go through every presentation piece by piece. I think Steve Wright gave a good overview of the theme, and by so doing he demonstrated how much trouble we were in. Here’s a chart he put up to show something of the genealogy of the conference’s intellectual and political roots.

By the end of his own talk he conceded that his attempt to circumscribe the ‘tendency’ we were discussing was incomplete and moreover, that even if it weren’t, that it could not be an adequate framework for a rigorous understanding of our world. Later he was overheard suggesting that the World Systems writers like Arrighi and Wallerstein had at least as much relevance for figuring things out as do the seminal contributors to “autonomous Marxism” (or whatever you want to call it), since a number of theorists were lost in jargon and abstractions.

He was followed by Yann Moulier-Boutang, who gave a presentation that I found tediously academic, though he tried to bring in to the discussion large swaths of the world population that have been left aside by the workerist theories with their roots in mid-1960s Italy, and Marx before that. Both Wright and Boutang failed to leave time for discussion in their half-hour segments which produced some howling objections when conference convener Ed Emery unceremoniously pre-empted any discussion on the grounds of the tight schedule he had done so much to plan.

I had been dismayed back in December when he told me I was not welcome to present at this conference, even though I felt I had a lot to offer. It seems my lack of academic credentials and general antipathy to a highly theoretical approach to the topic precluded me. OK, I decided to come anyway. But as the weekend progressed it became clear that that early rejection was a premonition of an overly self-important and really authoritarian approach to this conference. I found a number of the talks, especially on the 2nd day, to be laboriously academic and weirdly tangential to what I thought the conference would focus on. We weren’t able to stay to the very end when there was a more open round-table discussion scheduled—we were sure it was going to explode since there had been a growing undercurrent of dissatisfaction all weekend. I wonder why the conference had to be so rigid, academic, and closed, instead of curious, open, and diverse. I suspect it has a lot to do with Ed Emery’s decisions. (Too bad, because I liked him personally. He just seems to be a bit lost in an old-style class politics that I—and I think many other attendees—thought we were collectively trying to overcome with some fresh thinking… he did demonstrate a great ability to create moments of convivial pleasure like this one where he is poling us along on the nearby river, “punting” during lunch on Saturday.)

At least a third of the talks made discussion of “Basic Income” their main focus, a concept that traces its roots to a 1970 proposal by Potere Operaio for a Salario Garantito. After a young Japanese scholar finished his talk about it on Sunday morning, Emery stood up to announce with a beatific glow that he could feel a “revolutionary program” taking shape at the conference. I was not alone in my astonishment as many people glanced around in disbelief at this odd assertion. Italian economist Andrea Fumagalli filled in for Toni Negri on Friday night and re-presented his talk on Sunday, trying to show with some impenetrable charts that a capitalist economy that is generating a surplus from “social labor” (in which he included those of us who spend time critiquing capitalism, since after all this is a function that capitalism needs to progress) could direct that general increase in social wealth to paying everyone a basic income, not as means-tested charity or as direct compensation for specific activities, but as an unconditional right of existence. And that such a reform would make sense from capitalism’s point of view because it would act as a Keynesian boost for demand, while also serving the needs of revolutionaries who must escape the strict blackmail of capitalism to create the spaces and initiatives that can begin to reshape life.

I’m not hostile to a politics that seeks to break income from work; I also consider it essential in terms of transitional demands in this time of growing precariousness and insecurity. Demanding jobs or work is painfully obsolete, and even if it could succeed on its own merits, would only leave people back in the dead-end subordination of a new wage-labor deal. So as demands emerge in the face of growing immiseration, I do hope they are for direct income and shared wealth instead of for jobs or work. But I found the theoretical efforts on basic income presented at this conference unconvincing and more like wishful thinking than any real demonstration of the coherence of the demand. Even if there is now a social factory in which we all contribute to an aggregate profitability (which seems true enough), the way money and work is organized still leads to a fetishized dynamic in which some workers are paid and taxed, as are specific businesses, and then the government redistributes those revenues through payouts to whatever public goods and services (including, potentially, basic income) it deems necessary.

The politics of this demand are daunting at best, and as one person suggested in a (typically polemical) question, why fight for basic income instead of fighting to overthrow capitalism itself? Isn’t the social pressure required to extract such a huge and basic concession worthy of greater goals than a new stabilization of capitalist society? The other preponderant problem for this demand is rooted in the nation-state and the wide disparity of conditions among different countries and regions. A meaningful basic income would have to span the globe and include everyone unconditionally. Such a structural feature implies a globe-spanning state to administer it, no? Without that, as one participant aptly noted, wouldn’t a basic income in some places and not others just serve as a further magnet to the impoverished? And to respond to that wave of immigration wouldn’t it increase pressure to produce a “fortress Europe” as he put it? Curious problems without answers. Of course radical change always begs difficult problems, it goes with the territory, and should not automatically disqualify anything from being considered.

The implication of a new global state echoes the argument of Hardt and Negri’s Empire, wherein they claim that we are in a new period of history and that we must go through Empire to the other side, a global society beyond capitalism. Empire has already gone through a lot of critical evaluation, which I will leave you to find elsewhere. But the ideas that they develop, also in their later volume Multitude, were oddly absent from this conference where you might have thought they’d be more central. In fact, the enthusiastic embrace of the early core of Operaismo (Workerism in English) has the strange effect of obliterating from view at least two crucial points that ought to be central to any contemporary revolutionary politics, leaving them unspoken, unrecognized, and invisible.

First of all, the problem of useless work. You might expect a conference dedicated to discussing, among other things, General Intellect, cognitive capitalism and the creation of new subjects (or subjectivities) would make the basic stupidity of so much work in the world a central point. Except for Harry Halpin’s animated denunciation of 90% of computer programmers as the “stupid ones” (compared to the 10% of programmers who actually create most of what works in software), there was no mention of the larger division of labor, what is done, by whom, or crucially, why. The other big elephant in the room going unnoticed by this very academic crowd, was ecology. All the focus on class, wages, structures of production, shape of work, etc., and not a single reference to the unfolding ecological disaster to which this kind of obliviousness is an essential contributor.

For me, there are two keys to unlocking the relative sterility and confusion of this whole line of inquiry: the refusal of stupid work and the embrace of an ecological rebuilding our urban life. The abolition of capitalism and class society is an abstract way of proposing the general liberation from stupid and self-destructive, ecocidal work. The concept of “exodus” which runs through some of the key texts, from Hardt & Negri to Virno and Berardi, didn’t come up much here. But exodus is real practice in many places by many individuals. The refusal of work is one of the pillars of the radical workerist movement’s early decade or two. The intelligent rejection of the limits of wage-labor is the positive flipside of the precariat experience. It might have started out as a liberatory exodus but as capitalism embraced labor market flexibility a growing insecurity on all workers was imposed, turning the exodus against the escapees.

But the answer to this imposed desperation is not to succumb to capitalist blackmail but to redouble an insistence on a self-directed life, a new organization where we can decide what to do, how to do it, to whom the benefits of our work go, and so on. To leave unchallenged the pernicious capitalist division of labor is to go on producing the ecological catastrophes that already urgently need remedial efforts. We are not only not taking meaningful action in that direction, but at a conference like this we carried on as though there was no problem at all, just the need to expand the struggle for social wealth. Fumagalli even presented uncritically an economic framework utterly dependent on growth, with no nuance or further attempt to unravel what that might mean in a post-capitalist world.

Emma Dowling gave one of the talks I liked best in the conference, because she was trying to explode the idea of this broad category of immaterial labor. As a high-end waitress in a state-of-the-art restaurant she started out by giving us a version of her introductory rap to a table of hungry patrons. In it she showed how her own emotional talent was a crucial job skill, and then as she went on to unpack her labor process we learned that nearly every detail of her demeanor and performance was scripted in a 25-point system of patented values by the entrepreneur who invented her chain. I loved it as a demonstration of that overriding truth of modern work: nearly anyone can learn to do the physical tasks, but not everyone can “really believe” in their work (or have ability to create that impression at least), not everyone can maintain a “professional attitude” in the face of daily frustrations and their own personal lives. The skill most in demand by capital in the “service industry” is our ability to subsume ourselves fully under the terms imposed by our work, by capital. Massimo de Angelis and David Harvie followed her (and the three of them helped break the iron logic of the conference’s overly rigid scheduling by bunching themselves up and sharing their discussion time, which was still limited) with an assertive presentation about how tightly measured affective labor is, using their own academic work as an example. Harvie detailed the absurd measurements imposed on his work life, e.g. there are 3.5 hours allocated to prepare for a one hour lecture, etc. If he/the teacher/the worker cannot meet that schedule the additional time required simply comes unremunerated from his personal life. Or he can quit. From the two papers our vague notions of the immeasurability of immaterial labor were debunked. But without adequate time to hash it out and further discuss it their arguments didn’t alter the conference or other speakers’ continuing assertion of immeasurability in this period of capitalism.

Nick Dyer-Witheford, author of the brilliant CyberMarx, gave a good talk which drew an analogy between the “cellular form” of capitalism (the commodity) and the cellular form of communism—or commonism—which is the commons, i.e. goods and services produced not to sell but to share. In conversation with him later we grazed across a notion that the kinds of commons-producing that we can already see going on in daily life need a push from a central, state-like entity to help galvanize and extend their logic more fully. If you think about all the ways that the state subsidizes private business, privatization of common wealth, and obstructs cooperation and mutual aid with bureaucracy and legal impediments, it’s hard not to fantasize about how quickly and thoroughly we might transform a lot of our material lives with institutional support and aid. But of course there are no states whose mission is not first and foremost the preservation and extension of capitalism and the social relations that allow for further capital accumulation.

Anyway, I could probably write more, but you get the drift. It was certainly worthwhile going, though perhaps not in the way I expected. I kind of accepted my offer to speak being rejected as an indication that I’d find a lot of the conference over my head, and that the work this crowd is doing would make my head spin. Were that it were so! On the contrary, I’m more sure than ever of my book project and that it is a unique contribution, but not just to this arcane and small political tendency.

I had hoped to discuss the idea of class composition in the way that I've been thinking about it and planning to write about it in my book. I can't summarize my whole work here, but quickly, I think most people don't identify with a class identity. Instead they reject class as a meaningful category. And that's not a problem, but actually indicates the early stages of a whole swath of (actual) workers who are working to supercede the limitations of wage-labor and the narrowing of themselves as "just" workers. In various activities and pursuits, they are recomposing the working class outside of wage-labor and in ways that might actually start creating the basis for a classless and ecologically sound human society. And those activities are actually a lot of work, but unpaid and strictly geared towards creating a commons as Nick Dyer-Witheford described it. (This is not to say that all these incipient efforts aren't eminently co-optable and turned against themselves by becoming reintegrated into the logic of the market, but that's part of my book too...)...

Anyway, I'll leave it there, since this is obviously already too long a blog entry. It may well be that there was a mini-revolt Aat the end of the conference that I missed entirely, so I hope if anyone reads this and wants to add on to the narrative, or to contradict or embellish my account, they will do so!

 



Ed Emery Replies to Chris Carlsson
mute - Thu, 18/05/2006 - 12:23pm
(Note from Mute editors: Ed Emery has asked us to publish his reply to Chris. Here it is):
Cambridge
12 May 2006
Ref: www.geocities.com/immateriallabour
Dear Chris,
You express personal hurt that your paper was not accepted for the Cambridge
conference. You should not take it personally. Twenty other papers were also
not accepted.
You suggest that the organisational style of the conference was due to some
authoritarian streak in my personality. The conference style was the
entirely conventional style of an academic conference. At 20 minutes per
speaker plus 10 minutes for discussion, as advertised on the website.
It was deliberately chosen in order to generate a good number of
high-quality presentations that could then be processed into a published
book that could be made available to a far wider public.
That process is now under way. If anyone wants to judge the quality of the
presentations, they can read them on the conference website (above).
[You will find an identical (and equally productive) style at our Donkey
Conference at http://www.geocities.com/DonkeyConference.]
While I am on-line I might as well address Richard Barbrook's contribution
in Metamute. I find it unhelpful, and unworthy of what was a good and
hardworking conference. I suggest that readers read his article and judge
for themselves. It can be found at
http://www.metamute.org/?q=en/Archipelago-of-Immateriality
There is a curious and pervasive air of hostility to our Cambridge
conference - as can be found in Metamute's factually inaccurate and
dismissive phrase (ibid.): "With the high-priests (Negri and Lazzarato)
jumping ship early on...". And Nate Holdren's "that sucks".
I have no problem with the hostility - this is politics, after all. It
should, however, be balanced against the fact that many participants have
written to me expressing their delight and enthusiasm for our conference.
Perhaps some of them will eventually express themselves on-line.
Meanwhile I would offer my own criticism of the conference, as conveyed by
one of our young musicians at the evening Session: "It was a shame that all
these intellectuals talked so loudly during the music, and particularly
during the singing".
The next conference in this series will be held in two years time, on 25-27
April 2008.
Anybody wishing to join the conference mailing list should write to me at:
ed.emery@britishlibrary.net.
With best regards,
Ed Emery
Nate Holdren replies to Ed Emery
mute - Tue, 23/05/2006 - 9:57am

I want to respond because Ed Emery mentioned me in his response to
Chris Carlsson. Just to be clear at the outset, my "that sucks" was in
reference to Chris's paper being rejected. Not to the conference.
Chris is a friend of mine. I was comiserating. Rejection sucks. There
was no hostility intended there.

Also to be clear, as I've already said in email to a few people
including Ed (I forwarded the first two comments that appeared on the
Cambridge conference to the Aut-Op-Sy email list, kicking up a bit of
a fuss), I don't agree with or like the first two comments in Mute
about the conference. I passed them on to create discussion and, in a
rush, didn't say anything about them. That as a mistake, and
unwittingly created a bit more hostility or sense thereof, and perhaps
made it seem like there was more agreement with comments 1 and 2 than
there was. It takes a great deal of work to put on an event like the
Cambridge conference, which should be respected. The conference should
also be respected as a sincere attempt to understand the present
political moment and how to respond to it.

All of that aside, while I wasn't in Cambridge, I did talk with some
attendees who weren't entirely happy and for what seem to me
legitimate reasons. One was the conference format, which from what I
gather was rather typical for an ambitiout academic conference. That's
a format I don't have a problem with, but I can see how others might,
especially people who are not academics and don't often attend that
kind of event. This is not an important matter and not something by
which the entire event ought to be reduced to, but it is also not
simply groundless and meanspirited griping.

The other more substantive issue is that of disagreements over the
proposals made by some presenters at the conference for a political
program pushing for a basic income and over the political analysis
which sees immaterial labor as tremendously important. I'm personally
something of an agnostic on the latter, though veering toward atheism.
I value parts of the analysis, not least in that it addresses the
types of work I have done in much of my life, but I find some claims
made about it to be overblown and not subject to being substantiated.
Even more problematic, some versions of the thesis of the hegemony of
immaterial labor suggest a prior political impossibility before the
new era that is the present: multitude or communism were impossible
prior to postfordism. That strikes me as simply wrong and wrongheaded.

As for the basic income proposal, that doesn't speak to me in part
because my own political activities are centered around workplace
organizing in the United States, such that the demand for a basic
income in Europe strikes me as a non sequitur. I am also not convinced
by arguments that say that link the program of a general income with a
claim that such a general income is in the interests of capitalists. I
have not yet read some of the material presented at conference, pehaps
my mind will change when I've done so, but for now I am not convinced
that a general income is in capital's interest. Capital appropiates
the unwaged labors of housework, commuting, studying, and many others
and this expands the surplus it accrues. On the other hand, if such a
proposal is in capital's interest, I am suspicious of anything good
for Them being actually good for Us. This may be knee jerk
ultraleftism on my part.

In any case, vigorous and comradely debate around these questions is
certainly worth having, as are questions about the role and
formulation of political analsysis and demands in general. The
conference is to be applauded for starting more conversation about
these matters. It also strikes me, having read some of the papers by
conference attendees (Emma Dowling, Steve Wright, and George
Ciccariello-Maher), that there was a reasonable amount of disagreement
between some of the perspectives presented at the conference. Perhaps
in addition to reviews of the event, Mute reader/writers could read
the papers posted at the conference web site and debate those issues
as well.

Pragmatism is against revolution but in favour of reformism
mute - Tue, 16/05/2006 - 10:41am

This comment from Andrea Fumagalli is reposted from the Aut-op-sy mailing list and translated from the Italian. Since the site it refers to is this one, it made sense to post this here in the spirit of a continuing discussion.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

The weekend before the May 1 there was a conference on immaterial labour and class composition in cognitive capitalism, at which I gave a lecture on 'Basic income, Keynes and the revolt in France against the CPE', replacing Toni Negri, who was unable to attend.

Before an audience 50% comprised of comrades from the Trotskyist tendency and 50% from the post-workerist area (known here as 'Autonomist Marxism'), I presented the idea of flexicurity as we have articulated it in Italy (a social fund for basic income, social fund for indirect income, minimum wage and union rights, reduced use of precarious-type contracts), adding that such a proposal was reformist in itself but could crack the current forms of social control and capital-labour hierarchy, particularly with the introduction of a guaranteed income that would remove the individual from the blackmail of need and therefore from subaltern status vis-a-vis capital.  In this way it could instigate possible processes of liberation from and of labour.

Obviously the Trotskyist element disagreed, and accused me of being a 'bourgeois reformist', declaring that the present Italian workerist current (from Negri down) had abandoned the idea of revolution.  Pragmatism is against revolution but in favour of reformism.

In the site below [metamute.org] you can read reports on the conference which repeat these criticisms.

I should only add that when I asked for an explanation of how it would be possible to make a revolution today, I received no response.

What do you think?

Afuma

(Andrea Fumagalli)

PS.  Thanks to Matteo Pasquinelli for drawing my attention to this site

Comment on Fumagalli
mute - Fri, 19/05/2006 - 12:04pm
Of course it's perfectly valid, though urgently debateable, to stake everything on strategies you think are just reformist enough not to be violently supressed by capital yet just revolutionary enough to shatter the whole edifice quietly from within.  But it's somewhat less promising, surely, that the relation between capital and labour is presented [by Fumagalli] as nothing more complex, interdependent or historical than a 'hierarchy': like the briefly widespread absurdity 'classism', this reduces all of class composition/class struggle to something like discrimination against the differently-socially-abled, an equal-human-rights deficit to be cured with an EU directive and a bit of good old-fashioned deconstruction.  It might also be wondered whether the INDIVIDUAL's relation to capital as mediated by the various benevolent funds is the most most useful place to start.  And as for declaring anyone who disagrees with you to be a 'Trotskyist', the less said of such eternal anarchotrot tactics the better.  (Anyway what are Trots who advocate entryism to take over the Labour Party/unions/'anti-globalization movement' from within doing if not betting on strategically-'subversive' reformism of a kind that should be quite familiar here?)
  Finally it should be pointed out that workerism (think Tronti and occupied Alfa Romeo factories, not Lazzarato, the supersession of the law of value and San Precario)  is not 'known as Autonomist Marxism' in the English-speaking world.  The vocabulary here just as in Italy distinguishes clearly between the two traditions, which are closely entangled but are separated historically by several years and politically by totally different analyses of class composition.  (Steve Wright's 'Storming Heaven' looks in painstaking detail at the viscera of the defeats that this transformation emerged from, and then at the catastrophic defeats that gave us the line advocated by Negri and Fumagalli today). Barbrook may have forgotten this distinction, but it is it really possible that 'Afuma' was allowed to believe that no-one is aware of it at all here?  Otherwise WHAT is going on when he makes the actually-existing, pro-EU constitution Negri the mascot of the 'contemporary WORKERIST current'?

Matthew Hyland

if 'the net' is communism Marx was a social democrat
mute - Fri, 12/05/2006 - 9:38am

A response to Richard Barbrook's report:

As a contributing editor of Mute I would like to point out that this welter of smarm is anything but a collegiate opinion. Let's leave aside for now that calling Mario Tronti an 'Autonomist' betrays either gross historical ignorance or maybe just desperation to drag in the name of the one associated theorist who converted publicly back to the born-again-social-democratic Democratici di Sinistra. And let's try to ignore the way our correspondent presumes to award the remnants of the 'Autonomist' tradition wholesale to a European tendency labelled 'Negri', occluding the totally different strain of American post/autonomist politics.

Regardless of these lapses, it seems like a confused subjectivity that takes so much trouble to tar less compromised thinkers/practitioners with the brush of association with the slanderer's own vices (i.e. those of social democracy).

I was not at the conference or at the pub. But I remember that the only Ed Emery-organized event I have attended was an exceptionally credible (i.e. EXPOSED) attempt at a Zone of Proletarian Development. Anyway, the 'social democracy' smear obfuscates the debate worth pursuing with serious defenders of 'immaterial labour' as a category (or, god help us, a practice): does or does not their train of argument risk lapsing inadvertently into Barbrook's longnonstanding claim for 'the net' as 'subversive'/'communist' phenomenon?

The communAUTistIC party line remains:

DOWN WITH ALL DEMOCRACY! 'VERTICALS' AND 'HORIZONTALS' IN THE SAME HOSPITAL! LONG LIVE ANTI-SOCIAL THOUGHT AND BEHAVIOUR!

Matthew Hyland

Pragmatism is against revolution but in favour of reformism
mute - Tue, 16/05/2006 - 10:33am

This comment is re-posted from aut-op-sy and translated from the Italian

~~~~~~~

The weekend before the May 1 there was a conference on immaterial labour and class composition in cognitive capitalism, at which I gave a lecture on 'Basic income, Keynes and the revolt in France against the CPE', replacing Toni Negri, who was unable to attend.

Before an audience 50% comprised of comrades from the Trotskyist tendency and 50% from the post-workerist area (known here as 'Autonomist Marxism'), I presented the idea of flexicurity as we have articulated it in Italy (a social fund for basic income, social fund for indirect income, minimum wage and union rights, reduced use of precarious-type contracts), adding that such a proposal was reformist in itself but could crack the current forms of social control and capital-labour hierarchy, particularly with the introduction of a guaranteed income that would remove the individual from the blackmail of need and therefore from subaltern status vis-a-vis capital.  In this way it could instigate possible processes of liberation from and of labour.

Obviously the Trotskyist element disagreed, and accused me of being a 'bourgeois reformist', declaring that the present Italian workerist current (from Negri down) had abandoned the idea of revolution.  Pragmatism is against revolution but in favour of reformism.

In the site below you can read reports on the conference which repeat these criticisms.

I should only add that when I asked for an explanation of how it would be possible to make a revolution today, I received no response.

What do you think?

Afuma

(Andrea Fumagalli)

PS.  Thanks to Matteo Pasquinelli for drawing my attention to this site

A Material Success
mbauwens - Thu, 11/05/2006 - 10:37am

Contribution to: http://www.metamute.org/?q=en/Archipelago-of-Immateriality

Contrary to the previous assessments, I found the ILC to be of high interest and useful. I think the conference should not be interpreted as an Autonomist event but as a semi-academic exercise to bring together research aimed at understanding cognitive capitalism. Semi-academic because it was open to activist and independent researchers as well. It was a bridge event to allow bottom-up networking of the similarly minded, not meant as an expression of an organizational fraction.

But the organization was indeed paradoxical in that the attendees where divided between horizontals, who agreed to function in the 'organisationally dualist vertical structure' decided upon by the organizer, and the verticals, who wanted a dialogical structure to air their (in my mind pretty endless) tactical and strategic differentiations. They wanted the event to have been an expression of the revolutionary vanguard. I'm not sure which tendency dominated the audience, but the cultic nature of such debates would have surely driven away many. Bottom-up organizational formats are fine in a constructive context, but I'm pretty sure it would have been worse in the context of factional fighting. The programme announcement had made it pretty clear that it was based on a series of lectures.

So, the horizontals wanted an open bottom-up dialogue of various interpretations of cognitive capitalism, and organizer Ed Emery choose a classic lecture format to bring together various perspectives. What he wanted to explictely avoid was that the whole conference would become an affair of the nostalgic fraction, becoming hostage to fractious debates and denunciations. Unfortunately, the time for questions was way too limited and this was a serious handicap, and the horizontals were in fact the first to complain abut it. However, the limited time for discussion after presentations was somewhat balanced with the very intense discussions taking place before and after the breaks. The presentations themselves were of an uncommon high quality for this type of conference. The respective disappointments may be partly due to expectations. As an outside, though aware of the Autonomist linkage, I did not expect the conference to be activist meeting of the movement at all.

The verticals, those nostalgic of the revolutionary purity and who consider Negri as a reformist sell-out and are convinced they already know the truth, basically wanted a platform to air their criticism and discuss their 'true revolutionary' strategy. Such a desire is legitimate, but I'm not sure this was the venue to do it. I did not see anything in the invitational material that suggested the meeting was presented as such.

Autonomist Marxism might be dead, but what the ILC represents is a living tradition of research and action, that has essential contributions to make in our understanding of cognitive capitalism, and for dialogue on transitional strategies towards a peer to peer civilization. Such value is way beyond the nostalgia for a replay of the failed strategies that were tried in the Italyof the seventies. Rather than a continuation of the Autonomist fraction, it should be an open platform for collective research and dialogue, and in that sense, it was successfull.

Richard Barbrook's reaction is somewhat disingenuous. It ignores the wide debates that have taken place to go beyond the simplistic reformist/revolution duality based on the taking over of state power (Negri, Holloway, Benasayag), and suggests there is no difference between Negri and Blair. There is no direct connection between abandoning vanguard politics and joined the marketing machine that is the Labour Party. Such an interpretation, while making for a funny satirical piece, can only be based on a very superficial reading of the authors present, such as Yann Moulier Boutang, Carlo Vercellone, Nick Dyer-Witheford, and others. The conclusion that their research and proposed solutions are just reformist, should not go unchallenged. For example, it's pretty clear that a generalized basic income would be radically transformational. At the very least, it would be a matter for serious and informed debate.

Michel Bauwens, Foundation for P2P Alternatives

http://www.p2pfoundation.net/index.php/Main_Page

Infrared Conversations
Nick Dyer-Witheford - Tue, 16/05/2006 - 2:11pm

I too think that there was far more of substance to the Cambridge conference than some previous posts suggest. Rather than declaring the event the death of this or that, it might be considered an occasion for some overdue, if contentious, conversations within the infrared spectrum. I won’t recapitulate any of the several fine papers, many of which are now on-line at the conference web site, but rather note three points brought up, not from the platform speakers, but in responses to them, or in later conversations. None are my own-- I elaborate on them only as an exercise in “general intellect.”

a) Global basic income? Much of the discussion at the conference centered on the “basic income” strategy proposed by Andrea Fumagalli, Carlo Vercellone, Yves Moulier Boutang and others. Some see this a valuable strategic demand, others as mere acquiescence to welfare state social democracy (see below). Debate was set in an almost entirely European context. One point raised in questions but perhaps not adequately addressed was the matter of “basic income” on a global scale. A guaranteed annual income of $350, relatively negligible on an OECD scale, would double the monetary livelihood of one sixth of the planet’s population. It would fundamentally alter the floor of immiseration on which global exploitation rests. “Guaranteed income” and “citizen’s wage” have, to date, been mainly (though not exclusively) articulated as a (expensive) strategy for the affluent global Northwest. Global basic income may, paradoxically, be a demand that is at once more radical and more practical.
b) Autonomist transitions? A charge brought against the basic income program, and, by some, against the conference as a whole, is that of reformism. But this well-worn label is too easily used to avoid discussing the real difficulties of strategies for transit from capitalism to communism (or, if you prefer, commonism). For good historical reason many on the ultra-left dislike all mention of transitional regimes. The “go straight to revolution” slogan should, however, be backed with a clear, plausible concept of an immediately actualizable post-capitalist, trans-national economy, one that does not fall back either on the centralized command state or catastrophic survivalism. Absent this, thinking through intermediate demands, though beset with pitfalls, is neither dishonest nor foolish.
c) Networked Leninism? This phrase--guaranteed provocative-- circulated in the coffee break and post-conference conversations about the role of “immaterial” networks in today’s struggles. It connotes an apprehension that the rhizomatic, swarming logic of Net-connected “movement of movements” may not be as working as well as once hoped. Can a decentered multiplicitous movement develop demands and strategies that amount to more than an aggregation of what everybody wanted to do in the first place? Is it possible in a networked setting to develop a political program that, without reflecting the totality of every groupsucles aspirations, nonetheless provides a sufficiently common platform to be pursued with transversal coordination and in a self-disciplined way?

Questions, not answers. But questions from a worthwhile event, questions deserving discussion animated by vigorous disagreements but also by mutual respect.

Cheers,
Nick D/W

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