Authors: Professor Michael Hardt,Antonio Negri
Tags: #Philosophy, #Political, #Political Science, #General, #American Government
pondingly. From the standpoint ofthe capitalist, the value ofneces-
sary labor appears as an objective economic quantity—the price of
labor power, like the price ofgrain, oil, and other commodities—
but really it is determined socially and is the index ofa whole series
ofsocial struggles. The definition ofthe set ofsocial needs, the
quality ofthe time ofnon-work, the organization offamily relation-
ships, the accepted expectations of life are all in play and effectively
represented by the costs ofreproducing the worker. The enormous
rise in the social wage (in terms ofboth working wages and welfare)
during the period ofcrisis in the 1960s and 1970s resulted directly
from the accumulation ofsocial struggles on the terrain ofreproduc-
tion, the terrain ofnon-work, the terrain oflife.
The social struggles not only raised the costs ofreproduction
and the social wage (hence decreasing the rate ofprofit), but also
and more important forced a change in the quality and nature of
labor itself. Particularly in the dominant capitalist countries, where
the margin of freedom afforded to and won by workers was greatest,
the refusal ofthe disciplinary regime ofthe social factory was accom-
panied by a reevaluation ofthe social value ofthe entire set of
productive activities. The disciplinary regime clearly no longer
succeeded in containing the needs and desires ofyoung people.
The prospect ofgetting a job that guarantees regular and stable
work for eight hours a day, fifty weeks a year, for an entire working
life, the prospect ofentering the normalized regime ofthe social
factory, which had been a dream for many of their parents, now
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appeared as a kind ofdeath. The mass refusal ofthe disciplinary
regime, which took a variety offorms, was not only a negative
expression but also a moment ofcreation, what Nietzsche calls a
transvaluation ofvalues.
The various forms of social contestation and experimentation
all centered on a refusal to value the kind offixed program ofmaterial
production typical ofthe disciplinary regime, its mass factories, and
its nuclear family structure.22 The movements valued instead a more
flexible dynamic ofcreativity and what might be considered more
immaterial
forms of production. From the standpoint of the tradi-
tional ‘‘political’’ segments ofthe U.S. movements ofthe 1960s,
the various forms of cultural experimentation that blossomed with
a vengeance during that period all appeared as a kind ofdistraction
from the ‘‘real’’ political and economic struggles, but what they
failed to see was that
the ‘‘merely cultural’’ experimentation had very
profound political and economic effects.
‘‘Dropping out’’ was really a poor conception ofwhat was
going on in Haight-Ashbury and across the United States in the
1960s. The two essential operations were the refusal of the disciplin-
ary regime and the experimentation with new forms of productivity.
The refusal appeared in a wide variety of guises and proliferated
in thousands ofdaily practices. It was the college student who
experimented with LSD instead oflooking for a job; it was the
young woman who refused to get married and make a family; it
was the ‘‘shiftless’’ African-American worker who moved on ‘‘CP’’
(colored people’s) time, refusing work in every way possible.23 The
youth who refused the deadening repetition of the factory-society
invented new forms ofmobility and flexibility, new styles ofliving.
Student movements forced a high social value to be accorded to
knowledge and intellectual labor. Feminist movements that made
clear the political content of‘‘personal’’ relationships and refused
patriarchal discipline raised the social value ofwhat has traditionally
been considered women’s work, which involves a high content of
affective or caring labor and centers on services necessary for social
reproduction.24 The entire panoply ofmovements and the entire
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emerging counterculture highlighted the social value ofcooperation
and communication. This massive transvaluation ofthe values of
social production and production ofnew subjectivities opened the
way for a powerful transformation of labor power. In the next
section we will see in detail how the indexes ofthe value of
the movements—mobility, flexibility, knowledge, communication,
cooperation, the affective—would define the transformation of
capitalist production in the subsequent decades.
The various analyses of‘‘new social movements’’ have done
a great service in insisting on the political importance ofcultural
movements against narrowly economic perspectives that minimize
their significance.25 These analyses, however, are extremely limited
themselves because, just like the perspectives they oppose, they
perpetuate narrow understandings ofthe economic and the cultural.
Most important, they fail to recognize
the profound economic power
of the cultural movements,
or really the increasing indistinguishability ofeconomic and cultural phenomena. On the one hand, capitalist
relations were expanding to subsume all aspects ofsocial production
and reproduction, the entire realm oflife; and on the other hand,
cultural relations were redefining production processes and eco-
nomic structures ofvalue. A regime ofproduction, and above all
a regime ofthe production ofsubjectivity, was being destroyed and
another invented by the enormous accumulation ofstruggles.
These new circuits ofthe production ofsubjectivity, which
were centered on the dramatic modifications ofvalue and labor,
were realized within and against the final period ofthe disciplinary
organization ofsociety. The movements anticipated the capitalist
awareness of a need for a paradigm shift in production and dictated
its form and nature. If the Vietnam War had not taken place, if
there had not been worker and student revolts in the 1960s, ifthere
had not been 1968 and the second wave ofthe women’s movements,
ifthere had not been the whole series ofanti-imperialist struggles,
capital would have been content to maintain its own arrangement
ofpower, happy to have been saved the trouble ofshifting the
paradigm ofproduction! It would have been content for several
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good reasons: because the natural limits ofdevelopment served it
well; because it was threatened by the development ofimmaterial
labor; because it knew that the transversal mobility and hybridization
ofworld labor power opened the potential for new crises and class
conflicts on an order never before experienced. The restructuring
of production, from Fordism to post-Fordism, from modernization
to postmodernization, was anticipated by the rise ofa new subjectiv-
ity.26 The passage from the phase of perfecting the disciplinary
regime to the successive phase ofshifting the productive paradigm
was driven from below, by a proletariat whose composition had
already changed. Capital did not need to invent a new paradigm
(even ifit were capable ofdoing so) because
the truly creative moment
had already taken place.
Capital’s problem was rather to dominate a new composition that had already been produced autonomously
and defined within a new relationship to nature and labor, a relation-
ship ofautonomous production.
At this point the disciplinary system has become completely
obsolete and must be left behind. Capital must accomplish a negative
mirroring and an inversion ofthe new quality oflabor power; it
must adjust itselfso as to be able to command once again. We
suspect that for this reason the industrial and political forces that
have relied most heavily and with the most intelligence on the
extreme modernization ofthe disciplinary productive model (such
as the major elements ofJapanese and East Asian capital) are the
ones that will suffer most severely in this passage. The only configu-
rations ofcapital able to thrive in the new world will be those that
adapt to and govern the new immaterial, cooperative, communica-
tive, and affective composition of labor power.
The Death Throes of Soviet Discipline
Now that we have given a first approximation ofthe conditions
and forms of the new paradigm, we want to examine briefly one
gigantic subjective effect that the paradigm shift determined in the
course ofits movement: the collapse ofthe Soviet system. Our
thesis, which we share with many scholars ofthe Soviet world,27
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is that the system went into crisis and fell apart because of its
structural incapacity to go beyond the model ofdisciplinary govern-
ability, with respect to both its mode ofproduction, which was
Fordist and Taylorist, and its form of political command, which
was Keynesian-socialist and thus simply modernizing internally and
imperialist externally. This lack offlexibility in adapting its deploy-
ments ofcommand and its productive apparatus to the changes of
labor power exacerbated the difficulties of the transformation. The
heavy bureaucracy ofthe Soviet state, inherited from a long period
ofintense modernization, placed Soviet power in an impossible
position when it had to react to the new demands and desires
that the globally emerging subjectivities expressed, first within the
process ofmodernization and then at its outer limits.
The challenge ofpostmodernity was posed primarily not by
the enemy powers but by the new subjectivity oflabor power and
its new intellectual and communicative composition. The regime,
particularly in its illiberal aspects, was unable to respond adequately
to these subjective demands. The system could have continued,
and for a certain period did continue, to work on the basis of the
model ofdisciplinary modernization, but it could not combine
modernization with the new mobility and creativity oflabor power,
the fundamental conditions for breathing life into the new paradigm
and its complex mechanisms. In the context ofStar Wars, the
nuclear arms race, and space exploration, the Soviet Union may
still have been able to keep up with its adversaries from the techno-
logical and military point ofview, but the system could not manage
to sustain the competitive conflict on the subjective front. It could
not compete, in other words, precisely where the real power con-
flicts were being played out, and it could not face the challenges
ofthe comparative productivity ofeconomic systems, because ad-
vanced technologies ofcommunication and cybernetics are efficient
only when they are rooted in subjectivity, or better, when they
are animated by productive subjectivities. For the Soviet regime,
managing the power ofthe new subjectivities was a matter oflife
and death.
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According to our thesis, then, after the dramatic final years of
Stalin’s rule and Khrushchev’s abortive innovations, Brezhnev’s
regime imposed a freeze on a productive civil society that had
reached a high level ofmaturity and that, after the enormous mobili-
zations for war and productivity, was asking for social and political
recognition. In the capitalist world, the massive cold war propaganda
and the extraordinary ideological machine offalsification and misin-
formation prevented us from seeing the real developments in Soviet
society and the political dialectics that unfolded there. Cold war
ideology called that society totalitarian, but in fact it was a society
criss-crossed by extremely strong instances ofcreativity and freedom,
just as strong as the rhythms ofeconomic development and cultural
modernization. The Soviet Union was better understood not as a
totalitarian society but rather as a bureaucratic dictatorship.28 And
only ifwe leave these distorted definitions behind can we see how
political crisis was produced and reproduced in the Soviet Union,
to the point finally ofburying the regime.
Resistance to the bureaucratic dictatorship is what drove the
crisis. The Soviet proletariat’s refusal of work was in fact the very
same method ofstruggle that the proletariat in the capitalist countries
deployed, forcing their governments into a cycle of crisis, reform,
and restructuring. This is our point: despite the delays ofdevelop-
ment ofRussian capitalism, despite the massive losses in World
War II, despite the relative cultural isolation, the relative exclusion
from the world market, the cruel policies of imprisonment, starva-
tion, and murder ofthe population, despite all this, and despite
their enormous differences with the dominant capitalist countries,
the proletariat in Russia and the other countries ofthe Soviet bloc
managed by the 1960s and 1970s to pose the very same problems
as the proletariat in the capitalist countries.29 Even in Russia and