Authors: Professor Michael Hardt,Antonio Negri
Tags: #Philosophy, #Political, #Political Science, #General, #American Government
ity and charity would be bringing the Amerindians under the control
and tutelage ofthe true religion and its culture. The natives are
undeveloped potential Europeans. In this sense Las Casas belongs
to a discourse that extends well into the twentieth century on the
perfectibility of savages. For the Amerindians, just as for the Jews
of sixteenth-century Spain, the path to freedom from persecution
must pass first through Christian conversion. Las Casas is really not
so far from the Inquisition. He recognizes that humankind is one,
but cannot see that it is also simultaneously many.
More than two centuries after Las Casas, in the late eighteenth
century, when Europe’s domination over the Americas had changed
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form from conquest, massacre, and pillage to the more stable colonial
structure oflarge-scale slave production and trade exclusives, a
black slave named Toussaint L’Ouverture led the first successful
independence struggle against modern slavery in the French colony
ofSaint Domingue (now Haiti). Toussaint L’Ouverture breathed
in the rhetoric ofthe French Revolution emanating from Paris in
its pure form. If the French revolutionaries opposing the ancien
re´gime proclaimed the universal human right to ‘‘liberte´, egalite´,
et fraternite´,’’ Toussaint assumed that the blacks, mulattoes, and
whites ofthe colony were also included under the broad umbrella
ofthe rights ofcitizens. He took the victory over the feudal aristoc-
racy and the exaltation ofuniversal values in Europe to imply also
the victory over the ‘‘race aristocracy’’ and the abolition ofslavery.
All will now be free citizens, equal brothers in the new French
republic. The letters ofToussaint to French military and govern-
mental leaders pursue the rhetoric ofthe revolution faultlessly to
its logical conclusion and thereby reveal its hypocrisy. Perhaps na-
ively or perhaps as a conscious political tactic, Toussaint demon-
strates how the leaders ofthe revolution betray the principles they
claim to hold most dear. In a report to the Directoire on 14 Brumaire
an VI (November 5, 1797), Toussaint warned the French leaders
that any return to slavery, any compromise ofprinciples, would
be impossible. A declaration offreedom is irreversible: ‘‘Do you
think that men who have enjoyed the blessing ofliberty will calmly
see it snatched away? . . . But no, the same hand that has bro-
ken our chains will not enslave us anew. France will not revoke
her principles, she will not withdraw from us the greatest of her
benefits.’’3
The proclamations ofuniversal rights launched so confidently
in Paris come back from Saint Domingue only to strike horror in
the hearts ofthe French. In the voyage across the Atlantic, the
universality ofthe ideals became more real and were put into
practice. As AimeĆeśaire puts it, Toussaint L’Ouverture pushed
the project forward across the terrain ‘‘that separates the
only thought
from concrete reality; right from its actualization; reason from its
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proper truth.’’4 Toussaint takes the Declaration ofthe Rights of
Man to the letter and insists on its full translation into practice. The
revolution under Toussaint does not seek liberation from European
domination only to return to a lost African world or reestablish in
isolation traditional forms of rule; Toussaint looks forward to the
forms of liberty and equality newly made available in the increasingly
interconnected world.5
At times, however, Toussaint writes as ifthe very idea of
freedom had been created by the French, and as if he and his
insurgent companions were free only by the grace of Paris. This
may be merely a rhetorical strategy ofToussaint’s, an example of
his ironic obsequiousness toward the French rulers; but certainly
one should not think freedom to be a European idea. The slaves
ofSaint Domingue had revolted against their masters ever since
their capture and forced immigration from Africa. They were not
granted freedom but won it through bloody and tireless battle.
Neither the desire for freedom nor its conquest originated in France,
and the blacks ofSaint Domingue did not need the Parisians to
teach them to fight for it. What Toussaint does receive and make
good use ofis the specific rhetoric ofthe French revolutionaries
that gives legitimate form to his quest for liberation.
In the nineteenth century Karl Marx, like Las Casas and Tous-
saint L’Ouverture before him, recognized the utopian potential of
the ever-increasing processes ofglobal interaction and communica-
tion. Like Las Casas, Marx was horrified by the brutality ofEuropean
conquest and exploitation. Capitalism was born in Europe through
the blood and sweat ofconquered and colonized non-European
peoples: ‘‘The veiled slavery ofthe wage-labourers in Europe needed
the unqualified slavery ofthe New World as its pedestal.’’6 Like
Toussaint L’Ouverture, Marx recognized human freedom as a uni-
versal project to be realized through practice and from which no
population should be excluded.
This global utopian vein in Marx is nonetheless ambiguous,
perhaps even more so than in the other two cases, as we can see
clearly from the series of articles he wrote for the
New York Daily
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Tribune
in 1853 on British rule in India. Marx’s primary goal in
these articles was to explain the debate going on at the time in the
British Parliament over the status ofthe East India Company and
situate the debate in the history ofBritish colonial rule. Marx is of
course quick to note the brutality ofthe introduction ofBritish
‘‘civilization’’ into India and the havoc and suffering wrought by
the rapacious greed ofBritish capital and the British government.
He immediately warns, however, in terms that bring us right back
to the revolutionary face of the Renaissance, against simply reacting
to the barbarity ofthe British by supporting blindly the status quo
ofIndian society. The village system that Marx understood to
preexist the British colonial intrusion was nothing to be champi-
oned: ‘‘Sickening as it must be to human feeling to witness’’ the
destruction and suffering caused by the British, ‘‘we must not forget
that these idyllic village communities, inoffensive though they may
appear, had always been the solid foundation of Oriental despotism,
that they restrained the human mind, within the smallest possible
compass, making it the unresisting tool ofsuperstition, enslaving it
beneath the traditional rules depriving it ofall grandeur and historical
energies.’’7 Neither does the ruling structure ofIndian princes de-
serve support, even in reaction to the British: ‘‘It is not a strange
thing that the same men who denounce ‘the barbarous splendors
ofthe Crown and Aristocracy ofEngland’ are shedding tears at the
downfall of Indian Nabobs, Rujahs, and Jagidars, the great majority
ofwhom possess not even the prestige ofantiquity, being generally
usurpers ofvery recent date, set up by English intrigue.’’8
The colonial situation falls too easily into a choice between
two bad alternatives: either submission to British capital and British
rule or return to traditional Indian social structures and submission
to Indian princes; either foreign domination or local domination.
For Marx there must be another path that refuses both of these
alternatives, a path ofinsubordination and freedom. In this sense,
in creating the conditions ofpossibility for a new society, ‘‘whatever
may have been the crimes ofEngland, she was the unconscious
tool ofhistory in bringing about that revolution.’’9 Capital can, in
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certain circumstances, be a force of enlightenment. Like Toussaint,
then, Marx saw no use in overthrowing foreign domination simply
to restore some isolated and traditional form of oppression. The
alternative must look forward to a new form of freedom, connected
to the expansive networks ofglobal exchange.
The only ‘‘alternative’’ path Marx can imagine, however, is
that same path that European society has already traveled. Marx
has no conception of the difference of Indian society, the different
potentials it contains. He can thus see the Indian past only as vacant
and static: ‘‘Indian society has no history at all, at least no known
history. What we call its history is but the history ofthe successive
intruders who founded their empires on the passive basis of that
unresisting and unchanging society.’’10 The claim that Indian society
has no history means not that nothing has happened in India but
that the course ofevents has been determined exclusively by exter-
nal forces, while Indian society has remained passive, ‘‘unresisting
and unchanging.’’ Certainly Marx was limited by his scant knowl-
edge ofIndia’s present and past.11 His lack ofinformation, how-
ever, is not the point. The central issue is that Marx can con-
ceive ofhistory outside ofEurope only as moving strictly along
the path already traveled by Europe itself. ‘‘England has to fulfill a
double mission in India,’’ he wrote, ‘‘one destructive, the other
regenerating—the annihilation ofold Asiatic Society, and the laying
ofthe material foundations ofWestern society in Asia.’’12 India can
progress only by being transformed into a Western society. All the
world can move forward only by following the footsteps of Europe.
Marx’s Eurocentrism is in the end not so different from that of
Las Casas.
TheCrisis of Colonial Slavery
Although the utopian vein has continually surfaced in the historical
process ofthe interconnection and intercommunication ofthe world
in the modern period, it has nonetheless continually been suppressed
militarily and ideologically by the forces of European domination.
The primary result has been massacres on a scale never before
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imagined and the establishment ofracial, political, and economic
structures ofEuropean rule over the non-European world. The
rise ofEuropean supremacy was driven in large part by the develop-
ment and spread ofcapitalism, which fed Europe’s seemingly insatia-
ble thirst for wealth. The global expansion of capitalism, however,
was neither a uniform nor a univocal process. In various regions
and among different populations capitalism developed unevenly: it
lurched forward, hesitated, and retreated according to a variety of
diverse paths. One such circuitous path is traced by the history of
large-scale colonial slave production in the Americas between the
late seventeenth and mid-nineteenth centuries, a history that is
not precapitalist but rather
within
the complex and contradictory
developments ofcapital.
Large-scale plantation production with slave labor was initiated
in the Caribbean in the mid-seventeenth century by English and
French planters who imported African slaves to fill the void left by
the native peoples killed by European weapons and disease. By the
end ofthe eighteenth century, the products ofslave labor in the
Americas constituted one third ofthe value ofEuropean com-
merce.13 European capitalism stood in a very ambiguous relation
to this slave production in the Americas. One might reason logically,
as many have, that since capitalism is based ideologically and materi-
ally on free labor, or really on the worker’s ownership of his or
her own labor power, capitalism must be antithetical to slave labor.
From this perspective, colonial slavery would be seen as a preexisting
form of production analogous to feudalism that capital succeeds
gradually in overcoming. The capitalist ideology offreedom would
in this case be an unalloyed force of enlightenment.
Capital’s relationship to colonial slavery, however, is in fact
much more intimate and complex. First ofall, even though capital-
ism’s ideology is indeed antithetical to slavery, in practice capital
nonetheless not only subsumed and reinforced existing slave produc-
tion systems throughout the world but also
created new systems of
slavery
on an unprecedented scale, particularly in the Americas.14
One might interpret capital’s creation ofslave systems as a kind of
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apprenticeship to capitalism, in which slavery would function as a
transitional stage between the natural (that is, self-sufficient and
isolated) economies that preexisted European intrusion and capital-
ism proper. Indeed, the scale and organization ofthe eighteenth-
century Caribbean plantations did foreshadow in certain respects
the nineteenth-century European industrial plant.15 The slave pro-
duction in the Americas and the African slave trade, however, were