Authors: Professor Michael Hardt,Antonio Negri
Tags: #Philosophy, #Political, #Political Science, #General, #American Government
The two dance together over the abyss, over the imperial lack
ofbeing.
Such examples ofcorruption could be multiplied ad infinitum,
but at the base ofall these forms ofcorruption there is an operation
ofontological nullification that is defined and exercised as the
destruction ofthe singular essence ofthe multitude. The multitude
must be unified or segmented into different unities: this is how the
multitude has to be corrupted. This is why the ancient and modern
concepts ofcorruption cannot be translated directly into the post-
modern concept. Whereas in ancient and modern times corruption
was defined in relation to the schemas and/or relations ofvalue
and demonstrated as a falsification of them in such a way that it
could at times play a role in the change among the forms of govern-
ment and the restoration ofvalues, today, in contrast, corruption
cannot play a role in any transformation of the forms of government
because corruption itselfis the substance and totality ofEmpire.
Corruption is the pure exercise ofcommand, without any propor-
tionate or adequate reference to the world of life. It is command
directed toward the destruction ofthe singularity ofthe multitude
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through its coercive unification and/or cruel segmentation. This is
why Empire necessarily declines in the very moment ofits rise.
This negative figure ofcommand over productive biopower
is even more paradoxical when viewed from the perspective of
corporeality. Biopolitical generation directly transforms the bodies
ofthe multitude. These are, as we have seen, bodies enriched with
intellectual and cooperative power, and bodies that are already
hybrid. What generation offers us in postmodernity are thus bodies
‘‘beyond measure.’’ In this context corruption appears simply as
disease, frustration, and mutilation. This is how power has always
acted against enriched bodies. Corruption also appears as psychosis,
opiates, anguish, and boredom, but this too has always happened
throughout modernity and disciplinary societies. The specificity of
corruption today is instead the rupture ofthe community ofsingular
bodies and the impediment to its action—a rupture ofthe produc-
tive biopolitical community and an impediment to its life. Here
we are thus faced with a paradox. Empire recognizes and profits
from the fact that in cooperation bodies produce more and in
community bodies enjoy more, but it has to obstruct and control this
cooperative autonomy so as not to be destroyed by it. Corruption
operates to impede this going ‘‘beyond measure’’ ofthe bodies
through community, this singular universalization ofthe new power
ofbodies, which threaten the very existence ofEmpire. The paradox
is irresolvable: the more the world becomes rich, the more Empire,
which is based on this wealth, must negate the conditions ofthe
production ofwealth. Our task is to investigate how ultimately
corruption can be forced to cede its control to generation.
4.3
T H E M U L T I T U D E A G A I N S T E M P I R E
The great masses need a
material religion of the senses
[
eine sinnliche Religion
]. Not only the great masses but also the philosopher needs it.
Monotheism ofreason and the heart, polytheism ofthe imagination
and art, this is what we need . . . [W]e must have a new mythol-
ogy, but this mythology must be at the service ofideas. It must be
a mythology of
reason.
Das a¨lteste Systemprogramm des deutschen Idealismus,
by Hegel, Ho¨lderlin, or Schelling
We do not lack communication, on the contrary we have too
much ofit. We lack creation.
We lack resistance to the present.
Gilles Deleuze and Feĺix Guattari
Imperial power can no longer resolve the conflict of
social forces through mediatory schemata that displace the terms of
conflict. The social conflicts that constitute the political confront
one another directly, without mediations ofany sort. This is the
essential novelty ofthe imperial situation. Empire creates a greater
potential for revolution than did the modern regimes of power
because it presents us, alongside the machine ofcommand, with
an alternative: the set ofall the exploited and the subjugated, a
multitude that is directly opposed to Empire, with no mediation
between them. At this point, then, as Augustine says, our task is
to discuss, to the best ofour powers, ‘‘the rise, the development
and the destined ends ofthe two cities . . . which we find . . .
interwoven . . . and mingled with one another.’’1 Now that we
have dealt extensively with Empire, we should focus directly on
the multitude and its potential political power.
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TheTwo Cities
We need to investigate specifically how the multitude can become
a
political subject
in the context ofEmpire. We can certainly recognize the existence ofthe multitude from the standpoint ofthe constitution ofEmpire, but f
rom that perspective the multitude might
appear to be generated and sustained by imperial command. In the
new postmodern Empire there is no Emperor Caracalla who grants
citizenship to all his subjects and thereby forms the multitude as a
political subject. The formation ofthe multitude ofexploited and
subjugated producers can be read more clearly in the history of
twentieth-century revolutions. Between the communist revolutions
of1917 and 1949, the great anti-fascist struggles ofthe 1930s and
1940s, and the numerous liberation struggles ofthe 1960s up to
those of1989, the conditions ofthe citizenship ofthe multitude
were born, spread, and consolidated. Far from being defeated, the
revolutions ofthe twentieth century have each pushed forward and
transformed the terms ofclass conflict, posing the conditions ofa
new political subjectivity, an insurgent multitude against imperial
power. The rhythm that the revolutionary movements have estab-
lished is the beat ofa new
aetas,
a new maturity and metamorphosis ofthe times.
The constitution ofEmpire is not the cause but the conse-
quence ofthe rise ofthese new powers. It should be no surprise,
then, that Empire, despite its efforts, finds it impossible to construct
a system ofright adequate to the new reality ofthe globalization
ofsocial and economic relations. This impossibility (which served
as the point ofdeparture for our argument in Section 1.1) is not
due to the wide extension ofthe field ofregulation; nor is it simply
the result of the difficult passage from the old system of international
public law to the new imperial system. This impossibility is explained
instead by the revolutionary nature ofthe multitude, whose struggles
have produced Empire as an inversion ofits own image and who
now represents on this new scene an uncontainable force and an
excess ofvalue with respect to every form ofright and law.
To confirm this hypothesis, it is sufficient to look at the
contemporary development ofthe multitude and dwell on the
T H E M U L T I T U D E A G A I N S T E M P I R E
395
vitality ofits present expressions. When the multitude works, it
produces autonomously and reproduces the entire world oflife.
Producing and reproducing autonomously mean constructing a new
ontological reality. In effect, by working, the multitude produces
itselfas singularity. It is a singularity that establishes a new place in
the non-place ofEmpire, a singularity that is a reality produced by
cooperation, represented by the linguistic community, and devel-
oped by the movements ofhybridization. The multitude affirms
its singularity by inverting the ideological illusion that all humans
on the global surfaces of the world market are interchangeable.
Standing the ideology ofthe market on its f
eet, the multitude
promotes through its labor the biopolitical singularizations ofgroups
and sets ofhumanity, across each and every node ofglobal inter-
change.
Class struggles and revolutionary processes ofthe past under-
mined the political powers ofnations and peoples. The revolution-
ary preamble that has been written from the nineteenth to the
twentieth centuries has prepared the new subjective configuration
oflabor that comes to be realized today. Cooperation and communi-
cation throughout the spheres ofbiopolitical production define a
new productive singularity. The multitude is not formed simply
by throwing together and mixing nations and peoples indifferently;
it is the singular power ofa
new city.
One might object at this point, with good reason, that all this
is still not enough to establish the multitude as a properly political
subject, nor even less as a subject with the potential to control
its own destiny. This objection, however, does not present an
insuperable obstacle, because the revolutionary past, and the con-
temporary cooperative productive capacities through which the
anthropological characteristics ofthe multitude are continually tran-
scribed and reformulated, cannot help revealing a telos, a material
affirmation of liberation. In the ancient world Plotinus faced some-
thing like this situation:
‘‘Let us flee then to the beloved Fatherland’’: this is the soundest
counsel . . . The Fatherland to us is There whence we have
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come, and There is the Father. What then is our course, what
the manner of our flight? This is not a journey for the feet;
the feet bring us only from land to land; nor need you think
ofa coach or ship to carry you away; all this order ofthings
you must set aside and refuse to see: you must close the eyes
and call instead upon another vision which is to be waked
within you, a vision, the birth-right ofall, which few turn
to use.2
This is how ancient mysticism expressed the new telos. The multi-
tude today, however, resides on the imperial surfaces where there
is no God the Father and no transcendence. Instead there is our
immanent labor. The teleology ofthe multitude is theurgical; it
consists in the possibility ofdirecting technologies and production
toward its own joy and its own increase ofpower. The multitude
has no reason to look outside its own history and its own present
productive power for the means necessary to lead toward its consti-
tution as a political subject.
A material mythology ofreason thus begins to be formed, and
it is constructed in the languages, technologies, and all the means
that constitute the world oflife. It is a material religion ofthe senses
that separates the multitude from every residue of sovereign power
and from every ‘‘long arm’’ of Empire. The mythology of reason
is the symbolic and imaginative articulation that allows the ontology
ofthe multitude to express itselfas activity and consciousness. The
mythology oflanguages ofthe multitude interprets the telos ofan
earthly city,
torn away by the power ofits own destiny from any
belonging or subjection to a
city of God,
which has lost all honor and legitimacy. To the metaphysical and transcendent mediations,
to the violence and corruption are thus opposed the absolute consti-
tution oflabor and cooperation, the earthly city ofthe multitude.
Endless Paths (The Right to
Global Citizenship)
The constitution ofthe multitude appears first as a spatial movement
that constitutes the multitude in limitless place. The mobility of
T H E M U L T I T U D E A G A I N S T E M P I R E
397
commodities, and thus ofthat special commodity that is labor-
power, has been presented by capitalism ever since its birth as the
fundamental condition ofaccumulation. The kinds ofmovement
ofindividuals, groups, and populations that we find today in Empire,
however, cannot be completely subjugated to the laws ofcapitalist
accumulation—at every moment they overflow and shatter the
bounds ofmeasure. The movements ofthe multitude designate
new spaces, and its journeys establish new residences. Autonomous
movement is what defines the place proper to the multitude. In-
creasingly less will passports or legal documents be able to regulate
our movements across borders. A new geography is established by
the multitude as the productive flows ofbodies define new rivers
and ports. The cities ofthe earth will become at once great deposits
ofcooperating humanity and locomotives for circulation, temporary
residences and networks ofthe mass distribution ofliving humanity.
Through circulation the multitude reappropriates space and
constitutes itselfas an active subject. When we look closer at how
this constitutive process ofsubjectivity operates, we can see that
the new spaces are described by unusual topologies, by subterranean
and uncontainable rhizomes—by geographical mythologies that
mark the new paths ofdestiny. These movements often cost terrible