Showing posts with label deleuze and guattari. Show all posts
Showing posts with label deleuze and guattari. Show all posts

Friday, 27 July 2012

PRETTY VACANT: LONDON 2012, DAVID BECKHAM AND THE ‘FACE-MACHINE’


Attention seeking: a brief periodization... At the start of an individual’s life, attention seeking is a manifestly qualitative matter: the desperate, instinctual search for the sort of loving care, protection and nurturing that is the difference between life and death. It is not a matter of being looked at, but being looked after. By the time we reach adulthood, this simple evolutionary mechanism has for most people become dormant – we have survived to fend for ourselves (in ordinary circumstances, at least, and there’s Dyno-Rod and Dominos for other occasions) – while the need for succour and validation that never fully leaves us is routinely sated by way of our ordinary social interactions, without any especial pursuit. In a certain category of human, however, attention seeking remains as involuntary and compulsive as it is for babies, albeit now for cultural rather than natural reasons. Hello, Celebrities – from A-list to Z-list and into the pool of wannabes whence crawl the narcissists and exhibitionists and drama queens, the extrovert sulkers and nonchalant fashionistas, all of whose histrionic bleating egos are so many great Ptolemaic suns at the centre of a private universe. Best not get too close.

Anyway, once an individual crosses the threshold of fame and becomes a Public Figure, an artfully manipulated persona (which derives from the Latin for ‘mask’), attention seeking becomes primarily quantitative – a measure of one’s social status. It’s about ratings, units shifted, bums on seats. No one particularly cares what type of audience-consumer it was – its qualities – since all of those specifics will be yesterday’s news before tomorrow arrives, bringing its fresh torrents of memory-sluicing of infotainment.

Of course, it is not exclusively the case that (the) celebrity seeks out the love of strangers to stanch some disorder or other. Sometimes – with a cynicism that itself might be considered pathological outside of neocon think-tanks – it is a simple exercise in cultivating fans by furnishing their often transparent, off-the-peg, no-frills fantasies. In any case, we all get along perfectly well – well, not perfectly well, but well enough – with our phobias and manias, our obsessions and occasional paranoia, our superstitions and other low-intensity quirks, be they medicalised or not.

They are even quite socially useful, at least from the standpoint of a protean capitalism – in the first instance, a matter of brute quantity, of course – that stalks every flickering sign of life, unslakable in its thirst for some new untapped well of profit (and boy, is compulsion profitable: gambling, porn, nicotine, guns…), some unkempt, exploratory, vagabond desires all ready to be corralled into the punctual delivery system of our industrialised, sanitised pleasures.

Thus interlocking with slebs’ compulsive and/or cynical drive for ubiquity is a whole culture of attention seeking – what else is marketing? – a great white and its pilot fish of brazen liggers and dubious factotums who insinuate themselves between the bill and the board, the thickest spittle in town. A celebrity becomes an economy in itself, and their factitious gifts – their X-Factor – must be continually bestowed upon the populace, spattered across every medium. No event must be allowed to pass by unfructified by their celebrity juice, this ersatz postmodern aristocracy awaiting some new Jacobins to lop off their talking heads.


Darryn Lyons, celebrity celebrity voyeur commissioner, attention-seeker 
extraordinaire, apotheosis of what we have become. Do we need to have 
a look at ourselves in the mirror or are we doing too much of that already? 

Anyway, the problem with all this is that the cloying ubiquity of these Nobodies (in French, personne) slowly comes to cloud the judgement of otherwise eminently sensible people – people of influence who ought to know better than to acquiesce in the whole sorry farrago; people who at some uncertain though definite point themselves cross a threshold beyond which they become detached from and oblivious to their initial distaste, sucking away complicitly on the cynicism of this Celebrity cult, a cynicism that is naturalised to the point at which even our cultural commentators can blithely declare “what’s the matter with it? It’s only a bit of fun,” and end up throwing their weight behind the runaway train…

* * *

…And so we arrive, via Bus Replacement Service, at London 2012: a bloody-kneed country, dragged through a hedge(-fund) backwards by the cocksure, coke-fuelled attention-seeking tyros of a deregulated financial sector, aghast (if not surprised) at the fawning accommodations of the government to bankers, appalled (if not surprised) by the MPs expenses scandal and the systemic phone-tapping of Andy-Liar & Murdoch – a country with a chance to redeem itself, to put on its Sunday best and pretend that everything’s OK, like some asphyxiating and neurotic petite bourgeois family traipsing across the country on Boxing Day in aching introspective silence to see the cousins, hovering about them all a tacit entente that no-one shall mention her unwanted pregnancy, his expulsion, that caution for shoplifting, the botched investment, but all will smile their way through denial and back to good health. London 2012: the nation’s shop window, they say (displaying no unauthorised rings, if you please), whereas the previous summer the city’s shop windows were merely the quickest route to the loot. London 2012: Viva Britannia!

Apparently, to do this, to put your face on, as a city, I mean, you need a famous face. Thus Beckham – who else? Danny Dyer, N-Dubz, Simon Cowell, Barbara Windsor and Jack Whitehall might have been in the running were it not a sporting event, while not even Lord Coe, as happy in the 1922 Committee as the 2012, would endorse the ludicrous berk, Boris Johnson. Beckham, meanwhile, is pretty much inoffensive; he was good at his profession (although a galáctico in marketability only); he is handsome (when he isn’t talking); and he is vapid enough to believe the ‘all is hunky-dory with Blighty’ propaganda. 



Before we scrutinize that particular face, we should note that what Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari call the “machine of faciality” [visagéité] has long been an important device for power formations seeking as efficient a means of subduing their populations as possible – from the days of Imperial coinage, when it was expedient to give the newly-subjected peoples a representation of the distant despot to whose divine body they would henceforth owe their life and pay tribute, through the statues and friezes of the modern dictators (Fidel Castro seems an exception to this, perhaps because Che was the face of the Revolution, as a glance at Cuba’s Ministry of the Interior building confirms) all the way to the election-attuned workings, the wall-to-wall posters of political PR machine within ‘late’ capitalism’s imagosphere. Images are perfect for efficient and swift subjugation. In a species who are highly-skilled face-readers before they can stand up, the image provides an instantaneous mobilisation of affect and is preferable to the somewhat passé and laborious narrative means of emitting signs to rouse people.

The face irradiates these wordless signs just as it embodies the People. It personalises the impersonal workings of power, be that the despotic apparatus over the horizon in the capital (deriving from the Latin for head, ‘caput’) or the abstract machine of private capital accumulation with which us ‘advanced’ and ‘civilized’ folk busy ourselves (or is it vice-versa?). The flash of an apparently beneficent smile that’s too bright to look at for long occludes tens of thousands of concrete, specific decisions about how social wealth is spent. (The question of Olympic ‘legacy’ – beyond the brief, vicarious afterglow enjoyed as others from this sea-battered hunk of rock win medals – is one for another time, but suffice to say Athens, eight years on, doesn’t look in the greatest of shape.)

Ordinarily a tabula rasa onto which the public, in its yen for uplift, projects its hopes and dreams, the faciality-machine is occasionally tasked with something more complex. When it is compelled to speak – an inherently risky undertaking from the point of view of the regime or institution (as much an immaterial rhizome of desires, beliefs, decisions and commands as a material entity) for which it provides anthropomorphised substantiality – there behind it will invariably lurk some on-message eminence grise adept both at smoothing out the pointy bits of language on which one is apt to choke as well as fashioning gaudy sentimental flourishes. So, while the ventriloquist spoonfeeds this platitudinous mulch of mots justes for the mouthpiece to regurgitate, for its part, the ‘logophagous’ face-machine must learn only to listen and talk at more or less the same time (an illusion of spontaneity amidst the near-simultaneity), a task in which even George W Bush managed to convince most of the time.


Faciality machine: General Perón returns from 18 years in exile
(image flanked by Evita, left, and Isabela)  

* * *

And so, Londoners, it is Becks: Reprazent. An East End boy made good, one of the most recognisable faces on the planet, a sporting beacon and clearly much more useful being wheeled between banks of flashbulbs and TV cameras as the face of the Olympics than he would be labouring in Team GB’s midfield. This is not a sneering pop at Becks per se, just an enquiry as to whether he’s, yerknarr, the man for the job, whether he ought to be the Face of the Games. Jack London. You want smouldering? Fine; call Becks. Pouting, you say? I have the very man. Viciously whipped-in free-kicks and corners you’re after? Why, there’s only one man for the job: David Beck– …er, Ryan Giggs. You know what I mean.

Charged with rallying the good will of a public drenched in the Establishment’s piss and shit, Beckham must be our Nelson Mandela, our Pelé, our Gandhi, our Eva Perón (for whose emaciated, cancer-ravaged body was fabricated, in June 1952, a wire and plaster support which was then wrapped in fur coat so that, weeks before her death, she could stand in the back of a car and wave at the masses attending her husband’s second inauguration, “a sacred icon carried aloft on a pole, a thing of inert sanctity”: the face of the regime). Whether Becks has an earpiece in or has been scripted is hard to discern. But speak he must.

Having to say something is much less taxing than having something to say, having to have something to say, yet still presents its obvious pitfalls. So, to eliminate the possibility of faux pas and/or allow him to pick up the whispered words of some LOCOG worrier, His Royal Hairness, the Duke of Beckhamshire has duly slowed down his speech to the treacle rhythms of a Californian stoner.

Prompted by Sky Sports News earlier this week to transmute the Tour de France triumph of Bradley Wiggins into a harbinger of Team GB glory, our bunraku looked out over the Olympic Park and drawled:
My message to Bradley is: ‘Congratulations, you’ve made everyone proud. I’m sure you’ve made yourself and your family proud. But the whole country is behind you – was behind you – and, aah, incredibly, aah, y’know, incredibly proud of everything that you’ve achieved’. For any athlete to perform at their highest level, aaahm, is amazing. For someone like Bradley to perform the way he’s performed and, aaahm, to make people proud like he’s done, aaahm, y’know, makes the whole country proud and it kinda sets us up for an amazing occasion that’s coming up.  


When the fireworks have gone and the Olympians themselves have encased their medals on mantelpieces, when they eyes of the world (at least, those not in sweat shops, civil wars, concentration camps, subsistence farming, or otherwise engaged) have turned away, the city will rumble on as before, providing opportunities, imposing opportunism. Any perturbation of this rigorous stratification of the city’s human material and the fatigue-clad State-protectors (and G4S deputies) will jump quick-smart to the defence of an elite whose relationship to them – whose gratitude for their blind loyalty – extends principally to the diary-disturbing possibility of having to be (seen) at their funeral.

Olympics? Fine, you enjoy them. We all have our opiates. But don’t tell me all is well here just because some cyclist from the Isle of Man finishes a race before someone from across the water – some other water. It gets harder and harder to put on a ‘brave’ face over it all.


 


You may also enjoy: 'Andy Murray, 'Failure', and the Cult(ure) of Competition'


Tuesday, 17 July 2012

THE SCHIZO-CATS OF LOUIS WAIN



Louis Wain, so Wikipedia tells me, was born in Clerkenwell, South London, in 1860 with a cleft lip that led to doctors advising his parents to keep him out of school until the age of 10. It wasn’t a surprise to read this basic biographical datum – nor that he lost a wife to cancer after three years marriage, aged 23; or that, from the age of 20, he had to support his mother and five younger sisters – since I knew Wain as the painter of kitschy, anthropomorphised cats who later in life plunged [please choose a verb you find appropriate there] into schizophrenia. Or, if you prefer, he undertook the schizophrenic voyage.

A few years back, visiting a friend of mine, an old cricketing colleague who became a psychiatrist, I had seen on his wall, cherished and given pride of place, a series of six paintings of cats [pictured below], each one less and less naturalistic, increasingly Baroque and unrecognizable. They were the work of Louis Wain and the images are believed to serve as an oblique document of his ‘descent’ into schizophrenia, an experience about which psychiatry still knows so little about.

Other possibly salient biographical details emerged from a perusal of his Wikipedia page and a couple of other online sources, facets that would support a diagnosis of schizophrenia that is sometimes contested: a love of animals that included contributions to several pro-animal welfare organizations (a love that transcends the couple, that is cosmic); his lifelong financial difficulties (where the delusional paranoiac sustains his ‘reasonable’ external appearance and remains a functional member of society). He was, apparently, “modest, naïve, and easily exploited, ill-equipped for bargaining in the world of publishing” while others found him “incomprehensible, due to his way of speaking tangentially” (he was not psychologically organized in such a manner as to accumulate wealth and build a position of strength) and later, post-breakdown, this “mild-mannered and trusting man…became hostile and suspicious, particularly towards his sisters. He claimed that the flickering of the cinema screen had robbed the electricity from their brains. He began wandering the streets at night, rearranging furniture within the house, and spent long periods locked in his room, writing incoherently”.

While some familiar with Wain’s life ascribe the onset of schizophrenia to toxoplasmosis contracted from cats, certain psychologists have subsequently disputed the notion that Wain – committed to a psychiatric hospital in 1924, where he would spend the last 15 years of his life – was suffering from schizophrenia at all, claiming that he had Asperger’s Syndrome. Such a view is based on the lack of diminishment of his later work (it is not certain that the six images on my friend’s wall were sequential, since Wain didn’t date them).

The intense detail and ornate patterns of the pictures evoked certain memorable passages near the beginning of Deleuze and Guattari’s iconoclastic ‘schizoanalytic’ treatise (part anti-psychiatry, part-Marxism of the unconscious), Anti-Oedipus: Capitalism and Schizophrenia, Volume 1. In it, they not only prioritise the schizo experience (as opposed that of a schizophrenic, the limp rag found in asylums) over that of the neurotic Oedipal psyche – epigrammatically: “a schizo out of a stroll is a better model than a neurotic lying on the analyst’s couch” – they also seek to demystify some misconceptions about the schizo’s ‘dissociation’ or autism’.

Taking from Marx the notion of “species-being” – “we make no distinction between man and nature: the human essence of nature and the natural essence of man become one within nature in the form of production or industry, just as they do within the life of man as a species” – they construe the schizo as homo natura, because “far from having lost who knows what contact with life, the schizophrenic is closest to the beating heart of reality, to an intense point identical with the production of the real”. Not only that, he is homo historia because, typically, he understands his own subjective processes, the constitution of his self, as intimately bound up with the whole of history and not just Daddy-Mummy-Me: Oedipus.

One certainly finds it easy to imagine Wain, institutionalized and left to his own flights of fancy, still feeling an immense custodial responsibility for cats. As for the illustrations, they resemble nothing so much as the hallucinations experienced on strong LSD, the world suddenly starting – the more you focus in on its fractal-like minutiae – to dance, flicker, and pulsate, a world that teems like an ant colony, an experience or mental disorder in marked contrast to the catatonic’s shutting down of the ‘desiring machines’: “bodies [that] have fallen into the river like lead weights, immense transfixed hippopotamuses that will not come back to the surface”. Now, does anyone know what was on Wain’s prescription?



CAT 1 




CAT 2



CAT 3



CAT 4



CAT 5



CAT 6






Friday, 2 December 2011

THE ORIGIN OF THE THESIS

Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari



The text immediately below is the first version of the abstract for my PhD thesis. My supervisor, Dr Adam Sharman, ever wise and infinitely patient, was quick to point out that I needed to write something sober and straightforward, as per the convention. His words were: “It’s not often I caution you against doing something, but I really wouldn’t advise this abstract. It’s far too indulgent and anecdotal, and clever. Gives the wrong impression and will put people off reading it once it’s lodged in a library. The how you came about it is for a conversation; it needs to be scholarly, descriptive of the thesis’s contents, and shorter (no more than one side of A4).

I was happy to oblige, but it didnt tell the story so well...

----------

The emergence of the present text – its first discernible, manifest (co-)cause – was, as is the case with everything else, an encounter: a Master’s Degree candidate, splashing about – floundering – in Postmodernist Theory primers (texts that seemed to suggest that language caused everything, a pantextualism that one could not get outside or beyond…), one day stumbled across the passage from Deleuze and Guattari’s Anti-Oedipus (or a paraphrase thereof) that has been used as this work’s epigraph.* Desiring-repression, you say… Why is it that people rally to causes that are not in their objective interests, and invest with the last drops of their passion a system that crushes them – like royalty, say? (They cannot simply be deceived into acting this way, for Christ’s sake.) Further: what are the factors that group people together? How do you form an Us, and how does the Us relate to a Them, or its Thems? Politics. Desire.

A passional connection and a genesis, but an aperçu not yet fully formed. With this embryonic thought in mind, off I wandered, over the smooth space of the seas in search of an ‘object’; not yet so much of an Ahab pursuing his specific whale as a Columbus looking for the East Indies. Then a protean figure appeared – a fascist colonel, a prophet apparently leading his people to the socialist Promised Land – about whom neither historians nor Peronistas ‘themselves’ could agree. An uneasy, murky Us and Them. Are you the Judean People’s Front?

What follows, then, is not the Colón-izing attempt to provide a definitive answer to the enigmas of Perón and peronismo – it would take a whole network of texts to paint in the lines of enquiry excluded here: its virtual inter-textual rhizome – so much as a selective tracking through a forest of material, an attempt to search in the right places, and in the right ways, so as to aid the understanding of historical causal processes. Not to look for different objects, then, but to look differently at the same objects. A meta-historiography, if that’s not too immodest a claim to make…

Does history have a pattern, a logic? If not, is it, in its freewheeling ‘irrationality,’ its chance and indeterminacy, nevertheless intelligible, susceptible to analysis? The famous Japanese butterfly… If desire is the motor of history, locked in a permanent tango with a power that captures it, seemingly (or else switches roles, occasionally leading the dance), then why and how is it made to coincide with the diktats…no, the needs of the group or the social formation? (Gordon Gekko’s American Dream swirling over London Fields’ Lord Sugar, Ian Beale and Keith Talent: singing from the same hymn sheet, maybe, but not at all following a belief implanted from on high; rather, embodying an identical mode of desire: self-interest as the common good. Zeros and Heroes. Zeros and Ones. No need to persuade them – Them – of anything any longer…)

Where do words fit into all this? What is the relation of signs (“peronista”) to material bodies? Can you capture your own imagination?

[February 2011]


* Here is that epigraph:
Even the most repressive and the most deadly forms of social reproduction are produced by desire within the organization that is the consequence of such production under various conditions that we must analyze. That is why the fundamental problem of political philosophy is still precisely the one that Spinoza saw so clearly, and that Wilhelm Reich rediscovered: “Why do men fight for their servitude as stubbornly as though it were their salvation?” How can people possibly reach the point of shouting “More taxes! Less bread!”? As Reich remarks, the astonishing thing is not that some people steal or that others occasionally go out on strike, but rather that all those who are starving do not steal as a regular practice, and all those who are exploited are not continually out on strike: after centuries of exploitation, why do people still tolerate being humiliated and enslaved, to such a point, indeed, they actually want humiliation not only for others but for themselves? Reich is at his profoundest as a thinker when he refuses to accept ignorance or illusion on the part of the masses as an explanation of fascism, and demands an explanation that will take their desires into account, an explanation formulated in terms of desire: no, the masses were not innocent dupes; at a certain point, under a certain set of conditions, they wanted fascism, and it is this perversion of the desire of the masses that needs to be accounted for.
Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari: Anti-Oedipus

Friday, 12 August 2011

WINDOW OF OPPORTUNITY



“Doesn’t happen over here”: in the past, whenever news footage of rampaging mobs somewhere in the world flashed across the screen, this was the stock response with which ‘us Brits’ would content ourselves. It was believed – arrogantly, self-righteously – that Britain was too respectful of authority for protests to turn into riots (which is almost always true) and certainly too respectful of property for riots to turn into looting. The feeling was that there was some intrinsic cultural trait, deep within our ‘Britishness’, that made us impervious to such outrage, or outrages. Implicitly, we were saying “It’s a problem for ‘over there’, in those lawless, overheated, foreign places...” 

Not any more. The illusions have been shattered. It’s here on our doorstep – in fact, not even on our doorstep; it has crossed our threshold, grabbed whatever it wanted, and smashed the rest in a hysterical orgy of pillage not seen on these shores since Viking times (and that is no exaggeration). A threshold has been crossed. This was chaos, yes, but a paradoxical instance of organized chaos – Twitter and social media accelerating the communication between, and organization of, previously hostile gangs who set aside longstanding parochial squabbles to launch an assault on a society that had washed its hands of them. Or to grab some free trainers, depending on your point of view… 

My immediate, crushingly depressing feeling upon seeing these horrific scenes over four nights was that the social fabric that Margaret Thatcher, some 30 years ago, had already denied even existing seemed to have been definitively sundered – that any residual sense of commonality (hard to sustain, I know, in a culture long since addicted to the abstract accumulation of valuable stuff for its own sake) has been petrol-bombed and plundered into oblivion. If it wasn’t before, it was now every man for himself (and before people trot out something trite about evolution and “social Darwinism”, not even in nature is that the case)  


------------------

the politics of desire

For those familiar with the work, and idiom, of radical French philosophers Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari – a collaboration that emerged from another instance of the police in a major Western city losing control of the streets, albeit with an entirely different flavour: the May 1968 événements in Paris – they will perhaps have recognized that the fluid, rioting mobs – faced with an intolerable reality and with nothing left to lose – had abandoned the “revolutionary line of escape”, had forsaken the construction of a new order, which is to say creativity and imagination, and had substituted for invention a blizzard of destruction. Rage or opportunism? Rage and opportunism. Having stopped running and cowering and knowing their place (by which I mean, their place in the face of civil society, for their transhuman drive for status and recognition can always be nourished by local pecking orders, hierarchies every bit as brutalising and rigid as those of their antagonists, the Haves), the kids that made up the bulk of the looters had become what Deleuze and Guattari termed a “war machine”, albeit one that, having lost the ability to change and mutate (in ordinary language, being without opportunities) and thus with almost no latitude to improve their lot (none that was legal, anyway), funnelled their energy into a “cancerous” and “fascist” line of abolition: not a-political, strictly speaking, but un-political or anti-political (in the Greek sense), since it had no real constructive aims, no project – only projectiles. And obliteration… 

Later, when a sense of emotional detachment and philosophical engagement had settled in me, what these bewildering events seemed to have demonstrated most markedly is the extreme precariousness of the Law (and order), its inherent fragility at all times. (In many ways, as someone with more than a hint of Marxism colouring his political views, someone who therefore harbours a dream of an equitable society founded on a spirit of co-operation rather than exploitation and self-interest, I had hitherto taken this to be an unequivocal positive: if only we could all realize that the Law is paper-thin, this historical oppression of The Many by The Few could all be brought to an end. If only the police stopped defending the propertied elites; if only the pivot points in the balance of power shifted toward a sweating, smiling mass of decent people ever so slightly too content to put up with their “lot”…) 

In order to function, the Law requires passive or active consent on the part of a population. No police force that is itself subjected to the law can operate by force alone (and I realize there are several heated debates around this question of legitimate force and policing the police, emanating from a loss of trust in the IPCC, now seen to be serving the police rather than the public as a result of the number of deaths in custody without a single conviction). That is terror. 

Similarly, as much as the transactions of supra- or transnational financial institutions have increasingly eluded the control and legislation of States, and as much as monetary flows and markets have been capitalism’s de facto police, ensuring, through invisible yet tactile mechanisms of enforcement (credit lines), that we go to work, consume, fulfil our contractual obligations and pay our debts (lest we lose access to the means of life), these powerful “deterritorialized” entities, operating in an englobing manner without any fixed locale, cannot function without the actual physical force of the police, without States and governments. 

Anyway, this far from original conclusion as to the essential precariousness of the Law is also, plainly, a realization that had been reached by the rioters, evidently people with no longer any real constraints for their actions – neither the Law as deterrent, nor the more diffuse but no less effective community enforcement or inhibition mechanisms, such as reciprocity, responsibility, shame, and ostracism. Indeed, as the Iranian author and street-level London campaigner Camila Batmanghelidhj argued, the reason that many of the looters have no attachment to their front doorstep, which they are happy to raid, is because, cut adrift, they have long since enclaved themselves in “parallel anti-social communities” running on illicit economies and the rule of force, with any investment in the future collapsed into a perpetual, dog-eat-dog present.
An absence of morality can easily be found in the rioters and looters. How, we ask, could they attack their own community with such disregard? But the young people would reply “easily”, because they feel they don’t actually belong to the community. Community, they would say, has nothing to offer them. Instead, for years they have experienced themselves cut adrift from civil society's legitimate structures. Society relies on collaborative behaviour; individuals are held accountable because belonging brings personal benefit. Fear or shame of being alienated keeps most of us pro-social.
They (and, yes, I realize that some middle-class folk have been caught up in it all, but that doesn’t vitiate the point) may well have been the most acutely squeezed by the coalition’s swingeing cuts; they certainly won’t have been much more scandalised than were the majority of non-rioters by the MPs expenses disgrace and the banking crisis. As The Telegraph’s political editor, Peter Oborne, pointed out, the incrementally corrupt elites have long since lost (if indeed they ever had) any sense of communal responsibility (save to their cronies), with governments merely elaborate mechanisms for their continued subjugation of the great masses. (Wasn’t it ever thus?) Speaking of a recent, dinner party encounter with high society in Kensington (which would surely have made a more logical target for looters), he writes:
Most of the people in this very expensive street were every bit as deracinated and cut off from the rest of Britain as the young, unemployed men and women who have caused such terrible damage over the last few days. For them, the repellent Financial Times magazine How to Spend It is a bible. I’d guess that few of them bother to pay British tax if they can avoid it, and that fewer still feel the sense of obligation to society that only a few decades ago came naturally to the wealthy and better off.
Now, the incremental revulsion shared by the working classes and the middle class, the lumpenproletariat and the editor of The Telegraph toward our amoral elites invites, to my eyes, two closely related questions bearing upon the politics of desire with which Deleuze and Guattari famously concerned themselves in their first book, Anti-Oedipus – with “desire” understood, crucially, not at all as acquisition (which is a distortion), but simply as a mode of relation: to an environment, to members of your group (“us”), to outsiders (“them”), to yourself. These questions are, perhaps, different facets of one and the same dynamic, both intimately bound up with the effectiveness of the Law to encode or mediate our bodies’ access to resources (i.e. to act as a deterrent). First: why do the bereft kids plunge their desire into such an orgiastic black hole? How exactly do they reach the tipping point, the threshold whereby the internalized constraints burst open? Second: why don’t the middle classes kick up more of a stink, not only with corruption and abuse of power, but more generally with the pervasive values of our society? Or, to say much the same thing: Why the nihilism, if it is indeed that, and why the apathy? 

Being provocative, it could be argued that the cynicism of a life of self-interest (however this behaviour is justified to ourselves) is only marginally less reprehensible than feral looting. For, with deft denial of how we got to think and behave in this way – i.e. that our ‘rational’ self-interest is market-enforced – the middle classes simply repress the misgivings they might have had over, say, the dignity and worth of persuading more ‘consumers’ to drink your beverage, or any other careers into which our hopes are fixated (to pay the bills, not for any inherent worth), and we bury them deep. In so doing, we come to see the Law as natural rather than artificial, as brutely permanent as a plate of steel. We fail to see history as the accumulation of open struggles in which nothing is predetermined, everything is changeable, no direction is given, no outcome decided. We become resigned to our ‘fates’. We realize that it’s every man for himself. We play the game. Eventually, we embody – or personify – capitalist desire, albeit perhaps not in our beliefs or our conscious thoughts (because we all resent it, really, this slavery). Labouring for ourselves, we labour for the enrichment of the few, sustaining the “order” (politically established, precarious) that permits such a cosmic theft, gratefully or grudgingly accepting our compensation – buying stuff – and merely displacing the problem. And we displace it and displace it until the shit hits the fan… 

What Deleuze and Guattari mean by embodying a capitalist desire is very simple: where previous, pre-capitalist social machines – the “savage” or “primitive” machine, in which kinship structures was the principal social institution, and the “imperial” or “despotic” machine, in which it was the newly ‘invented’ State – had relied on meaning and codes to organize the qualitative relationships between ‘bodies’ (people, products, food, prestige, necklaces, cattle, fire, words, wenches), capitalism is in essence meaningless and quantitative. Numbers. A balance sheet. Thus, capitalism’s peculiar genius is that, in order to get us to behave in a manner that serves its imperatives (profit-making, regardless of what specifically is produced or provided in order to generate it: a production for production’s sake), it no longer has to tell us what, concretely, to believe or think (although it does do this, through advertising, to channel desire towards products where profit, still virtual at this stage, needs to be actualised, or realized). It is not concerned with ideology, or persuasion – not really (even though it may appear to us that way). In fact, it can absorb most forms of opposition since they are potential sources of new profit. All that matters is that people desire (and work and consume) in roughly the same way – i.e. through the abstract accumulation of stuff, as I said earlier. And so the wheels turn. Ever faster. 

The tumescent, braying Gordon Gekko and the passive-aggressive Willy Loman, with his hackneyed yet still compelling zero-to-hero imaginings, express differences in degree, not in nature. They desire in exactly the same way: acquisition. It just happens that one has a lot more capital than the other. This is the famous American Dream: a ‘democratic’, ‘individualist’ fantasy of the self-made man, abroad in penthouses and trailer parks alike, and that already animated the sort of anomie and atomization that eventuated in the British riots. It is what the Canadian philosopher (and translator of Deleuze and Guattari) Brian Massumi, glossing neoliberal values, such as they are, has called the ethics of greed:
Capitalism dispenses with the need for its subjects to accept ideological or moral justifications of its (or their) existence. But when it does produce precepts, one is heard with overwhelming regularity: the idea that a body can serve the interests of society (not only ‘can’: can only). ‘Self-interest’ is the basic capitalist expression of the common good.
Earlier in the same chapter, he writes of the neoconservatism promoted by Reaganomics and Thatcherism, claiming that it was:
[The] coming out of capital, a new golden age of greed that dares to say its name… The men who personify it…do not so much represent an ideological cause as embody a desire. An abstract desire, a mania for accumulating numerical quantities. Possessing things is understandable from the moral-molar point of view, as is accumulating capital for what it can buy in the way of time, things, and activities. But to accumulate more than anyone could ever spend? And then keep on accumulating greater and greater sums with no other aim in life? That is beyond good and evil. The neoconservative capitalist is defined less by what he possesses than by what possesses him. He is the personification of a mode of irrationality.
Anyway, it is this isolation of desire (or “desiring-production”) as being bound up with – both determining of (causally) and determined by (quasi-causally) – varying historical machines that serve to organize it distinctly (kinship; State; market) that formed the great insight of Deleuze and Guattari’s Anti-Oedipus, and its “universal history” of desire. In this view, all forms of society, of any scale (by forms we mean their degrees of authoritarianism or lawlessness, from totalitarianism to ‘anarchy’, and their consequent relationship to an ‘other’), are expressions or instantiations – temporary and provisional stabilizations – of the productive combinations (or indeed disjunctions) of desire. It is this desire that determines the way those bodies are held together, and the way those bodies relate to a perceived inside and outside (us/them): from revolutionary openness to “fascism-paranoia”. Again, this point cannot be emphasised enough: “desire” in this conception is simply this mode of connecting bodies (in a very, very broad sense), recording those connections as intensities, and consuming those sensations as degrees of pain or pleasure. We don’t guide those unconscious connections; “we” are their result (a foot fetishist is not so because of deliberate choice; unconscious desire and the habitual repetition of its connections are precisely what define the fetishist as such). 

Deleuze and Guattari’s insistent point about the primacy of desire in the form that a given society (or group activity) takes is especially clear when one compares the role played by social media in these riots with its eminently constructive role in the Arab uprisings this spring: the technology is entirely neutral, merely creating an amplified range of possibilities, but a tool that is nevertheless subtended by collective desires that can be taken in a revolutionary direction or else retreat into the segregated, segregative “microfascisms” that pervade the social field. 

Thus, as with the Law, so with a social machine – precarious both, their efficacy would vanish almost instantaneously if we stopped investing our desire in them in the way that we do; if our passional attachment to the world were to change; if we stopped accepting our fate as inevitable… Let me quote the passage of Anti-Oedipus that I used as the epigraph for my doctoral thesis, for it is now startlingly au courant:
Even the most repressive and the most deadly forms of social reproduction are produced by desire… That is why the fundamental problem of political philosophy is still precisely the one that Spinoza saw so clearly, and that Wilhelm Reich rediscovered: “Why do men fight for their servitude as stubbornly as though it were their salvation?” How can people possibly reach the point of shouting “More taxes! Less bread!”? As Reich remarks, the astonishing thing is not that some people steal or that others occasionally go out on strike, but rather that all those who are starving do not steal as a regular practice, and all those who are exploited are not continually out on strike: after centuries of exploitation, why do people still tolerate being humiliated and enslaved, to such a point, indeed, they actually want humiliation not only for others but for themselves? Reich is at his profoundest as a thinker when he refuses to accept ignorance or illusion on the part of the masses as an explanation of fascism, and demands an explanation that will take their desires into account, an explanation formulated in terms of desire: no, the masses were not innocent dupes; at a certain point, under a certain set of conditions, they wanted fascism, and it is this perversion of the desire of the masses that needs to be accounted for.
We have to recognise that our fear-driven desires to climb the social ladder, to be a winner, and thus implicitly to endorse a society in which this is promoted as an unambiguous virtue rather a panicked response to a failure of political imagination, makes us all complicit in that society’s continuation. We need to stop saying that the desocialization (dehumanization) that preceded riots is a problem for elsewhere, in ‘immature nations’ or the inner cities whose lives do not touch ‘ours’ – for the gated communities are ghettoes too. The reasons for the abandonment of this parallel society are inside us, in our own apathy, in the crushing obstacles that this ‘system’ – the profiteering machine – imparts to our more noble desires, our better wishes, our revolutionary dreams, in the little corners of sanity-seeking into which it pushes us, defeated. We need to such again on this repressed disgust. 


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‘shopping riots’

There is a insidious sense of powerlessness shared by many in the face of an utterly irrational capitalist machine – one that functions by producing for profit (be that pornography, pizzas, plastic bags, pesticides, prostitutes, pens or pedalos) regardless of social utility – insane from top to bottom. Even so, it is surely stretching credulity to ascribe to these recent events any revolutionary tenor – despite the attempts of many well-meaning, left-leaning friends to do so – not even as a revolution “gone bad”. OK, it has grown from ocean-deep disaffection and alienation, but revolutions, even when initially destroying things, are fundamentally constructive. This was not. This was the ransacking of a society that the looters had unconsciously come to despise. As Zoe Williams in the Guardian has said, in a manner that could be seen as a reply to the long quote from Deleuze and Guattari above:
I think it’s just about possible that you could see your actions refashioned into a noble cause if you were stealing the staples: bread, milk. But it can’t be done while you're nicking trainers, let alone laptops. In Clapham Junction, the only shop left untouched was Waterstone’s [which] kept Twitter alive all night with tweets about how uneducated these people must be.
These were, she said, “shopping riots”. 

Returning briefly to the question of the ‘inhibition’ of desire (a task necessarily carried out by all societies, since, in the abstract, a society is nothing more than a division of labour and distribution of surplus) and the constraints obtaining on behaviour, there are perhaps some serious questions to be asked of the relevance and effectiveness of the criminal justice system – for, as Williams again perceptively highlights, the startling thing about the riots was not at all the uneasy images of masked, anonymous men who adorned the covers of the Daily Mail; it was not the stealth, but the sheer brazenness of it. It was daylight robbery: “On Sunday morning, apparently, people had been not just looting H&M, but trying things on first… [Left-wing activist, Claire] Fox said the riots seemed nihilistic, they didn’t seem to be politically motivated, nor did they have any sense of community or social solidarity.” 

Thus, the events seemed less a case of what, in relation to fascism’s delirious total war economy and expansion-unto-death, Deleuze and Guattari described as a “realized nihilism” than a grotesque mirror of consumerism – its roots squarely in the way in which our society, top-to-bottom, communicates status (a transcultural, evolutionary function) through objects: purchasing power. I shop, therefore I am… That is what our participation in the community means to our elites; credit rating is not so much the lowest common denominator for status in capitalist societies, as the sole denominator. 

Of course, there is a distinction between indignation and deprivation, and to argue that the great mass of people’s faith in authority has been eroded by the MP expenses scandals, by the Catholic paedophile rings, by the 333 deaths in police custody without a single conviction, by the banking crisis, the bail-outs and fat cat bonuses, is not in any way to condone the actions of the last week. When we are looking for the deeper causes that allowed the ostensible trigger to act as trigger, the conditions that provoked a riot, there are doubtless an ensemble of factors to weigh up: it might have something to do with the lack of moral guidance provided in an ever-increasing amount of broken homes (this would certainly be the thesis of Oliver James in They F*** You Up); it might have something to do with a culture of apathy and leeching (Daily Mail); it might have something to do with the lack of opportunity, of hope; its relative novelty may have something to do with secularization, too (the blackmail of a virtuous life guaranteeing entry into heaven fools very few; football and shopping having become the new opiates); it might have something to do with the strength of weed being smoked, the ‘dread’ (in the Rastafarian sense) it induces. 

But it overwhelmingly has to do with status, in the macho bling posturing of the bereft and the disenfranchised and in male hormones translated into hyper-aggressive modes of expression (gangster rap) – a miniaturized, local form of precisely the same status-seeking, prestige vicariously accrued by the Lamborghini driver, the superyacht owner, the man with villa on the Caps. Only now, on the London estates and Black Country ghettos, tough schools where the weak are swallowed, it is trainers, phones, and flatscreen TVs that provide the short-hand coded symbols of pecking-order – signs that enable you to get jiggy with Shaneesa or Chelsea, or to get yo-yo-yo-yo-bruv to back the fuck up. 

A slew of unattainable consumer fantasies bombarding them all day, every day; a society with its back turned – this pot had been left on the boil for a while now. And unless escape routes are provided – social mobility: an exit from the degenerate peer-group pressures that present so few options for status and recognition – then you get a great big festering landfill of unfulfilled lives, with no mollifying of passion. In fact, the opposite; its attenuation, until, taut as catgut, it snaps. As Deleuze and Guattari say of fascism (which proliferated virally in 1930s Europe, before resonating together in a State, and whose micro-to-macro emergence resides in a certain mode of relation to the world, in desire): “it is precisely when the war machine has reached the point that it has no other object but war, it is when it substitutes destruction for mutation, that it frees the most catastrophic charge”. When there is no longer any scope for changing their lives, when they are trapped, with no lines of escape from drudgery, then a catastrophic charge is built. And boy, has it ignited. 

In these circumstances, the Law is ideally supposed to act as a thermostat, sponsoring negative feedback (i.e. when the population get agitated and heats up, when sedition is brewing, equilibrium is restored). This was positive feedback, an explosion, a runaway dynamic akin to a prison riot, in which typically, according to the brilliant description of forensic psychologist Kay Nonney, “there will be some form of moral outrage that takes its expression in self-interested revenge. There is no higher purpose, you just have a high volume of people with a history of impulsive behaviour, having a giant adventure”. The shooting of Mark Duggan by police was the moral outrage, but the events long sailed from the shores of protest and rioting to become straight opportunism. A giant adventure. 


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window of opportunity

The law is fundamentally precarious, then, as thin as the glass that separates a looter and his loot. For the consensus (literally, “feeling with”) that subtends the Law to be forthcoming, for power not to backtrack to brute force and terror, it is clear that a population has to believe that they form part of something real and worthwhile, no matter how intangible that thing is, no matter how much its precise contours and dimensions remain uncertain (and it is better that it is not too precise, too defined). This entity is not to be thought of as a totality community that subsumes its differences into an unreal image of unity (à la nationalisms, regionalisms, creeds, races, etc), but one that accentuates commonality all the while remaining accepting of difference. Thus, this feeling of being part of something does not mean slavishly belonging to pre-determined, transcendent identities (ideas that no body can embody) – belonging to which, in any case, usually means having been railroaded by local interactions and peer-group pressure – what Nietzsche had already called the “herd mentality”. It does not mean retreat into artificially segregative groups (and all the differences are artificial, really) based around religion, musical preference, football team, corporation, nationality, region, city, suburb, street, side of the street, side of the sofa – all the little groups from which we think we draw our personal intimate identity, our meaning, and which only really serve to block off our potential, to drive us to whimpering reactive veneration of an abstract identity category (“what should a Christian/Muslim do?”; “how does a Marxist think about this?”; “how does the concierge for Hilton hotels stand when talking to a powerful guest?”; “how does a Cripps/Blood walk across his ‘turf’?”; “how does an Orangeman bang his drum?”)… 

For Deleuze and Guattari, these “molar” identities are all based on fear (losing one’s meaning, the sense one makes of the world), even, and especially, when mobilizing that most dubious of virtues, pride. How preposterous to feel proud of a passport, or the colour of one’s skin! Mental ghettos! Let go, let go – it is all artifice! Follow the revolutionary line of flight and invent new (provisional, ephemeral) identities-in-common, based on dynamic action and changing goals rather than ossified, ‘immortal’ ideas (and the spontaneously self-organized clean-up is a good example of this potential, as well as an index of the ongoing will to community). A collective becoming over dutiful, fearful belonging


The logical end point of this argument about believing in something (and the concomitant softening and mutual openness of identities) is at the planetary level – for it is only at that scale – and not through our ever more powerless national governments – that we can tackle the most pressing issues that now face us: climate change and the social devastation caused by unpoliced, deregulated movement of capital, the smoke and mirrors of credit and debt

So, when the fires are out and enough of the thieves have been caught to placate the moral outrage, is there not a window of social and political opportunity? If so, starting right here where we are, from our present conditions, whatever their provenance, where next? As Deleuze and Guattari muse, apropos of an all-encompassing capitalist relation, “Which is the revolutionary path?” 

The answer is, we don’t know – in principle. History has to be improvised, invented, hence the importance of the realization that the Law is an artifice, and that things don’t have to be like this… But we need to ask whether we still want to condone a system that turns a weary, resigned, almost blind eye to bankers’ bonuses when unregulated, high-stakes financial speculation set in motion the financial crash? The law certainly has not operated as much of a constraint there. We could take a deep breath and belatedly confront the thoroughgoing insanity of a society in which we accept the ‘decisions’ of an anthropomorphised (and politically intervened, thus eminently un-free) Market, construed as some sort of ineffable consciousness, that deems it fine – to use a dog-eared, but palpably relevant example – to give wage packets of £200,000 per week for playing football, the new opium of the people. That is not the way of the world. That is apathy. We could all follow the example of Javi Poves

The disinvestment in the very idea of society or community that presaged this plunderous abomination of civility could also be taken in a positive direction, the riots functioning as a political bucket of cold water in the face, a break in the automatic stimulus-response circuitry of our social and political behaviour, all of which grow from the barren soil of identities that are all too sacred. Massumi sets out this ‘strategy’ of “Stopping the World”:
Becoming is about movement, but it begins with an inhibition. At least some of the automatic circuits between regularized stimuli and habitual responses must be disconnected, as if crowbar had been inserted into the interlocking network of standardized actions and trajectories constituting the World As We Know It. The resulting zone of indeterminacy is a tear in the fabric of good/common sense… Stopping the World As We Know it…is a prerequisite for setting up the kind of actual-virtual circuit crucial to the political imagination. Tactical sabotage of the existing order is a necessity of becoming, but for survival’s sake it is just as necessary to improve the existing order, to fight for integration into it on its own terms. These are two sides of the same coin and should be practised in such a way as to reinforce than mutually exclude one another. Neither is an end in itself. Their combined goal is a redefinition of the conditions of existence laid down by the molar order: their conversion into conditions of becoming.
To cite just a few general areas of a reformism to accompany revolutionary becomings, we could seek the end of ‘market fundamentalism’; the fostering of less consumptive lifestyles; investment in new green jobs; wealth redistribution; collaboration over competition. We could think global and act local about the food and energy supply. The possibilities are there, and have doubtless been imagined by the vast reserves of collective intelligence and goodwill shackled and silenced by our debt economy. Eventually, we could abandon waged labour and build sustainable collaborative communities, using the Internet to forge links every bit as transnational and deterritorialized as the mega-corporations and finance behemoths to which our governments are in thrall. Like a capitalist rocket returning to earth after running out of fuel, the insane rocket of whatever-profiteering, we could re-enter the atmosphere of genuine State sovereignty, demanding that our leaders stop pandering to the super-rich (whose offshore-whisked profits would vanish without our co-operation), that they tax corporations and cultivate conditions whereby a minimal state is not a neoliberal byword for the vice-like control of globalised elites, but the means for safeguarding the interests of grass-roots organizations... 

In temporarily disinvesting structures of power that would ultimately carry us to the abyss (not consciously, just through not taking their feet off the accelerator) and counteractualizing the World As We Know It, we have a chance to renovate the project of the Left. But we must also remain vigilant as to the traps and the dangers of disinvestment – what Deleuze and Guattari, recommending caution and dosages in the personal and political revolutions to be undertaken, call “the dangers of too-sudden a de-stratification”, dangers that can see the necessary undoing of group identities veer toward fascism – dangers that manifest themselves not as opportunity, but opportunism.