Our solidarity with
non-Europeans should be a solidarity of struggles, not a "dialogue of
cultures" but a uniting of struggles within each culture.
Adam Kotsko, a
professor of humanities at Shimer College in Chicago, in an email to me,
provided the best characterization of the reactions to my latest text on the refugees and
Paris attacks:
I notice that the
responses always seem to be a referendum on you, almost a Rorschach test for
what people think of you. If they think you’re a terrible quasi-fascist,
pro-Western ideologue, they find stuff to support that. If they assume you’re
in good faith, they can find a more positive reading. But the discussion never
gets to the point of actually addressing the issue—it’s almost like “what we
should do about the issue” is treated as self-evident to all concerned, and the
question is whether and how you measure up to this implicit standard (which of
course can’t be explicitly stated by anyone).
As for numerous
attacks on what I have written, most of them don’t deserve an answer since they
simply repeat the position I criticize. What should I say to the claim that I
want to use the military to quarantine and throw out the refugees, apart from
the fact that it’s a simple lie? Some of the criticism, however, is worthy of
reply.
I often hear the
reproach that I speak as a European, part of the European elite with whom I am
in solidarity, and as such I am treating refugees as an external threat to be
contained. To which I can only say: Of course I speak from an European
position. To deny this would be a preposterous lie, an unmistakable sign of
patronizing fake solidarity.
But which
European position? In the same way that there is no one Islam, that Islam also
can harbor emancipatory potentials (and I’ve
written about this extensively ), European
tradition is also marked by a series of deep antagonisms. The only way to
effectively fight “Eurocentrism” is from within, mobilizing Europe’s
radical-emancipatory tradition. In short, our solidarity with non-Europeans
should be a solidarity of struggles, not a “dialogue of cultures” but a uniting
of struggles within each culture.
Merkel’s invitation
to accept the refugees—more refugees than any other Euruoean state—was a
genuine ethical miracle, one that cannot be reduced to the capitalist strategy
of importing cheap labor force. What I find more than a little bit weird is the
eagerness to criticize Germany for not showing enough openness toward the
refugees instead of focusing on those states that adopt the paraoniac
anti-immigrant attitude: Poland, Hungary, etc. It’s the same old superego logic;
the more we obey the commandment of the law, the more we are guilty. The more
Germany acts in a (relatively) decent way, the more it will be criticized. On
the top of that, it is deeply symptomatic of our hypocrisy how rarely the
European Left insists that the way to defuse the racist fear of refugees is to
include refugees in the public debate. Our TV stations and other public media
should have been full of refugees describing their plea, talking about their
expectations, etc. One should give them the space to speak in public, not just
speak on their behalf.
Another
often-repeated reproach targets my mention of Western “values” and “way of
life”: How dare I ignore the blatant fact that “Western values” are for the
Third World people the very ideology that justifies their colonization and
exploitation, the ruthless destruction of their ways of life? My answer is that
I am far from ignoring it—I’ve written pages and pages on it.
What I insist upon is that, in the same way that Islam does not designate one
big homogeneous entity, European tradition also provides the resources for
radical emancipation, i.e., for the radical self-critique of “Eurocentrism,”
while calls for a return to some pre-colonial indigenous roots mostly fit
perfectly global capitalism.
A more refined
version of this reproach points out that egalitarianism, feminism, etc., are
not simply part of Western core values but the result of a long struggle against
the hegemonic ideology and politics of capitalism. It maintains that the
freedom of press, of public speech, etc., is not an ingredient of liberal
capitalist societies that arose spontaneously: it was hard won through popular
struggles throughout 19th century. When the West boasts of its emancipatory
values, one should always bear in mind that we are largely dealing with the
logic of “if you can’t defeat them, join them.” I cannot but agree with this
point, adding that the same struggle goes on today (Wikileaks, etc.).
The last point. In
public debates on many campuses from London to Berlin, I am repeatedly told
that now is not the time to raise the topic of the incompatibility of ways of
life, of the status of women in some immigrant communities, etc.—that now we
are dealing with a big humanitarian crisis, hundreds of thousands are fighting
for their life, and to bring in cultural issues ultimately just detracts from
the key issue. I totally disagree with this logic: It is precisely now, when
hundreds of thousands are ariving into Europe, that we should talk about all
this and elaborate a formula of how to deal with it.
The reason is not
merely that only such a direct approach can help to defuse anti-immigrant
paranoia, but a much more ominous fact: Sexuality has emerged as one of the
central ingredients of today’s ideologico-political struggles.
Let’s take the
Nigerian Boko Haram movement, the name which can be roughly and descriptively
translated as “Western education is forbidden”—meaning, in particular, any
education of women. How, then, to account for the weird fact of a massive
sociopolitical movement whose main programmatic item is the hierarchic
regulation of the relationship between the two sexes?
Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini made clear decades ago why an
attack like the Paris bombings that focuses on the “dissolute” every day
amusements can be considered appropriate. In February 1979, on his return to
the Islamic Republic of Iran he said, “We’re not afraid of
sanctions. We’re not afraid of military invasion. What frightens us is invasion
by western immorality.” The fact that Khomeini talks about fear, about what a
Muslim should fear most in the West, should be taken literally: Muslim
fundamentalists, be they Shiite or Sunni, do not have any problems with the
brutality of economic and military struggles, their true enemy is not the
Western economic neocolonialism and military aggressiveness but its “immoral”
culture.
The same holds for
Putin’s Russia, where the conservative nationalists define their conflict with
the West as cultural, in the last resort focused on sexual difference: apropos
the victory of the Austrian drag queen Conchita Wurst (a.k.a. Tom Neuwirth) at
the 2014 Eurovision contest, Putin himself said at a dinner in St. Petersburg:
“The Bible talks about the two genders, man and woman, and the main purpose of
union between them is to produce children.” As usual, the rabid nationalist Vladimir Zhirinovsky, a member of parliament, was more outspoken.
He called her victory “the end of Europe,” saying: “There is no limit to our
outrage. … There are no more men or women in Europe, just it.” Vice prime
minister Dmitry Rogozin tweeted that the Eurovision
result “showed supporters of European integration their European future—a
bearded girl.”
There is a certain
quasi-poetic uncanny beauty in this image of the bearded lady (for long time
the standard feature of circus freakshows) as the symbol of united Europe—no
wonder Russia refused to transmit the Eurovision contest to its TV public, with
calls for a renewed cultural Cold War. Note the same logic as in Khomeini: not
army or economy, the truly feared object is immoral depravity, the threat to
sexual difference. Boko Haram just brought brings this logic to its endpoint.
What psychoanalysis tells us
One should not
underestimate the complexity and persistence of different “ways of life,” and
here psychoanalysis can be of some help. Which is the factor that renders
different cultures (or, rather, ways of life in the rich texture of their daily
practices) incompatible? What is the obstacle that prevents their fusion or, at
least, their harmoniously indifferent co-existence?
The
psychoanalytic answer is: jouissance. It is not only that different
modes of jouissance are incongruous with each other without a common
measure; the Other’s jouissance is insupportable for us because (and insofar
as) we cannot find a proper way to relate to our own jouissance.
The ultimate
incompatibility is not between mine and other’s jouissance, but between
myself and my own jouissance, which forever remains an ex-timate
intruder. It is to resolve this deadlock that the subject projects the core of
its jouissance onto an Other, attributing to this Other full access to a
consistent jouissance. Such a constellation cannot but give rise to
jealousy: In jealousy, the subject creates/imagines a paradise (a utopia
of full jouissance) from which he is excluded.
The same definition
applies to what one can call political jealousy, from the anti-Semitic
fantasies about the mysterious practices and abilities of the Jews (which
sometimes reach the level of madness, like the claim that Jewish men also
menstruate) to the Christian fundamentalists’ fantasies about the weird sexual
practices of gays and lesbians. As Klaus Theweleit, a scholar of fascist
sociology, pointed out, it is all too easy to read such phenomena as mere
“projections”: Jealousy can be quite real and well-founded; other people can
and do have as much more intense sexual life than the jealous subject—a fact
that, as Lacan remarked, doesn’t make jealousy any less pathological. Here is
Lacan’s succinct description of the political dimension of this predicament:
With our jouissance
going off track, only the Other is able to mark its position, but only in so
far as we are separated from this Other. Whence certain fantasies – unheard of
before the melting pot. Leaving the Other to his own mode of jouissance,
that would only be possible by not imposing our own on him, by not thinking of
him as underdeveloped.
To recapitulate the argument: Due to our impasse with our
own jouissance, the only way for us to imagine a consistent jouissance
is to conceive it as the Other’s jouissance; however, the Other’s jouissance
is by definition experienced as a threat to our identity, as something to be
rejected, destroyed even.
With regard to the
identity of an ethnic group, this means that “there is always, in any human
community, a rejection of an inassimilable jouissance, which forms the
mainspring of a possible barbarism.” Here, Lacan
underpins Freud, for whom the social bond (group identification) is mediated by
the identification of each of its members with the figure of a Leader shared by
all: Lacan conceives this symbolic identification with a Master-Signifier as
secondary to some preceding rejection of jouissance, which is why, for
him, “the founding crime is not the murder of the father, but the will to
murder he who embodies the jouissance that I reject.” (And, one might
add, even the murder of the primordial father is grounded in the hatred of his
excessive jouissance, his possessing of all women.)
The starting point,
what I “immediately see,” is that I don’t know who or what I am since my
innermost core of jouissance eludes me. I then identify myself with
others who are caught in the same deadlock, and we ground our collective
identity not directly in some Master-Signifier but, more fundamentally, in our
shared rejection of the Other’s jouissance.
The status of
Other’s jouissance is thus deeply ambiguous: It is a threat to my
identity, but at the same time my reference to it founds my identity—in short,
my identity emerges as a defensive reaction to what threatens it, or, as we may
say apropos anti-Semitism, what is a Nazi without a Jew?
Hitler allegedly
said: “We have to kill the Jew within us.” A.B. Yehoshua’s provided an adequate
comment to this statement:
This devastating
portrayal of the Jew as a kind of amorphous entity that can invade the identity
of a non-Jew without his being able to detect or control it stems from the
feeling that Jewish identity is extremely flexible, precisely because it is
structured like a sort of atom whose core is surrounded by virtual electrons in
a changing orbit.
In this sense, Jews
are effectively the objet petit a of the Gentiles: what is “in Gentiles
more than Gentiles themselves,” not another subject that I encounter in front
of me but an alien, a foreign intruder, within me, what Lacan called lamella,
the amorphous intruder of infinite plasticity, an undead “alien” monster who
cannot ever be pinned down to a determinate form.
In this sense, Hitler’s statement tells more than it wants
to say: Against its intention, it confirms that the Gentiles need the anti-Semitic
figure of the “Jew” in order to maintain their identity. It is thus not only
that “the Jew is within us”—what Hitler fatefully forgot to add is that he,
the anti-Semite, his identity, is also in the Jew. (And the same holds even
for a certain kind of anti-racism. The Politically Correct anti-racism depends
on what it fights (or pretends to)—on the first-level racism itself, thus
parasitizing its opponent: The PC anti-racism is sustained by the
surplus-enjoyment which emerges when the PC-subject triumphantly reveals the
hidden racist bias of an apparently neutral statement or gesture.)
Another conclusion
to be drawn from this intermingling of jouissances is that racism is
always a historical phenomenon: Even if anti-Semitism seems to remain the same
through millenia, its inner form changes with every historical rupture. French
philosopher Étienne Balibar perspicuously noted that in today’s global
capitalism, in which we are all neighbors to each other even if we live far
away, the structure of anti-Semitism is in a way globalized: Every other ethnic
group perceived as posing a threat to our identities functions as a “Jew” did
for the anti-Semite. The paradox is that, in our specific historical situation,
anti-Semitism is universalized. This universalization reaches its apogee in the
unique exceptional fact that even the fervent Zionist themselves construct the
figure of the “self-hating Jew” along the lines of anti-Semitism.
Why Sam Kriss is wrong
As Zizek himself
frequently argues, the primary pathology of the racist is to refuse to see the
Jew or the Muslim or the Roma as a person …
So what, then, are
we to make of his statement that “Muslims find it impossible to bear our
blasphemous images and reckless humor, which we consider a part of our
freedoms”?
I said no such
thing. This is what I wrote:
[F]undamentalist
Muslims find it impossible to bear our blasphemous images and
reckless humor, which we consider a part of our freedoms.
Do you notice the
word that he omitted?
Despite such
intellectual sleights of hand, Kriss seemed to engage also with the Lacanian concepts
I use, accusing me of misusing them. But then I stumbled upon sentences like
the following one: “Fantasy is that which structures reality, and even if it’s
a symptom, the symptom is always a sign to be interpreted, rather than a cloud
that obfuscates.”
Such sentences are
strict nonsense, implying a series of false identifications: objet a as
the cause of desire is reduced to its role in fantasy (while Lacan elaborated
in detail the status of objet a outside fantasy, as well as modes of
desiring which remain after we “traverse” the fantasy), fantasy is equated with
symptom (while Lacan spent long chapters elaborating their opposition), etc.
Since there is no
space here to engage in this explanation (every good introduction to Lacan will
do the job), I will limit myself to a passage from Kriss’s reply which
condenses his double confusion, theoretical as well as political, culminating
in his ridiculous notion of fidelity to a fantasy:
In Lacanian terminology,
what Zizek identifies as a fundamental disparity between ‘our’ civilized
European way of life and the irreducible foreignness of the migrants would be
called an asymmetry in the Symbolic order. (It’s not just Lacanianism that he
abandons here — what happened to the Hegelian identity of non-identity and
identity?) If this asymmetry does exist, then fantasy is precisely the means by
which it can be resolved. If we lack the appropriate signifiers for each other,
then the interdicting untruth of fantasy opens up a space for some semblance of
communication. If migrants are to live peacefully and happily in Europe, the
demand should not be that they give up their fantasy of a better life, but that
they cling to it for all its worth.
First, the basic
premise of Lacan’s theory is that what my critic rather clumsily calls the
“asymmetry in the symbolic order” does not primarily occur between different
ways of life (cultures) but within each particular culture: each culture is
structured around its particular “points of impossibility,” immanent blockades,
antagonisms, around its Real.
Second, far from
“resolving” it, a fantasy obfuscates it, it covers up the antagonism – a
classic case: the fantasmatic figure of the Jew in anti-Semitism obfuscates the
class antagonism by way of projecting it onto the “Jew,” the external cause
that disturbs an otherwise harmonious social edifice. The statement “If we lack
the appropriate signifiers for each other, then the interdicting untruth of
fantasy opens up a space for some semblance of communication.” is thus totally
misleading: it implies that each culture somehow manages to be in touch with
itself, it just lacks appropriate signifiers for other cultures. Lacan’s thesis
is, on the contrary, that each culture lacks “appropriate signifiers” for
itself, for its own representation, which is why fantasies are needed to fill
in this gap.
And it is here that
things get really interesting: these fantasies as a rule concern other
cultures. Back to the Nazis: the fantasy of the Jew is a key ingredient of the
Nazi identity. The Jew as the enemy allows the anti-Semitic subject to avoid
the choice between working class and capital: by blaming the Jew whose plotting
foments class warfare, he can advocate the vision of a harmonious society in
which work and capital collaborate.
This is also why
Julia Kristeva is right in linking the phobic object (the Jew whose plots
anti-Semites fear) to the avoidance of a choice: “The phobic object is
precisely avoidance of choice, it tries as long as possible to maintain the
subject far from a decision.”
Does this
proposition not hold especially for political phobia? Does the phobic
object/abject, on the fear of which the rightist-populist ideology mobilizes
its partisans (the Jew, the immigrant, today in Europe the refugee), not embody
a refusal to choose? Choose what? A position in class struggle. The
anti-Semitic fetish-figure of the Jew is the last thing a subject sees just
before he confronts social antagonism as constitutive of the social body (I paraphrase
here Freud’s definition of fetish as the last thing a subject sees before
discovering that a woman doesn’t have a penis).
So the first
conclusion is that some fantasies at least are “bad”: we should definitely not
advise the Nazis “not to give up their fantasy of a better life (without Jews)
but to cling to it for all its worth”… Should we then distinguish between
“good” and “bad” fantasies—say, should we replace racist fantasies with
humanist all-inclusive fantasies of global brotherhood and collaboration?
This seems to be the
direction of my critic when he writes that “the interdicting untruth of fantasy
opens up a space for some semblance of communication”—in short, even if a
fantasy is not true, this is all we have to maintain at least a semblance of
communication.
But is this really
the (political) lesson of Lacan’s psychoanalysis? Is fantasy really the last
resort of politics? Is Communism ultimately just a fantasy we should cling to
whatever the cost? The least one can say is that Lacan’s theory opens up
another way, what one may call a politics of traversing the fantasy: a
politics which does not obfuscate social antagonisms but confronts them, a
politics which aims not just to “realize an impossible dream” but to practice a
“discourse (social link) which would not be that of a semblance” (Lacan), a
discourse which touches/disturbs the Real. Whatever Lacan is, he is not a
post-modernist who claims that all communication is, as Kriss puts it, a
“semblance.”
No comments:
Post a Comment