I love this piece of writing by Hakim Bey, spelling out the idea of the Temporary Autonomous Zone. The idea as i have come to think of it, roughly put, is that we are drawn into struggle with and against the Spectacle... that mainstream societal myth which tells us how we are. We either accept it and are confined by it or struggle at and against it, and thus, in a sense, our actions are still defined and proscribed by it. By thinkning about and planning against our oppression and the ways we are oppressed, we live more in the oppression. While perhaps not a complete strategy to freedom, at least a partial strategy to be more free is to simply spend more time thinking about and living in the places where we are free from the spectacle... when we are in Immediate interactions with others, ourselves, a pursuit of beauty, where the control structures of society are not actually present and we do what we want.... the temporary autonous zones (TAZs). The more we live in these TAZs, the more we live in an experience of freedom. The more we evacuate the Spectacle, the less energy it has and the less oppressed we are. Enjoy reading...
The
Temporary Autonomous Zone
by Hakim Bey
"...this time however I come as the victorious Dionysus, who will turn the world into a holiday...Not that I have much time..."
--Nietzsche (from his last "insane" letter to Cosima Wagner)
Pirate Utopias
THE SEA-ROVERS
AND CORSAIRS of the 18th century created an "information network"
that spanned the globe: primitive and devoted primarily to grim
business, the yet nevertheless functioned admirably. Scattered throughout
the net were islands, remote hideouts where ships could be watered
and provisioned, booty traded for luxuries and necessities. Some
of these islands supported "intentional communities," whole mini-societies
living consciously outside the law and determined to keep it up,
even if only for a short but merry life.
Some years ago
I looked through a lot of secondary material on piracy hoping to
find a study of these enclaves--but it appeared as if no historian
has yet found them worthy of analysis. (William Burroughs has mentioned
the subject, as did the late British anarchist Larry Law--but no
systematic research has been carried out.) I retreated to primary
sources and constructed my own theory, some aspects of which will
be discussed in this essay. I called the settlements "Pirate Utopias."
Recently Bruce
Sterling, one of the leading exponents of Cyberpunk science fiction,
published a near-future romance based on the assumption that the
decay of political systems will lead to a decentralized proliferation
of experiments in living: giant worker-owned corporations, independent
enclaves devoted to "data piracy," Green-Social-Democrat enclaves,
Zerowork enclaves, anarchist liberated zones, etc. The information
economy which supports this diversity is called the Net; the enclaves
(and the book's title) are Islands
in the Net.
The medieval Assassins
founded a "State" which consisted of a network of remote mountain
valleys and castles, separated by thousands of miles, strategically
invulnerable to invasion, connected by the information flow of secret
agents, at war with all governments, and devoted only to knowledge.
Modern technology, culminating in the spy satellite, makes this
kind of autonomy
a romantic dream. No more pirate islands! In the future the same
technology-- freed from all political control--could make possible
an entire world of autonomous
zones. But for now the concept remains precisely science
fiction--pure speculation.
Are we who live
in the present doomed never to experience autonomy, never to stand
for one moment on a bit of land ruled only by freedom? Are we reduced
either to nostalgia for the past or nostalgia for the future? Must
we wait until the entire world is freed of political control before
even one of us can claim to know freedom? Logic and emotion unite
to condemn such a supposition. Reason demands that one cannot struggle
for what one does not know; and the heart revolts at a universe
so cruel as to visit such injustices on our
generation alone of humankind.
To say that "I
will not be free till all humans (or all sentient creatures) are
free" is simply to cave in to a kind of nirvana-stupor, to abdicate
our humanity, to define ourselves as losers.
I believe that
by extrapolating from past and future stories about "islands in
the net" we may collect evidence to suggest that a certain kind
of "free enclave" is not only possible in our time but also existent.
All my research and speculation has crystallized around the concept
of the TEMPORARY AUTONOMOUS ZONE (hereafter abbreviated TAZ). Despite
its synthesizing force for my own thinking, however, I don't intend
the TAZ to be taken as more than an essay
("attempt"), a suggestion, almost a poetic fancy. Despite the occasional
Ranterish enthusiasm of my language I am not trying to construct
political dogma. In fact I have deliberately refrained from defining
the TAZ--I circle around the subject, firing off exploratory beams.
In the end the TAZ is almost self-explanatory. If the phrase became
current it would be understood without difficulty...understood in
action.
Waiting for the Revolution
HOW IS IT THAT
"the world turned upside-down" always manages to Right
itself? Why does reaction always follow revolution, like seasons
in Hell?
Uprising,
or the Latin form insurrection, are words used by historians to
label failed revolutions--movements
which do not match the expected curve, the consensus-approved trajectory:
revolution, reaction, betrayal, the founding of a stronger and even
more oppressive State--the turning of the wheel, the return of history
again and again to its highest form: jackboot on the face of humanity
forever.
By failing to
follow this curve, the up-rising
suggests the possibility of a movement outside and beyond the Hegelian
spiral of that "progress" which is secretly nothing more than a
vicious circle. Surgo--rise up, surge. Insurgo--rise up, raise oneself
up. A bootstrap operation. A goodbye to that wretched parody of
the karmic round, historical revolutionary futility. The slogan
"Revolution!" has mutated from tocsin to toxin, a malign pseudo-Gnostic
fate-trap, a nightmare where no matter how we struggle we never
escape that evil Aeon, that incubus the State, one State after another,
every "heaven" ruled by yet one more evil angel.
If History IS
"Time," as it claims to be, then the uprising is a moment that springs
up and out of Time, violates the "law" of History. If the State
IS History, as it claims to be, then the insurrection is the forbidden
moment, an unforgivable denial of the dialectic--shimmying up the
pole and out of the smokehole, a shaman's maneuver carried out at
an "impossible angle" to the universe. History says the Revolution
attains "permanence," or at least duration, while the uprising is
"temporary." In this sense an uprising is like a "peak experience"
as opposed to the standard of "ordinary" consciousness and experience.
Like festivals, uprisings cannot happen every day--otherwise they
would not be "nonordinary." But such moments of intensity give shape
and meaning to the entirety of a life. The shaman returns--you can't
stay up on the roof forever-- but things have changed, shifts and
integrations have occurred--a difference
is made.
You will argue
that this is a counsel of despair. What of the anarchist dream,
the Stateless state, the Commune, the autonomous zone with duration,
a free society, a free culture?
Are we to abandon that hope in return for some existentialist acte
gratuit? The point is not to change consciousness but to change
the world.
I accept this
as a fair criticism. I'd make two rejoinders nevertheless; first,
revolution has
never yet resulted in achieving this dream. The vision comes to
life in the moment of uprising--but as soon as "the Revolution"
triumphs and the State returns, the dream and the ideal are already
betrayed. I have not given up hope or even expectation of change--but
I distrust the word Revolution.
Second, even if we replace the revolutionary approach with a concept
of insurrection blossoming
spontaneously into anarchist culture, our own particular
historical situation is not propitious for such a vast undertaking.
Absolutely nothing but a futile martyrdom could possibly result
now from a head- on collision with the terminal State, the megacorporate
information State, the empire of Spectacle and Simulation. Its guns
are all pointed at us, while our meager weaponry finds nothing to
aim at but a hysteresis, a rigid vacuity, a Spook capable of smothering
every spark in an ectoplasm of information, a society of capitulation
ruled by the image of the Cop and the absorbant eye of the TV screen.
In short, we're
not touting the TAZ as an exclusive end in itself, replacing all
other forms of organization, tactics, and goals. We recommend it
because it can provide the quality of enhancement associated with
the uprising without necessarily leading to violence and martyrdom.
The TAZ is like an uprising which does not engage directly with
the State, a guerilla operation which liberates an area (of land,
of time, of imagination) and then dissolves itself to re-form elsewhere/elsewhen,
before the State
can crush it. Because the State is concerned primarily with Simulation
rather than substance, the TAZ can "occupy" these areas clandestinely
and carry on its festal purposes for quite a while in relative peace.
Perhaps certain small TAZs have lasted whole lifetimes because they
went unnoticed, like hillbilly enclaves--because they never intersected
with the Spectacle, never appeared outside that real life which
is invisible to the agents of Simulation.
Babylon takes
its abstractions for realities; precisely within
this margin of error the TAZ can come into existence. Getting the
TAZ started may involve tactics of violence and defense, but its
greatest strength lies in its invisibility--the State cannot recognize
it because History has no definition of it. As soon as the TAZ is
named (represented, mediated), it must vanish, it will
vanish, leaving behind it an empty husk, only to spring up again
somewhere else, once again invisible because undefinable in terms
of the Spectacle. The TAZ is thus a perfect tactic for an era in
which the State is omnipresent and all-powerful and yet simultaneously
riddled with cracks and vacancies. And because the TAZ is a microcosm
of that "anarchist dream" of a free culture, I can think of no better
tactic by which to work toward that goal while at the same time
experiencing some of its benefits here and now.
In sum, realism
demands not only that we give up waiting
for "the Revolution" but also that we give up wanting
it. "Uprising," yes--as often as possible and even at the risk of
violence. The spasming
of the Simulated State will be "spectacular," but in most cases
the best and most radical tactic will be to refuse to engage in
spectacular violence, to withdraw
from the area of simulation, to disappear.
The TAZ is an
encampment of guerilla ontologists: strike and run away. Keep moving
the entire tribe, even if it's only data in the Web. The TAZ must
be capable of defense; but both the "strike" and the "defense" should,
if possible, evade the violence of the State, which is no longer
a meaningful violence.
The strike is made at structures of control, essentially at ideas;
the defense is "invisibility," a martial
art, and "invulnerability"--an "occult" art within the
martial arts. The "nomadic war machine" conquers without being noticed
and moves on before the map can be adjusted. As to the future--Only
the autonomous can plan
autonomy, organize for it, create it. It's a bootstrap operation.
The first step is somewhat akin to satori--the realization that
the TAZ begins with a simple act of realization.
(Note: See Appendix
C, quote by Renzo Novatore)
The Psychotopology of
Everyday Life
THE CONCEPT OF
THE TAZ arises first out of a critique of Revolution, and an appreciation
of the Insurrection. The former labels the latter a failure; but
for us uprising
represents a far more interesting possibility, from the standard
of a psychology of liberation, than all the "successful" revolutions
of bourgeoisie, communists, fascists, etc.
The second generating
force behind the TAZ springs from the historical development I call
"the closure of the map." The last bit of Earth unclaimed by any
nation-state was eaten up in 1899. Ours is the first century without
terra incognita, without a frontier. Nationality is the highest
principle of world governance--not one speck of rock in the South
Seas can be left open,
not one remote valley, not even the Moon and planets. This is the
apotheosis of "territorial gangsterism." Not one square inch of
Earth goes unpoliced or untaxed...in theory.
The "map" is a
political abstract grid, a gigantic con enforced by the carrot/stick
conditioning of the "Expert" State, until for most of us the map
becomes the territory-
-no longer "Turtle Island," but "the USA." And yet because the map
is an abstraction it cannot cover Earth with 1:1 accuracy. Within
the fractal complexities of actual geography the map can see only
dimensional grids. Hidden enfolded immensities escape the measuring
rod. The map is not accurate; the map cannot
be accurate.
So--Revolution
is closed, but insurgency is open. For the time being we concentrate
our force on temporary "power surges," avoiding all entanglements
with "permanent solutions."
And--the map is
closed, but the autonomous zone is open. Metaphorically it unfolds
within the fractal dimensions invisible to the cartography of Control.
And here we should introduce the concept of psychotopology (and
-topography) as an alternative "science" to that of the State's
surveying and mapmaking and "psychic imperialism." Only psychotopography
can draw 1:1 maps of reality because only the human mind provides
sufficient complexity to model the real. But a 1:1 map cannot "control"
its territory because it is virtually identical with its territory.
It can only be used to suggest,
in a sense gesture towards,
certain features. We are looking for "spaces" (geographic, social,
cultural, imaginal) with potential to flower as autonomous zones--and
we are looking for times in which these spaces are relatively open,
either through neglect on the part of the State or because they
have somehow escaped notice by the mapmakers, or for whatever reason.
Psychotopology is the art of dowsing
for potential TAZs.
The closures of
Revolution and of the map, however, are only the negative sources
of the TAZ; much remains to be said of its positive inspirations.
Reaction alone cannot provide the energy needed to "manifest" a
TAZ. An uprising must be for
something as well.
1. First, we can
speak of a natural anthropology of the TAZ. The nuclear family is
the base unit of consensus society, but not of the TAZ. ("Families!--how
I hate them! the misers of love!"--Gide) The nuclear family, with
its attendant "oedipal miseries," appears to have been a Neolithic
invention, a response to the "agricultural revolution" with its
imposed scarcity and its imposed hierarchy. The Paleolithic model
is at once more primal and more radical: the band.
The typical hunter/gatherer nomadic or semi- nomadic band consists
of about 50 people. Within larger tribal societies the band-structure
is fulfilled by clans within the tribe, or by sodalities such as
initiatic or secret societies, hunt or war societies, gender societies,
"children's republics," and so on. If the nuclear family is produced
by scarcity (and results in miserliness), the band is produced by
abundance--and results in prodigality. The family is closed,
by genetics, by the male's possession
of women and children, by the hierarchic totality of agricultural/industrial
society. The band is open--not
to everyone, of course, but to the affinity group, the initiates
sworn to a bond of love. The band is not part of a larger hierarchy,
but rather part of a horizontal pattern of custom, extended kinship,
contract and alliance, spiritual affinities, etc. (American Indian
society preserves certain aspects of this structure even now.)
In our own post-Spectacular
Society of Simulation many forces are working--largely invisibly--to
phase out the nuclear family and bring back the band. Breakdowns
in the structure of Work resonate in the shattered "stability" of
the unit-home and unit-family. One's "band" nowadays includes friends,
ex-spouses and lovers, people met at different jobs and pow-wows,
affinity groups, special interest networks, mail networks, etc.
The nuclear family becomes more and more obviously a trap,
a cultural sinkhole, a neurotic secret implosion of split atoms--and
the obvious counter-strategy emerges spontaneously in the almost
unconscious rediscovery of the more archaic and yet more post-industrial
possibility of the band.
2. The TAZ as
festival. Stephen
Pearl Andrews once offered, as an image of anarchist society, the
dinner party,
in which all structure of authority dissolves in conviviality and
celebration (see Appendix C). Here we might also invoke Fourier
and his concept of the senses as the basis of social becoming--"touch-rut"
and "gastrosophy," and his paean to the neglected implications of
smell and taste. The ancient concepts of jubilee and saturnalia
originate in an intuition that certain events lie outside the scope
of "profane time," the measuring-rod of the State and of History.
These holidays literally occupied gaps in the calendar--intercalary
intervals. By the Middle Ages, nearly a third of the
year was given over to holidays. Perhaps the riots against calendar
reform had less to do with the "eleven lost days" than with a sense
that imperial science was conspiring to close up these gaps in the
calendar where the people's freedoms had accumulated--a coup d'etat,
a mapping of the year, a seizure of time itself, turning the organic
cosmos into a clockwork universe. The death of the festival.
Participants in
insurrection invariably note its festive aspects, even in the midst
of armed struggle, danger, and risk. The uprising is like a saturnalia
which has slipped loose (or been forced to vanish) from its intercalary
interval and is now at liberty to pop up anywhere or when. Freed
of time and place, it nevertheless possesses a nose for the ripeness
of events, and an affinity for the genius loci; the science of psychotopology
indicates "flows of forces" and "spots of power" (to borrow occultist
metaphors) which localize the TAZ spatio-temporally, or at least
help to define its relation to moment and locale.
The media invite
us to "come celebrate the moments of your life" with the spurious
unification of commodity and spectacle, the famous non-event
of pure representation. In response to this obscenity we have, on
the one hand, the spectrum of refusal
(chronicled by the Situationists, John Zerzan, Bob Black et al.)--and
on the other hand, the emergence of a festal
culture removed and even hidden from the would-be managers
of our leisure. "Fight for the right to party" is in fact not a
parody of the radical struggle but a new manifestation of it, appropriate
to an age which offers TVs and telephones as ways to "reach out
and touch" other human beings, ways to "Be There!"
Pearl Andrews
was right: the dinner party is already "the seed of the new society
taking shape within the shell of the old" (IWW Preamble). The sixties-style
"tribal gathering," the forest conclave of eco-saboteurs, the idyllic
Beltane of the neo-pagans, anarchist conferences, gay faery circles...Harlem
rent parties of the twenties, nightclubs, banquets, old-time libertarian
picnics--we should realize that all these are already "liberated
zones" of a sort, or at least potential TAZs. Whether open only
to a few friends, like a dinner party, or to thousands of celebrants,
like a Be-In, the party is always "open" because it is not "ordered";
it may be planned, but unless it "happens"
it's a failure. The element of spontaneity is crucial.
The essence of
the party: face-to-face, a group of humans synergize their efforts
to realize mutual desires, whether for good food and cheer, dance,
conversation, the arts of life; perhaps even for erotic pleasure,
or to create a communal artwork, or to attain the very transport
of bliss-- in short, a "union of egoists" (as Stirner put it) in
its simplest form--or else, in Kropotkin's terms, a basic biological
drive to "mutual aid." (Here we should also mention Bataille's "economy
of excess" and his theory of potlatch culture.)
3. Vital in shaping
TAZ reality is the concept of psychic
nomadism (or as we jokingly call it, "rootless cosmopolitanism").
Aspects of this phenomenon have been discussed by Deleuze and Guattari
in Nomadology
and the War Machine, by Lyotard in Driftworks
and by various authors in the "Oasis" issue of Semiotext(e).
We use the term "psychic nomadism" here rather than "urban nomadism,"
"nomadology," "driftwork," etc., simply in order to garner all these
concepts into a single loose complex, to be studied in light of
the coming- into-being of the TAZ. "The death of God," in some ways
a de-centering of the entire "European" project, opened a multi-perspectived
post- ideological worldview able to move "rootlessly" from philosophy
to tribal myth, from natural science to Taoism-- able to see for
the first time through eyes like some golden insect's, each facet
giving a view of an entirely other world.
But this vision
was attained at the expense of inhabiting an epoch where speed and
"commodity fetishism" have created a tyrannical false unity which
tends to blur all cultural diversity and individuality, so that
"one place is as good as another." This paradox creates "gypsies,"
psychic travellers driven by desire or curiosity, wanderers with
shallow loyalties (in fact disloyal to the "European Project" which
has lost all its charm and vitality), not tied down to any particular
time and place, in search of diversity and adventure...This description
covers not only the X-class artists and intellectuals but also migrant
laborers, refugees, the "homeless," tourists, the RV and mobile-home
culture--also people who "travel" via the Net, but may never leave
their own rooms (or those like Thoreau who "have travelled much--in
Concord"); and finally it includes "everybody," all of us, living
through our automobiles, our vacations, our TVs, books, movies,
telephones, changing jobs, changing "lifestyles," religions, diets,
etc., etc.
Psychic nomadism
as a tactic, what
Deleuze & Guattari metaphorically call "the war machine," shifts
the paradox from a passive to an active and perhaps even "violent"
mode. "God"'s last throes and deathbed rattles have been going on
for such a long time--in the form of Capitalism, Fascism, and Communism,
for example--that there's still a lot of "creative destruction"
to be carried out by post-Bakuninist post-Nietzschean commandos
or apaches (literally
"enemies") of the old Consensus. These nomads practice the razzia,
they are corsairs, they are viruses; they have both need and desire
for TAZs, camps of black tents under the desert stars, interzones,
hidden fortified oases along secret caravan routes, "liberated"
bits of jungle and bad-land, no-go areas, black markets, and underground
bazaars.
These nomads chart
their courses by strange stars, which might be luminous clusters
of data in cyberspace, or perhaps hallucinations. Lay down a map
of the land; over that, set a map of political change; over that,
a map of the Net, especially the counter-Net with its emphasis on
clandestine information-flow and logistics--and finally, over all,
the 1:1 map of the creative imagination, aesthetics, values. The
resultant grid comes to life, animated by unexpected eddies and
surges of energy, coagulations of light, secret tunnels, surprises.
The Net and the Web
THE NEXT FACTOR
CONTRIBUTING to the TAZ is so vast and ambiguous that it needs a
section unto itself.
We've spoken of
the Net, which
can be defined as the totality of all information and communication
transfer. Some of these transfers are privileged and limited to
various elites, which gives the Net a hierarchic aspect. Other transactions
are open to all--so the Net has a horizontal or non-hierarchic aspect
as well. Military and Intelligence data are restricted, as are banking
and currency information and the like. But for the most part the
telephone, the postal system, public data banks, etc. are accessible
to everyone and anyone. Thus within
the Net there has begun to emerge a shadowy sort of
counter-Net, which
we will call the Web
(as if the Net were a fishing-net and the Web were spider-webs woven
through the interstices and broken sections of the Net). Generally
we'll use the term Web
to refer to the alternate horizontal open structure of info- exchange,
the non-hierarchic network, and reserve the term counter-Net
to indicate clandestine illegal and rebellious use of the Web, including
actual data-piracy and other forms of leeching off the Net itself.
Net, Web, and counter-Net are all parts of the same whole pattern-complex--they
blur into each other at innumerable points. The terms are not meant
to define areas but to suggest tendencies.
(Digression: Before
you condemn the Web or counter-Net for its "parasitism," which can
never be a truly revolutionary force, ask yourself what "production"
consists of in the Age of Simulation. What is the "productive class"?
Perhaps you'll be forced to admit that these terms seem to have
lost their meaning. In any case the answers to such questions are
so complex that the TAZ tends to ignore them altogether and simply
picks up what it can use.
"Culture is our Nature"-- and we are the thieving magpies, or the
hunter/gatherers of the world of CommTech.)
The present forms
of the unofficial Web are, one must suppose, still rather primitive:
the marginal zine network, the BBS networks, pirated software, hacking,
phone- phreaking, some influence in print and radio, almost none
in the other big media--no TV stations, no satellites, no fiber-
optics, no cable, etc., etc. However the Net itself presents a pattern
of changing/evolving relations between subjects ("users") and objects
("data"). The nature of these relations has been exhaustively explored,
from McLuhan to Virilio. It would take pages and pages to "prove"
what by now "everyone knows." Rather than rehash it all, I am interested
in asking how these evolving relations suggest modes of implementation
for the TAZ.
The TAZ has a
temporary but actual location in time and a temporary but actual
location in space. But clearly it must also have "location" in
the Web, and this location is of a different sort, not
actual but virtual, not immediate but instantaneous. The Web not
only provides logistical support for the TAZ, it also helps to bring
it into being; crudely speaking one might say that the TAZ "exists"
in information- space as well as in the "real world." The Web can
compact a great deal of time, as data, into an infinitesimal "space."
We have noted that the TAZ, because it is temporary, must necessarily
lack some of the advantages of a freedom which experiences duration
and a more-or-less fixed locale.
But the Web can provide a kind of substitute for some of this duration
and locale--it can inform
the TAZ, from its inception, with vast amounts of compacted time
and space which have been "subtilized" as data.
At this moment
in the evolution of the Web, and considering our demands for the
"face-to-face" and the sensual, we must consider the Web primarily
as a support system, capable of carrying information from one TAZ
to another, of defending the TAZ, rendering it "invisible" or giving
it teeth, as the situation might demand. But more than that: If
the TAZ is a nomad camp, then the Web helps provide the epics, songs,
genealogies and legends of the tribe; it provides the secret caravan
routes and raiding trails which make up the flowlines of tribal
economy; it even contains
some of the very roads they will follow, some of the very dreams
they will experience as signs and portents.
The Web does not
depend for its existence on any computer technology. Word-of-mouth,
mail, the marginal zine network, "phone trees," and the like already
suffice to construct an information webwork. The key is not the
brand or level of tech involved, but the openness and horizontality
of the structure. Nevertheless, the whole concept of the Net implies
the use of computers. In the SciFi imagination the Net is headed
for the condition of Cyberspace (as in Tron
or Neuromancer)
and the pseudo-telepathy of "virtual reality." As a Cyberpunk fan
I can't help but envision "reality hacking" playing a major role
in the creation of TAZs. Like Gibson and Sterling I am assuming
that the official Net will never succeed in shutting down the Web
or the counter-Net--that data-piracy, unauthorized transmissions
and the free flow of information can never be frozen. (In fact,
as I understand it, chaos theory predicts
that any universal Control-system is impossible.)
However, leaving
aside all mere speculation about the future, we must face a very
serious question about the Web and the tech it involves. The TAZ
desires above all to avoid mediation,
to experience its existence as immediate.
The very essence of the affair is "breast-to-breast" as the sufis
say, or face-to-face. But, BUT: the very essence of the Web is mediation.
Machines here are our ambassadors--the flesh is irrelevant except
as a terminal,
with all the sinister connotations of the term.
The TAZ may perhaps
best find its own space by wrapping its head around two seemingly
contradictory attitudes toward Hi- Tech and its apotheosis the Net:
(1) what we might call the Fifth
Estate/Neo-Paleolithic Post-Situ Ultra-Green position,
which construes itself as a luddite argument against mediation and
against the Net; and (2) the Cyberpunk utopianists, futuro-libertarians,
Reality Hackers and their allies who see the Net as a step forward
in evolution, and who assume that any possible ill effects of mediation
can be overcome--at least, once we've liberated the means of production.
The TAZ agrees
with the hackers because it wants to come into being--in part--through
the Net, even through the mediation of the Net. But it also agrees
with the greens because it retains intense awareness of itself as
body and feels
only revulsion for CyberGnosis,
the attempt to transcend the body through instantaneity and simulation.
The TAZ tends to view the Tech/anti-Tech dichotomy as misleading,
like most dichotomies, in which apparent opposites turn out to be
falsifications or even hallucinations caused by semantics. This
is a way of saying that the TAZ wants to live in this
world, not in the idea of another world, some visionary world born
of false unification (all
green OR all metal)
which can only be more pie in the sky by-&-by (or as Alice
put it, "Jam yesterday or jam tomorrow, but never jam today").
The TAZ is "utopian"
in the sense that it envisions an intensification
of everyday life, or as the Surrealists might have said, life's
penetration by the Marvelous. But it cannot be utopian in the actual
meaning of the word, nowhere,
or NoPlace Place. The TAZ
is somewhere. It lies at the intersection of many forces,
like some pagan power- spot at the junction of mysterious ley-lines,
visible to the adept in seemingly unrelated bits of terrain, landscape,
flows of air, water, animals. But now the lines are not all etched
in time and space. Some of them exist only "within" the Web, even
though they also intersect with real times and places. Perhaps some
of the lines are "non-ordinary" in the sense that no convention
for quantifying them exists. These lines might better be studied
in the light of chaos science than of sociology, statistics, economics,
etc. The patterns of force which bring the TAZ into being have something
in common with those chaotic "Strange Attractors" which exist, so
to speak, between
the dimensions.
The TAZ by its
very nature seizes every available means to realize itself--it will
come to life whether in a cave or an L-5 Space City--but above all
it will live, now, or as soon as possible, in however suspect or
ramshackle a form, spontaneously, without regard for ideology or
even anti- ideology. It will use the computer because the computer
exists, but it will also use powers which are so completely unrelated
to alienation or simulation that they guarantee a certain psychic
paleolithism to the TAZ, a primordial-shamanic spirit
which will "infect" even the Net itself (the true meaning of Cyberpunk
as I read it). Because the TAZ is an intensification, a surplus,
an excess, a potlatch, life spending itself in living rather than
merely surviving
(that snivelling shibboleth of the eighties), it cannot be defined
either by Tech or anti-Tech. It contradicts itself like a true despiser
of hobgoblins, because it wills itself to be, at any cost in damage
to "perfection," to the immobility of the final.
In the Mandelbrot
Set and its computer-graphic realization we watch--in a fractal
universe--maps which are embedded and in fact hidden within maps
within maps etc. to the limits of computational power. What is it
for, this map
which in a sense bears a 1:1 relation with a fractal dimension?
What can one do with it, other than admire its psychedelic elegance?
If we were to
imagine an information map--a
cartographic projection of the Net in its entirety--we would have
to include in it the features of chaos, which have already begun
to appear, for example, in the operations of complex parallel processing,
telecommunications, transfers of electronic "money," viruses, guerilla
hacking and so on.
Each of these
"areas" of chaos could be represented by topographs similar to the
Mandelbrot Set, such that the "peninsulas" are embedded or hidden
within the map--such that they seem to "disappear." This "writing"--parts
of which vanish, parts of which efface themselves--represents the
very process by which the Net is already compromised, incomplete
to its own view, ultimately un-Controllable. In other words, the
M Set, or something like it, might prove to be useful in "plotting"
(in all senses of the word) the emergence of the counterNet as a
chaotic process, a "creative evolution" in Prigogine's term. If
nothing else the M Set serves as a metaphor
for a "mapping" of the TAZ's interface with the Net as a disappearance
of information. Every "catastrophe" in the Net is a
node of power for the Web, the counter-Net. The Net will be damaged
by chaos, while the Web may thrive on it.
Whether through
simple data-piracy, or else by a more complex development of actual
rapport with chaos, the Web- hacker, the cybernetician of the TAZ,
will find ways to take advantage of perturbations, crashes, and
breakdowns in the Net (ways to make information out of "entropy").
As a bricoleur, a scavenger of information shards, smuggler, blackmailer,
perhaps even cyberterrorist, the TAZ-hacker will work for the evolution
of clandestine fractal connections. These connections, and the different
information that flows among and between them, will form "power
outlets" for the coming-into-being of the TAZ itself- -as if one
were to steal electricity from the energy- monopoly to light an
abandoned house for squatters.
Thus the Web,
in order to produce situations conducive to the TAZ, will parasitize
the Net--but we can also conceive of this strategy as an attempt
to build toward the construction of an alternative and autonomous
Net, "free" and no longer parasitic, which will serve as the basis
for a "new society emerging from the shell of the old." The counter-Net
and the TAZ can be considered, practically speaking, as ends in
themselves--but theoretically they can also be viewed as forms of
struggle toward a different reality.
Having said this
we must still admit to some qualms about computers, some still unanswered
questions, especially about the Personal Computer.
The story of computer
networks, BBSs and various other experiments in electro-democracy
has so far been one of hobbyism
for the most part. Many anarchists and libertarians have deep faith
in the PC as a weapon of liberation and self-liberation--but no
real gains to show, no palpable liberty.
I have little
interest in some hypothetical emergent entrepreneurial class of
self-employed data/word processors who will soon be able to carry
on a vast cottage industry or piecemeal shitwork for various corporations
and bureaucracies. Moreover it takes no ESP to foresee that this
"class" will develop its underclass--a
sort of lumpen yuppetariat: housewives, for example, who will provide
their families with "second incomes" by turning their own homes
into electro-sweatshops, little Work-tyrannies where the "boss"
is a computer network.
Also I am not
impressed by the sort of information and services proffered by contemporary
"radical" networks. Somewhere--one is told--there exists an "information
economy." Maybe so; but the info being traded over the "alternative"
BBSs seems to consist entirely of chitchat and techie-talk. Is this
an economy? or merely a pastime for enthusiasts? OK, PCs have created
yet another "print revolution"--OK, marginal webworks are evolving--OK,
I can now carry on six phone conversations at once. But what difference
has this made in my ordinary life?
Frankly, I already
had plenty of data to enrich my perceptions, what with books, movies,
TV, theater, telephones, the U.S. Postal Service, altered states
of consciousness, and so on. Do I really need a PC in order to obtain
yet more such data? You offer me secret
information? Well...perhaps I'm tempted--but still I demand marvelous
secrets, not just unlisted telephone numbers or the trivia of cops
and politicians. Most of all I want computers to provide me with
information linked to real
goods--"the good things in life," as the IWW Preamble
puts it. And here, since I'm accusing the hackers and BBSers of
irritating intellectual vagueness, I must myself descend from the
baroque clouds of Theory & Critique and explain what I mean
by "real goods."
Let's say that
for both political and personal reasons I desire good food, better
than I can obtain from Capitalism-- unpolluted food still blessed
with strong and natural flavors. To complicate the game imagine
that the food I crave is illegal--raw milk perhaps, or the exquisite
Cuban fruit mamey, which cannot be imported fresh into the U.S.
because its seed is hallucinogenic (or so I'm told). I am not a
farmer. Let's pretend I'm an importer of rare perfumes and aphrodisiacs,
and sharpen the play by assuming most of my stock is also illegal.
Or maybe I only want to trade word processing services for organic
turnips, but refuse to report the transaction to the IRS (as required
by law, believe it or not). Or maybe I want to meet other humans
for consensual but illegal acts of mutual pleasure (this has actually
been tried, but all the hard-sex BBSs have been busted--and what
use is an underground with lousy
security?). In short, assume that I'm fed up with mere
information, the ghost in the machine. According to you, computers
should already be quite capable of facilitating my desires for food,
drugs, sex, tax evasion. So what's the matter? Why isn't it happening?
The TAZ has occurred,
is occurring, and will occur with or without the computer. But for
the TAZ to reach its full potential it must become less a matter
of spontaneous combustion and more a matter of "islands in the Net."
The Net, or rather the counter-Net, assumes the promise of an integral
aspect of the TAZ, an addition that will multiply its potential,
a "quantum jump" (odd how this expression has come to mean a big
leap) in complexity and significance. The TAZ must now exist within
a world of pure space, the world of the senses. Liminal, even evanescent,
the TAZ must combine information and desire in order to fulfill
its adventure (its "happening"), in order to fill itself to the
borders of its destiny, to saturate itself with its own becoming.
Perhaps the Neo-Paleolithic
School are correct when they assert that all forms of alienation
and mediation must be destroyed or abandoned before our goals can
be realized--or perhaps true anarchy will be realized only in Outer
Space, as some futuro-libertarians assert. But the TAZ does not
concern itself very much with "was" or "will be." The TAZ is interested
in results, successful raids on consensus reality, breakthroughs
into more intense and more abundant life. If the computer cannot
be used in this project, then the computer will have to be overcome.
My intuition however suggests that the counter-Net is already coming
into being, perhaps already exists--but I cannot prove it. I've
based the theory of the TAZ in large part on this intuition. Of
course the Web also involves non-computerized networks of exchange
such as samizdat, the black market, etc.--but the full potential
of non-hierarchic information networking logically leads to the
computer as the tool par excellence. Now I'm waiting for the hackers
to prove I'm right, that my intuition is valid. Where are my turnips?
"Gone to Croatan"
WE HAVE NO DESIRE
to define the TAZ or to elaborate dogmas about how it must
be created. Our contention is rather that it has been created, will
be created, and is being created. Therefore it would prove more
valuable and interesting to look at some TAZs past and present,
and to speculate about future manifestations; by evoking a few prototypes
we may be able to gauge the potential scope of the complex, and
perhaps even get a glimpse of an "archetype." Rather than attempt
any sort of encyclopaedism we'll adopt a scatter-shot technique,
a mosaic of glimpses, beginning quite arbitrarily with the 16th-17th
centuries and the settlement of the New World.
The opening of
the "new" world was conceived from the start as an occultist
operation. The magus John Dee, spiritual advisor to
Elizabeth I, seems to have invented the concept of "magical imperialism"
and infected an entire generation with it. Halkyut and Raleigh fell
under his spell, and Raleigh used his connections with the "School
of Night"--a cabal of advanced thinkers, aristocrats, and adepts--to
further the causes of exploration, colonization and mapmaking. The
Tempest was a propaganda-piece for the new ideology,
and the Roanoke Colony was its first showcase experiment.
The alchemical
view of the New World associated it with materia prima or hyle,
the "state of Nature," innocence and all-possibility ("Virgin-ia"),
a chaos or inchoateness which the adept would transmute into "gold,"
that is, into spiritual perfection as
well as material abundance. But this alchemical vision
is also informed in part by an actual fascination with the inchoate,
a sneaking sympathy for it, a feeling of yearning for its formless
form which took the symbol of the "Indian" for its focus: "Man"
in the state of
nature, uncorrupted by "government." Caliban, the Wild Man, is lodged
like a virus in the very machine of Occult Imperialism; the forest/animal/humans
are invested from the very start with the magic power of the marginal,
despised and outcaste. On the one hand Caliban is ugly, and Nature
a "howling wilderness"--on the other, Caliban is noble and unchained,
and Nature an Eden. This split in European consciousness predates
the Romantic/Classical dichotomy; it's rooted in Renaissance High
Magic. The discovery of America (Eldorado, the Fountain of Youth)
crystallized it; and it precipitated in actual schemes for colonization.
We were taught
in elementary school that the first settlements in Roanoke failed;
the colonists disappeared, leaving behind them only the cryptic
message "Gone To Croatan." Later reports of "grey-eyed Indians"
were dismissed as legend. What really happened, the textbook implied,
was that the Indians massacred the defenseless settlers. However,
"Croatan" was not some Eldorado; it was the name of a neighboring
tribe of friendly Indians. Apparently the settlement was simply
moved back from the coast into the Great Dismal Swamp and absorbed
into the tribe. And the grey-eyed Indians were real--they're still
there, and they still call themselves Croatans.
So--the very first
colony in the New World chose to renounce its contract with Prospero
(Dee/Raleigh/Empire) and go over to the Wild Men with Caliban. They
dropped out. They became "Indians," "went native," opted for chaos
over the appalling miseries of serfing for the plutocrats and intellectuals
of London.
As America came
into being where once there had been "Turtle Island," Croatan remained
embedded in its collective psyche. Out beyond the frontier, the
state of Nature (i.e. no State) still prevailed--and within the
consciousness of the settlers the option of wildness always lurked,
the temptation to give up on Church, farmwork, literacy, taxes--
all the burdens of civilization--and "go to Croatan" in some way
or another. Moreover, as the Revolution in England was betrayed,
first by Cromwell and then by Restoration, waves of Protestant radicals
fled or were transported to the New World (which had now become
a prison, a place
of exile). Antinomians,
Familists, rogue Quakers, Levellers, Diggers, and Ranters were now
introduced to the occult shadow of wildness, and rushed to embrace
it.
Anne Hutchinson
and her friends were only the best known (i.e. the most upper-class)
of the Antinomians--having had the bad luck to be caught up in Bay
Colony politics--but a much more radical wing of the movement clearly
existed. The incidents Hawthorne relates in "The Maypole of Merry
Mount" are thoroughly historical; apparently the extremists had
decided to renounce Christianity altogether and revert to paganism.
If they had succeeded in uniting with their Indian allies the result
might have been an Antinomian/Celtic/Algonquin syncretic religion,
a sort of 17th century North American Santeria.
Sectarians were
able to thrive better under the looser and more corrupt administrations
in the Caribbean, where rival European interests had left many islands
deserted or even unclaimed. Barbados and Jamaica in particular must
have been settled by many extremists, and I believe that Levellerish
and Ranterish influences contributed to the Buccaneer "utopia" on
Tortuga. Here for the first time, thanks to Esquemelin, we can study
a successful New World proto-TAZ in some depth. Fleeing from hideous
"benefits" of Imperialism such as slavery, serfdom, racism and intolerance,
from the tortures of impressment and the living death of the plantations,
the Buccaneers adopted Indian ways, intermarried with Caribs, accepted
blacks and Spaniards as equals, rejected all nationality, elected
their captains democratically, and reverted to the "state of Nature."
Having declared themselves "at war with all the world," they sailed
forth to plunder under mutual contracts called "Articles" which
were so egalitarian that every member received a full share and
the Captain usually only 1 1/4 or 1 1/2 shares. Flogging and punishments
were forbidden-- quarrels were settled by vote or by the code duello.
It is simply wrong
to brand the pirates as mere sea-going highwaymen or even proto-capitalists,
as some historians have done. In a sense they were "social bandits,"
although their base communities were not traditional peasant societies
but "utopias" created almost ex nihilo in terra incognita, enclaves
of total liberty occupying empty spaces on the map. After the fall
of Tortuga, the Buccaneer ideal remained alive all through the "Golden
Age" of Piracy (ca. 1660-1720), and resulted in land-settlements
in Belize, for example, which was founded by Buccaneers. Then, as
the scene shifted to Madagascar--an island still unclaimed by any
imperial power and ruled only by a patchwork of native kings (chiefs)
eager for pirate allies--the Pirate Utopia reached its highest form.
Defoe's account
of Captain Mission and the founding of Libertatia may be, as some
historians claim, a literary hoax meant to propagandize for radical
Whig theory--but it was embedded in The
General History of the Pyrates (1724-28), most of
which is still accepted as true and accurate. Moreover the story
of Capt. Mission was not criticized when the book appeared and many
old Madagascar hands still survived. They
seem to have believed it, no doubt because they had experienced
pirate enclaves very much like Libertatia. Once again, rescued slaves,
natives, and even traditional enemies such as the Portuguese were
all invited to join as equals. (Liberating slave ships was a major
preoccupation.) Land was held in common, representatives elected
for short terms, booty shared; doctrines of liberty were preached
far more radical than even those of Common
Sense.
Libertatia hoped
to endure, and Mission died in its defense. But most of the pirate
utopias were meant to be temporary; in fact the corsairs' true "republics"
were their ships, which sailed under Articles. The shore enclaves
usually had no law at all. The last classic example, Nassau in the
Bahamas, a beachfront resort of shacks and tents devoted to wine,
women (and probably boys too, to judge by Birge's Sodomy
and Piracy), song (the pirates were inordinately fond
of music and used to hire on bands for entire cruises), and wretched
excess, vanished overnight when the British fleet appeared in the
Bay. Blackbeard and "Calico Jack" Rackham and his crew of pirate
women moved on to wilder shores and nastier fates, while others
meekly accepted the Pardon and reformed. But the Buccaneer tradition
lasted, both in Madagascar where the mixed-blood children of the
pirates began to carve out kingdoms of their own, and in the Caribbean,
where escaped slaves as well as mixed black/white/red groups were
able to thrive in the mountains and backlands as "Maroons." The
Maroon community in Jamaica still retained a degree of autonomy
and many of the old folkways when Zora Neale Hurston visited there
in the 1920's (see Tell
My Horse). The Maroons of Suriname still practice
African "paganism."
Throughout the
18th century, North America also produced a number of drop-out "tri-racial
isolate communities." (This clinical-sounding term was invented
by the Eugenics Movement, which produced the first scientific studies
of these communities. Unfortunately the "science" merely served
as an excuse for hatred of racial "mongrels" and the poor, and the
"solution to the problem" was usually forced sterilization.) The
nuclei invariably consisted of runaway slaves and serfs, "criminals"
(i.e. the very poor), "prostitutes" (i.e. white women who married
non-whites), and members of various native tribes. In some cases,
such as the Seminole and Cherokee, the traditional tribal structure
absorbed the newcomers; in other cases, new tribes were formed.
Thus we have the Maroons of the Great Dismal Swamp, who persisted
through the 18th and 19th centuries, adopting runaway slaves, functioning
as a way station on the Underground Railway, and serving as a religious
and ideological center for slave rebellions. The religion was HooDoo,
a mixture of African, native, and Christian elements, and according
to the historian H. Leaming-Bey the elders of the faith and the
leaders of the Great Dismal Maroons were known as "the Seven Finger
High Glister."
The Ramapaughs
of northern New Jersey (incorrectly known as the "Jackson Whites")
present another romantic and archetypal genealogy: freed slaves
of the Dutch poltroons, various Delaware and Algonquin clans, the
usual "prostitutes," the "Hessians" (a catch-phrase for lost British
mercenaries, drop-out Loyalists, etc.), and local bands of social
bandits such as Claudius Smith's.
An African-Islamic
origin is claimed by some of the groups, such as the Moors of Delaware
and the Ben Ishmaels, who migrated from Kentucky to Ohio in the
mid-18th century. The Ishmaels practiced polygamy, never drank alcohol,
made their living as minstrels, intermarried with Indians and adopted
their customs, and were so devoted to nomadism that they built their
houses on wheels. Their annual migration triangulated on frontier
towns with names like Mecca and Medina. In the 19th century some
of them espoused anarchist ideals, and they were targeted by the
Eugenicists for a particularly vicious pogrom of salvation-by-extermination.
Some of the earliest Eugenics laws were passed in their honor. As
a tribe they "disappeared" in the 1920's, but probably swelled the
ranks of early "Black Islamic" sects such as the Moorish Science
Temple. I myself grew up on legends of the "Kallikaks" of the nearby
New Jersey Pine Barrens (and of course on Lovecraft, a rabid racist
who was fascinated by the isolate communities). The legends turned
out to be folk-memories of the slanders of the Eugenicists, whose
U.S. headquarters were in Vineland, NJ, and who undertook the usual
"reforms" against "miscegenation" and "feeblemindedness" in the
Barrens (including the publication of photographs of the Kallikaks,
crudely and obviously retouched to make them look like monsters
of misbreeding).
The "isolate communities"--at
least, those which have retained their identity into the 20th century--consistently
refuse to be absorbed into either mainstream culture or the black
"subculture" into which modern sociologists prefer to categorize
them. In the 1970's, inspired by the Native American renaissance,
a number of groups--including the Moors and the Ramapaughs--applied
to the B.I.A. for recognition as Indian
tribes. They received support from native activists
but were refused official status. If they'd won, after all, it might
have set a dangerous precedent for drop-outs of all sorts, from
"white Peyotists" and hippies to black nationalists, aryans, anarchists
and libertarians-- a "reservation" for anyone and everyone! The
"European Project" cannot recognize the existence of the Wild Man--
green chaos is still too much of a threat to the imperial dream
of order.
Essentially the
Moors and Ramapaughs rejected the "diachronic" or historical explanation
of their origins in favor of a "synchronic" self-identity based
on a "myth" of Indian adoption. Or to put it another way, they
named themselves "Indians." If everyone who wished "to
be an Indian" could accomplish this by an act of self- naming, imagine
what a departure to Croatan would take place. That old occult shadow
still haunts the remnants of our forests (which, by the way, have
greatly increased in the Northeast since the 18-19th century as
vast tracts of farmland return to scrub. Thoreau on his deathbed
dreamed of the return of "...Indians...forests...": the return of
the repressed).
The Moors and
Ramapaughs of course have good materialist reasons to think of themselves
as Indians--after all, they have Indian ancestors--but if we view
their self-naming in "mythic" as well as historical terms we'll
learn more of relevance to our quest for the TAZ. Within tribal
societies there exist what some anthropologists call mannenbunden:
totemic societies devoted to an identity with "Nature" in the act
of shapeshifting, of becoming
the totem-animal (werewolves, jaguar shamans, leopard men, cat-witches,
etc.). In the context of an entire colonial society (as Taussig
points out in Shamanism,
Colonialism and the Wild Man) the shapeshifting power
is seen as inhering in the native culture as a whole-- thus the
most repressed sector of the society acquires a paradoxical power
through the myth of its occult knowledge, which is feared and desired
by the colonist. Of course the natives really do have certain occult
knowledge; but in response to Imperial perception of native culture
as a kind of "spiritual wild(er)ness," the natives come to see themselves
more and more consciously in that role. Even as they are marginalized,
the Margin takes
on an aura of magic. Before the whiteman, they were simply tribes
of people--now, they are "guardians of Nature," inhabitants of the
"state of Nature." Finally the colonist himself is seduced by this
"myth." Whenever an American wants to drop out or back into Nature,
invariably he "becomes an Indian." The Massachusetts radical democrats
(spiritual descendents of the radical Protestants) who organized
the Tea Party, and who literally believed that governments could
be abolished (the whole Berkshire region declared itself in a "state
of Nature"!), disguised themselves as "Mohawks." Thus the colonists,
who suddenly saw themselves marginalized vis-·- vis the motherland,
adopted the role of the marginalized natives, thereby (in a sense)
seeking to participate in their occult power, their mythic radiance.
From the Mountain Men to the Boy Scouts, the dream of "becoming
an Indian" flows beneath myriad strands of American history, culture
and consciousness.
The sexual imagery
connected to "tri-racial" groups also bears out this hypothesis.
"Natives" of course are always immoral, but racial renegades and
drop-outs must be downright polymorphous-perverse. The Buccaneers
were buggers, the Maroons and Mountain Men were miscegenists, the
"Jukes and Kallikaks" indulged in fornication and incest (leading
to mutations such as polydactyly), the children ran around naked
and masturbated openly, etc., etc. Reverting to a "state of Nature"
paradoxically seems to allow for the practice of every "unnatural"
act; or so it would appear if we believe the Puritans and Eugenicists.
And since many people in repressed moralistic racist societies secretly
desire exactly these licentious acts, they project them outwards
onto the marginalized, and thereby convince themselves that they
themselves remain civilized and pure. And in fact some marginalized
communities do really reject consensus morality--the pirates certainly
did!--and no doubt actually act out some of civilization's repressed
desires. (Wouldn't you?)
Becoming "wild" is always an erotic act, an act of nakedness.
Before leaving
the subject of the "tri-racial isolates," I'd like to recall Nietzsche's
enthusiasm for "race mixing." Impressed by the vigor and beauty
of hybrid cultures, he offered miscegenation not only as a solution
to the problem of race but also as the principle for a new humanity
freed of ethnic and national chauvinism--a precursor to the "psychic
nomad," perhaps. Nietzsche's dream still seems as remote now as
it did to him. Chauvinism still rules OK. Mixed cultures remain
submerged. But the autonomous zones of the Buccaneers and Maroons,
Ishmaels and Moors, Ramapaughs and "Kallikaks" remain, or their
stories remain, as indications of what Nietzsche might have called
"the Will to Power as Disappearance." We must return to this theme.
Music as an Organizational
Principle
MEANWHILE, HOWEVER,
WE TURN to the history of classical anarchism in the light of the
TAZ concept.
Before the "closure
of the map," a good deal of anti- authoritarian energy went into
"escapist" communes such as Modern Times, the various Phalansteries,
and so on. Interestingly, some of them were not intended to last
"forever," but only as long as the project proved fulfilling. By
Socialist/Utopian standards these experiments were "failures," and
therefore we know little about them.
When escape beyond
the frontier proved impossible, the era of revolutionary urban Communes
began in Europe. The Communes of Paris, Lyons and Marseilles did
not survive long enough to take on any characteristics of permanence,
and one wonders if they were meant to. From our point of view the
chief matter of fascination is the spirit
of the Communes. During and after these years anarchists took up
the practice of revolutionary nomadism, drifting from uprising to
uprising, looking to keep alive in themselves the intensity of spirit
they experienced in the moment of insurrection. In fact, certain
anarchists of the Stirnerite/Nietzschean strain came to look on
this activity as an end in itself, a way of always
occupying an autonomous zone, the interzone which opens
up in the midst or wake of war and revolution (cf. Pynchon's "zone"
in Gravity's
Rainbow). They declared that if any socialist revolution
succeeded, they'd
be the first to turn against it. Short of universal anarchy they
had no intention of ever stopping. In Russia in 1917 they greeted
the free Soviets with joy: this
was their goal. But as soon as the Bolsheviks betrayed the Revolution,
the individualist anarchists were the first to go back on the warpath.
After Kronstadt, of course, all
anarchists condemned the "Soviet Union" (a contradiction in terms)
and moved on in search of new insurrections.
Makhno's Ukraine
and anarchist Spain were meant to have duration,
and despite the exigencies of continual war both succeeded to a
certain extent: not that they lasted a "long time," but they were
successfully organized and could have persisted if not for outside
aggression. Therefore, from among the experiments of the inter-War
period I'll concentrate instead on the madcap Republic of Fiume,
which is much less well known, and was not
meant to endure. Gabriele D'Annunzio, Decadent poet, artist, musician,
aesthete, womanizer, pioneer daredevil aeronautist, black magician,
genius and cad, emerged from World War I as a hero with a small
army at his beck and command: the "Arditi." At a loss for adventure,
he decided to capture the city of Fiume from Yugoslavia and give
it to Italy. After a necromantic ceremony with his mistress in a
cemetery in Venice he set out to conquer Fiume, and succeeded without
any trouble to speak of. But Italy turned down his generous offer;
the Prime Minister called him a fool.
In a huff, D'Annunzio
decided to declare independence and see how long he could get away
with it. He and one of his anarchist friends wrote the Constitution,
which declared music to be
the central principle of the State. The Navy (made up
of deserters and Milanese anarchist maritime unionists) named themselves
the Uscochi, after the long- vanished pirates who once lived on
local offshore islands and preyed on Venetian and Ottoman shipping.
The modern Uscochi succeeded in some wild coups: several rich Italian
merchant vessels suddenly gave the Republic a future: money in the
coffers! Artists, bohemians, adventurers, anarchists (D'Annunzio
corresponded with Malatesta), fugitives and Stateless refugees,
homosexuals, military dandies (the uniform was black with pirate
skull-&-crossbones--later stolen by the SS), and crank reformers
of every stripe (including Buddhists, Theosophists and Vedantists)
began to show up at Fiume in droves. The party never stopped. Every
morning D'Annunzio read poetry and manifestos from his balcony;
every evening a concert, then fireworks. This made up the entire
activity of the government. Eighteen months later, when the wine
and money had run out and the Italian fleet finally
showed up and lobbed a few shells at the Municipal Palace, no one
had the energy to resist.
D'Annunzio, like
many Italian anarchists, later veered toward fascism--in fact, Mussolini
(the ex-Syndicalist) himself seduced the poet along that route.
By the time D'Annunzio realized his error it was too late: he was
too old and sick. But Il Duce had him killed anyway--pushed off
a balcony--and turned him into a "martyr." As for Fiume, though
it lacked the seriousness
of the free Ukraine or Barcelona, it can probably teach us more
about certain aspects of our quest. It was in some ways the last
of the pirate utopias (or the only modern example)--in other ways,
perhaps, it was very nearly the first modern TAZ.
I believe that
if we compare Fiume with the Paris uprising of 1968 (also the Italian
urban insurrections of the early seventies), as well as with the
American countercultural communes and their anarcho-New Left influences,
we should notice certain similarities, such as:--the importance
of aesthetic theory (cf. the Situationists)--also, what might be
called "pirate economics," living high off the surplus of social
overproduction--even the popularity of colorful military uniforms--and
the concept of music
as revolutionary social change--and finally their shared air of
impermanence, of being ready to move on, shape-shift, re- locate
to other universities, mountaintops, ghettos, factories, safe houses,
abandoned farms--or even other planes of reality. No one was trying
to impose yet another Revolutionary Dictatorship, either at Fiume,
Paris, or Millbrook. Either the world would change, or it wouldn't.
Meanwhile keep on the move and live
intensely.
The Munich Soviet
(or "Council Republic") of 1919 exhibited certain features of the
TAZ, even though--like most revolutions--its stated goals were not
exactly "temporary." Gustav Landauer's participation as Minister
of Culture along with Silvio Gesell as Minister of Economics and
other anti- authoritarian and extreme libertarian socialists such
as the poet/playwrights Erich Mªhsam and Ernst Toller, and
Ret Marut (the novelist B. Traven), gave the Soviet a distinct anarchist
flavor. Landauer, who had spent years of isolation working on his
grand synthesis of Nietzsche, Proudhon, Kropotkin, Stirner, Meister
Eckhardt, the radical mystics, and the Romantic volk-philosophers,
knew from the start that the Soviet was doomed; he hoped only that
it would last long enough to be understood.
Kurt Eisner, the martyred founder of the Soviet, believed quite
literally that poets and poetry should form the basis of the revolution.
Plans were launched to devote a large piece of Bavaria to an experiment
in anarcho-socialist economy and community. Landauer drew up proposals
for a Free School system and a People's Theater. Support for the
Soviet was more or less confined to the poorest working-class and
bohemian neighborhoods of Munich, and to groups like the Wandervogel
(the neo-Romantic youth movement), Jewish radicals (like Buber),
the Expressionists, and other marginals. Thus historians dismiss
it as the "Coffeehouse Republic" and belittle its significance in
comparison with Marxist and Spartacist participation in Germany's
post-War revolution(s). Outmaneuvered by the Communists and eventually
murdered by soldiers under the influence of the occult/fascist Thule
Society, Landauer deserves to be remembered as a saint. Yet even
anarchists nowadays tend to misunderstand and condemn him for "selling
out" to a "socialist government." If the Soviet had lasted even
a year, we would weep at the mention of its beauty--but before even
the first flowers of that Spring had wilted, the geist and the spirit
of poetry were crushed, and we have forgotten. Imagine what it must
have been to breathe the air of a city in which the Minister of
Culture has just predicted that schoolchildren will soon be memorizing
the works of Walt Whitman. Ah for a time machine...
The Will to Power as
Disappearance
FOUCAULT, BAUDRILLARD,
ET AL. have discussed various modes of "disappearance" at great
length. Here I wish to suggest that the TAZ is in some sense a tactic
of disappearance. When the Theorists speak of the disappearance
of the Social they mean in part the impossibility of the "Social
Revolution," and in part the impossibility of "the State"-- the
abyss of power, the end of the discourse of power. The anarchist
question in this case should then be: Why bother
to confront a "power" which has lost all meaning and become sheer
Simulation? Such confrontations will only result in dangerous and
ugly spasms of violence by the emptyheaded shit-for-brains who've
inherited the keys to all the armories and prisons. (Perhaps this
is a crude american misunderstanding of sublime and subtle Franco-Germanic
Theory. If so, fine; whoever said understanding
was needed to make use of an idea?)
As I read it,
disappearance seems to be a very logical radical option for our
time, not at all a disaster or death for the radical project. Unlike
the morbid deathfreak nihilistic interpretation of Theory, mine
intends to mine
it for useful strategies in the always-ongoing "revolution of everyday
life": the struggle that cannot cease even with the last failure
of political or social revolution because nothing except the end
of the world can bring an end to everyday life, nor to our aspirations
for the good things,
for the Marvelous. And as Nietzsche said, if the world could
come to an end, logically it would have done so; it has not, so
it does not. And
so, as one of the sufis said, no matter how many draughts of forbidden
wine we drink, we will carry this raging thirst into eternity.
Zerzan and Black
have independently noted certain "elements of Refusal" (Zerzan's
term) which perhaps can be seen as somehow symptomatic of a radical
culture of disappearance, partly unconscious but partly conscious,
which influences far more people than any leftist or anarchist idea.
These gestures are made against
institutions, and in that sense are "negative"--but each negative
gesture also suggests a "positive" tactic to replace rather than
merely refuse the despised institution.
For example, the
negative gesture against schooling
is "voluntary illiteracy." Since I do not share the liberal worship
of literacy for the sake of social ameliorization, I cannot quite
share the gasps of dismay heard everywhere at this phenomenon: I
sympathize with children who refuse books along with the garbage
in the books. There are however positive alternatives which make
use of the same energy of disappearance. Home-schooling and craft-apprenticeship,
like truancy, result in an absence from the prison of school. Hacking
is another form of "education" with certain features of "invisibility."
A mass-scale negative
gesture against politics consists simply of not voting. "Apathy"
(i.e. a healthy boredom with the weary Spectacle) keeps over half
the nation from the polls; anarchism never accomplished as much!
(Nor did anarchism have anything to do with the failure of the recent
Census.) Again, there are positive parallels: "networking" as an
alternative to politics is practiced at many levels of society,
and non-hierarchic organization has attained popularity even outside
the anarchist movement, simply because it works.
(ACT UP and Earth First! are two examples. Alcoholics Anonymous,
oddly enough, is another.)
Refusal of Work
can take the forms of absenteeism, on-job drunkenness, sabotage,
and sheer inattention--but it can also give rise to new modes of
rebellion: more self- employment, participation in the "black" economy
and "lavoro nero," welfare scams and other criminal options, pot
farming, etc.--all more or less "invisible" activities compared
to traditional leftist confrontational tactics such as the general
strike.
Refusal of the
Church? Well,
the "negative gesture" here probably consists of...watching television.
But the positive alternatives include all sorts of non-authoritarian
forms of spirituality, from "unchurched" Christianity to neo- paganism.
The "Free Religions" as I like to call them-- small, self-created,
half-serious/half-fun cults influenced by such currents as Discordianism
and anarcho-Taoism--are to be found all over marginal America, and
provide a growing "fourth way" outside the mainstream churches,
the televangelical bigots, and New Age vapidity and consumerism.
It might also be said that the chief refusal of orthodoxy consists
of the construction of "private moralities" in the Nietzschean sense:
the spirituality of "free spirits."
The negative refusal
of Home is "homelessness,"
which most consider a form of victimization, not wishing to be forced
into nomadology. But "homelessness" can in a sense be a virtue,
an adventure--so it appears, at least, to the huge international
movement of the squatters, our modern hobos.
The negative refusal
of the Family
is clearly divorce, or some other symptom of "breakdown." The positive
alternative springs from the realization that life can be happier
without the nuclear family, whereupon a hundred flowers bloom--from
single parentage to group marriage to erotic affinity group. The
"European Project" fights a major rearguard action in defense of
"Family"--oedipal misery lies at the heart of Control. Alternatives
exist--but they must remain in hiding, especially since the War
against Sex of the 1980's and 1990's.
What is the refusal
of Art? The "negative
gesture" is not to be found in the silly nihilism of an "Art Strike"
or the defacing of some famous painting--it is to be seen in the
almost universal glassy-eyed boredom that creeps over most people
at the very mention of the word. But what would the "positive gesture"
consist of? Is it possible to imagine an aesthetics that does not
engage, that removes
itself from History and even from the Market? or at least tends
to do so? which wants to replace representation with presence?
How does presence make itself felt even in (or through) representation?
"Chaos Linguistics"
traces a presence which is continually disappearing from all orderings
of language and meaning- systems; an elusive presence, evanescent,
latif ("subtle," a term in sufi alchemy)--the Strange Attractor
around which memes accrue, chaotically forming new and spontaneous
orders. Here we have an aesthetics of the borderland between chaos
and order, the margin, the area of "catastrophe" where the breakdown
of the system can equal enlightenment. (Note: for an explanation
of "Chaos Linguistics" see Appendix A, then please read this paragraph
again.)
The disappearance
of the artist IS "the suppression and realization of art," in Situationist
terms. But from where do we vanish? And are we ever seen or heard
of again? We go to Croatan--what's our fate? All our art consists
of a goodbye note to history--"Gone To Croatan"--but where is it,
and what will we do
there?
First: We're not
talking here about literally vanishing from the world and its future:--no
escape backward in time to paleolithic "original leisure society"--no
forever utopia, no backmountain hideaway, no island; also, no post-
Revolutionary utopia--most likely no Revolution at all!-- also,
no VONU, no anarchist Space Stations--nor do we accept a "Baudrillardian
disappearance" into the silence of an ironic hyperconformity. I
have no quarrel with any Rimbauds who escape Art for whatever Abyssinia
they can find. But we can't build an aesthetics, even an aesthetics
of disappearance, on the simple act of never
coming back. By saying we're not an avant-garde and
that there is no avant- garde, we've written our "Gone To Croatan"--the
question then becomes, how to envision "everyday life" in Croatan?
particularly if we cannot say that Croatan exists in Time (Stone
Age or Post-Revolution) or Space, either as utopia or as some forgotten
midwestern town or as Abyssinia? Where and when is the world of
unmediated creativity? If it can
exist, it does
exist--but perhaps only as a sort of alternate reality which we
so far have not learned to perceive. Where would we look for the
seeds--the weeds cracking through our sidewalks--from this other
world into our world? the clues, the right directions for searching?
a finger pointing at the moon?
I believe, or
would at least like to propose, that the only solution to the "suppression
and realization" of Art lies in the emergence of the TAZ. I would
strongly reject the criticism that the TAZ itself is "nothing but"
a work of art, although it may have some of the trappings. I do
suggest that the TAZ is the only possible "time" and "place" for
art to happen for the sheer pleasure of creative play, and as an
actual contribution to the forces which allow the TAZ to cohere
and manifest.
Art in the World
of Art has become a commodity; but deeper than that lies the problem
of re-presentation
itself, and the refusal of all mediation.
In the TAZ art as a commodity will simply become impossible; it
will instead be a condition of life. Mediation is harder to overcome,
but the removal of all barriers between artists and "users" of art
will tend toward a condition in which (as A.K. Coomaraswamy described
it) "the artist is not a special sort of person, but every person
is a special sort of artist."
In sum: disappearance
is not necessarily a "catastrophe"-- except in the mathematical
sense of "a sudden topological change." All the positive
gestures sketched here seem to involve various degrees
of invisibility rather than traditional revolutionary confrontation.
The "New Left" never really believed in its own existence till it
saw itself on the Evening News. The New Autonomy, by contrast, will
either infiltrate the media and subvert "it" from within--or else
never be "seen" at all. The TAZ exists not only beyond Control but
also beyond definition, beyond gazing and naming as acts of enslaving,
beyond the understanding of the State, beyond the State's ability
to see.
Ratholes in the Babylon
of Information
THE TAZ AS A CONSCIOUS
radical tactic will emerge under certain conditions:
- Psychological
liberation. That is, we must realize (make real) the moments and
spaces in which freedom is not only possible but actual.
We must know in what ways we are genuinely oppressed, and also
in what ways we are self- repressed or ensnared in a fantasy in
which ideas
oppress us. WORK, for example, is a far more actual source of
misery for most of us than legislative politics. Alienation is
far more dangerous for us than toothless outdated dying ideologies.
Mental addiction to "ideals"--which in fact turn out to be mere
projections of our resentment and sensations of victimization--will
never further our project. The TAZ is not a harbinger of some
pie-in-the-sky Social Utopia to which we must sacrifice our lives
that our children's children may breathe a bit of free air. The
TAZ must be the scene of our present autonomy, but it can only
exist on the condition that we already know ourselves as free
beings.
- The
counter-Net
must expand. At present it reflects more abstraction than actuality.
Zines and BBSs exchange information, which is part of the necessary
groundwork of the TAZ, but very little of this information relates
to concrete goods and services necessary for the autonomous life.
We do not live in CyberSpace; to dream that we do is to fall into
CyberGnosis, the false transcendence of the body. The TAZ is a
physical place and we are either in it or not. All the senses
must be involved. The Web is like a new sense in some ways, but
it must be added
to the others-- the others must not be subtracted from it, as
in some horrible parody of the mystic trance. Without the Web,
the full realization of the TAZ-complex would be impossible. But
the Web is not the end in itself. It's a weapon.
- The
apparatus of Control--the "State"--must (or so we must assume)
continue to deliquesce and petrify simultaneously, must progress
on its present course in which hysterical rigidity comes more
and more to mask a vacuity, an abyss of power. As power "disappears,"
our will to power must be disappearance.
We've already
dealt with the question of whether the TAZ can be viewed "merely"
as a work of art. But you will also demand to know whether it is
more than a poor rat-hole in the Babylon of Information, or rather
a maze of tunnels, more and more connected, but devoted only to
the economic dead-end of piratical parasitism? I'll answer that
I'd rather be a rat in the wall than a rat in the cage--but I'll
also insist that the TAZ transcends these categories.
A world in which
the TAZ succeeded in putting
down roots might resemble the world envisioned by "P.M."
in his fantasy novel bolo'bolo. Perhaps the TAZ is a "proto-bolo."
But inasmuch as the TAZ exists now,
it stands for much more than the mundanity of negativity or countercultural
drop-out- ism. We've mentioned the festal aspect of the moment which
is unControlled, and which adheres in spontaneous self- ordering,
however brief. It is "epiphanic"--a peak experience on the social
as well as individual scale.
Liberation is
realized <EMINstruggle--this
is the essence of Nietzsche's "self-overcoming." The present thesis
might also take for a sign Nietzsche's wandering. It is the precursor
of the drift, in the Situ sense of the derive and Lyotard's definition
of driftwork. We can foresee a whole new geography, a kind of pilgrimage-map
in which holy sites are replaced by peak experiences and TAZs: a
real science of psychotopography, perhaps to be called "geo-autonomy"
or "anarchomancy."
The
TAZ involves a kind of ferality, a growth from tameness to wild(er)ness,
a "return" which is also a step forward. It also demands a "yoga"
of chaos, a project of "higher" orderings (of consciousness or simply
of life) which are approached by "surfing the wave-front of chaos,"
of complex dynamism. The TAZ is an art of life in continual rising
up, wild but gentle--a seducer not a rapist, a smuggler rather than
a bloody pirate, a dancer not an eschatologist.
Let
us admit that we have attended parties where for one brief night
a republic of gratified desires was attained. Shall we not confess
that the politics of that night have more reality and force for
us than those of, say, the entire U.S. Government? Some of the "parties"
we've mentioned lasted for two or three years. Is this something
worth imagining, worth fighting for? Let us study invisibility,
webworking, psychic nomadism--and who knows what we might attain?
--Spring
Equinox, 1990
Appendix
A. Chaos Linguistics
NOT
YET A SCIENCE but a proposition: That certain problems in linguistics
might be solved by viewing language as a complex dynamical system
or "Chaos field."
Of
all the responses to Saussure's linguistics, two have special interest
here: the first, "antilinguistics," can be traced--in the modern
period--from Rimbaud's departure for Abyssinia; to Nietzsche's "I
fear that while we still have grammar we have not yet killed God";
to dada; to Korzybski's "the Map is not the Territory"; to Burroughs'
cut-ups and "breakthrough in the Gray Room"; to Zerzan's attack
on language itself as representation and mediation.
The
second, Chomskyan Linguistics, with its belief in "universal grammar"
and its tree diagrams, represents (I believe) an attempt to "save"
language by discovering "hidden invariables," much in the same way
certain scientists are trying to "save" physics from the "irrationality"
of quantum mechanics. Although as an anarchist Chomsky might have
been expected to side with the nihilists, in fact his beautiful
theory has more in common with platonism or sufism than with anarchism.
Traditional metaphysics describes language as pure light shining
through the colored glass of the archetypes; Chomsky speaks of "innate"
grammars. Words are leaves, branches are sentences, mother tongues
are limbs, language families are trunks, and the roots are in "heaven"...or
the DNA. I call this "hermetalinguistics"--hermetic and metaphysical.
Nihilism (or "HeavyMetalinguistics" in honor of Burroughs) seems
to me to have brought language to a dead end and threatened to render
it "impossible" (a great feat, but a depressing one)- -while Chomsky
holds out the promise and hope of a last- minute revelation, which
I find equally difficult to accept. I too would like to "save" language,
but without recourse to any "Spooks," or supposed rules about God,
dice, and the Universe.
Returning
to Saussure, and his posthumously published notes on anagrams in
Latin poetry, we find certain hints of a process which somehow escapes
the sign/signifier dynamic. Saussure was confronted with the suggestion
of some sort of "meta"-linguistics which happens within language
rather than being imposed as a categorical imperative from "outside."
As soon as language begins to play, as in the acrostic poems he
examined, it seems to resonate with self- amplifying complexity.
Saussure tried to quantify the anagrams but his figures kept running
away from him (as if perhaps nonlinear equations were involved).
Also, he began to find the anagrams everywhere, even in Latin prose.
He began to wonder if he were hallucinating--or if anagrams were
a natural unconscious process of parole. He abandoned the project.
I
wonder: if enough of this sort of data were crunched through a computer,
would we begin to be able to model language in terms of complex
dynamical systems? Grammars then would not be "innate," but would
emerge from chaos as spontaneously evolving "higher orders," in
Prigogine's sense of "creative evolution." Grammars could be thought
of as "Strange Attractors," like the hidden pattern which "caused"
the anagrams--patterns which are "real" but have "existence" only
in terms of the sub-patterns they manifest. If meaning is elusive,
perhaps it is because consciousness itself, and therefore language,
is fractal.
I
find this theory more satisfyingly anarchistic than either anti-linguistics
or Chomskyanism. It suggests that language can overcome representation
and mediation, not because it is innate, but because it is chaos.
It would suggest that all dadaistic experimentation (Feyerabend
described his school of scientific epistemology as "anarchist dada")
in sound poetry, gesture, cut-up, beast languages, etc.--all this
was aimed neither at discovering nor destroying meaning, but at
creating it. Nihilism points out gloomily that language "arbitrarily"
creates meaning. Chaos Linguistics happily agrees, but adds that
language can overcome language, that language can create freedom
out of semantic tyranny's confusion and decay.
Appendix
B. Applied Hedonics
THE
BONNOT GANG WERE vegetarians and drank only water. They came to
a bad (tho' picturesque) end. Vegetables and water, in themselves
excellent things--pure zen really--shouldn't be consumed as martyrdom
but as an epiphany. Self-denial as radical praxis, the Leveller
impulse, tastes of millenarian gloom--and this current on the Left
shares an historical wellspring with the neo-puritan fundamentalism
and moralic reaction of our decade. The New Ascesis, whether practiced
by anorexic health-cranks, thin-lipped police sociologists, downtown
straight-edge nihilists, cornpone fascist baptists, socialist torpedoes,
drug-free Republicans...in every case the motive force is the same:
resentment.
In
the face of contemporary pecksniffian anaesthesia we'll erect a
whole gallery of forebears, heros who carried on the struggle against
bad consciousness but still knew how to party, a genial gene pool,
a rare and difficult category to define, great minds not just for
Truth but for the truth of pleasure, serious but not sober, whose
sunny disposition makes them not sluggish but sharp, brilliant but
not tormented. Imagine a Nietzsche with good digestion. Not the
tepid Epicureans nor the bloated Sybarites. Sort of a spiritual
hedonism, an actual Path of Pleasure, vision of a good life which
is both noble and possible, rooted in a sense of the magnificent
over-abundance of reality.
Shaykh
Abu Sa'id of Khorassan
Charles Fourier
Brillat-Savarin
Rabelais
Abu Nuwas
Aga Khan III
R. Vaneigem
Oscar Wilde
Omar Khayyam
Sir Richard Burton
Emma Goldman
add your own favorites
Appendix
C. Extra Quotes
As
for us, He has appointed the job of permanent unemployment.
If he wanted us to work, after all,
He would not have created this wine.
With a skinfull of this, Sir,
would you rush out to commit economics?
--Jalaloddin
Rumi, Diwan-e Shams
Here
with a Loaf of Bread beneath the Bough,
A flask of Wine, A Book of Verse--and Thou
Beside me singing in the Wilderness--
And Wilderness is Paradise enow.
Ah, my Beloved, fill the cup that clears
To-day of past Regrets and future Fears--
Tomorrow?--Why, Tomorrow I may be
Myself with Yesterday's Sev'n Thousand Years.
Ah, Love! could thou and I with Fate conspire
To grasp this sorry Scheme of Things entire,
Would not we shatter it to bits--and then
Re-mould it nearer to the Heart's Desire!
--Omar
FitzGerald
History,
materialism, monism, positivism, and all the "isms" of this world
are old and rusty tools which I don't need or mind anymore. My principle
is life, my end is death. I wish to live my life intensely for to
embrace my life tragically.
You
are waiting for the revolution? My own began a long time ago! When
you will be ready (God, what an endless wait!) I won't mind going
along with you for awhile. But when you'll stop, I shall continue
on my insane and triumphal way toward the great and sublime conquest
of the nothing! Any society that you build will have its limits.
And outside the limits of any society the unruly and heroic tramps
will wander, with their wild & virgin thoughts--they who cannot
live without planning ever new and dreadful outbursts of rebellion!
I
shall be among them!
And
after me, as before me, there will be those saying to their fellows:
"So turn to yourselves rather than to your Gods or to your idols.
Find what hides in yourselves; bring it to light; show yourselves!"
Because
every person; who, searching his own inwardness, extracts what was
mysteriously hidden therein; is a shadow eclipsing any form of society
which can exist under the sun! All societies tremble when the scornful
aristocracy of the tramps, the inaccessibles, the uniques, the rulers
over the ideal, and the conquerors of the nothing resolutely advances.
So,
come on iconoclasts, forward!
"Already
the foreboding sky grows dark and silent!"
--Renzo
Novatore Arcola, January, 1920
PIRATE
RANT
Captain
Bellamy
Daniel
Defoe, writing under the pen name Captain Charles Johnson, wrote
what became the first standard historical text on pirates, A
General History of the Robberies and Murders of the Most Notorious
Pirates.
According to Patrick Pringle's Jolly
Roger,
pirate recruitment was most effective among the unemployed, escaped
bondsmen, and transported criminals. The high seas made for an instantaneous
levelling of class inequalities. Defoe relates that a pirate named
Captain Bellamy made this speech to the captain of a merchant vessel
he had taken as a prize. The captain of the merchant vessel had
just declined an invitation to join the pirates.
I
am sorry they won't let you have your sloop again, for I scorn to
do any one a mischief, when it is not to my advantage; damn the
sloop, we must sink her, and she might be of use to you. Though
you are a sneaking puppy, and so are all those who will submit to
be governed by laws which rich men have made for their own security;
for the cowardly whelps have not the courage otherwise to defend
what they get by knavery; but damn ye altogether: damn them for
a pack of crafty rascals, and you, who serve them, for a parcel
of hen-hearted numbskulls. They vilify us, the scoundrels do, when
there is only this difference, they rob the poor under the cover
of law, forsooth, and we plunder the rich under the protection of
our own courage. Had you not better make then one of us, than sneak
after these villains for employment?
When
the captain replied that his conscience would not let him break
the laws of God and man, the pirate Bellamy continued:
You
are a devilish conscience rascal, I am a free prince, and I have
as much authority to make war on the whole world, as he who has
a hundred sail of ships at sea, and an army of 100,000 men in the
field; and this my conscience tells me: but there is no arguing
with such snivelling puppies, who allow superiors to kick them about
deck at pleasure.
THE
DINNER PARTY
The
highest type of human society in the existing social order is found
in the parlor. In the elegant and refined reunions of the aristocratic
classes there is none of the impertinent interference of legislation.
The Individuality of each is fully admitted. Intercourse, therefore,
is perfectly free. Conversation is continuous, brilliant, and varied.
Groups are formed according to attraction. They are continuously
broken up, and re-formed through the operation of the same subtile
and all-pervading influence. Mutual deference pervades all classes,
and the most perfect harmony, ever yet attained, in complex human
relations, prevails under precisely those circumstances which Legislators
and Statesmen dread as the conditions of inevitable anarchy and
confusion. If there are laws of etiquette at all, they are mere
suggestions of principles admitted into and judged of for himself
or herself, by each individual mind.
Is
it conceivable that in all the future progress of humanity, with
all the innumerable elements of development which the present age
is unfolding, society generally, and in all its relations, will
not attain as high a grade of perfection as certain portions of
society, in certain special relations, have already attained?
Suppose
the intercourse of the parlor to be regulated by specific legislation.
Let the time which each gentleman shall be allowed to speak to each
lady be fixed by law; the position in which they should sit or stand
be precisely regulated; the subjects which they shall be allowed
to speak of, and the tone of voice and accompanying gestures with
which each may be treated, carefully defined, all under pretext
of preventing disorder and encroachment upon each other's privileges
and rights, then can any thing be conceived better calculated or
more certain to convert social intercourse into intolerable slavery
and hopeless confusion?
--S.
Pearl Andrews The
Science of Society











