 |
Deliberately unsystematic thoughts on a new way of running
a country
(Originally published as Chapter 4 in The End of Knowing)
The conclusion to Gergen's succinct characterization of the
postmodem era that we quoted in Chapter 2 (p. 23) is the distinctly
political
metaphor, "The center fails to hold." The formulation
(from Yeats's "The Second Coming") is in this context
substantively apt, for postmodemism makes "compromise as
Truth" structurally meaningless (given that there is no
Truth). Furthermore, it is formally appropriate in the sense
that the issue of whether there can be a developmental way
to continue knowing and, if not, what lies ahead for our species
is, in our opinion, ultimately a political matter.
The search for the center has not only guided the practice
of politics in liberal democratic society these past few hundred
years, it has shaped our very way of thinking and talking about
politics. Left and right projected on to the ends of a finite
and fixed horizontal line—with the center that this model
logically, geometrically, necessitates—have come to mean
much, much more than which side of the aisle someone sits on
in the French (or any other) national assembly; this horizontal
model has come to define programmatically oriented democratic
compromise politics. Thus, the postmodem suggestion that the
center fails to hold is viewed by many with great alarm; it seems
to imply the end of compromise and the emergence of one form
or another of extremism. Such radical relativism—tantamount
to either some kind of authoritarianism or anarchism, politically
speaking— understandably shakes liberal sensibility to
its roots. Nevertheless, to many, Gergen's descriptive (not
prescriptive) observation about the collapse of the center
seems increasingly
to be the basis of the emerging social and political pragmatics
of our time and our society.
Not only political scientists (so-called) and philosophically
oriented thinkers on such matters but, more importantly, political
players are coming to see things this way. Amid eight days
of Republican Party and Democratic Party nominating conventions
in the US in the late summer of 1996 (nothing very much happened
during these multi-million dollar postmodem—in the critical
sense of the term—extravaganzas except for thousands of
hours of media coverage and commentary on "what happened"),
a Democratic Party advisor (an insider) made an unusually pithy
and honest comment in responding to a typically boring modernistically
formulated question. The interviewer made a rambling inquiry:
was Clinton's perspective "actually" liberal (left)
but being covered up by a moderate political presentation, or
was it "really" a moderate (more right) position hidden
behind a liberal political presentation? The Democratic Party
advisor, obviously at once amused and annoyed by the interviewer's
naiveté and verbosity, interrupted to say something like, "None
of the above. Clinton's position is exactly one-eighth of an
inch to the left of Bob Dole's, the Republican Party candidate.
Period."
We quite agree. Clinton is America's first self-consciously
postmodern, anti-centrist president. Don't be fooled by the
use of the term "left" here.
The subtext of the enlightened (or, at least, enlightening) advisor's
comment is a total rejection of the left-center-right (centrist)
political paradigm, for it turns left and right (back) into purely
relative terms which, of course, these designations are in their
original use as spatial markers; it thereby eliminates any meaningful
notion of a reified center. Indeed, the modifier "one-eighth
of an inch" implied that Clinton's positioning self-consciously
left no room at all between himself and Dole for anyone else
or any other point of view ("No room for Ross" [Perot],
as some American pundits tagged the utterly disingenuous and
bipartisan strategic effort to defuse the pro-independent,
anti-two-party fervor of millions of ordinary Americans). There
was to be no
center. Period.
During the 1996 convention period, C-SPAN, the US cable network
of political record, covered a talk on global democracy delivered
at the Aspen Institute by political scientist Kenneth Jowitt,
who characterized this moment in American history as more than
likely embodying (or, at least, requiring) a qualitative transformation
in politics. Not simply new parties or new ideas or new programs,
but new kinds of parties, ideas, and programs, he said, were
needed. Jowitt spoke, as well, of new definitions, although—not
surprisingly—he did not speak of how definitions transform
or are transformed (even the old ones in the old days, not
to mention new ones in our days). Like so many in this postmodern
moment, Jowitt's analysis rests fully on the modern epistemological
assumption (more accurately, the assumption of epistemology)
that to know x is, at a minimum, to increase the likelihood
that
x will be done or, as it is sometimes put, nothing will change
(nothing will be done) unless there is some kind of antecedent
knowing.
Harvard professor Michael Sandel's recent and valuable writings
about the need for a new "public philosophy" rest
on the same epistemological subtext. Neither in his book, Democracy's
Discontent (l996a), nor in his conversation (Sandel, 1996b)
does
he pay attention to how a new public philosophy might come
into being, no less whether a new philosophy (coming into being)
might
require a thoroughgoing re-examination and restructuring of
the way(s) philosophies (public and otherwise, new and old)
come
(came) into being.
Might the epistemologically biased method which has dominated
Western civilization's understanding (if not practice) of developmental
social-historical transformation itself have to go through
a qualitative transformation? Might we somehow have to transform
what transformation is in order to move forward politically
and
otherwise? Might we not have to find a way to move beyond the
tired pseudo-academic language of "offering new definitions" to
a qualitatively new "definition" of what definition
is? Might we not have to consider the possibility that a new "definition" might
not be a definition at all? Indeed, is it not possible that an
examination of "definition" from within our postmodern
historical moment might reveal that in the past the language
of definitions has had much more to do with justifying change
(epistemologically)) than with making it—that theories
of knowledge have been much more dominant than theories of activity?
Arguably, the hegemony of knowing—from the Greeks through
modern science to contemporary philosophy—is inextricably
connected with the scientific/technological/industrial/political-economic
dominance of the West/North. But is it not, perhaps, the very
point of postmodernism (or, at least, shouldn't it be) that such
epistemological overdetermination is inconsistent with further
species and personal development—that such dominance is
not only immoral, it is no longer productive, that is, developmental?
Isn't this what "the center fails to hold" really
suggests?
A MOMENT OF TRUTH?
But what happened? Why is the center "suddenly" (historically
speaking) failing to hold? And can we, in good postmodern faith,
ask such an epistemologically overdetermined question? Marxism,
in some of its variations (but in a self-consciously "descienced" form),
serves, in our opinion, as the best modern modality for "explaining" the
folding (an abbreviation for "the failure to hold")
of the center. For the failure of the so-called free market during
this century, and the ensuing socio-political efforts to repair
and/or reform economic capitalism without endangering the power
relations of capitalism as a social system, are best understood
by a materialist political economic analysis. And everyone, most
especially the rulers of the capitalist countries and their advisors—from
John Maynard Keynes to Clinton's Secretary of Labor, Robert Reich—has
relied on Marxian insights about the nature of capital to reconstruct
their post-free market societies.
Rosa Luxemburg, the early twentieth-century Polish political
economist, insisted that free market capitalism's eventual
demise (and the internal contradiction which will produce it)
is best
understood not (as orthodox Marxists do) in terms of "over-production" but
rather in terms of "realization" (Luxemburg, 1958,
1972). She argued that the continued expansion of capital (she
agreed with traditional Marxists and most other economists
that non-expanding capital is not capital at all) required
the continued
existence of pre-capitalist economies. Why? According to Luxemburg,
the realization of the value of the product of a given business
(production) cycle in an investment form necessary to move
to the next cycle of production ultimately demands pre-capitalist
economies. Why? For one thing, the value created in a business-production
cycle must hold the promise (and must fulfill the promise at
least some of the time) of an expanded value. Capitalists will
not continue to invest if they get only the same or less value
in return. But whence comes the added value?
According to Luxemburg, nothing occurs within the capitalist
production cycle to account for it. For while the expanded
value itself may well be a unique feature of (exploited) labor—it
creates value outputs above and beyond its input— there
is nothing internal to the capitalist production cycle which
can realize this added value. "Economic imperialism" is
what makes it all work. Capitalism's overall superiority to pre-capitalist
economies causes (coerces) feudal societies to pay much more
than a product is worth, thereby yielding the realization of
surplus value. In effect, the pre-capitalist societies not only
buy particular products, they buy (are forced to buy) capitalism,
that is, to buy on capitalist terms. The problem (the contradiction),
as Luxemburg saw it, is that in buying capitalism these pre-capitalist
societies eventually become capitalist (albeit poor capitalist)
societies themselves. Ultimately, the whole world becomes capitalist;
one day there are no pre-capitalist societies left. The center—the
economic gap between capitalist and pre-capitalist economies—collapses
and disappears. The consequence is a giant realization crisis,
and less and less stimulation for capitalists to continue on
to the next business-production cycle unless something is done
about it to "guarantee" profits.
There are those who would identify the early twentieth-century
completion of German expansionism and World War I as marking
the historical moment when pre-capitalist societies disappeared
from the face of the Earth, and the international depression
of the late 1920s and 1930s as the resulting crisis or crises
of realization. (2) Fascism and regulated welfare statism were,
broadly speaking, the two competing "solutions" to
this monumental capitalist crisis. Welfare statism, combined
with Communism, won World War II (fortunately); the last fifty
years of political economic history can be viewed as an effort
by the US in particular to recover from that victory!
The famous (or infamous) "safety net" spoken of so
often and with such passion in contemporary American politics
has always been, it seems to us, a safety net not exclusively
for the poor, but for capitalism as a whole. For whatever the
complex motives of varying politicians and political parties
might have been (or still might be), the shared concern of Democrats
and Republicans alike (as well as their monied and powerful patrons)
is, and always has been, the preservation of capitalism as an
economic and social system. When free market capitalism crumbled
in the late 1920s and 1930s, regulatory-ism emerged as the most
favored solution. Again, the welfare state is not simply a means
by which money and services are administered to the poor; it
is the total transformation of the state and all its governmental
arms from a loose domestic coordinating agency to a highly centralized
regulatory agency. Everything—banking, the market, business,
science, education, labor, the poor (and anything in between)—has
become increasingly regulated this past half century to control
against future collapse(s), and, meanwhile, turn a pretty profit
for the "special interests."
The regulated society has, in turn, changed the very nature
of US economics and politics and the relationship between them.
For in a highly regulated market system (as opposed to a largely
unregulated free market system), profitability (the realization,
not to mention the creation, of surplus value) is increasingly
determined by who controls and best manipulates the regulations.
In Tales of a New America (1987), Robert Reich, a key economic
advisor to Clinton, speaks of the dramatic transformation in
the composition of corporate boards over the past fifty years;
having been made up primarily of production or manufacturing
related people, they are now more and more populated by lawyers
(who know how to manipulate the regulations). The manufacturing
sector of the US economy, profoundly (although temporarily)
stimulated
by World War II and the ensuing rebuilding of Europe and Japan
(on the highly favorable economic terms articulated, for example,
in the Bretton Woods agreement), failed to restructure itself
adequately (as Germany and Japan did) for peacetime production.
(Armaments production remained, of course, highly profitable,
since it was largely controlled directly by government regulations
and policy, the government being the principal purchaser of
arms.) With the erosion of the US manufacturing base, the "manipulation
of paper" (money, stocks, bonds) became the preferred area
of economic growth; the regulated economy became a credit economy
and, lawfully, a debt economy; the higher paid workforce became
smaller and more middle class (white collar). The US went from
being the world's leading creditor nation to the world's largest
debtor nation (in recent years Japan, in particular, taking advantage
of America's regulatory-ism). Meanwhile, the stock market apparently
knows no bounds. Capitalism has been secured, and Communism defeated.
But as with Muhammad Ali's highly publicized victory over Joe
Frazier in the "thrilla in Manilla," we must ask—at
what price?
The radical transformation from a free market economy to a
regulatory one did not, in our view, entirely determine the
political evolution
of America. It did, however, have a significant impact on the
very nature of US politics in the second half of the twentieth
century. Highly regulated capitalism and the ever-increasing
capacity to derive greater and greater profits from the legal
manipulation of regulations (at all levels of government, especially
the federal level) profoundly transformed the complex historical
relationship between the political and the economic in US society.
In the most general terms, the political came to determine
the economic rather than the other way around—the more typical "causal" connection
during America's first 150 years. Not surprisingly, therefore,
the major political parties (the Democratic Party and the Republican
Party) took shape together as a monopolistic corporate entity:
a highly centralized, Washington, DC-controlled, lobby-friendly
(and, correspondingly, grassroots-unfriendly), legalistic professional
body of armed (mostly with legal degrees ) men who legislatively,
executively, and judicially overdetermined the nature of the
hardly-free market during their time in office (or working
for those in office) and, when they left office, quickly turned
around
and sold themselves to the highest bidders (still retaining
their party connections). While in office, the bipartisan politicians
radically altered the election laws so as to exclude alternative
parties and candidates from the political process (see Winger,
1995).
Global capitalization—the total elimination of pre-capitalist
societies and the ensuing collapse—required a radical restructuring
of the American free market economy into a regulatory economy
which made government itself (and control thereof) the single
most important economic commodity. Increasingly, the two dominant
political parties became commodity traders "representing" special
interests (including themselves) and not the American people.
Politicians became professional (a political class or caste),
shifting effortlessly (and, for the most part, unnoticed) back
and forth between the "public" and "private" sectors.
These matters have been documented by Reich (1987), Choate
(1990), and others, but they remain largely hidden from the
American
public as a consequence of who (the political class) controls
and how it controls (the infamous thirty-second sound byte
at election time) what the American public actually comes to
know.
A BRIEF HISTORY OF LIBERTY (3)
The method of liberal compromise and the search for the programmatic
center which typified the first hundred or so years of American
political life have gone through a profound change as well in
this past half century, even though the rhetoric of the left-center-right
paradigm is still officially and opportunistically retained.
In fact, the meaning of liberty itself has been transformed.
At the very beginning of the American republic (confederation),
liberty was identified primarily with the dominance of local
(grassroots) institutions in which Americans participated directly,
and with political and economic power that was correspondingly
dispersed. The Constitution of 1787 laid the foundation for a
major consolidation of political power in a centralized federal
government; the Bill of Rights was regarded by its supporters
as a necessary check on this new power.
However, for a long time the Bill of Rights had surprisingly
little practical impact on American liberty. (It was not until
after World War I that the Supreme Court declared a law unconstitutional
for infringing on the freedom of speech protected by the First
Amendment.) For the first century of the Republic, political
discourse about liberty did not focus on individual rights
so much as on how government could best nurture "republican
virtue" and support the development of a nation of self-governing
citizens. The fight for liberty during this largely free market
period was played out primarily in the political (as opposed
to the judicial) arena, in an ongoing effort to give republican
shape to the growth and consolidation of economic power.
It is only in the twentieth century (especially since the end
of World War II, which brought an intensification of regulatory
capitalism) that American liberty has come to mean a primary
emphasis on the rights of individuals as defined in the Bill
of Rights and subsequent amendments to the Constitution. In
this evolution, judicial review by the federal courts and the
Supreme
Court (and, therefore, lawyering) has come to play an increasingly
prominent role in defining American liberty in terms of constraints
on the power of government (the regulators) and of political
majorities in a bipartisan regulatory arrangement to impose
their particular views on individuals and constituencies.
From the contemporary liberal perspective, this evolution of
the "neutral state" promised to open up a whole new
era in which individual citizens would experience unprecedented
freedom to define themselves, their purposes and commitments,
and their own associations, and to reject obligations they
had not themselves chosen. From this point of view, the evolution
of American liberty seemed to be fulfilling the promise of
the
American Revolution. Yet the changing character of liberty
was essentially a reaction formation to the takeover by the
professional
political caste of regulatory capitalism. Ultimately, there
was no room for compromise.
In practice, many Americans felt a growing ambivalence (at
least) about the quality of life brought about by the new freedom.
The
transformed paradigm of liberty, emphasizing the primacy of
individual rights, superseded the older republican paradigm
in which liberty
was understood not primarily as legal constraints on government,
but as the participation of citizens in a self governing nation.
But who was "taking care" of the country now?
During the first 100 years of the American republic, there
existed a developmental creative tension between the growth
of the economy
and the growth of liberty. The ongoing effort to give republican
shape to the titanic economic power that was evolving ensured
(or, at least, gave cause for hope) that economic growth would
benefit not a privileged few, but the entire nation (albeit
in varying degrees). Conversely, confidence in American liberty
enlisted the enthusiastic participation of millions of people
from all over the world in America's economic growth.
The new paradigm of individuated liberty, however, reflected
the dissolution of this creative tension, and the consolidation
of economic and political power (otherwise known as the rise
of "special interests") to the exclusion of the republican
majority. The proliferation of individual rights and the accompanying "identity
politics," despite the many things that can be invoked
to justify them, came about in part as an alternative to the
creative
tension between liberty and economic growth. Individual liberty
appeared wonderful to many, but the environment in which it
was to be practiced came to seem increasingly regulated. There
was,
once again, no apparent synthesis possible (no compromise,
no center ground) between the political/corporate takeover
of highly
regulated American capitalism and the endless varieties of
demands (in most cases legitimate) for rights, liberty, and
a greater
share of the economic pie on the part of conflicting identity
based groups. They have always been on a collision course.
Now, as the twenty-first century nears, they have collided.
Most importantly,
the developmental tension between old-style republican liberty
and economic expansion (arguably, the bedrock of Americanism)
has been destroyed. The political-economic center has collapsed.
Although there is much profit, there is no real growth. There
is structural antagonism, an irreconcilable contradiction,
no room for compromise. The center fails to hold.
THE COLLAPSE OF CONTEMPORARY LIBERALISM (IDENTITY POLITICS)
Postmodernism in general and social constructionism in particular,
it would seem, have some applicability to the transformation
of politics. Indeed, we have seen in earlier chapters that two
of the leading Anglo-American voices, Gergen and Shotter, are
concerned to restructure political life and dialogue. Here we
will explore the (possible) transformation of identity politics
via social constructionism through a careful reading of Gergen's
thoughts on the matter. We will examine both a paper he delivered
at a 1995 symposium hosted by the New School for Social Research
and the response to it.
In "Social construction and the transformation of identity
politics," Gergen (1995) characterizes identity politics
as "initiated by groups excluded from traditional mainstream
politics" who "generate a self-designated identity
(group consciousness) that is instantiated by the individual
identities of its constituents" (pp. 1-2). The major point
of Gergen's presentation was that the generation-long "love
affair" between liberal identity politics and social constructionism
that was rooted in constructionist critiques of "mainstream" objectivity
("truth beyond cultural standpoint") is at an end.
The passion of this love affair originally made good sense:
Not only did constructionism.
. . help to incite the political impulse, but it has also generated
a powerful set of implements
for societal critique. Constructionist inquiry demonstrated
how claims to the true and the good were born of historical
traditions,
fortified by social networks, sewn together by literary tropes,
legitimated through rhetorical devices, and operated in the
service of particular ideologies to fashion structures of power
and privilege.
For the sophisticated constructionist, there are no invulnerable
or unassailable positions, no foundational warrants, no transcendent
rationalities, or obdurate facts in themselves. Most important
for the present, many of these modes of deconstructing the
opposition are "street ready;" they can be (and are)
paraphrased easily in the daily argots of political activism.
(Gergen, 1995, pp. 3-4)
But according to Gergen, the virtue and value of identity politics
as the contemporary expression of political liberalism has "unraveled." For
one thing, "identity politics has depended on a rhetoric
of blame" (p. 4). Responses to it, not surprisingly, are
hostile, defensive, and filled with counter-charges. Furthermore,
Gergen notes:
antagonistic replies are additionally
invited by virtue of the differing discourse worlds of the
critic as opposed to target.
What are viewed as "exploitative wages" on the one
side are branded as "just earnings" on the other; "prejudicial
decisions" on the one side are excoriated as "decisions
by merit" on the other; attempts to combat "exclusionary
prejudices" are seen as disruptions of "orderly and
friendly community"; "rigid parochialism" for
the critic is understood as "love of enduring traditions" by
the target. Under such conditions those targeted by the critiques
are least likely to take heed, and most likely to become galvanized
in opposition. As Mary Ann Glendon argues in Rights Talk, the
rhetoric of rights "polarizes" debate; it tends to
suppress moral discussion and consensus building. Once an agenda
is introduced as "right," sensible discussion and
moderate positions tend to disappear.
(Gergen, 1995, p. 5)
But the blaming modus operandi of liberal identity politics
has also turned on itself:
With the rhetoric of blame a favored option for dealing with
.others, it also becomes a hammer for fixing what is wrong within
the political movements. Any movement which finds its voice oppressed
within the culture more generally, will soon find that within
its own ranks some voices are more equal than others. In the
thrust toward economic equality, women turn on men for their
patriarchal disposition; in the drive toward gender equality,
white women are found guilty of silencing the black voice, the
educationally privileged guilty of elitist and exclusionary language,
the straight for politics inimical to the lesbian, and so on.
(Gergen, 1995, p. 5)
Over time a growing number of identity groups (left, center,
and right) sprang into existence, claiming more and more rights.
With the "remedy" for injustice, however, came a host
of new problems. For one thing, the proliferation of new rights "devalued" their
moral claims (Etzioni, 1993); for another, it produced disaffection: "Strong
resentment among many who are implicated in the movements (for
example, African and Asian Americans), but who do not share the
revolutionary political sentiments and are embarrassed by the
ways in which they are incessantly singled out to represent 'their
people' " and also outside the movements, where the "disaffiliation
within is also paralleled by backlash effects in the society
more generally (consider the present Congress)" (Gergen,
1995, p. 7).
But while liberal identity politics (most of it fully justified
by the long history of exploitation and oppression, racism,
sexism, homophobia, classism, and so on) reels from the backlash
of "conservative" ideological
reactions and political action, a still deeper—if you will, "structural"—problem
of identity politics is increasingly recognized by its advocates;
there is a distinct tendency for identity politics to take on
a realistic, objectivistic, indeed, authoritarian, epistemic,
and moral posture towards its own deconstructionist findings.
In response, "traditional" constructionism plays more
the role of "critical enemy" than friend to identity
politics. As Gergen puts it, "constructionism offers strong
arguments against the realism, essentialism, and ethical foundationalism
endemic to much of the discourse of identity politics" (1995,
p. 8, emphasis added). He continues:
In characterizing the barriers of class, the glass ceiling,
homophobia, the effects of pornography on rape, and the embryonic
fetus as
a human being, for example, claims are being [made] about the
state of nature independent of our interpretive proclivities.
For the constructionist, of course, such claims are not so
much reflections of nature as the outcome of social process.
The descriptions
are inherently positioned both historically and culturally,
and myriad alternatives are both possible and creditable from
other
societal locations. The realist posture is all the more ironic,
the constructionist reasons, because such critiques are often
coupled with a deconstruction of the opposition's objectivity.
The constructed character of the dominant discourse is used
by the identity politician to pave the way for the marginalized
alternative, with the latter position then treated as if transparent.
(Gergen, 1995, p. 8)
Should social constructionism and identity politics therefore now agree to
divorce, with each party recognizing the "failings" of the other? Gergen does
not think so. Instead he offers a reconstructionist plan for social constructionism
and a way forward for identity politics—a move from the primarily deconstructionist
posture of social constructionism in the 1970s and 1980s to a reconstructionist
posture and, simultaneously, a change from 1970s style identity politics to
what he calls relational politics.
In shifting to a reconstructionist posture for social constructionism,
Gergen urges that we (re)visit the age-old question of how
we "comprehend
others' meanings (or fail to do so)" (1995, p. 11). He
summarizes the past history of relational theory as follows:
Since the 17th century virtually all attempts at answering
[the above question] have been cast in terms of resonating
mentalities.
That is, to understand another requires that their thoughts
(intentions, meanings, construals, conceptual worlds) are reproduced
in some
form within one's own thinking. If you understand me your subjectivity
is in some way resonant with my own. From John Locke, through
centuries of hermeneutic theory, and into contemporary cognitive
theory, however, no one has been able to give a satisfactory
account of how such resonances can occur. (Gergen, 1995, pp. 11-12)
Constructionism, he says, takes up the challenge, making no
reference to mental events:
By focusing solely on the means by which an individual's actions
invite or suggest a range of supplements, and the way in which
the respondent's supplements function to determine the implication
of the initial action, we arrive at a view of meaning as embedded
within relational scenarios. . . . I do not convey meaning, save
through your graces as an interlocutor; however, your potential
meaning[s] as an interlocutor are largely constituted by my actions.
As dialogue unfolds; so is meaning formed and transformed within
the interstice.
On this view, language (as a vehicle for making meaning) is
shaped neither by nature nor mind, but by relationship. All
that we
take to be true of nature and of mind, of self and others,
thus finds its origins within relationship. Or, in Martin Buber's
terms, "In the beginning is the relationship."
(Gergen, 1995, pp. 12-13)
To Gergen, this constructionist view has important and positive
implications for liberal identity politics; it contains:
the seeds for both revitalization and transformation of the
most profound variety. Let me cast such a transformation in
terms
of relational politics a politics in which neither self nor
other, we nor them, take precedence, but in which relational
process
serves as the generative source of change. I am not speaking
here of a mere fantasy, another grand but unworkable design
hatched in the ivory tower. Rather, I believe that relational
politics
are already in evidence—not yet self-conscious, but struggling
in multiple sites toward common intelligibility.
(Gergen, 1995, p. 13)
Central (in our view, far too central) to Gergen's reconstructionist
stance is rhetoric. He says:
From the standpoint of relational politics, it is essential
to develop alternative rhetorics. This is not because we need
prettier,
sharper, or more sophisticated words in which to wrap the case.
I am not speaking here of a "better spin." Rather,
rhetoric is important because it is itself a speech act, a constituent
feature of relationship. Because it is a form of action, rhetoric
serves to form, sustain, and possibly change patterns of relationship.
We have glimpsed some of the major shortcomings of traditional
rhetorics—their capacities to alienate, antagonize, and
escalate. Required, then, are a new range of poetics, and more
specifically, poetics that invite broader fields of coordination.
Let me touch on two significant openings:
Rhetorics of Unity. As we saw, many black intellectuals are
now moving away from rhetorics of antagonism and separation
to articulate
visions of unity. This is a move highly congenial with a relational
constructionism and should become a cause for all concerned
with identity politics. The move from me vs. you to we has
enormous
consequences for relating to the polity. (Gergen, 1995, pp.17-l8)
Of course, Gergen recognizes that more than rhetoric is required:
A transformation in theoretical resources and rhetorical practices
is scarcely sufficient. Most acutely needed are innovative
forms of political action. In my view, one of the most significant
innovations derived from the identity politics movement was
to
broaden extensively the arena of the political. In particular,
political practice ceased to be reserved for the arena of politics
formally considered—campaigning, voting, office holding—and
it ceased to be centrist—that is moving from the top
down. Rather, politics moved into the arena of the local and
the immediate
into the streets, the classrooms, business, and so on.
Gergen concludes his paper by citing examples of already existing
forms of relational political organizing, what he calls "relational
politics in action" (1995, p. 21). He cites "collaborative
education," "family therapy," "community
focused institutes" (where he generously includes the
practical work we at the East Side Institute and our network
of associates have carried out), "appreciative inquiry" and
others.
To us, Gergen never truly moves beyond the rhetorical and,
thereby, the (social) epistemological. At the New School conference
at which he originally presented his paper, Gergen was "confronted" by
Richard Bernstein, the chair of the New School's Philosophy
Department. Bernstein polemicized against a political view
(presumably he was referring to Gergen's) which draws no distinction
between himself (an old-guard left liberal) and Newt Gingrich
(the conservative Republican Speaker of the US House of Representatives).
Now Gergen had not said, or even implied, that "no such
distinction could be drawn." What he was saying was that
the orthodox way of "drawing distinctions" was developmentally
troublesome. Bernstein's verbal bullying was reminiscent in
style and speciousness of G. E. Moore's waving his hand in
people's faces as a "refutation" of idealism. The
problem? Well, the idealists do not (and never did) question
that there is "a hand waving in your face." Rather,
they seek to understand what is meant (what realists mean)
by making such a claim (or having such an experience). Similarly,
Gergen does not deny distinctions or differences. Rather he
seeks a new and more developmental way of understanding such
differences. Yet Gergen's effort to reconstruct constructionism,
identity politics, and their relationship (in order to create
or support relational politics) is highly vulnerable to "Bernstein-ian
revisionism" because, we believe, it is ultimately a theory
of knowing and not a theory of action (or, more importantly,
activity). (Gergen, 1995, p. 20)
Bernstein insists (as do most in our culture, especially academics,
the paid knowers) on knowing who is better—himself or
Gingrich. Gergen urges that we must find a way of "getting
on with it" without knowing who is better. But so long
as our understanding of "getting on with it" is more
an understanding expressed in language (rhetorical) than a
getting on with it (activity), the epistemic bias which, to
us, is what ultimately makes it practically impossible these
days to get on with anything—personal, political, or
otherwise is reinforced. In our opinion, Gergen has—passionately,
politely, and properly—polemicized against the reliance
by proponents of liberal identity politics on traditional individualistic,
realistic, objectivistic mainstream categories in articulating
their own "points of view."
Still, in our opinion, he has failed to consider fully the "evil" of "point
of viewism" altogether and/or in itself. Instead he calls
for a new and more unified and unifying relational "point
of view" (a social epistemology), a more serious recognition
of other(s) even as we demand what we believe is rightfully
ours. Because, as Gergen argues, persuasively and morally (to
our political taste and sensibility), there is no meaningful
sense of self or identity (either group or individual) and
other that is not relational. (We all live by taking in each
other's wash!) But from the "vantage point" of knowing,
in its current institutionalized form, there is. If the organized
cultural environment requires that we know who is right, better,
closer to the truth—that is, if the organized environment
is fundamentally a knowing one (as was surely the case with
the liberal academic New School forum)—then the rhetorical
and the epistemic will dominate, even if "rhetoric…is
itself a speech act, a constituent feature of relationship" (Gergen,
1995, p. 17).
For while speaking (speech acts) is an activity, not all activity
is speaking. More importantly, speaking is a particular (and
peculiar, although commonplace) form of human activity, subject
in our epistemically and individualistically biased culture
to being "related to" more as pronouncement of truth
and/or expression of inner happenings (opinions, beliefs, feelings)
than activistic, continuously developmental conversation. So
long as "knowing" who each of us is and the "truth" of
what each one says dominates (which it does in Bernstein's
institution, no less at Gingrich's), then what is obscured
is the facticity of the activity of social (relational) life.
The" screaming, judgment-making husband and wife in a
modern bad marriage are, after all, relationally joined. But
they are each far too involved in the truth and rightness of
what "I" am saying to notice the relational activity
in which they are in fact (however destructively) engaging.
Yet talk of "we" rather than "you" and "I" will,
in our opinion, have little or no impact so long as "we" means "you
and I," so long as we do not activistically change the
meaning of "you and I." Changed rhetoric will not
change meaning so long as the epistemological institution (the
knowing way of life) dominates.
What is needed, in our opinion, is not merely a new rhetoric,
or even a new (social) epistemology, but a theory/method of
activity (practical-critical activity, revolutionary activity).
The recognition of other in ourselves can be neither religious
nor rhetorical if it is to make a developmental difference;
it cannot be the arbitrary imposition of new meanings and new
rhetoric on unchanged, or even somewhat different, actions,
but must be manifest in revolutionary meaning-making, that
is, it must be the result of a shared, non-epistemologized
activity which creates new meaning.
In a word, the transformation of politics (the search for a
new public philosophy or new political definitions) and the
deconstruction of epistemology—a tool-and-result connection
(unity) if ever there was one—cannot, it seems to us,
be a search for a new Truth (or even truth), but a search for
a new non-epistemological method (a practice of method) which
does not involve truth at all. Such a position "entails" extremism
only if we subtextually (subconsciously) retain a centrist,
horizontal, left-center-right paradigm. For extremism itself
only has meaning (is defined) in terms of such a paradigm.
The new politics must be an activity which is anti-programmatic,
not in the sense that new ways of doing things are no longer
considered and/or enacted and/or carried out, but in the sense
that programmatics (and their extension or presupposition,
ideology) are not a substitute for shared, collective, democratic
human (citizen) activity
A WORD ON MARXISM-- NEO- AND OTHERWISE
Karl Marx would have done well to pay much more attention to the activity of
how people spoke to each other and much less to what they said. While his early
writings can reasonably be taken as the very source of activity theory, his so-called
more mature writings, post-l 848 (primarily Kapital and Theories of Surplus Value),
largely abandon dialectical, methodological, philosophical, revolutionary method
and insights in favor of a more rationalistic, scientific approach. His depth
study of capital has been of great value to capitalist societies the world over.
These days everyone is a Marxist in quite the way that everyone is a Darwinian
or a Newtonian. But Marx's failure to further his studies of dialectics as applied
to social transformation, crisis, psychology, and revolutionary activity, among
other things, has left future revolutionaries with no real guidance on the critical "subjective" issues.
What Is To Be Done came to dominate, completely, what is to be doing. Little
wonder then that Marxism (as opposed to Marx) was revisionist virtually from
the moment of its birth. The later Marx (not to mention his principal collaborator
and intellectual proselytizer, Engels, and his most well-known follower, Lenin),
like almost all other modernists, bought in on the objective hegemony of the
scientific. As such, they continued within the Greek/modem scientific tradition
of epistemology, the knowing tradition of Western culture.knowing tradition of
Western culture.
The Luxemburgist accounting for capitalism's profound transformation which we
discussed earlier in this chapter is, in our view, best related to as nothing
more and nothing less than poetry or, perhaps, yet another grand narrative, not
science. But calling it poetic or narrative neither diminishes its value nor
implies that more traditional empirical, descriptive macro/microeconomic accounts
possess greater accuracy. Orthodox economics, much like orthodox psychology,
is largely a scam (Newman, 1991a; Newman and Holzman, 1996) which serves those
who use it well (if it serves them at all) only insofar as those same people
(and/or their institutionally organized friends) have the power to manipulate
economic conditions and the sociology of knowing. Thus economics (again, like
traditional psychology) is more a self-fulfilling prophecy than a genuine predictive
(hard) science. Shockingly, but not surprisingly, traditional Marxists (ever
metaphysicians, and thus all but impervious to the collapse of Communism and
the abject failure of Marxism that pre-dated it by decades) seek to revive Marxism
(now called neo-Marxism) by making it even more scientific. In this light, it
is worth examining in more detail the neo-Marxist critique of social constructionism
as we continue to consider the transformation of politics. And so, we return
to Jost's critique (Jost,1996; Jost and Hardin, 1996) discussed in Chapter 2.
That Jost's agenda is a more scientific Marxism is clear from the following:
At the end of the day, I think that the greatness of Marx's theory is that he
is proposing an empirical theory about how social relations actually are and
how they might be better. This is not a rejection of knowing. It's an affirmation
of knowledge that we all could/should have and a commitment to acting on behalf
of that knowledge. (Jost, 1996, personal correspondence, emphasis added)
Apparently more concerned with "acting on behalf of knowledge" than,
for example, with activity "on behalf of" people, classes of people,
their desires, needs, and wantings, Jost seeks to preserve knowing (reified and
deified}and its contemporary mythic form, social science. In an article on false
consciousness, he defends so-called scientific psychology: "To give up the
possibility of locating beliefs on dimensions of evaluations such as accuracy,
self-interestedness, adaptiveness, and so on is to relinquish the claim of psychology
to be a science" (Jost, 1995, p. 415).
But what if a theory (or pseudoscience) which purports to tell us, as he says, "how
social relations actually are," is antithetical (by design) to the revolutionary
activity which was of central importance to Marx as revolutionary theorist and
practitioner? Jost rather cavalierly rewrites (reinterprets) Marx on these matters.
In his correspondence with us, he construes Marx's remark about interpretation
and revolution ("The philosophers have only interpreted the world, in various
ways; the point is to change it") as follows: "Marx wasn't against
interpretation; he was against not going beyond mere interpretation" (Jost,
1996, personal communication). But if Marx is not polemicizing against interpretation
altogether, then presumably he would have said something other than what he said,
perhaps something like: The point is not to interpret the world but to come up
with the right interpretation. To us, Marx's early critique is a thoroughgoing
attack on philosophy and its interpretive method in favor of the method of practice,
that is, the revolutionary activity of changing the world. To Jost, Marx holds
on to the interpretive method and "goes beyond" it. Jost justifies
such a theory of "beyondness" (activism as beyond interpretation) with
a two-valued "scientific logic." He asks us, "But how do we decide
to commit to a particular action? Surely you're not advocating action for the
sake of action, but action on behalf of clear, accurate, moral visions" (personal
communication, italics added). In another instance, he comments: "I don't
even know what it means to be 'pro-truth.' Does 'anti-truth' mean in favor of
lies?" (1996, personal communication). Yet (even on a logical/scientific
understanding of implication), offering a critique of truth does not imply support
for lying. But in Jost's arguments things are either black or white (not even
black or not black). We think that putting socialism on a "scientific" basis
did much more for capitalism than for revolution, and precious little for socialist
societies. To accept Psychology-as-a-(finished)-Science is to alter (by direct
or indirect coercion) the subject matter of psychology, which is subjective life.
Jost's interpretation of Marx is much closer to the accepted view of Marx (including,
perhaps, even Marx's) than ours. It is Jost's interpretation of interpretation
that we find to be very far from the tradition of the early Marx and most troublesome.
His objection to our critique of reality (Reality) and/or
truth (Truth) is a case in point. Calling it an "old-fashioned idealist
position that Marx critiqued in the 1840's" (1996, personal correspondence)
seems to us to be using the language of interpretation to obscure a commitment
to truth. Even in ordinary language, interpretation has more to do with different
ways of looking at the same thing than with correctness. Jost's appeal to interpretation,whether
Marx's or his own, appears somewhat disingenuous to us since he calls it interpretation
and "uses" it as truth.
"How do we decide to commit to a particular action?" Jost asks. Well,
do we decide to commit to a particular action? What does action (particularized
or not) have to do with activity? Does speaking of particular actions imply or
require a theory of identity for adjudging an action ? the same as or other than
an action ?(1)? And, if so, what is that theory of action identification? It
will no longer do to dismiss these (kinds of) questions (and myriad others) on
the grounds that they are too philosophical. Postmodernism in psychology is the
asking of such questions as a challenge to the calcified "scientific" institution
that psychology has become in this half century of permanent, self-perpetuating
institutions, identity politics, and a regulatory economy.
Luxemburg's poetic grand narrative is inextricably (and dialectically) connected
with her methodological aversion to Marx's use of ultra-rational (and pseudoscientific)
models in Volume I of Kapital to account for the capitalist business/production
cycles. She argues (convincingly, we think) that the models actually obscure
the historicality (the existential this-ness) of capitalist production (as models,
in general, are wont to do). Both economics and psychology (Marxist and non-Marxist)
are in themselves models in this problematic sense. They are curious maps which
purport to tell us how to get from A to B. But there is no reality here other
than the map (or the model)--only labels, names, and descriptions without referents.
And so we have the illusion that we have gotten, or gone, somewhere. The real
task is to make the map (the problem) vanish, in Wittgenstein's sense. To do
this we need, it seems to us, not a map or a model but an activity which is not
definable (directly or indirectly) in terms of the map or the model. It is neither
truth (Truth) nor lie (Lie). It is a practical-critical study of what we do even
as it is (or, more accurately, is an intrinsic part of) what we do.
THE POLITICS OF ACTIVITY
Jost's appeal to a more scientific neo-Marxism as the savior in a collapsing
political and economic world, a psychotically psychologized world, seems most
odd to us. Our conversation with him (in writing) is, we feel, extremely useful.
We shall attempt to articulate our activity-theoretic, postmodern, revolutionary
approach in the final section of this chapter largely by attempting to answer
the questions we have come up with in response to his formulations.
| 1. |
Do we decide to commit
to a particular action? |
| 2. |
What does action (particularized
or not) have to do with activity? |
| 3. |
Does speaking of particular actions
imply or require a theory of identity for adjudging an
action ? as the same as or other than ?(1)? |
| 4. |
What is that theory of action identification? |
These questions help us to articulate, at least in outline,
our understanding of the politics of activity. Gergen's relational
politics, it seems to us, while of immense value, fall short
because ultimately they seek to reconstruct (identity politics
and) the failing center rather than to pursue a new way forward
(a way to reconstruct the world) given the demise of the center.
As such, they are analogous (and, we think, somehow connected
to) his apparent unwillingness to move beyond epistemology
altogether.
But highly regulated capitalism, the total commodification
of government, the resulting redefinition of liberty (as
completely
individuated) and identity politics, together with their contradictions
and resulting failure, are not, we suggest, reformable. What
is required is a new kind of revolution. Furthermore, these
deep fissures in modern society (our study is focused, in
particular,
on the US) cry out not simply for a "new public philosophy" or "new
political definitions" but a movement beyond philosophy
arid, more specifically, epistemology. There is no room for traditional
programmatic compromise. We surely do not support extremism in
any of its traditional violent, antidemocratic forms. To move
forward we must create new political activity which is not rooted
in epistemological overdetermined programmatics (Truth and Rightness).
Indeed, to us, the new political activity must have as one raison
d'être the elimination of knowing as the dominant mode
of human understanding. For, to our understanding, further development
and growth, of all kinds—at the personal and species level—demand
such a thoroughgoing restructuring. Such, it seems to us, is
the postmodern political mission.
Do we decide to commit to a particular action?
On the face of it, given our highly individuated and behavioristic
societal frame of reference ("common sense"), the answer
to the question would appear to be "yes." We can, so
the argument would no doubt go, do a particular action (go to
the grocery store, re-read Moby Dick, join the Air Force, tour
the Everglades); if we do any of these things self-consciously,
as opposed, for example, out of habit, by mistake, unintentionally,
or without giving it any thought, then we could be said to have
committed ourselves to doing it. Furthermore, if we to some degree
deliberated about either our commitment or the action (or both),
then we can be said to have "decided to commit to a' particular
action." Yet even if we agree with this modest piece of
ordinary language analysis, we would likely also agree that deciding
to commit to a particular action takes place in a complex and
ever-changing world. In a psychological laboratory study of deciding
to commit to a particular action we would no doubt expect the
environment to be as "clean" as possible, free of
other factors which might impinge on our capacity to discern
the action
at issue.
But studies of ecological invalidity (for example, Cole et
al., 1978; Newman and Holzman, 1993) indicate that the sterile
psychological
laboratory is more a problem than a help in understanding action.
For even if someone managed to create one, the studied action
is so removed from its natural environment that whatever is
discovered about it in the lab has little or no applicability
to the action
in its actual environment; inevitably, the "results" (and
the study) are ecologically invalid. The point here, of course,
is that psychological actions are simply too interconnected
with their environment to be meaningfully disconnected from
it. The
study of action(s), either through linguistic analysis or empirically,
suffers from this arbitrariness.
What does action (particularized or not) have to do with activity?
The concept of actions, we would suggest, begs the question
(actually, many questions). Consider Jost's formulation: "deciding
to commit to a particular action." It is, to our ears,
epistemologically biased and top-heavy. It presumes, rather
than explores, a (kind
of) relationship between various kinds of mental activity (deciding,
committing, identifying particularities) and a physical (behavioral)
doing. Moreover, the relationship (its presuppositions) is
essentially dualistic, causal, and expressionistic, with physical
doings
(including, most especially, speakings) understood as expressions
of inner (mental) acts or, at least, goings-on; the implied
separation between them requires bridging, which is necessarily
understood
causally (Davidson, 1980).
Vygotsky (and many others) challenged these philosophical assumptions.
Unlike action or actions, activity is not over-epistemologized.
Indeed, on our account (and Vygotsky's, we think), it is a
highly suitable alternative to epistemology-to knowing. Activity
is
not to be instrumentally understood (it is not a fool for result)
but dialectically understood (it is a tool-and-result), to
employ Vygotsky's critical methodological distinction. Activity
is a
dialectical unity which does not require (indeed, it denies)
the separation of the world into dualistic components and the
ensuing pseudo-theories of instrumentalist mediations necessary
to get a bifurcated world "back together again." Activity-language
(talk, conversation) is simply a way of speaking socio-culturally
of the complex, dialectically intertwined phenomenon that is
human life which does not demand the dualistic epistemic distortion
characteristic of Western culture. Actions and activity, thus
understood, are not simply different; they are antithetical.
Does speaking of particular actions imply or require a theory
of identity for adjudging an action ? the same as or other than
an action ?(1))?
To reply as simply as possible: of course it does. And (to answer
question 4 even before we get to it) there isn't any. The identification
of actions presumes substantival particularity (in something
of a Kantian and Piagetian sense). But substantival particularity
has not even fared so well in contemporary hard science; witness
the extraordinary revolution in physics of the twentieth century.
At the core of the quantum revolution is the methodological recognition
that limiting our understanding of the most basic physical elements
and their activity to a particle-ized, particularized ontology
seriously and systematically distorts our understanding of the
physical world. It is not simply that there are various ways
of looking at (interpretations of) physical elements-for example,
as particles or as quantum processes-but that physical phenomena
are such that they must be construed in both ways simultaneously
or we risk misrepresenting how the physical world actually is.
An understanding of human social-cultural intercourse which reduces,
explicitly or implicitly, subjective life to an infinitude of
discrete and identifiable particularized actions fundamentally
distorts human life in much the same way that Newtonian-style
particle physics does physical phenomena (DeBerry, 1991). Human
life, like the complex physical material of which it is physically
composed, is vastly more complex than that. Simple particularized
reductionism as the methodological accompaniment of an over-epistemologized
culture has failed; it has reached its limits, it has folded.
Moreover, an identity-based theory of understanding (classical
modern knowing) has also folded, failed. The folding (the failure
of the center to hold) is, it seems to us, indistinguishable
from the whole family of foundational failures of modernism whic9,
in turn, are inseparable from the social-economic-political failures
of modern liberal capitalist society.
What is that theory of action identification?
Again, there is none. Nor need there be. Activity "on behalf" of
(not knowledge or vision but) social change is the new non-epistemic
politics for a postmodern, twenty-first century world. Is that
action (or activity) for its own sake? No. It is neither for
its own sake nor for the sake of (on behalf of) knowledge or
visions. It has nothing to do with "sakes" at all.
The problem we must make vanish, in Wittgenstein's sense, is
the problem of sakes. Then why do we do this rather than that?
With the activity of the mass performing as the organized political
tool-and-result there is no possible answer to this (ultimately
religious) why question. While action must be epistemologically
justified (as Jost insists), activity does not (and cannot
be).
The transformation of politics entails the democratic organization
of mass activity, not the compromising of actions defined programmatically
and ideologically by relative handfuls of highly individuated
people. Non-epistemic politics is the organized collective
activity of (in the case of the US) all Americans as producers
taking
responsibility (not legalistically, but humanistically) for
all the complex social-cultural processes that constitute "America," rather
than as individuated consumers seeking in their actions to
justify by their particularized identity a larger share of
a shrinking
(albeit enormously profitable pie) owned (and thoroughly regulated)
by a small (spendthrift) permanent commodified government.
Non-epistemic politics is conducted with the recognition that
it is the activity
of politics itself (organized democratically for mass participation)
that will serve as a tool-and-result (and, thereby, make problems
vanish), and that it is not the undemocratically organized
actions of a select professional few who putatively solve (by
their instrumental
actions) the problems facing the US and/or the world.
For it is we, the people, who are, at once, the problem and
the solution. It is the organized activity of the people, by
the
people, and for the people, not the actions of anyone, which
is the necessary new anti-epistemological, pro-activity politics
urgently needed in this historical moment. This is neither "capitalism" nor "socialism," nor,
for that matter, any other "-ism" economically and
ideologically defined. Indeed, it is not defined at all but is,
rather, the activity of the people organized to determine both
the tools and the results of our activity. For even beyond the
populist rhetorical (however accurate) recognition that "the
people own the country" is the understanding that the people,
by our activity, "own
owning."
Relational rhetoric (and social constructionism) are not enough
Gergen's social epistemology and relational politics; Jost's,
Parker's (and others') neo-Marxism; Sandel's call for a "new
public philosophy" (without a new understanding of philosophy),
Jowitt's demand for "new kinds of political definitions" (without
a new kind of "definition" of definition). All, we
think, are most insightful and valuable responses to the "folding
(collapsing) center" that is the postmodern epoch. Yet to
us, none of them goes nearly far enough, qualitatively speaking.
They are, ultimately, reforms when what is demanded (required,
whatever) is a peaceful, democratic revolution (revolutionary
activity) against epistemology (the domination of the knowing
mode of understanding and action), and a reconstructed society
(and world) based on democratically organized activity as a tool-and-result.
Social constructionism is more a product of the postmodern collapse
than a solution to it. Hence, social constructionist products
such as social epistemology, relational politics, politicized
discourse analyses, discursive psychology, and narrative therapy,
while great advances, embody far too much of what they seek to
correct. The reconstruction of social constructionism (from a
mainly deconstructionist dynamic to a reconstructionist one),
so honestly and insightfully called for by Gergen, requires,
as we see it, the abandonment of the social constructionist project
precisely as a new politics must abandon the epistemological
presuppositions of relationality and a new therapy must give
up the self upon which narrative approaches still subtextually
(and, perhaps, subconsciously) rest. Here the early Marx, Vygotsky,
and the later Wittgenstein (as activity theorists) will be of
great help. Their work suggests that it is neither rhetoric nor
reality that must be reinterpreted; it is human activity itself
which must be democratically reorganized. Gergen's well-intended
effort to transform rhetoric will not, in our opinion, suffice,
for it does not fully recognize the activity that is language
but is overdetermined by a use analysis of language. Hence, Gergen
himself ends up articulating a politics of persuasion. But persuasion
(even of the most ethically decent variety) will not, as we see
it, succeed. Gergen's brilliant critique of identity politics
brings to mind the psychoanalytically grounded analyses of Fanon
(1963, 1967) concerning the way in which oppressed peoples (when
slightly freer) so typically take on the characteristics of their
(former) oppressors. So are we all persuaders, appealing in varied
ways, employing varied rhetoric, to convince whoever will listen
that we speak the Truth (or even the truth). But this is precisely
the problem. The democratic reorganization of activity (not based
on ideology, programmatics, labels, or truths) is the long and
arduous independent road toward the creation of a new politics
(a new political activity) that will eliminate epistemology—the
ending that, as we see it, is required for further human growth
and development. Ever-changing, democratically determined, inclusionary"rules" for
the people's activity must replace the exclusionary Robert's
Rules of Order. The point here is not to favor disorder but to
reject any kind of order (including Mr. Robert's) which diminishes
the participatory activity of the people. In this "activity-theoretic" approach,
performance and conversation (the activity thereof}—indeed,
the performance of conversation—will be,we think (and we
have found), invaluable.
Notes
1. See Scriven (1959), "Truisms as the grounds for historical explanation."
2. This is a fairly traditional Marxist analysis, even among those who do not follow Luxemburg.
3. Thanks to Lou Hinman for his valuable input on these formulations. |
 |