Liberation Hurts: An Interview with Slavoj
Zizek
Eric Dean Rasmussen
The following interview with Slavoj Zizek
took place on the morning of
September 29,
2003 in the Palmer House Hilton,
a Gilded
Age-era hotel in downtown Chicago.
In the
hotel's opulent lobby, it was
easy to spot
the bearded Zizek amongst the
nattily dressed
businesspeople and well-healed
tourists.
As befits a self-described "old-fashioned
left winger,"1 Zizek seemed dressed down for our meeting.
Yet when Zizek lectured at the
University
of Chicago's Oriental Institute
later that
night, he wore the same striped
velour shirt
and casual pants and looked even
more disheveled.
But although Zizek's comfortable
attire and
his unassuming demeanor lacked
the authority
and panache of an academostar
such as, say,
Edward Said (who had passed away
just four
days before and whose elegant
and opulent
fashions even The Nation remarked
upon favorably),
once Zizek began to philosophize
he instantaneously
grew in stature. He spoke extemporaneously
with an arresting verve and displayed
the
theoretical prowess and outrageous
sense
of humor that have established
him as one
of the world's foremost intellectuals.
Not that such academic accolades
probably
mean much to Zizek, who described
himself
to me as a philosopher with "a
very
technical, modest project"
- to reactualize
the legacy of German Idealism.
After determining
that it was too noisy in the
bustling lobby
to conduct the interview, we
headed to Zizek's
room. "So, what's your agenda?"
he asked me conspiratorially
as we entered
his room, which appeared almost
ascetically
empty. Zizek was on the road
for several
weeks, yet he apparently traveled
with only
a single duffel bag, a laptop
computer, and
some novels by Henning Mankell,
the Swedish
detective novelist. 2
Zizek was coming down with a
bad cold, and
apologized for his sniffling.
While I readied
my recorder, he climbed into
bed, pulled
up the covers, and in an comfortably
reclined
position, cracked a joke about
waxing philosophical
from his sickbed. His self-deprecating
humor
helped me to relax, not least
because Zizek's
posture reminded me of the provocative
author's
photo adorning on the back cover
of The Puppet
and the Dwarf. Shot at the Sigmund
Freud
museum, on the 100th anniversary
of the birth
of Jacques Lacan, the photo features
an intense
looking Zizek lounging on a canopied
couch
covered with a southwestern-style
rug. Immediately
above Zizek's outstretched legs,
affixed
to the back of the couch, is
a framed picture
of the bottom half of a woman's
torso with
her hairy vagina prominently
displayed. I
half expected to see the picture
hanging
above Zizek's hotel bed, but
in the interest
of professionalism refrained
from telling
him so and launched into the
interview, which
lasted just under two hours.
Despite being under the weather,
it didn't
take long for Zizek to display
the vigor
and loquaciousness for which
he is famous.
As he launched into a polemic
against the
Other as posited in Levinasian-Derridean
theory, Zizek lurched up from
the bed and
began gesticulating with his
arms, his strength
increasing with each idea that
rapidly came
to mind.
For the remainder of our interview
Zizek
was extremely animated, and the
rapidity
of his speech increased with
each passing
minute. It quickly became clear
that I would
be unable to ask all of the questions
I had
diligently prepared and, in retrospect,
I
wish I'd more thoroughly interrogated
him
about his animosity towards deconstruction.
My sense was that, were I to
ask only one
question, Zizek would've continued
to talk
for the remainder of the interview.
In order
to get my questions in, I had
to speak quickly
and risk interrupting the verbose
Zizek,
who was understanding of my desire
to direct
the interview but clearly wanted
to insure
that he was able to elaborate
upon and clarify
his points.
Not surprisingly, then, the interview
ran
over its allotted time by almost
an hour.
After all, two books on Deleuze
and Iraq
were forthcoming, and Zizek enjoyed
joking
with Irina Rasmussen Goloubeva,
my Russian-born
wife, about Western misconceptions
regarding
Soviet-era life behind the Iron
Curtain.
As he apologetically escorted
me and Ira
out the door, Zizek was still
theorizing
at a machine-gun rate. "When
does he
get the time to write?"
we wondered,
in awe of our encounter with
this sublime,
yet humble, Slovenian philosopher.
telling
him so and launched into the
interview, which
lasted just under two hours.
|
Eric Dean Rasmussen:
In The Puppet and the Dwarf one of your theoretical maxims is that “in
our politically correct times, it is
always
advisable to start with the set of
unwritten
prohibitions that define the positions
one
is allowed to adopt.”3 You argue that although proclamations for
various forms of multiculturalist spirituality
are currently in vogue, professing
“serious”
religious beliefs - that is, proclaiming
one’s faith devoutly and unironically
- is
an exemplary case of an unwritten prohibited
position, at least in academia. Do
you really
think that expressing sincere religious
belief
is so taboo in public discourse, at
least
in the United States? In fact, aren’t
we
witnessing a resurgence of fundamentalism?
Under the Bush Administration’s “faith-based
initiatives,” for example, fundamentalist
Christian organizations are beginning
to
receive government funds to manage
social
services, etc. Should concerned academics
not speak out against the erosion of
the
separation between church and state,
or do
you think that they “secretly believe
much
more than they are willing to admit”
(PD
8) and it would be hypocritical for
them
to do so?
Slavoj Zizek:
No, no I don’t think this is any longer
the unwritten rule. I think that what
we
usually refer to as the ‘post-secular
turn’
really designates not quite the opposite
tendency, but that some kind of spiritually
is again ‘in’ - even in academic circles.
For example, in one of the predominant
orientations,
so-called deconstructionism, with its
Levinasian
ethico-religious turn, the motto is
traditional
onto-theology - where you assert God
as a
supreme being and so on - that is over.
But
then you play all of these games -
there
is no God, but there is some absence,
a void,
calling us, confronting us with our
finitude.
There is, as Levinas would put it,
a radical
Otherness confronting us with the absolute
responsibility, ethical injunction,
all that.
So, what interests me is precisely
this kind
of - how should I put it? - disavowed
spirituality.
It is as if the form of spirituality,
the
ultimate, I am almost tempted to say,
iconoclastic
spirituality (which it is no wonder
that
the central representative is a Jewish
thinker
like Levinas, no?) is a kind of spiritual
commitment which shouldn’t be positivized
in a set of beliefs and so on.
It is amusing sometimes to follow the
more
detailed ramifications of these rules,
what
is prohibited, what is not. For example,
this abstract Jewish spirituality is
in;
in other circles, some kind of a pagan
spirituality
is in. Of course, as you hinted at,
these
are in clear contrast to ‘mainstream’
America,
the Bible Belt, where you find more
orthodox
belief. But even there, that belief
already
functions in a different way. The so-called
moral majority fundamentalism is -
to put
it in slightly speculative Hegelian
terms
- the form of the appearance of its
opposite.
Let’s be serious: Nobody will convince
me
that people like Donald Rumsfeld, John
Ashcroft
and George W. Bush believe. They may
even
be sincere, but... from Hegel we learned
how to undermine a position - not through
comparing it directly with reality
to assert
its truth status, but seeing how the
very
subjective stance from which you announce
a certain position undermines this
position.
A classic, simplified Hegelian example
would
be asceticism. The message of asceticism
is I despise my body, but all the focus
is
on the body, so the very message of
the practice
is the opposite of the official message.
Along the same lines, if you look closely
at - to take the most extreme example
- televangelists,
figures we all love, like Jim Bakker,
or
Jimmy Swaggart, with all their complaints
against liberal decadence, and so on,
the
way they relate to religion is a kind
of
narcissistic ego trip. The way they
deliver
their message undermines the message.
You
don’t need an external criticism.
I’m willing to go even further here.
For
example, take family values. I disagree
with
my leftist friends who immediately
cry wolf,
“Oh family values, they want to reimpose
the patriarchal family, what about
gay marriages,
new forms? blah, blah, blah.” No, let’s
look
at what effectively happened. I don’t
think
there was an era that did more to undermine
so-called family and community values
than
the Reagan era, with Reaganomics. All
these
shifts to a new economy, with the end
of
fixed employment, mobility, etc. So,
my response
to conservatives is not that we need
to defend
plurality and different lifestyles,
but look
who is taking! Your policies undermined
the
family, and you don’t have any right
to even
speak about family values.
To return to the fundamentals of your
questions,
one of my theses is that belief is
a complex
phenomenon. I don’t mean this in a
superficial
way, “Ha, ha, they are fakes; they
don’t
really believe; they are cynical manipulators,
and so on.” In a more serious way,
what does
belief mean? What does it mean when
you say
people believe in something? For example,
I had very interesting conversation
with
a priest during the Turin shroud controversy,
and he told me kind of a half-public
secret
- the French have this nice expression,
le
secret de Polichinelle, a secret which
everybody
knows about - that the Church really
does
not want, and is secretly absolutely
afraid
for, that shroud to be proven to be
the real
thing, the blood of Christ from that
time.
The idea is that the shroud should
remain
an object of belief, and its status
shouldn’t
be directly proven. It would complicate
things
if you proved the shroud was really
from
year zero in Palestine with, say, a
DNA profile
of Christ. [Chuckles] But at the more
fundamental
level, intelligent theologians like
Kierkegaard
knew that belief should not be knowledge,
it must be a leap of faith. Often,
when you
believe in something, the utmost shattering
experience or shock can be an immediate,
brutal confirmation of your belief.
For example,
did you see the movie Leap of Faith?
4 It’s naïve, and I don’t like Steve Martin
in it, he’s playing a stupid role politically,
but it’s a nice movie about a fake
faith
healer/preacher with Martin and Debra
Winger.
Eric Dean Rasmussen:
No, I haven’t seen Leap of Faith, but
the
film illuminates the Kierkegaardian
distinction
between belief as faith versus knowledge
as objective, scientifically verifiable
fact?
Slavoj Zizek:
It’s a story of one of these swindlers who
goes around the Bible Belt, sells miracles,
healing cripples, and so on - it’s
all a
fake. Then, at some point, a young
guy, who
is the younger brother of a woman whom
Martin
wants to get to bed, to seduce, publicly
approaches him to perform a miracle.
So he
does, and it works. It totally ruins
him!
He immediately runs away, dropping
everything.
This is how belief functions.
Interestingly, the last time I was
in Israel,
I spoke with some specialists over
in Ramallah
who told me that they know people from
the
families of Palestinian suicide bombers.
They told me that even those people
who are
usually portrayed to us [Westerners]
as true
believers, their belief is more complex
that
it appears. First, there are much more
secular
motivations at work. This is our Western
racism, when we imbue them with motives
like,
“I blow myself up, and then I awaken
with
those famous forty virgins at my disposal.”
No, no, no, it’s more like, “This sacrifice
is for my nation.” Even more importantly,
it’s a strange logic in which the bombers
themselves have doubts, and their suicide
becomes a way of confirming their belief.
“If I kill myself in this way, I can
calm
my doubts and prove, even to me, that
I do
believe.” So, even here, the issue
of belief
is more complex that it might seem.
You may be aware of an almost repetitive
motif in my work, how not only those
people
whom we perceive as fundamentalists,
but
how we enlightened Westerners believe
more
than it may appear. The usual strategy
is
displaced belief, what in Lacanian
theory
is referred to as “the subject supposed
to
believe,” in which literally believe
through
the Other. It’s a wonderful topic.
For example,
Paul Veyne’s book, Did the Ancient
Greeks
Believe in Their Myths? - I don’t agree
with
its conclusions, but it sets forth
a wonderful
problematic - demonstrates that the
notion
of belief we have today, this fully
subjectivized
belief (here I am, I literally mean
it, I
stand behind it) is a modern phenomenon.
For example, the ancient Greeks, they
believed,
but they believed in an anonymous way.
One
believes, not me. The Greeks didn’t
believe
that if you climbed to the top of Mount
Olympus
that you would encounter God, or Zeus
there.
No, their belief is something more
paradoxical.
Do you remember how we greeted each
other
the first time? Let’s say we said “Hello,
how are you? Nice to meet you.” Such
greetings
are fake, usually, in the sense that,
if
we’ve just met for the first time,
and I
were to ask “How do you feel? How are
you?”
and you were to suspect that my questions
were meant literally, you would have
the
right to say, “Sorry, it’s none of
your business!”
But it’s wrong to say it’s hypocrisy.
That’s
the paradox of culture: It’s not to
be taken
literally, but it’s totally wrong to
say
it’s hypocritical. Small children haven’t
assumed the paradox of culture fully.
My
small son, for example, plays this
game of
taking things too literally. When I
say,
“Could you pass me the salt?” he says
“Yes
I can,” and then looks at me before
saying
“You didn’t tell me to pass the salt.”
There’s
a certain paradoxical level of thought,
you
cannot but call it sincere lying. If
I ask
you, “how are you?” literally, I lie,
but
it’s a sincere lie, because at the
metalevel
the message is to establish, to use
old hippie
terminology, positive vibrations [chuckles]
or whatever. So, again, belief is a
much,
much more complex phenomenon than is
generally
acknowledged.
Eric Dean Rasmussen:
Let’s follow up on your suicide bomber reference.
In both Welcome to the Desert of the
Real
and The Puppet and the Dwarf you seem
to
come close to endorsing “hysterical”
violence
as a preferable alternative to an “obsessional,”
micromanaged, life-in-death. I’m thinking
of the contrast you make between the
Palestinian
suicide bomber, the American solider
waging
war before a computer screen, and the
New
York yuppie jogging along the Hudson
River.
In the moment before the bomber kills
himself
and others, you suggest he is more
alive
than either the soldier or the yuppie.
How
would you defend yourself against charges
that you are promoting terrorism or
romanticizing
revolutionary violence?
Slavoj Zizek:
Such charges may be a below-the-belt blow.
Believe me, from my personal experience,
coming from an ex-socialist country,
I know
very well the misery of living in a
post-revolutionary
society. Let me first state my basic
position,
which is the fundamental paradox that
I repeat
again and again in my works, and which
is
basically a paraphrase of that reversal
by
Jacques Lacan where he says, against
Dostoevsky,
that, if God doesn’t exist, not everything
is permitted, but everything is prohibited.
Lacan was right, and the so-called
fundamentalist
terrorists are exactly the proof of
his claim.
With them, it’s inverted: God exists,
so
everything is permitted. If you act
as a
divine instrument, you can kill, rape,
etc.,
because, through all these mystical
tricks,
it’s not me who is acting, rather it
is God
who is acting through me.
I was shocked recently when I read
some
speeches by Commandant Marcos of the
Zapatistas,
Behind a mask, Marcos says, “I am nobody.
Through me, you have this poetic explosion.
Through me, dispossessed peasants in
Brazil,
poor drug addicts and homeless people
in
New York, sweatshop workers in Indonesia,
all of them speak, but I am nobody.”
See
how ambiguous this position is? It
appears
modest, but this self-erasure conceals
an
extreme arrogance. It means all these
people
speak through me, so the silent conclusion
is if you attack me, I am untouchable,
because
you attack all those others.
What interests me is the following
paradox:
of how, precisely in our liberal societies,
where no one can even imagine a transcendental
cause for which to die, we are allowed
to
adopt a hedonistic, utilitarian, or
even
more spiritually egotistical stance
- like,
the goal of my life is the realization
of
all my potential, fulfillment of my
innermost
desires, whatever you want. The result
is
not that you can do everything you
want,
but a paradoxical situation: so many
prohibitions,
regulations. You can enjoy your life,
but
in order to do it, no fat, no sexual
harassment,
no this, no that. Probably never in
human
history did we live in a society in
which,
at the microlevel of personal behavior,
our
lives were so strongly regulated.
To this paradox, I like to link another,
which interests me even more: how this
applies
at all levels, not only at the personal
level.
Namely, how false is the official position
that we live in a permissive society
of consumption
where you just consume until you drop,
and
so on. No, I think that if there is
something
which is paradigmatic for today’s society,
it’s phenomena like decaffeinated coffee.
You can consume coffee, but it should
be
decaf. Have beer, but without alcohol.
Have
dessert, but without sugar. Get the
thing
deprived of its substance. And the
way this
interests me is not only at this personal
level. What is safe sex, but another
name
for sex without? It makes me almost
sympathetic
to that famous racist notion in Europe,
where
they ask an African guy, “With such
a high
rate of AIDS, why don’t you use more
condoms?”
and he responds, “It’s like taking
a shower
with a raincoat on.” But I tend to
agree
with it [chuckling], I’m sorry. Even
war
follows this logic. What’s Colin Powell’s
doctrine if not war without war? War,
but
with no casualties on our side, of
course.
And I could go on. The emblematic product
of all these phenomena is a chocolate
laxative,
laxative in the form of chocolate.
Chocolate
is perceived, at least in the popular
imagination,
as the main cause of constipation.
So, advertisers
devised a wonderful publicity slogan:
still
constipated, no problem, have another
portion
of chocolate. No wonder, then, that
there
is such a movement for, among some
so-called
radicals, to liberate the consumption
of
marijuana. Marijuana is precisely kind
of
a decaf coffee - opium, without opium.
You
can have it, but not fully. The paradox
for
me, in this sense, is that precisely
by dedicating
your life to full assertion of life,
life’s
pleasures, you pay a price.
Now I come to truly answering you.
What
if this sounds almost proto-fascist,
a celebration
of violence and such? I will give you
a horrible
answer. “Why not?” This line of questioning
is the typical liberal trap. In These
Times
- those crazy loonies, they are my
friends,
I like them, leftists - published an
essay
of mine apropos Leni Riefenstahl in
which
I ferociously attack a typical liberal
reaction
against fascism. 5 You don’t really have a theory of fascism.
So you look a little bit into history,
encounter
something which superficially reminds
you
of fascism, and then you claim that
it’s
proto-fascist already. Before making
her
famous Nazi movies, Riefenstahl did
so-called
bergfilms, “mountain movies,” filled
with
this heroic, extreme danger, climbing
mountains,
passionate love stories up there. Everybody
automatically assumes these films must
already
be proto-Nazi. Sorry, but the guy who
co-wrote
the scenario for her best known early
film,
Das Blaue Licht (The Blue Light), Béla
Balázs
was a Communist. [Chuckles]. Now, liberals
have an answer to this one, which is
[spoken
in a half-whisper] “this only proves
how
the entire society was already penetrated
by the spirit of Nazism.” No, I violently
disagree. Take the most popular example
used
again and again by Susan Sontag in
her famous
text on Leni Riefenstahl: mass public
spectacles,
crowds, gymnastics, thousands of bodies.
I’m very sorry, but it’s an historical
fact
that the Nazis took these forms from
the
Social Democrats. Originally, these
forms
were Leftist. The liberal point would
be,
“Oh, this only proves how totalitarianism
was in the air.” I am totally opposed
to
this line of argument. We should not
oppose
something just because it was appropriated
by the wrong guys; rather, we should
think
about how to reappropriate it. And
I think
that the limit is here - I admit it
here,
we are in deep critical waters - very
refined,
between... engaging in redemptive violence
and what is truly fascist, the fetishizing
of violence for its own sake.
A kind of litmus test is - this always
works
on all my friends - “How do you stand
toward
Fight Club, the movie?” All the liberals
claim, “Ah, it’s proto-fascist, violent,
blah, blah, blah.” No, I am for it.
I think
the message of Fight Club is not so
much
liberating violence but that liberation
hurts.
What may falsely appear as my celebration
of violence, I think, is a much more
tragic
awareness. If there is a great lesson
of
the 20th-century history, it’s the
lesson
of psychoanalysis: The lesson of totalitarian
subordination is not “renounce, suffer,”
but this subordination offers you a
kind
of perverted excess of enjoyment and
pleasure.
To get rid of that enjoyment is painful.
Liberation hurts.
In the first act of liberation, as
I develop
it already in The Fragile Absolute,
where
I provide lots of violent examples
- from
Keyser Söze in The Usual Suspects,
who kills
his family (which I’ll admit, got me
into
lots of trouble) to a more correct
example,
Toni Morrison’s Beloved. But, of course,
now, I’m not saying what Elizabeth
Wright,
who edited a reader about me, thought.
I
love her, an English old lady. I had
tea
with her once, and she said, “I liked
your
book, The Fragile Absolute, but something
bothered me. Do I really have to kill
my
son to be ethical?” I love this total
naïveté.
Of course not! My point was to address
the
problem of totalitarian control. The
problem
is: how does a totalitarian power keep
you
in check? Precisely by offering you
some
perverse enjoyment, and you have to
renounce
that, and it hurts. So, I don’t mean
physical
violence, or a kind of fetishization
of violence.
I just mean simply that liberation
hurts.
What I don’t buy from liberals is this
idea
of, as Robespierre would have put it,
“revolution
without revolution,” the idea that
somehow,
everything will change, but nobody
will be
really hurt. No, sorry, it hurts.
Eric Dean Rasmussen:
You just critiqued the misrecognition of
fascism, in which liberals rush to
denounce
a cluster of phenomena as fascist or
proto-fascist
without first formulating or advancing
a
rigorous definition of fascism. Do
you think
that the Left, in the United States,
is wrong
to use the rhetoric of fascism to critique
the Bush Administration? Does the Left
err
when it makes claims like “the Bush
Administration
is an incipient fascist regime,” or
“the
United States government is moving
rightward,
in the direction of fascism?”
Slavoj Zizek:
This is wrong, but it’s not that the Left
is too harsh on Bush. It’s that they
are,
in a way, not harsh enough. In Organs
Without
Bodies, I have a chapter where I try
to prove
that - it’s a totally crazy book, the
wager
of the book is double - Deleuze is
the best
theorist of Oedipus and castration
and he
is Hegelian. To explain these points
I have
a chapter on the underlying Hegelian
structure,
of the paradoxes, those famous stupidities
and slips, uttered by Dan Quayle and
George
W. Bush. I compare them as two kinds
of self-relating
negativity tricks. I don’t recall if
it was
Bush or Quayle who said, “Tomorrow
the future
will look brighter,” but this is wonderful,
totally Hegelian. And the title of
the chapter
is “Dumb and Dumber,” a reference to
the
movie. [Laughs] Don’t you also have
the feeling
that all this crying wolf, all this
“Fascism!
Fascism!” is a kind of admission of
impotence
signaling the lack of a true analysis
of
what actually is going on now. If I
say that
the Bush Administration’s agenda is
not fascist,
I am not saying that it’s no so bad.
What
I’m saying is that these are different
structures
of domination. I hate it when Leftists
say
we’re returning to fascism! My reply
to them
is, “You don’t know what you are talking
about! You don’t have a conceptual
apparatus.”
They’re simply taking recourse to this
old
notion of fascism, which is a catastrophe.
I do admire thinkers like Giorgio Agamben,
with his theory of homo sacer, which
is a
much more refined analysis. 6 Agamben’s basic insight is the following
one: We have two apparently opposed
tendencies
today. On the one hand, we have so-called
biopolitics, that is to say, more and
more
our lives are controlled through state
mechanisms,
whatever, all these theories articulated
by Foucault and later by Agamben. On
the
other hand, we have what right wingers
usually
refer to as a liberal, extreme narcissism,
this “culture of complaint,” or, “culture
of victimization.” You know, where
whatever
you do -like, I look at you now and
[smacks
his hand on the table] ha, ha, ha,
rape already
or harassment - construed as oppressive.
Incidentally, the only way to react
to excessive
political correctness, I claim, is
propagating
dirty jokes.
Dirty jokes are ambiguous. On the one
hand,
of course, I’m well aware they can
be racist,
sexist, and so on. On the other hand,
I hate
the term “African-Americans.” I prefer
black,
and they do too. I think African-American
as a term is the worst example of apparent
political correctness. My best example
of
this was in Minneapolis, one of the
capitals
of political correctness [chuckles].
On TV,
I saw a debate involving Native Americans,
and they referred to themselves as
“Indians,”
and this white, PC liberal said, “No,
no,
no, don’t use that colonialist term.
You
are Native Americans.” And at the end,
the
poor Indian exploded. He said, “Sorry,
I
hate that term! Please, give me at
least
the right to call myself what I want.
‘Native
American’ means that you’re making
me a part
of nature! You are reducing me! What’s
the
opposite of nature? It’s culture! You
Europeans
are culture, then you have horses and
us,
‘Native Americans’ here, with foxes
or whatever.”
So whenever I meet blacks in this kind
of
situation, I immediately try to break
these
racist barriers. And what’s my measure
that
we truly broke the barrier? Ok, at
one level
it’s political correctness, but it’s
absolutely
clear that if you play this game, only
politically
correct terms and ooooh, this fake
interest,
“ooooh, how interesting, your culture,
what
a wealth, and blah, blah, blah,” it
will
backfire. Blacks confess to me that
they
secretly despise this kind of white
liberalism.
What’s the trick? Humor. It’s a kind
of dialectical
double reversal. And this is when they
really
admit you. That somehow you can return
to
the worst starting point, racist jokes
and
so on, but they function no longer
as racist,
but as a kind of obscene solidarity.
To give
you an extremely vulgar example, I
met a
big, black guy, and when we became
friends,
I went into it like, [assuming a naïve,
awe-filled
whisper] “Is it true that you have,
you know
[makes gesture signifying a gigantic
penis]?”
and (this is a racist myth I heard
in Europe)
“Is it true that you blacks can control
your
muscles so that when you walk with
a half
erection and there is a fly here you
can
BAM! [slaps thigh] snap it with your
penis?”
We became terribly close friends! Now,
I’m
well aware of how risky these waters
are,
because if you do it in the wrong context,
in the wrong way, I’m well aware that
this
is racism.
What bothers me with so-called tolerance
is that, if you combine tolerance with
opposition
to harassment, what do you get? You
get tolerance
that effectively functions as its opposite.
Tolerance means we should tolerate
each other,
which practically means that we shouldn’t
harass each other, which means I tolerate
you on the condition that you don’t
get too
close to me! [chuckles]. Because, often,
the fear beneath harassment is one
of proximity.
Don’t get too close to me, emotionally
or
physically. We have here, again, the
same
chocolate-laxative logic, the Other
yes,
but not too close, deprived of its
substance.
I don’t think these two levels are
opposed.
One the one hand, the state wants to
control
you via biopolitics, and, on the other
hand,
the state allows this extreme narcissism.
I think they are two sides of the same
coin.
Both have in common this logic of pure
-
how should I put it? biopolitical levels,
pure life, pleasures, sensitivity,
whatever.
Simply falling back to this old position
of “oooh, we are returning to fascism,
and
so on” doesn’t work. And while I despise
so-called fundamentalists, we should
not
knock, or buy too simply, this liberal
opposition
between us, good liberal guys, versus
them,
bad fundamentalists. The first counterargument
that I mentioned is “Wait a minute;
are these
really fundamentalists?” It’s an affront
to fundamentalism to call people like
Jim
Bakker or Jimmy Swaggart [chuckles]
fundamentalists.
I had once a conversation with my good
friend,
one of the last Marxist dinosaurs,
Fred Jameson,
who told me, “True fundamentalists
are people
like the army theologians who were
against
the Vietnam War.” In Israel, it’s the
same.
As all my Jewish friends are telling
me,
it’s not some stupid, fanatic rabbis
in Jerusalem
versus tolerant Tel Aviv. Tel Aviv
is worse,
if anything! In Tel Aviv, you know,
it’s
ethnically cleansed. There are almost
no
Palestinians. So, the most radical
proponents
of dialogue with the Palestinians are
some
very orthodox Jewish theologians.
Increasingly I’m convinced that we
must
problematize the way the mass media
present
us the big opposition: liberating,
multiculturalist
tolerance versus some crazy fundamentalism.
Let me be precise here. I know the
danger
here is the old temptation to become
fascinated
with the - old Georges Sorel stuff
- liberating
aspect of violence. 7 I am well aware of - and I’m not afraid
to use this term - the “inner greatness”
of liberalism, because usually religious
fundamentalists approach liberalism
as a
kind of “humanist arrogance.” However,
the
origin of authentic liberalism is something
much more tragic and sincere. Liberalism
emerged after the Thirty Years War
in 17th-century
Europe. It was a desperate answer to
a very
pressing problem: we have here groups
of
people with mutually exclusive religious
commitments, how can we build a governable
space? There is an initial modesty
in Liberalism.
Liberalism was not originally a doctrine
of “man is the king.” No, it was a
very modest
attempt to build a space where people
could
live together without slaughtering
one another.
As I repeat again and again in my books,
I don’t buy the simplistic, Marxist
reductive
decoding, “human rights, screw them,
they
are really just rights for white men
of property.”
The problem is that from the very beginnings
of Liberalism there was the tension
between
content and form. The properly political
dialectic is that the form, even if
it is
just a fake appearance, has its own
symbolic
efficiency and sets in motion a certain
process.
Even before the French Revolution,
Mary
Wollstonecraft said, “Why not also
we women?”
Then, human rights triggered the first
big
political rebellion of the blacks,
led by
Toussaint L’Ouverture in Haiti. The
demand
was not “let’s return to our tribe.”
The
Haitian Revolution was explicitly linked
to the French Revolution and the Jacobins
- I still love them - invited the black
delegation
from Haiti to Paris. They were applauded
there. It’s only Napoleon, then, who
turns
it around. But this is the properly
dialectic
process that fascinates me. It’s not
only
the story of degeneration - something
is
authentic and then it’s co-opted -
what interests
me much more is how something can start
as
a fake, but then acquire its own [authentic]
logic. For example, the Virgin of Guadalupe,
the black Madonna. It’s clear that
Catholicism
is first imposed on the natives - ok,
here
I cannot think of another term for
the people
who lived in Mexico before the Spaniards
arrived, but the appearance of the
Virgin
of Guadalupe marks precisely the moment
when
Catholicism was no longer simply a
tool of
oppression, but had become a site from
which
to articulate grievances, a site of
struggle.
So, things are here much more open.
To be quite frank, especially after
doing
that book on Lenin, 8 people laugh at me saying “oh, oh, oh you
want Leninism.” But no, sorry, I am
not totally
crazy [chuckles]. I’m just saying that
-
as you hinted at also - I don’t think
the
Left is ready to draw all the consequences
of the deep shit it is in. The phenomena
you invoked - calling Bush a fascist,
and
so on, display the Left’s disorientation.
In Europe, you have this nostalgic
reaction,
which explains the Left’s irrational
hatred
of people like Tony Blair or Gerhardt
Schroeder
in Germany. Not that I love them, but
they
way they are often criticized is that
they
betrayed the old welfare states. Ok,
but,
what was the choice? It is not as if
everything
would be ok if we would just remain
faithful
to the old social democratic logic.
Or, to
give you another example, once I had
dinner
with Richard Rorty, and he admitted
to me
that his dream is that of Adlai Stevenson;
his solution is that we should return
to
a socially active role for the Democratic
Party. I wonder if it’s as simple as
that?
I don’t think it’s simply that some
bad guys
around Tony Blair in England, for example,
betrayed the old Labour Party. No,
the problem
is that... What is the alternative
here?
To be quite honest, I am at the state
of
just asking questions.
So, again, when I problematize even
democracy,
it’s not this typical Leftist, fascist
way
of, oh it’s not spectacular enough;
we need
radical measures. No, it’s maybe that
we
should start to ask questions like,
“What
does democracy effectively mean, and
how
does it function today? What do we
really
decide?” For example, let’s take the
last
twenty or thirty years of history.
There
was a tremendous shift, as we all know,
in
the entire social functioning of the
State,
the way the economy changed with globalization,
the way social services and health
care are
perceived. There was a global shift,
but
we never voted about that. So, the
biggest
change, the biggest structural shift
in the
entire logic of capitalistic, democratic
states is something that we, the citizens,
never decided. Now, I’m not saying
we should
abandon democracy. I’m just saying
that we
should start asking these elementary
questions:
What do we decide today? Why are some
things
simply perceived as necessity?
For example, it’s interesting to note
the
big shift within the thinking of the
postmodern
Left, who believe that we can no longer
change
the functioning in the economy. The
economy
is a certain objective problem, to
be left
to experts - don’t mess with that.
One of
Tony Blair’s advisors said frankly,
“Regarding
the economy, we are all Margaret Thatcher’s
pupils.” All we can do, then, is exercise
a bit more tolerance here and there,
and
so on. I’m not saying that the answer
to
this is simply that we should return
to our
old welfare state project, but that
there
are still tough questions to be asked.
Eric Dean Rasmussen:
In a recent issue of The Nation (29 Sept.
2003), William Greider - repeating
the thesis
of his book, The Soul of Capitalism:
Opening
Paths to a Moral Economy
- suggests that through a “transformation
of Wall Street’s core values,” American
capitalism
might be reformed so as to eliminate
the
gross inequalities that are structured
into
the system. 9 Greider suggests, for example, that organized
labor, which controls billions of dollars
in the form of workers’ pension funds,
could
exert influence and improve capitalism
by
insisting that the money it manages
be placed
in investment funds that are more socially
and environmentally responsible. Do
such
reforms sound promising?
Slavoj Zizek:
Maybe, but such reforms have already been
tried. When the Swedish Social Democracy
was at its high point in the 1960s,
there
already was a timeline - they set a
limit
of thirty years - established for how
trade
unions and pension funds should buy,
to put
it simply, private property, setting
the
way for a kind of radical people’s
capitalism.
But it failed. But maybe this is one
option.
Another option to pursue. Robin Blackburn
published a book on retirement funds.
10 It isn’t talked about, but there are tremendous
amounts of money there, possibilities
for
popular control, and so on. Another
option
- which I wouldn’t underestimate, at
least
in some underdeveloped countries
- is a more risky strategy: of not
just
playing this liberal identity politics
game
for the media. What if we risk, and
this
doesn’t mean violence, alternative
communities?
For example, I am fascinated with the
favelas
in Latin America. 11 Don’t romanticize them, it’s desperate!
In many of them, you have, ultimately,
mafia
control, and the State simply doesn’t
care
about the people living there. It might
care
a little bit about hygienic conditions
when
it appears that there might be an outbreak
of a disease. What interests me is
that the
residents of the favelas were pushed
into
self-organizing. These different forms
of
self-organization, we need to think
more
about them.
Again, I don’t have great positive
answers.
I just think that something is effectively
happening with today’s capitalism and
that
both standard positions - on the one
hand,
the standard Leftist view, it’s nothing
new,
it’s just the old financial capitalism;
on
the other hand, the opposite view,
all the
‘post-‘ theories (information society,
post-industrial
society, whatever) - at some level
misfire.
I they elevate into a self-contained
entity,
something which can function only as
a part
of a larger society. The argument that
we
are living in this post-industrial,
information
society, service society, with no blue-collar
workers, is a fiction. I know, because
I
have a small son. Go to a toy store;
ninety
percent of the toys are made in China,
the
rest are made in Guatemala, Indonesia,
and
so on. This is one of my standard jokes
from
my early books. It always fascinated
me that
the only place where you see the old-fashioned
production process is where? Hollywood.
In
James Bond movies. It’s a formula;
two-thirds
of the way into the film, Bond is captured
by the big, bad guy and, then - this
is the
kind of structural stupidity that enables
the final victory of Bond - instead
of immediately
shooting Bond, the villain gives Bond
kind
of an old Soviet Union socialist tour,
showing
him the plant and how it works. Of
course
it’s some kind of criminal activity,
like
processing drugs, or manufacturing
gold.
But there you see it, and the result
you
know - Bond escapes and destroys it
all.
It’s as if Bond is a kind of agent
of Anthony
Giddens and other sociologists who
claim
that there is no working class.
But you see my point, what these “post”-theories
don’t take into account radically enough
is that this split is structural. In
order
for the United States to function the
way
it functions today, you need China
as the
ultimate communist-capitalist country.
What
do I mean by this? Everything hinges
on this
symbiosis between the United States
and China.
China is an ingenious solution. It’s
a country
where, yes, you have political control
by
the communists, but everyone in the
West
focuses their attention on those persecuted
religious sects or dissidents. Screw
them
- not that I don’t care about them.
For me,
the true news about China is that there
are
now desperate attempts by millions
of jobless
workers to organize themselves into
trade
unions. There lies the true repression.
So,
China, as long as you don’t mess with
politics,
is the ultimate capitalist country,
because
capitalists can do whatever they want
in
the economy, and the state guarantees
them
total control over the working class
- no
interference by trade unions or whatever.
That guarantee of noninterference,
I maintain,
is absolutely crucial. One way it is
done
is by this famous outsourcing.
Outsourcing is not only an economic
phenomenon.
Take this flirting with torture - as
proposed
by Alan Dershowitz and Jonathan Alter.
Their
true message is not so much that the
United
States should practice torture, but
that
torture should be outsourced. “We cannot
[torture suspected terrorists, so let’s
give
them back to Pakistan. They will do
it.”
Again, although people accuse me of
being
some arrogant Hegelian, Leninist, I’ll
admit
- very honestly, that I don’t have
answers.
At this state of the revolutionary
process
[chuckling] I see my function as introducing
more trouble, if anything, to force
confrontations.
As a friend put it, the standard Leftist
stance is that we basically know what’s
going
on, and we just need to find a way
to mobilize
people. I don’t think we really know
what’s
going on. By this, I don’t mean anything
mystical. I simply mean that the Left
still
doesn’t have a representative theory.
I see
elements here and there. For example,
although
I violently disagree with the second
half
of the book, the first half of Jeremy
Rifkin’s
The Age of Access, offers a nice description
of the whole change in the commodity
structure.12 Basically, your life itself is now the ultimate
commodity. What you are buying is not
an
object, but the ‘time of your life.’
You
know, you go to a therapist, you buy
your
quality life.
Eric Dean Rasmussen:
You buy - or access - experiences.
Slavoj Zizek:
Yeah, exactly. So there are elements here
and there, but I don’t think we have
a theory.
Here, I am even more pessimistic. It’s
not
that the Left knows what’s going on
and just
doesn’t know how to mobilize people.
This
view is the last, and maybe the most
dangerous
illusion, of the Left.
Eric Dean Rasmussen:
I want to return to your earlier allusion
to Kierkegaard. When I read The Puppet
and
the Dwarf, I was struck by your appeals
to
a sort of passionate commitment. For
example,
when you ask, “What if we are ‘really
alive’
only if and when we engage ourselves
with
an excessive intensity which puts us
beyond
‘mere life?”
(94) you seem to be advocating a sort
of
Kierkegaardian passionate commitment.
13 For Kierkegaard, of course, this commitment
was to developing one’s relationship
with
God, and he stressed that such an inward,
existential, relationship should not
and
could not be externally visible to
others.
As Derrida stresses, the gift must
remain
secret.
Slavoj Zizek:
It’s very complex with Kierkegaard. It’s
inward, but this inwardness is externalized
in that it’s a traumatic inwardness.
People
usually only take one side of Kierkegaard
- that he’s against Christendom as
institution.
Yes, but, at the same time, Kierkegaard
was
the most ferocious opponent of liberal
Christianity,
which asserted that external institutions
don’t matter and that what matters
is the
sincerity of one’s inner belief. Let’s
take
the ultimate case, Abraham. His faith
is
inner in that he’s unable to communicate
his predicament, that he must sacrifice
Isaac,
his son. He cannot turn to the community
to explain why he must do it. At the
same
time, it’s a totally crazy order that
Abraham
must obey. It’s not that Abraham in
his insight
knows why he must kill his son. It’s
not
a New Age narrative; it’s not an inner
enlightenment.
With Kierkegaard, things are more ambiguous.
If you read Kierkegaard’s most wonderful,
enigmatic text, Works of Love (I don’t
like
big Kierkegaard, Either/Or) you find
the
wonderful formula - that to love your
neighbor
means you must love him as you love
death;
a good neighbor is a dead neighbor,
and all
these paradoxes. Or, that wonderful
short
text on the difference between an apostle
and a genius, in which he has wonderful
formulas
on authority. If there is anything
totally
strange to Kierkegaard it is this simple
opposition - external, institutional
authority
versus inner.
Here, Kierkegaard is effectively close
to
Kafka. For Kafka, bureaucracy is an
innermost,
metaphysical phenomenon, and I tend
to agree
with him. This is the theological dimension
today. A year ago, the wife of a friend
of
mine, living in France, was informed
by the
local authorities that her carte d’identité,
her ID card, was stolen. So, she went
to
the authorities and told them, “I have
my
card here; it hasn’t been stolen. There’s
been a mistake.” The authorities told
her
that, “You may have it there, but officially,
it’s stolen. So, what you have there,
is
officially a fake, a forged ID card.
You
should destroy it and then request
a new
one.” This is, for me, everyday life
theology,
metaphysics.
Eric Dean Rasmussen:
When you suggest that “what makes life ‘worth
living’ is the very excess of life:
the awareness
that there is something for which we
are
ready to risk our life (we may call
this
excess ‘freedom,’ ‘honor,’ ‘dignity,’
‘autonomy,’
etc.) Only when we are ready to take
this
risk are we really alive” (PD 95) you
seem
to be pushing for a different sort
of existential
commitment, something, perhaps, along
the
lines of Judas’s betrayal of Christ?
Slavoj Zizek:
Ok, I think there are only two heroes there,
Judas and St. Paul.
Eric Dean Rasmussen:
For what excessive causes or projects are
you passionately committed? Are there
any
existential causes for which you would
be
willing, if necessary, to sacrifice
your
life, or, to commit a heroic betrayal?
Slavoj Zizek:
Well, I don’t think we can repeat the formula
of Judas’s betrayal today. It’s a different
logic. It’s no longer this heroic logic
of
“I sacrifice my life,” but I will count
in
posterity, and will be recognized as
a hero.
Now, you must risk also your second
death.
This would be for me the new logic.
I’m looking
for a non-heroic logic of activity.
Even
the term “sacrifice,” I don’t quite
like.
I have very elaborate criticisms of
the notion
of sacrifice. Did you see that wonderful
melodrama, Stella Dallas with Barbara
Stanwyck?
She has a daughter who wants to marry
into
the upper class, but she is an embarrassment
to her daughter. So, the mother - on
purpose
- played an extremely vulgar, promiscuous
mother in front of her daughter’s lover,
so that the daughter could drop her,
without
guilt. The daughter could be furious
with
her and marry the rich guy. That’s
a more
difficult sacrifice. It’s not “I will
make
a big sacrifice and remain deep in
their
heart.” No, in making the sacrifice,
you
risk your reputation itself. Is this
an extreme
case? No, I think every good parent
should
do this.
The true temptation of education is
how
to raise your child by sacrificing
your reputation.
It’s not my son who should admire me
as a
role model and so on. I’m not saying
you
should, to be vulgar, masturbate in
front
of your son in order to appear as an
idiot.
But, to avoid this trap - the typical
pedagogical
trap, which is, apparently you want
to help
your son, but the real goal is to remain
the ideal figure for your son - you
must
sacrifice your parental authority.
But, to
go on very naïvely, in art, in science
-
this is, for me, the site of actual
sacrifice,
not some spectacular sacrifice - you
are
obsessed with the idea of a work of
art,
and you risk everything, just to do
it. You
do it. There are people doing this,
but very
few of them. People who are committed
to
a certain project. Really, it’s tragic.
Let me put it this way. Bernard Williams,
the English moral philosopher, develops,
in a wonderful way, the difference
between
‘must’ and ‘have to.’ He opposes the
logic
of positive injunction - in the sense
of
“you should do this” - with another
logic
of injunction, a more fundamental sense,
of “I just cannot do it otherwise.”
The first
logic is simply that of the ideal.
You should
do it, but never can do it. You never
can
live up to your ideal. But, the more
shattering,
radical, ethical experience is that
of “I
cannot do it otherwise.” For example
- this
is one of the old partisan myths in
Yugoslavia
- Yugoslavian rebels killed some Germans,
so the Germans did the usual thing.
They
encircled the village and decided to
shoot
all the civilians. But, one ordinary
German
soldier stood up and said, “Sorry,
I just
cannot do it.” The officer in charge
said,
“No problem, you can join them,” and
the
German soldier did. This is what I
mean by
sacrifice. There’s nothing pathetic
about
it. This honest German soldier, his
point
was not, “Oooooh, what a nice, ideal
role
for me.” He was just ethically cornered.
You cannot do it otherwise. Politically
it’s
the same. It’s not a sacrificial situation
where you’re secretly in love with
your role
of being sacrificed and you’re seeking
to
be admired. It’s a terrible, ethical,
existential
deadlock; you find yourself in a position
in which you say, “I cannot do it otherwise.”
Eric Dean Rasmussen:
Ok, so you’re not advocating a sacrificial
ethos. In fact, the logic of the heroism
you’ve described doesn’t necessarily
posit
the need to make an existential choice;
rather,
one is compelled to “do the right thing?”
Slavoj Zizek:
I’m trying to avoid two extremes. One extreme
is the traditional pseudo-radical position
which says, “If you engage in politics
-
helping trade unions or combating sexual
harassment, whatever - you’ve been
co-opted
and so on. Then you have the other
extreme
which says, “Ok, you have to do something.”
I think both are wrong. I hate those
pseudo-radicals
who dismiss every concrete action by
saying
that “This will all be co-opted.” Of
course,
everything can be co-opted [chuckles]
but
this is just a nice excuse to do absolutely
nothing. Of course, there is a danger
that
- to use the old Maoist term, popular
in
European student movements thirty some
years
ago, “the long march through institutions”
will last so long that you’ll end up
part
of the institution. We need more than
ever,
a parallax view - a double perspective.
You
engage in acts, being aware of their
limitations.
This does not mean that you act with
your
fingers crossed. No, you fully engage,
but
with the awareness that - the ultimate
wager
in the almost Pascalian sense - is
not simply
that this act will succeed, but that
the
very failure of this act will trigger
a much
more radical process.
Eric Dean Rasmussen:
Let’s shift gears a bit. I’d like you to
comment about the idea of “confronting
the
catastrophe,” which you present as
a strategy
for problem solving that inverts the
existential
premise that, at a particular historical
juncture, we must choose to act from
a range
of possibilities, even though in retrospect
the choices will appear to us as being
fully
determined. In The Puppet at the Dwarf,
you
explain the inversion as such, “Jean-Pierre
Dupey suggests that we should confront
the
catastrophe: we should first perceive
it
as our fate, as unavoidable, and then
projecting
ourselves into it, adopting its standpoint,
we should retroactively insert into
its past
(the past of the future) counterfactual
possibilities...
upon which we then act today” (164).
You
then suggest that Adorno and Horkheimer’s
critical theory provides a “a supreme
case
of the reversal of positive into negative
destiny” (164). How does Dupey’s strategy
of confronting the catastrophe specifically
relate to the outlook adopted by the
Adorno
and Horkheimer of the Dialectic of
Enlightenment?
When one reads “The Culture Industry:
Enlightenment
as Mass Deception” today, its diagnosis
appears
strikingly prescient, yet at times
uncannily
naïve in its implicit conviction that
the
hegemony of the culture industry had
nearly
reached a crescendo point back in the
1940s.14 Did Adorno and Horkheimer neglect to imagine
a sufficiently catastrophic or dystopian
future?
Slavoj Zizek:
I can only give you an extremely unsatisfying
and naïve answer, which is that Adorno
and
Horkheimer’s formal logic was correct.
The
whole project in The Dialectic of Enlightenment
is “let’s paint the ultimate outcome
of the
administered world as unavoidable,
as catastrophe,
for this is the only way to effectively
counteract
it.” Adorno and Horkheimer had the
right
insight; I agree with their formal
procedure,
but as for the positive content, I
think
it’s a little bit too light. Although
all
is not as bad as it might appear. Let
me
give you an interesting anecdote, which
may
amuse you. Officially, for the youth
generation
the standard position is “Adorno is
bad;
he hated jazz. Marcuse is good; solidarity
with the students and so on.” I know
people
in Germany who knew Adorno and I know
people,
such as Fred Jameson, who knew Marcuse.
Marcuse
was much nastier. To make a long story
short,
Marcuse was a conscious manipulator.
Marcuse
wanted to be popular with students,
so he
superficially flirted with them. Privately,
he despised them. Fred Jameson was
Marcuse’s
student in San Diego, and he told me
how
he brought to Marcuse a Rolling Stones
album.
Marcuse’s reaction: Total aggressive
dismissal;
he despised it. With Adorno, interestingly
enough, you always have this margin
of curiosity.
He was tempted, but how does something
become
a hit? Is it really true that the hitmaking
process is totally manipulated. For
example,
if you look in the Introduction to
Music
Sociology, in the chapter on popular
music,
Adorno argues that a hit cannot be
totally
planned. There are some magic explosions
of quality here and there. Adorno was
much
more refined and much more open at
this level.
My answer, then, would be this vulgar
one.
Adorno and Horkheimer’s formal strategy
was
the correct one, but my main counterargument,
which I develop a bit further in my
Deleuze
book, is that the key enigma concerning
the
failure of critical theory was their
total
ignorance and avoidance of the phenomena
of Stalinism. I know, I did my homework;
You have this general theory, which
was very
fashionable in the 1930s, of how all
big
systems - fascism, Stalinism - they
approach
the same model of total state control,
blah,
blah, blah, end of liberal capitalism.
Then
you have Marcuse’s very strange book,
Soviet
Marxism, which is totally dispassionate
and
very strange. Then you have some of
the neo-Habermasians,
like Andrew Arato, and so on, but they
don’t
so much advance a positive theory of
Stalinism.
What they do instead is this civil
society
stuff, which I think is of very limited
usefulness.
Of course, civil society was a big
motto
in the last years of real socialism
as a
site of resistance. But from the very
beginning,
it was ambiguous. For example, in Russia,
Vladimir Zhirinovsky - alright now
he’s a
clown, but... If there is a civil society
phenomenon, it’s Zhirinovsky. 15 It’s the same in Slovenia. Quite often,
if I were to choose between the state
and
civil society, I’m on the side of the
state.
Then you have in Adorno and Horkheimer,
in their private letters, these kind
of aggressive
statements, but with no theory. Now
isn’t
this an incredible thing - the dialectic
of Aufklärung - the idea being the
project
of Aufklärung, of emancipation. The
supreme
question should be why did Marxism
go wrong?
But the Frankfurt School was too focused
on anti-Semitism and Nazism to ask
this question.
How could they have ignored this? Even
Habermas,
he only has this totally boring, unsatisfying
theory of belated modernization. The
idea
being that we don’t have anything to
learn
from the East; it was a deadlock; the
East
has to catch up with us. It’s not surprising,
then, that Habermas is very unpopular
in
ex-East Germany, because basically
his lesson
is the worst West European appropriation:
we don’t have anything to learn from
you,
you have to join us. Habermas explicitly
rejects any notion that any positive
could
emerge from the reunification of the
two
Germanys as being potentially right-wing
revisionism. The idea being that such
thought
can be functionalized, used by a right-wing,
anti-American, anti-liberal, anti-Western-democracy
rhetoric. So, again, this is my big
problem
with this idea of the dialectic of
enlightenment.
Although there is, of course, an element
of truth in this basic insight that
so-called
permissive societies can also have
forms
of domination, what was later expressed
by
Marcuse’s terms, “repressive tolerance,”
“repressive desublimation,” nonetheless,
they do it via a kind of false shortcut.
The way they do it is basically, “Oh,
there
is something wrong there. The apparatus
of
the dialectic of Aufklärung, this basic
idea
of instrumental reason, domination
over nature,
and so on.” Something wrong there.
The analysis
is not strong, not concrete enough.
If the
problem was “how did the dialectic
of Aufklärung
go wrong?” the focus should’ve been
on Stalinism.
I say this, and people accuse me of
Leninist-Stalinism,
but no, sorry, I am from the East,
I know
what shit it was. I have no nostalgia
for
Stalinism. In simplistic terms, the
paradox
is that it’s a relatively easy game
to assess
fascism. Hitler was bad guy who wanted
to
do some bad things, and really did
many bad
things. So, ok, with all the complexity,
how did it function? The situation
in Nazi
Germany is fairly clear. But, my god,
with
the October Revolution, with Lenin,
it’s
more complicated. Sorry, but if you
read
the reports, how did Lenin succeed,
against
even the majority of the politburo?
There
was a tremendous low-level explosion.
People
down below wanted more. However, the
revolution
was twisted, there was an emancipatory
explosion.
The difficulty is thinking this explosion
together with what happened later and
not
playing any of the easy, Trotskyite
games.
If only Lenin were to live two years
longer,
were to make the pact with Trotsky,
blah,
blah, blah. I don’t buy this. No, the
problem
is how, as a result of first the socialist
revolution, you get a system that at
a certain
level was, in naïve terms, much more
irrational.
For example, take my mental experiment.
Compare two ordinary guys, in Germany
and
the Soviet Union, in 1937, let’s say.
First
the German. Ok, a couple of provisos,
are
necessary, I know. First, let’s say
you are
not a Jew, not a communist, and you
don’t
have accidental enemies in the Nazi
apparatus.
Now, with these conditions met, if
you didn’t
meddle with politics, of course, you
could
live a relatively safe life. Incidentally,
to give you some proof, there is a
biography
of Adorno that came out. Did you know
that
Adorno was going back to Germany until
1937?
This gives you a slightly different
image
of Germany. But not in the Soviet Union.
Wasn’t it the case that 1937 was the
high
point of the purges? I mean, the fear
was
universal, literally anybody could
be exterminated.
You know, you didn’t have this minimal
safety
of, you know, if I duck down, if I
don’t
stick out, I may survive. Ha, Ha! No,
under
Comrade Stalin, no way, no way! [Chuckles]
So, isn’t this, my god, calling, calling
for a kind of refined analysis? And,
shit,
you don’t find it there. That’s, for
me,
the tragedy of critical theory.
Again, it’s even more ridiculous, with
Habermas,
living in West Germany. It was across
the
street from the GDR, but he simply
treated
it as a non-existent country. East
Germany
didn’t exist for him. Now, isn’t this
a symptom
of some serious theoretical flaw? And
this
is why I think Habermas is fundamentally
a failure. He has this model of enlightened,
modernity as an unfinished project
- we should
go on - it’s not yet fully realized,
blah,
blah, blah. Sorry, I don’t think this
is
a strong enough analytic apparatus
to equate
fascism with Stalinism, because they
didn’t
fully realize the enlightenment project.
Again, we still lack an adequate theory
of
Stalinism.
You know who comes closest to my position
here? The so-called revisionists scholars
of the Soviet Era, like Shelia Fitzpatrick.
Some of the more radical anti-communist
historians
try to dismiss them, saying they try
to whitewash
the horror, but I don’t think so. They
paint
the horror. I’ve read Fitzpatrick’s
book
- it’s wonderful, in a horrible sense
- Everyday
Stalinism. 16 It doesn’t go into excessively big topics.
She limits herself to Moscow. It asks
a simple
question: what did it mean? Not if
you were
a top nomenklatura and caught in the
purges.
How did Stalinism function at an everyday
level? What movies did you watch? Where
did
you go shopping? What kind of apartment
did
you live in? How did it function? Historians
are starting to ask the right questions.
You know, you get a pretty horrible
image
of the extremely chaotic nature of
life under
Stalin.
Everybody emphasizes how there was
a big
purge in 1936–37, when one-and-a-half
million
people were thrown out of the Communist
party.
Yes, but one year later one million,
two-hundred
thousand people were readmitted. Now,
I’m
not saying it wasn’t so bad. I’m just
saying
that the process was much more chaotic.
There
is one ingenious insight by Fitzpatrick.
The game Stalin played was the pure
superego
game; Stalinism was Kafkaesque in the
sense
that it wasn’t totalitarian. Ok, it
was,
ultra-totalitarian, but not in the
superficial
sense, where you get clear orders that
must
be obeyed. Stalin played a much more
tricky
game. Take collectivization. From the
top,
you received an order, say, “Cossacks
should
be liquidated as a class.” It was not
stated
clearly what this order meant - dispossess
them, kill them etc. That ambiguity
was part
of Stalin’s logic. Being afraid of
being
denounced as too soft, local cadres
went
to extremes, and then, the interesting
irony
is that the only positive concrete
intervention
of Stalin was his famous dizziness
with success.
Here, he would say, “No, comrades,
we should
respect legalities.” Stalin’s obscenity
was
that he put in this kind of abstract,
superego
injunction which threw you into a panic,
and then he appeared as a moderate.
Eric Dean Rasmussen:
My final question might be impossibly
broad,
but it is one that I know interests
many
of your readers. Can you provide a
concise
account of the relationship that you
see
between Hegel and Lacan’s thought?
Do you
see a direct historical progression
from
Hegel’s theory of subjectivity to the
Lacanian
model of the barred subject and the
nonexistence
of the Big Other?
Slavoj Zizek:
Ok, ha, ha! I will give you a punchline.
If you were to ask me at gunpoint,
like Hollywood
producers who are too stupid to read
books
and say, “give me the punchline,” and
were
to demand, “Three sentences. What are
you
really trying to do?” I would say,
Screw
ideology. Screw movie analyses. What
really
interests me is the following insight:
if
you look at the very core of psychoanalytic
theory, of which even Freud was not
aware,
it's properly read death drive - this
idea
of beyond the pleasure principle, self-sabotaging,
etc. - the only way to read this properly
is to read it against the background
of the
notion of subjectivity as self-relating
negativity
in German Idealism. That is to say,
I just
take literally Lacan’s indication that
the
subject of psychoanalysis is the Cartesian
cogito - of course, I would add, as
reread
by Kant, Schelling, and Hegel. I am
here
very old fashioned. I still think that
basically
this - the problematic of radical evil
and
so on - is philosophy, and all the
rest is
a footnote. [Chuckles]. I think that
philosophy
is something for which Spinoza laid
the ground,
but Spinoza’s edifice must be kicked
out.
Then it’s Kant transcendentalism, which
is,
I think, a much more radical notion
than
people are aware, because it totally
turns
around the relationship between infinity
and finitude. Kant’s fundamental idea,
which
was correctly addressed by Heidegger,
is
that infinity itself is a category
of finitude.
It’s something which can only be understood
from the horizon of our finitude. Then
you
get Schelling, with this tremendous
idea
of historicity, the fall, temporality,
of
this tension within God. Schelling,
I think,
provided the only consistent answer
to the
question of how you could have, at
the same
time, evil and so on - not this cheap
theodicy
- and how to account for evil without
dualism.
Then, of course, you get Hegel. Of
course,
things are more complex. Hegel didn’t
know
what he was doing. You have to interpret
him.
Let me give you a metaphoric formula.
You
know the term Deleuze uses for reading
philosophers
- anal interpretation, buggering them.
Deleuze
says that, in contrast to other interpreters,
he anally penetrates the philosopher,
because
it’s immaculate conception. You produce
a
monster. I’m trying to do what Deleuze
forgot
to do - to bugger Hegel, with Lacan
[chuckles]
so that you get monstrous Hegel, which
is,
for me, precisely the underlying radical
dimension of subjectivity which then,
I think,
was missed by Heidegger. But again,
the basic
idea being this mutual reading, this
mutual
buggering [Chuckles] of this focal
point,
radical negativity and so on, of German
Idealism
with the very fundamental (Germans
have this
nice term, grundeswig) insight of psychoanalysis.
It’s a very technical, modest project,
but
I believe in it. All other things are
negotiable.
I don’t care about them. You can take
movies
from me, you can take everything. You
cannot
take this from me. And let me go even
further.
This is horrible. If you will say,
ok, but
even here no let’s go over binary logic.
Do you ultimately use Hegel to reactualize
Lacan, or the other way around? I would
say
the other way around. What really interests
me is philosophy, and for me, psychoanalysis
is ultimately a tool to reactualize,
to render
actual for today’s time, the legacy
of German
Idealism. And here, with all of my
Marxist
flirtings I’m pretty arrogant. I think
you
cannot understand Marx’s Capital, its
critique
of the political economy, without detailed
knowledge of Hegelian categories. But
ultimately
if I am to choose just one thinker,
it’s
Hegel. He’s the one for me. And here
I’m
totally and unabashedly naïve. He may
be
a white, dead, man or whatever the
wrong
positions are today, but that’s where
I stand.
—September 29, 2003, Chicago, Illinois
Notes
1 See Geert Lovink, "Civil Society, Fanaticism,
and Digital Reality: An Interview with
Slavoj
Zizek" in Uncanny Networks (Cambridge:
MIT Press, 2002) p. 39.
2 See Slavoj Zizek, "Parallax,"
in the London Review of Books 25.22.
(Nov.
20, 2003), http://www.lrb.co.uk/v25/n22/zize01_.html.
Zizek's review of Mankell's The Return
of
the Dancing Master discusses the effect
of
globalization on the locale of recent
detective
novels.
3 See Slavoj Zizek, The Puppet and the Dwarf:
The Perverse Core of Christianity (Cambridge,
MA: MIT Press, 2003), p. 5. Hereafter
all
citations from The Puppet and the Dwarf
will
be cited parenthetically as (PD) followed
by the page number.
4 See Leap of Faith, dir. Richard Pierce, Paramount,
1992.
5 See Slavoj Zizek, “Learning to Love Leni
Riefenstahl,” In These Times Sept.
10, 2003),
http://inthesetimes.com/comments.php?
id=359_0_4_0_M.
6 See Giorgio Agamben, Homo Sacer: Sovereign
Power and Bare Life (Stanford University
Press, 1998).
7 See Georges Sorel, Reflections on Violence
(New York: Cambridge University Press,
2000).
8 See Slavoj Zizek, Repeating Lenin (Small
Press Distribution 2002), “Can Lenin
Tell
Us About Freedom Today?” in Rethinking
Marxism,
13.2 (Summer, 2001), and “Seize the
day:
Lenin's legacy, London Review of Books,
24.
14 (25 July 2002). Zizek edited and
wrote
the introduction to Lenin’s Revolution
at
the Gates: A Selection of Writings
from February
to October 1917 (New York: Verso, 2002).
9 See William Greider, “The Soul of Capitalism,”
The Nation 277. (Sept. 29, 2003). http://www.thenation.com/doc.mhtml?
i=20030929&s=greider
10 See Robin Blackburn, Banking on Death: Or,
Investing in Life: The History and
Future
of Pension Funds, (New York: Verso,
2002).
11 Favelas are the squatter settlements, illegally
established on vacant land by the poor,
that
lie on the margins of Brazilian cities.
12 See Jeremy Rifkin, The Age of Access: The
New Culture of Hypercapitalism, Where
all
of Life is a Paid-For Experience, (New
York:
J. P Tarcher, 2001).
13 See also Slavoj Zizek, Welcome to the Desert
of the Real (New York: Verso, 2002),
p. 88.
In “From Homo Sucker to Homo Sacer,”
the
Kierkegaardian resonances of Zizek’s
claim
are even more explicit, because in
his original
formulation Zizek uses the verb “commit”
rather than “engage.”
14 See Max Horkheimer and Theodor W. Adorno,
Dialectic of Enlightenment (New York:
Continuum,
1972).
15 Vladimir Volfovich Zhirinovsky is one of
the founders of Liberal Democratic
Party
of Russia (LDPR) which emerged in 1989
and
advances a far-right, nationalist platform
that has included promises to reclaim
territory
in Finland and Alaska from Russia’s
imperial
empire and to use nuclear weapons.
Although
Zhirinovksy has been dismissed as a
fascist,
a xenophobe, and an anti-Semite whose
extremist
views threaten democracy in Russia,
he and
the LDPR have attracted popular support.
The LDPR won the largest share—23%—of
the
popular vote and 15% of the seats in
the
1993 federal assembly election. Zhirinovsky
placed fifth in the 2000 presidential
election.
16 See Shelia Fitzpatrick, Everyday Stalinism:
Ordinary Life in Extraordinary Times:
Soviet
Russia in the 1930s (New York: Oxford
University
Press, 1999).
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