Authors: Professor Michael Hardt,Antonio Negri
Tags: #Philosophy, #Political, #Political Science, #General, #American Government
biopolitical production; the proletariat produces in all its generality
everywhere all day long.
This generality ofbiopolitical production makes clear a second
programmatic political demand ofthe multitude:
a social wage and
a guaranteed income for all.
The social wage stands opposed first of all to the family wage, that fundamental weapon of the sexual
division oflabor by which the wage paid for the productive labor
ofthe male worker is conceived also to pay f
or the unwaged
reproductive labor ofthe worker’s wife and dependents at home.
The family wage keeps family control firmly in the hands of the
male wage earner and perpetuates a false conception of what labor
is productive and what is not. As the distinction between production
and reproductive labor fades, so too fades the legitimation of the
family wage. The social wage extends well beyond the family to
the entire multitude, even those who are unemployed, because the
entire multitude produces, and its production is necessary from the
standpoint oftotal social capital. In the passage to postmodernity
and biopolitical production, labor power has become increasingly
collective and social. It is not even possible to support the old slogan
‘‘equal pay for equal work’’ when labor cannot be individualized
and measured. The demand for a social wage extends to the entire
population the demand that all activity necessary for the production
ofcapital be recognized with an equal compensation such that a
social wage is really a guaranteed income. Once citizenship is ex-
tended to all, we could call this guaranteed income a citizenship
income, due each as a member ofsociety.
Telos (The Right to Reappropriation)
Since in the imperial realm ofbiopower production and life tend
to coincide, class struggle has the potential to erupt across all the
fields of life. The problem we have to confront now is how concrete
instances ofclass struggle can actually arise, and moreover how they
can form a coherent program of struggle, a constituent power
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adequate to the destruction ofthe enemy and the construction of
a new society. The question is really how the body ofthe multitude
can configure itselfas a telos.
The first aspect ofthe telos ofthe multitude has to do with
the senses oflanguage and communication. Ifcommunication has
increasingly become the fabric ofproduction, and iflinguistic coop-
eration has increasingly become the structure ofproductive corpore-
ality, then the control over linguistic sense and meaning and the
networks ofcommunication becomes an ever more central issue
for political struggle. Ju¨rgen Habermas seems to have understood
this fact, but he grants the liberated functions of language and
communication only to individual and isolated segments ofsociety.5
The passage to postmodernity and Empire prohibits any such com-
partmentalization ofthe life world and immediately presents com-
munication, production, and life as one complex whole, an open
site ofconflict. The theorists and practitioners ofscience have long
engaged these sites ofcontroversy, but today all oflabor power (be
it material or immaterial, intellectual or manual) is engaged in
struggles over the senses oflanguage and against capital’s coloniza-
tion ofcommunicative sociality. All the elements ofcorruption and
exploitation are imposed on us by the linguistic and communicative
regimes ofproduction: destroying them in words is as urgent as
doing so in deeds. This is not really a matter ofideology critique
ifby ideology we still understand a realm ofideas and language
that is superstructural, external to production. Or rather, in the
imperial regime ideology, critique becomes directly the critique of
both political economy and lived experience. How can sense and
meaning be oriented differently or organized in alternative, coherent
communicative apparatuses? How can we discover and direct the
performative lines of linguistic sets and communicative networks
that create the fabric of life and production? Knowledge has to
become linguistic action and philosophy has to become a real
reappro-
priation of knowledge.
6 In other words, knowledge and communica-
tion have to constitute life through struggle. A first aspect of the
telos is posed when the apparatuses that link communication to
modes oflife are developed through the struggle ofthe multitude.
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405
To every language and communicative network corresponds
a system ofmachines, and the question ofmachines and their use
allows us to recognize a second aspect ofthe telos ofthe multitude,
which integrates the first and carries it further. We know well that
machines and technologies are not neutral and independent entities.
They are biopolitical tools deployed in specific regimes ofproduc-
tion, which facilitate certain practices and prohibit others. The
processes ofconstruction ofthe new proletariat that we have been
following go beyond a fundamental threshold here when the multi-
tude recognizes itselfas machinic, when it conceives ofthe possibil-
ity ofa new use ofmachines and technology in which the proletariat
is not subsumed as ‘‘variable capital,’’ as an internal part ofthe
production ofcapital, but is rather an autonomous agent ofproduc-
tion. In the passage from the struggle over the sense of language
to the construction ofa new system ofmachines, the telos gains a
greater consistency. This second aspect ofthe telos serves to make
what has been constructed in language become a lasting, corporeal
progression ofdesire in freedom. The hybridization ofhuman and
machine is no longer a process that takes place only on the margins
ofsociety; rather, it is a fundamental episode at the center ofthe
constitution ofthe multitude and its power.
Since great collective means must be mobilized for this muta-
tion, the telos must be configured as a collective telos. It has to
become real as a site ofencounter among subjects and a mechanism
ofthe constitution ofthe multitude.7 This is the third aspect ofthe
series ofpassages through which the material teleology ofthe new
proletariat is formed. Here consciousness and will, language and
machine are called on to sustain the collective making ofhistory.
The demonstration ofthis becoming cannot consist in anything
but the experience and experimentation ofthe multitude. Therefore
the power ofthe dialectic, which imagines the collective formed
through mediation rather than through constitution, has been de-
finitively dissolved. The making ofhistory is in this sense the con-
struction ofthe life ofthe multitude.
The fourth aspect deals with biopolitics. The subjectivity of
living labor reveals, simply and directly in the struggle over the
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senses oflanguage and technology, that when one speaks ofa
collective means ofthe constitution ofa new world, one is speaking
ofthe connection between the power oflife and its political organi-
zation. The political, the social, the economic, and the vital here
all dwell together. They are entirely interrelated and completely
interchangeable. The practices ofthe multitude invest this complex
and unitary horizon—a horizon that is at once ontological and
historical. Here is where the biopolitical fabric opens to the constitu-
tive, constituent power.
The fifth and final aspect thus deals directly with the constit-
uent power ofthe multitude—or really with the product ofthe
creative imagination ofthe multitude that configures its own consti-
tution. This constituent power makes possible the continuous open-
ing to a process ofradical and progressive transformation. It makes
conceivable equality and solidarity, those fragile demands that were
fundamental but remained abstract throughout the history of mod-
ern constitutions. It should come as no surprise that the postmodern
multitude takes away from the U.S. Constitution what allowed it
to become, above and against all other constitutions, an imperial
constitution: its notion of a boundless frontier of freedom and its
definition ofan open spatiality and temporality celebrated in a
constituent power. This new range ofpossibilities in no way guaran-
tees what is to come. And yet, despite such reservations, there is
something real that foreshadows a coming future: the telos that we
can feel pulsing, the multitude that we construct within desire.
Now we can formulate a third political demand of the multi-
tude:
the right to reappropriation.
The right to reappropriation is first ofall the right to the reappropriation ofthe means ofproduction.
Socialists and communists have long demanded that the proletariat
have free access to and control over the machines and materials
it uses to produce. In the context ofimmaterial and biopolitical
production, however, this traditional demand takes on a new guise.
The multitude not only uses machines to produce, but also becomes
increasingly machinic itself, as the means of production are increas-
ingly integrated into the minds and bodies ofthe multitude. In this
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
407
context reappropriation means having free access to and control
over knowledge, information, communication, and affects—be-
cause these are some ofthe primary means ofbiopolitical produc-
tion. Just because these productive machines have been integrated
into the multitude does not mean that the multitude has control
over them. Rather, it makes more vicious and injurious their alien-
ation. The right to reappropriation is really the multitude’s right
to self-control and autonomous self-production.
Posse
The telos ofthe multitude must live and organize its political space
against Empire and yet within the ‘‘maturity ofthe times’’ and the
ontological conditions that Empire presents. We have seen how
the multitude moves on endless paths and takes corporeal form by
reappropriating time and hybridizing new machinic systems. We
have also seen how the power ofthe multitude materializes within
the vacuum that remains necessarily at the heart ofEmpire. Now
it is a matter ofposing within these dimensions the problem ofthe
becoming-subject ofthe multitude. In other words, the virtual
conditions must now become real in a concrete figure. Against the
divine city, the earthly city must demonstrate its power as an appara-
tus ofthe mythology ofreason that organizes the biopolitical reality
ofthe multitude.
The name that we want to use to refer to the multitude in
its political autonomy and its productive activity is the Latin term
posse
—power as a verb, as activity. In Renaissance humanism the
triad
esse–nosse–posse
(being–knowing–having power) represented
the metaphysical heart ofthat constitutive philosophical paradigm
that was to go into crisis as modernity progressively took form.
Modern European philosophy, in its origins and in its creative
components that were not subjugated to transcendentalism, contin-
ually tended to pose posse at the center ofthe ontological dynamic:
posse is the machine that weaves together knowledge and being in
an expansive, constitutive process. When the Renaissance matured
and reached the point ofconflict with the forces ofcounterrevolu-
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tion, the humanistic posse became a force and symbol of resistance,
in Bacon’s notion of
inventio
or experimentation, Campanella’s
conception oflove, and Spinoza’s usage of
potentia.
Posse is what
a body and what a mind can do. Precisely because it continued to
live in resistance, the metaphysical term became a political term.
Posse refers to the power of the multitude and its telos, an embodied
power ofknowledge and being, always open to the possible.
Contemporary U.S. rap groups have rediscovered the term
‘‘posse’’ as a noun to mark the force that musically and literarily
defines the group, the singular difference of the postmodern multi-
tude. Of course, the proximate reference for the rappers is probably
the
posse comitatus
ofWild West lore, the rough group ofarmed
men who were constantly prepared to be authorized by the sheriff
to hunt down outlaws. This American fantasy of vigilantes and
outlaws, however, does not interest us very much. It is more interest-
ing to trace back a deeper, hidden etymology ofthe term. It seems
to us that perhaps a strange destiny has renewed the Renaissance
notion and has, with a grain ofmadness, made the term once again
deserving ofits high political tradition.
From this perspective we want to speak ofposse and not of
‘‘res-publica,’’ because the public and the activity ofsingularities