Authors: Professor Michael Hardt,Antonio Negri
Tags: #Philosophy, #Political, #Political Science, #General, #American Government
with the political agitation ofthe First International, continuing in
the 1880s and 1890s with the formation of socialist political and
trade union organizations, and then rising to a peak after the Russian
revolution of1905 and the first international cycle ofanti-imperialist
struggles.11 A second wave arose after the Soviet revolution of 1917,
which was followed by an international progression of struggles
that could only be contained by fascisms on one side and reabsorbed
by the New Deal and antifascist fronts on the other. And finally there
was the wave ofstruggles that began with the Chinese revolution
and proceeded through the African and Latin American liberation
struggles to the explosions ofthe 1960s throughout the world.
These international cycles ofstruggles were the real motor
that drove the development ofthe institutions ofcapital and that
drove it in a process ofref
orm and restructuring.12 Proletarian,
anticolonial, and anti-imperialist internationalism, the struggle for
communism, which lived in all the most powerful insurrectional
events ofthe nineteenth and twentieth centuries, anticipated and
prefigured the processes ofthe globalization ofcapital and the
formation of Empire. In this way the formation of Empire is a
response
to proletarian internationalism. There is nothing dialectical or teleological about this anticipation and prefiguration ofcapitalist
development by the mass struggles. On the contrary, the struggles
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themselves are demonstrations ofthe creativity ofdesire, utopias
oflived experience, the workings ofhistoricity as potentiality—in
short, the struggles are the naked reality ofthe
res gestae.
A teleology of sorts is constructed only after the fact,
post festum.
The struggles that preceded and prefigured globalization were
expressions ofthe force ofliving labor, which sought to liberate
itselffrom the rigid territorializing regimes imposed on it. As it
contests the dead labor accumulated against it, living labor always
seeks to break the fixed territorializing structures, the national orga-
nizations, and the political figures that keep it prisoner. With the
force of living labor, its restless activity, and its deterritorializing
desire, this process ofrupture throws open all the windows of
history. When one adopts the perspective ofthe activity ofthe
multitude, its production ofsubjectivity and desire, one can recog-
nize how globalization, insofar as it operates a real deterritorialization
ofthe previous structures ofexploitation and control, is really a
condition ofthe liberation ofthe multitude. But how can this
potential for liberation be realized today? Does that same uncontain-
able desire for freedom that broke and buried the nation-state and
that determined the transition toward Empire still live beneath
the ashes ofthe present, the ashes ofthe fire that consumed the
internationalist proletarian subject that was centered on the industrial
working class? What has come to stand in the place ofthat subject?
In what sense can we say that the ontological rooting ofa new
multitude has come to be a positive or alternative actor in the
articulation ofglobalization?
TheMoleand theSnake
We need to recognize that the very subject oflabor and revolt
has changed profoundly. The composition of the proletariat has
transformed and thus our understanding of it must too. In conceptual
terms we understand
proletariat
as a broad category that includes all those whose labor is directly or indirectly exploited by and subjected
to capitalist norms ofproduction and reproduction.13 In a previous
era the category ofthe proletariat centered on and was at times
A L T E R N A T I V E S W I T H I N E M P I R E
53
effectively subsumed under the
industrial working class,
whose paradigmatic figure was the male mass factory worker. That industrial
working class was often accorded the leading role over other figures
oflabor (such as peasant labor and reproductive labor) in both
economic analyses and political movements. Today that working
class has all but disappeared from view. It has not ceased to exist,
but it has been displaced from its privileged position in the capitalist
economy and its hegemonic position in the class composition of
the proletariat. The proletariat is not what it used to be, but that
does not mean it has vanished. It means, rather, that we are faced
once again with the analytical task ofunderstanding the new compo-
sition ofthe proletariat as a class.
The fact that under the category of proletariat we understand
all
those exploited by and subject to capitalist domination should not indicate that the proletariat is a homogeneous or undifferentiated
unit. It is indeed cut through in various directions by differences
and stratifications. Some labor is waged, some is not; some labor
is restricted to within the factory walls, some is dispersed across the
unbounded social terrain; some labor is limited to eight hours a
day and forty hours a week, some expands to fill the entire time
oflife; some labor is accorded a minimal value, some is exalted to
the pinnacle ofthe capitalist economy. We will argue (in Section
3.4) that among the various figures ofproduction active today,
the figure ofimmaterial labor power (involved in communication,
cooperation, and the production and reproduction of affects) occu-
pies an increasingly central position in both the schema ofcapitalist
production and the composition ofthe proletariat. Our point here
is that all ofthese diverse forms oflabor are in some way subject
to capitalist discipline and capitalist relations ofproduction. This
fact of being within capital and sustaining capital is what defines
the proletariat as a class.
We need to look more concretely at the form of the struggles
in which this new proletariat expresses its desires and needs. In the
last half-century, and in particular in the two decades that stretched
from 1968 to the fall of the Berlin Wall, the restructuring and global
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expansion ofcapitalist production have been accompanied by a
transformation ofproletarian struggles. As we said, the figure ofan
international cycle ofstruggles based on the communication and
translation ofthe common desires oflabor in revolt seems no longer
to exist. The fact that the cycle as the specific form of the assemblage
ofstruggles has vanished, however, does not simply open up to an
abyss. On the contrary, we can recognize powerful events on the
world scene that reveal the trace ofthe multitude’s refusal ofexploi-
tation and that signal a new kind ofproletarian solidarity and mili-
tancy.
Consider the most radical and powerful struggles of the final
years ofthe twentieth century: the Tiananmen Square events in
1989, the Intifada against Israeli state authority, the May 1992 revolt
in Los Angeles, the uprising in Chiapas that began in 1994, and
the series ofstrikes that paralyzed France in December 1995, and
those that crippled South Korea in 1996. Each ofthese struggles
was specific and based on immediate regional concerns in such a
way that they could in no respect be linked together as a globally
expanding chain ofrevolt. None ofthese events inspired a cycle
ofstruggles, because the desires and needs they expressed could not
be translated into different contexts. In other words, (potential)
revolutionaries in other parts ofthe world did not hear ofthe
events in Beijing, Nablus, Los Angeles, Chiapas, Paris, or Seoul
and immediately recognize them as their own struggles. Further-
more, these struggles not only fail to communicate to other contexts
but also lack even a local communication, and thus often have a
very briefduration where they are born, burning out in a flash. This
is certainly one ofthe central and most urgent political paradoxes of
our time: in our much celebrated age ofcommunication,
struggles
have become all but incommunicable.
This paradox ofincommunicability makes it extremely difficult
to grasp and express the new power posed by the struggles that
have emerged. We ought to be able to recognize that what the
struggles have lost in extension, duration, and communicability they
have gained in intensity. We ought to be able to recognize that
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55
although all ofthese struggles f
ocused on their own local and
immediate circumstances, they all nonetheless posed problems of
supranational relevance, problems that are proper to the new figure
ofimperial capitalist regulation. In Los Angeles, for example, the
riots were fueled by local racial antagonisms and patterns of social
and economic exclusion that are in many respects particular to
that (post-)urban territory, but the events were also immediately
catapulted to a general level insofar as they expressed a refusal of
the post-Fordist regime ofsocial control. Like the Intifada in certain
respects, the Los Angeles riots demonstrated how the decline of
Fordist bargaining regimes and mechanisms ofsocial mediation has
made the management ofracially and socially diverse metropolitan
territories and populations so precarious. The looting ofcommodi-
ties and burning ofproperty were not just metaphors but the real
global condition ofthe mobility and volatility ofpost-Fordist social
mediations.14 In Chiapas, too, the insurrection focused primarily
on local concerns: problems ofexclusion and lack ofrepresentation
specific to Mexican society and the Mexican state, which have also
to a limited degree long been common to the racial hierarchies
throughout much ofLatin American. The Zapatista rebellion, how-
ever, was also immediately a struggle against the social regime
imposed by NAFTA and more generally the systematic exclusion
and subordination in the regional construction ofthe world mar-
ket.15 Finally, like those in Seoul, the massive strikes in Paris and
throughout France in late 1995 were aimed at specific local and
national labor issues (such as pensions, wages, and unemployment),
but the struggle was also immediately recognized as a clear contesta-
tion ofthe new social and economic construction ofEurope. The
French strikes called above all for a new notion of the public, a
new construction ofpublic space against the neoliberal mechanisms
ofprivatization that accompany more or less everywhere the project
ofcapitalist globalization.16 Perhaps precisely because all these strug-
gles are incommunicable and thus blocked from traveling horizon-
tally in the form of a cycle, they are forced instead to leap vertically
and touch immediately on the global level.
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We ought to be able to recognize that this is not the appearance
ofa new cycle ofinternationalist struggles, but rather the emergence
ofa new quality ofsocial movements. We ought to be able to
recognize, in other words, the fundamentally new characteristics
these struggles all present, despite their radical diversity. First, each
struggle, though firmly rooted in local conditions, leaps immediately
to the global level and attacks the imperial constitution in its general-
ity. Second, all the struggles destroy the traditional distinction be-
tween economic and political struggles. The struggles are at once
economic, political, and cultural—and hence they are biopolitical
struggles, struggles over the form of life. They are constituent strug-
gles, creating new public spaces and new forms of community.
We ought to be able to recognize all this, but it is not that
easy. We must admit, in fact, that even when trying to individuate
the real novelty ofthese situations, we are hampered by the nagging
impression that these struggles are always already old, outdated, and
anachronistic. The struggles at Tiananmen Square spoke a language
ofdemocracy that seemed long out offashion; the guitars, head-
bands, tents, and slogans all looked like a weak echo ofBerkeley
in the 1960s. The Los Angeles riots, too, seemed like an aftershock
ofthe earthquake ofracial conflicts that shook the United States
in the 1960s. The strikes in Paris and Seoul seemed to take us back
to the era ofthe mass factory worker, as ifthey were the last gasp
ofa dying working class. All these struggles, which pose really
new elements, appear from the beginning to be already old and
outdated—precisely because they cannot communicate, because
their languages cannot be translated. The struggles do not communi-
cate despite their being hypermediatized, on television, the Internet,
and every other imaginable medium. Once again we are confronted
by the paradox ofincommunicability.
We can certainly recognize real obstacles that block the com-