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Self-deceptions
On being tolerant - and smug
When you are bombarded by claims that in our post-ideological cynical
era nobody believes any more in the proclaimed ideals, when you encounter
a person who claims he is cured of any beliefs, accepting social reality
the way it really is, you should always counter such claims with a simple,
yet intricate question: What is your gadget, your favorite illusionary
escape-hatch?
By Slavoj Zizek
Is the Balkan really an island of primitivism, exempted from this modernization?
The case of Muslims as an ethnic, not merely religious, group in Bosnia
is exemplary: during the entire history of Yugoslavia, Bosnia was the
place of potential tension and dispute, the locale in which the struggle
between Serbs and Croats for the dominant role was fought. The problem
was that the largest group in Bosnia were neither the Orthodox Serbs
nor the Catholic Croats, but Muslims whose ethnic origins were always
disputed - are they Serbs or Croats. (This role of Bosnia even left
a trace in idiom: in all ex-Yugoslav nations, the expression "So
Bosnia is quiet!" was used in order to signal that any threat of
a conflict was successfully defused.) In order to forestall this focus
of potential (and actual) conflicts, the ruling Communist imposed in
the 60s a miraculously simple invention: they proclaimed Muslims an
autochthonous ETHNIC community, not just a religious group, so that
Muslims were able to avoid the pressure to identify themselves either
as Serbs or as Croats. What was so in the beginning a pragmatic political
artifice, gradually caught on, Muslims effectively started to perceive
themselves as a nation, systematically manufacturing their tradition,
etc. However, even today, there remains an element of a reflected choice
in their identity: during the post-Yugoslav war in Bosnia, one was ultimately
forced to CHOOSE his/her ethnic identity - when a militia stopped a
person, asking him/her threateningly "Are you a Serb or a Muslim?",
the question did not refer to the inherited ethnic belonging, i.e. there
was always in it an echo of "Which side did you choose?" (say,
the movie director Emir Kusturica, coming from an ethnically mixed Muslim-Serb
family, has chosen the Serb identity).
The more general point to be made here is that the global reflexivization/mediatization
generates its own brutal immediacy whose figure was best captured
by Etienne Balibar's notion of excessive, non-functional cruelty as
a feature of contemporary life: a cruelty whose figures range from "fundamentalist"
racist and/or religious slaughter to the "senseless" outbursts
of violence performed by adolescents and the homeless in our megalopolises,
a violence one is tempted to call Id-Evil, a violence grounded
in no utilitarian or ideological reasons. All the talk about foreigners
stealing work from us or about the threat they represent to our Western
values should not deceive us: under closer examination, it soon becomes
clear that this talk provides a rather superficial secondary rationalization.
The answer we ultimately obtain from a skinhead is that it makes him
feel good to beat foreigners, that their presence disturbs him... What
we encounter here is indeed Id-Evil, i.e., the Evil structured
and motivated by the most elementary imbalance in the relationship between
the Ego and jouissance, by the tension between pleasure and the
foreign body of jouissance in the very heart of it. Id-Evil thus stages
the most elementary "short-circuit" in the relationship of
the subject to the primordially missing object-cause of his desire:
what "bothers" us in the "other" (Jew, Japanese,
African, Turk) is that he appears to entertain a privileged relationship
to the object - the other either possesses the object-treasure, having
snatched it away from us (which is why we don't have it), or he poses
a threat to our possession of the object. What one should propose here
is the ultimate identity of these "useless" and "excessive"
outbursts of violent immediacy, which display nothing but a pure and
naked ("non-sublimated") hatred of the Otherness, with the
global reflexivization of society; perhaps, the ultimate example of
this coincidence is the fate of psychoanalytic interpretation. Today,
the formations of the Unconscious (from dreams to hysterical symptoms)
have definitely lost their innocence and are thoroughly reflexivized:
the "free associations" of a typical educated analysand consist
for the most part of attempts to provide a psychoanalytic explanation
of their disturbances, so that one is quite justified in saying that
we have not only Jungian, Kleinian, Lacanian... interpretations of the
symptoms, but symptoms themselves which are Jungian, Kleinian, Lacanian...,
i.e. whose reality involves implicit reference to some psychoanalytic
theory. The unfortunate result of this global reflexivization of the
interpretation (everything becomes interpretation, the Unconscious interprets
itself) is that the analyst's interpretation itself loses its performative
"symbolic efficiency" and leaves the symptom intact in the
immediacy of its idiotic jouissance.
What happens in psychoanalytic treatment is strictly homologous to the
response of neo-Nazi skinhead who, when really pressed for the reasons
for his violence, suddenly starts to talk like social workers, sociologists
and social psychologists, quoting diminished social mobility, rising
insecurity, the disintegration of paternal authority, the lack of maternal
love in his early childhood - the unity of practice and its inherent
ideological legitimization disintegrates into raw violence and its impotent,
inefficient interpretation. This impotence of interpretation is also
one of the necessary obverses of the universalized reflexivity hailed
by the risk-society-theorists: it is as if our reflexive power can flourish
only insofar as it draws its strength and relies on some minimal "pre-reflexive"
substantial support which eludes its grasp, so that its universalization
comes at the price of its inefficiency, i.e., by the paradoxical reemergence
of the brute Real of "irrational" violence, impermeable and
insensitive to reflexive interpretation. So the more today's social
theory proclaims the end of Nature and/or Tradition and the rise of
the "risk society," the more the implicit reference to "nature"
pervades our daily discourse: even when we do not speak of the "end
of history," do we not put forward the same message when we claim
that we are entering a "post-ideological" pragmatic era, which
is another way of claiming that we are entering a post-political order
in which the only legitimate conflicts are ethnic/cultural conflicts?
Typically, in today's critical and political discourse, the term "worker"
disappeared from the vocabulary, substituted and/or obliterated by "immigrants
/immigrant workers: Algerians in France, Turks in Germany, Mexicans
in the USA/" - in this way, the class problematic of workers'
exploitation is transformed into the multiculturalist problematic
of the "intolerance of the Otherness," etc., and the excessive
investment of the multiculturalist liberals in protecting immigrants's
ethnic rights clearly draws its energy from the "repressed"
class dimension. Although Francis Fukuyama's thesis on the "end
of history" quickly fell into disrepute, we still silently presume
that the liberal-democratic capitalist global order is somehow the finally-found
"natural" social regime, we still implicitly conceive conflicts
in the Third World countries as a subspecies of natural catastrophies,
as outbursts of quasi-natural violent passions, or as conflicts based
on the fanatic identification to one's ethnic roots (and what is "the
ethnic" here if not again a codeword for nature?). And, again,
the key point is that this all-pervasive renaturalization is strictly
correlative to the global reflexivization of our daily lives.
Does, then, this mean that, today, "nobody believes"? One
of the postmodern ironies is the strange exchange between Europe and
Asia: at the very moment when, at the level of the "economic infrastructure,"
the European technology and capitalism are triumphing worldwide, at
the level of "ideological superstructure," the Judeo-Christian
legacy is threatened in the European space itself by the onslaught of
the New Age "Asiatic" thought, which, in its different guises,
from the "Western Buddhism" (today's counterpoint to Western
Marxism, as opposed to the "Asiatic" Marxism-Leninism) to
different "Taos," is establishing itself as the hegemonic
ideology of the global capitalism. Although "Western Buddhism"
presents itself as the remedy against the stressful tension of the capitalist
dynamics, allowing us to uncouple and retain the inner peace and Gelassenheit,
it actually functions as its perfect ideological supplement. One should
mention here the well-known topic of the "future schock,"
i.e. of how, today, people are no longer psychologically able to cope
with the dazzling rhythm of the technological development and the social
changes that accompany it - things simply move too fast, before one
can accustom oneself to an invention, this invention is already supplanted
by a new one, so that one more and more lacks the most elementary "cognitive
mapping." The recourse to Taoism or Buddhism offers a way out of
this predicament which definitely work better than the desperate escape
into old traditions: instead of trying to cope with the accelerating
rhythm of the technological progress and social changes, one should
rather renounce the very endeavor to retain control over what goes on,
rejecting it as the expression of the modern logic of domination - one
should, instead, "let oneself go," drift along, while retaining
an inner distance and indifference towards the mad dance of the accelerated
process, a distance based on the insight that all this social and technological
upheaval is ultimately just a non-substantial proliferation of semblances
which do not really concern the innermost kernel of our being... One
is almost tempted to resuscitate here the old infamous Marxist cliche
of religion as the "opium of the people," as the imaginary
supplement of the terrestrial misery: the "Western Buddhist"
meditative stance is arguably the most efficient way, for us, to fully
participate in the capitalist dynamics, while retaining the appearance
of mental sanity. If Max Weber were to live today, he would definitely
wrote a second, supplementary, volume to his Protestant Ethic,
entitled The Taoist Ethic and the Spirit of the Global Capitalism.
And, instead of playing the old game of the aggressive Islamic monotheism
against the "gentle" Buddhism, one should rather use the bombing
of the Bamiyan status to reflect on a more fundamental deadlock. It
is not only that Western Buddhism, this pop-cultural phenomenon preaching
inner distance and indifference towards the frantic pace of the market
competition, is arguably the most efficient way, for us, to fully participate
in the capitalist dynamics, while retaining the appearance of mental
sanity - in short, the paradigmatic ideology of late capitalism. One
should add that it is no longer possible to oppose this Western Buddhism
to its "authentic" Oriental version; the case of Japan delivers
here the conclusive evidence. Not only do we have today, among the Japanese
top managers, the wide-spread "corporate Zen" phenomenon;
in the whole of the last 150 years, Japan's rapid industrialization
and militarization, with its ethics of discipline and sacrifice, was
sustained by the large majority of Zen thinkers - who, today, knows
that D.T.Suzuki himself, the high guru of Zen in the America of the
60s, supported in his youth, in Japan of the 30s, the spirit of utter
discipline and militaristic expansion. There is no contradiction here,
no manipulative perversion of the authentic compassionate insight: the
attitude of total immersion into the self-less "now" of the
instant Enlightenment, in which all reflexive distance is lost and "I
am what I do," as C.S.Lewis put it, in short: in which absolute
discipline coincides with total spontaneity, perfectly legitimizes one
subordination to the militaristic social machine. Or, to put it in somewhat
simplified terms (which, however, just repeat the central ethical lesson
of Bhagavadgita): if the external reality is ultimately just
an ephemeral appearance, even the most horrifying crimes eventually
DO NOT MATTER.
"Western Buddhism" thus perfectly fits the fetishist
mode of ideology in our allegedly "post-ideological" era,
as opposed to its traditional symptomal mode, in which the ideological
lie which structures our perception of reality is threatened by symptoms
qua "returns of the repressed," cracks in the fabric
of the ideological lie. Fetish is effectively a kind of envers of the
symptom. That is to say, symptom is the exception which disturbs the
surface of the false appearance, the point at which the repressed truth
erupts, while fetish is the embodiment of the Lie which enables us to
sustain the unbearable truth. Let us take the case of the death of a
beloved person: when I "repress" this death, I try not to
think about it, but the repressed trauma persists and returns in the
symptoms. Say, after my beloved wife dies of the breast cancer, I try
to repress this fact by throwing myself into hard work or vivacious
social life, but then there is always something which reminds me of
her, I cannot escape her ghost haunting me. In the case of a fetish,
on the contrary, I "rationally" fully accept this death, I
am able to talk about her most painful moments in a cold and clear way,
because I cling to the fetish, to some feature that embodies for me
the disavowal of this death. In this sense, a fetish can play a very
constructive role of allowing us to cope with the harsh reality: fetishists
are not dreamers lost in their private worlds, they are thoroughly "realists,"
able to accept the way things effectively are - since they have their
fetish to which they can cling in order to cancel the full impact of
reality.
So, when we are bombarded by claims that in our post-ideological cynical
era nobody believes in the proclaimed ideals, when we encounter a person
who claims he is cured of any beliefs, accepting social reality the
way it really is, one should always counter such claims with the question:
OK, but where is the fetish which enables you to (pretend to) accept
reality "the way it is"? "Western Buddhism"
is such a fetish: it enables you to fully participate in the frantic
pace of the capitalist game, while sustaining the perception that you
are not really in it, that you are well aware how worthless this spectacle
is - what really matters to you is the peace of the inner Self to which
you know you can always withdraw.
27. August 2001
Leserbrief
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