Wednesday 24 December 2014

Freedom, not profit: Ursula Le Guin at the N.B.A.s

Photograph: Dan Tuffs/Getty [El Pais] 

The impeccable Ursula Le Guin at the National Book Awards back in November: brilliantly critical, eloquently storming, and insightful as always. I wouldn't expect anything less from her of course, but to address her speech just as the best of the year is an understatement; there is so much more than that here. 




Thank you Neil, and to the givers of this beautiful reward, my thanks from the heart. My family, my agent, editors, know that my being here is their doing as well as mine, and that the beautiful reward is theirs as much as mine. And I rejoice at accepting it for, and sharing it with, all the writers who were excluded from literature for so long, my fellow authors of fantasy and science fiction—writers of the imagination, who for the last 50 years watched the beautiful rewards go to the so-called realists.

I think hard times are coming when we will be wanting the voices of writers who can see alternatives to how we live now and can see through our fear-stricken society and its obsessive technologies to other ways of being, and even imagine some real grounds for hope. We will need writers who can remember freedom. Poets, visionaries—the realists of a larger reality.

Right now, I think we need writers who know the difference between the production of a market commodity and the practice of an art. Developing written material to suit sales strategies in order to maximize corporate profit and advertising revenue is not quite the same thing as responsible book publishing or authorship. (Thank you, brave applauders.)

Yet I see sales departments given control over editorial; I see my own publishers in a silly panic of ignorance and greed, charging public libraries for an ebook six or seven times more than they charge customers. We just saw a profiteer try to punish a publisher for disobedience and writers threatened by corporate fatwa, and I see a lot of us, the producers who write the books, and make the books, accepting this. Letting commodity profiteers sell us like deodorant, and tell us what to publish and what to write. (Well, I love you too, darling.)

Books, you know, they’re not just commodities. The profit motive often is in conflict with the aims of art. We live in capitalism. Its power seems inescapable. So did the divine right of kings. Any human power can be resisted and changed by human beings. Resistance and change often begin in art, and very often in our art—the art of words.

I have had a long career and a good one. In good company. Now here, at the end of it, I really don’t want to watch American literature get sold down the river. We who live by writing and publishing want—and should demand—our fair share of the proceeds. But the name of our beautiful reward is not profit. Its name is freedom.

Thank you.

Saturday 13 December 2014

Dancing against the darkness


This is a picture of the protest against the eviction of the Caferağa Neighborhood House, a squat in Istanbul’s Kadıköy district. It was taken by Ozan Kose and published in TIME.  

Tuesday 9 December 2014

Nikos Romanos, neoliberalism, and death

[Dromographos]
 
21-year-old Greek anarchist Nikos Romanos is on hunger strike since 10 November, because the authorities deny him his legal right to be granted educational leaves of absence from prison to follow his university courses. He is currently held in hospital in a critical condition, while a thriving solidarity movement is holding protests and demonstrations throughout Greece and in many European cities. Romanos' legitimate demand is significant as such, but at the same time the fact that his life is at risk highlights that what is at stake in this case has wider consequences: succinctly put, Romanos' incarcerated body is inscribed in the order of power which has emerged in crisis-ridden Greece.

The Greek case has been viewed by Panayota Gounari as a neoliberal experiment resonating with social necrophilia; the latter is related to austerity policies resulting in "the physical, material, social and financial destruction of human beings: policies that promote death, whether physical or symbolic. The goal of the ongoing capitalist offensive in the form of a neoliberal doctrine is to destroy symbolically and physically the most vulnerable strata of the population". This condition has a two-fold manifestation. On the one hand, it is expressed in physical terms through the degeneration of the human body in a context of increased impoverishment, unemployment and homelessness that involves malnutrition, illness, and suicide.  

On the other hand, it also finds a political expression in forms that Gounari understands as proto-fascist, such as urgent legislative decrees that violate the constitution; institutionalized instability relating to laws that keep on changing or are applied with retroactive effect; the degradation and devaluation of all things public; the restriction of the right to protest, such as prohibiting demonstrations in the centre of Athens during official visits; the increased exponential violence employed by the police, including the torture of arrested protesters; and the connection between the police and the neo-Nazi party Golden Dawn, which is responsible for violent paramilitary attacks, including the murders of the Pakistani immigrant Shehzad Luqman and the antifascist musician Pavlos Fyssas.

The pivotal political implication of such an account is perhaps reflected best through Giorgio Agamben's concept of the state of exception; a politically and legally ambiguous condition primarily signified by the suspension of the rule of ordinary law (State of Exception, Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 2005). And perhaps there is no better illustration of such a condition in contemporary Greece than the treatment of the migrant population and the human rights violations that are associated with it. Migrants have been scapegoated as 'invaders' of the country, as a 'bomb' in the foundations of society, and as a 'hygiene bomb' as well, by government officials; vast numbers of migrants have been rounded up in massive police 'sweep' operations based on racial profiling; undocumented migrants are being held in police stations and newly found detention centres under inhuman conditions; and most importantly, their irregular but constantly prolonged and unspecified period of incarceration has led to the materialisation of indefinite detention.

Hunger strikes, suicide attempts, desperate uprisings that are violently suppressed by the police, and deaths of detainees because of illnesses left untreated, are far from rare in the detention centres. Simultaneously, the Aegean Sea is becoming the grave of countless migrants and refugees fleeing war; and the illegal push back operations of the Greek authorities are another manifestation of how expendable migrant lives have become. Agamben has put forward the term homo sacer to address the human subject who has been stripped of their rights, whose life may be taken away with impunity, and whose position is structurally symmetrical to that of the sovereign: "the sovereign is the one with respect to whom all men are potentially homines sacri, and homo sacer is the one with respect to whom all men act as sovereigns" (Homo sacer: Sovereign power and bare life, Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 1998, p. 53). And migrant bodies in Greece have indeed been drowned, killed, tortured, stabbed, shot at, or beaten; violence has been inflicted on them by ordinary people, such as their employers; in many cases by organised fascist gangs; and often by law enforcement agents, in the vast majority of cases with impunity.

In other words, the era of the crisis has given rise to an economic, political, legal and institutional context in which sovereignty is defined by its ability to determine life or death and produce expendable and disposable bodies, as exemplified by the subjugation of migrant lives to the power of death. Achille Mbembe has addressed this form of subjugation as necropolitics; and he has commented that "under conditions of necropower, the lines between resistance and suicide, sacrifice and redemption, martyrdom and freedom are blurred" (Necropolitics, Public Culture, 15.1, 2003).
  
These are the particularly demanding, and dangerous in their blurriness, terms under which Nikos Romanos has gone on hunger strike; to use the body as a "barricade", as his exact words are, is to reclaim it from the sphere of sovereignty and redefine it as a site of resistance. And this is the reason why this case requires urgent and substantial support; not only because the demand is justified, but also because the body is the very site of struggle between the power of death and, hopefully, the powers of life. And that struggle may begin on an individual basis, but it can only be fought, and hopefully won, on a collective basis. So as to literally avert death.



International coverage:



Statements by Nikos Romanos:


Twitter hashtag:



Online petitions:



International solidarity:

 


Sunday 30 November 2014

Antifascist demonstration in London, 29.11.2014


Holland Park, 29.11.2014

Antifascists from various British and Greek organizations promptly and effectively held a demonstration outside the Greek embassy in London yesterday. The puprose was to block a scheduled fascist gathering supporting Golden Dawn, the Greek neo-Nazis who have been prosecuted as a criminal organization, and will stand trial for crimes such as the murder of the antifascist musician Pavlos Fyssas and violent attacks against migrants. Back to the embassy: the antifascist mobilization overshadowed and outnumbered the few neo-Nazis who showed up late and quickly returned to the sewers they came from. Well done and many thanks to everyone who participated in the antifascist demonstration.


See also: 


On Cultural Synergy:

Tuesday 11 November 2014

Αs little afraid of conflict with the powers that be


But, if constructing the future and settling everything for all times are not our affair, it is all the more clear what we have to accomplish at present: I am referring to ruthless criticism of all that exists, ruthless both in the sense of not being afraid of the results it arrives at and in the sense of being just as little afraid of conflict with the powers that be.


Saturday 1 November 2014

Michael Löwy: 10 theses on the far right in Europe



I. The European elections confirmed a tendency that has been apparent for some years across most of the continent: the spectacular rise of the far right. This is a phenomenon without precedent since the 1930s. In many countries this movement obtained between 10 and 20 percent of the vote; today in three countries (France, United Kingdom, Denmark) is has already reached 25 to 30 percent. Moreover, its influence is greater than its own electorate: its ideas contaminate also the ‘classical’ right and even part of the social-neoliberal left. The French case is the most serious, with the Front National’s breakthrough exceeding even the most pessimistic predictions. As the website Mediapart wrote in a recent editorial, ‘it’s five minutes to midnight’.

II. This far right is very diverse, a variety ranging from openly neo-Nazi parties like ‘Golden Dawn’ in Greece to bourgeois forces who are perfectly well integrated into the institutional political game, such as Switzerland’s UDC. What they have in common is their chauvinist nationalism, xenophobia, racism, hatred of immigrants – particularly ‘non-Europeans’ – and Roma (the continent’s oldest people), Islamophobia and anti-communism. To that we could add, in many cases, anti-semitism, homophobia, misogyny, authoritarianism, disdain for democracy and Europhobia. On other questions – for example their stances for or against neoliberalism or secularism – this movement is more divided.

III. It would be mistaken to believe that fascism and anti-fascism are phenomena belonging to the past. Of course, today we do not see mass fascist parties comparable to the NSDAP in the Germany of the 1930s, but already in that period fascism was not limited to this model only: Spanish Francoism and Portuguese Salazarism were very different from the Italian and German models. A significant part of today’s European far right has a directly fascist and/or neo-Nazi framework: this being the case for Greece’s ‘Golden Dawn’, Hungary’s Jobbik and the Ukrainian parties Svoboda and Right Sector; but also, in a different way, France’s Front National, Austria’s FPÖ, and Belgium’s Vlaams Belang, among others, whose founding leaders had close links with historical fascism and the forces that collaborated with the Third Reich. In other countries – such as the Netherlands, Switzerland, the UK and Denmark – the far-right parties do not have fascist origins but do share in their racism, xenophobia and Islamophobia. One of the arguments used to show that the far right has changed and no longer has much to do with fascism is its acceptance of parliamentary democracy and the electoral route to power. Though we might remember that a certain Adolf Hitler made it to the German Chancellery by a legal vote in the Reichstag, and that Marshal Pétain was elected Head of State by the French Parliament. If the Front National made it to power by electoral means – a hypothesis that can sadly no longer be dismissed – what would remain of democracy in France?

IV. The economic crisis that has riven Europe since 2008 has almost everywhere (with the exception of Greece) favoured the far right more than the radical left. The two forces are totally out of proportion, contrary to the European situation of the 1930s where in many countries the anti-fascist left rose in parallel to fascism. The current far right has without doubt profited from the crisis, though this does not explain everything: in Spain and Portugal, two of the countries hit hardest by the crisis, the far right remains only marginal. And in Greece, though ‘Golden Dawn’ has enjoyed exponential growth, it has very much been left in the wake of Syriza, the Coalition of the Radical Left. In Switzerland and Austria, two countries largely spared by the crisis, the racist far right often gets above 20 percent support. Thus we should avoid the economistic explanations often advanced by the left.

V. Historical factors have without doubt played some role: a long anti-semitic tradition widespread in certain countries; the persistence of those currents who collaborated during the Second World War; and the colonial culture that impregnates attitudes and behaviours long after decolonisation – not only in the former empires, but in almost all European countries. All these factors are at work in France and contribute to explaining the success of Le Pen’s party.

VI. The concept of ‘populism’ employed by certain political scientists, the media and even part of the left, is wholly inadequate to explaining this phenomenon, serving only to sow confusion. If in the Latin America of the 1930s to ‘60s the term populism corresponded to something quite specific – Vargas-ism, Peronism, etc. – its European usage from the 1990s onward is ever more vague and imprecise. Populism is defined as ‘a political position that takes the side of the people against the elites’, which goes for almost any political party or movement. When applied to the parties of the far right, this pseudo-concept leads – whether deliberately or not – to legitimising them, making them more acceptable, or even appealing – who isn’t for the people against the elites? – while carefully avoiding the troubling terms racism, xenophobia, fascism, and far right. ‘Populism’ is also used in a deliberately mystifying fashion by neoliberal ideologues in order to make an amalgam between the far right and the radical left, characterised as ‘right-wing populism’ and ‘left-wing populism’, since they are both opposed to neoliberal policies, ‘Europe’, etc.

VII. The left as a whole, with only a few exceptions, has severely underestimated this danger. It did not see the brown wave coming, and thus did not see the need to take the initiative of an anti-fascist mobilisation. For certain currents of the left, seeing the far right as nothing more than a side-effect of the crisis and of unemployment, it is these causes that must be attacked and not the fascist phenomenon itself. Such typically economistic reasoning has disarmed the left in the face of the far right’s racist, xenophobic and nationalist ideological offensive.

VIII. No social group is immune to the brown plague. The ideas of the far right, in particular racism, have contaminated a significant part of not only the petty bourgeoisie and the unemployed, but also the working class and young people. This is particularly striking in the French case. These ideas have no relation to the reality of immigration: the vote for the Front National, for example, was particularly high in certain rural areas that have never seen a single immigrant. And Roma immigrants, recently the object of a hysterical racist campaign that made some impression – with the generous participation of the ‘socialist’ Interior Minister of the time, Mr. Manuel Valls – number less than twenty thousand across the whole of France.

IX. Another ‘classic’ left-wing analysis of fascism is that which explains it essentially as an instrument of big capital to crush the revolution and the workers’ movement. Since today the workers’ movement is very much weakened and the revolutionary threat non-existent, big capital has no interest in supporting far-right movements and thus the risk of a brown offensive is non-existent. This is, once again, an economistic reading that does not take account of the autonomy of any political phenomenon – electors can, indeed, choose a party that does not have the big bourgeoisie’s backing – and one that seems to ignore the fact that big capital can accommodate to all sorts of political regimes without too much soul-searching. 

X. There is no magic recipe for fighting the far right. We must be inspired – with a proper critical distance – by the anti-fascist traditions of the past, but we must also know how to innovate in order to respond to the new forms of this phenomenon. We must know how to combine local initiatives with solidly organised and structured unitary socio-political and cultural movements, at both the national and continental levels. It is sometimes possible to unite with the ghost of ‘republicanism’, but any organised anti-fascist movement will only be effective and credible if it is driven by forces situated outside of the dominant neoliberal consensus. This means a struggle that cannot be limited within the borders of a single country, but must be organised at the level of Europe as a whole. The struggle against racism, as well as solidarity with its victims, is one among the essential components of this resistance.


Wednesday 29 October 2014

Listening to the rain but hearing something else



Mr. Verlaine, guitarist and songwriter for the 1970's band Television, has kept a low profile since he became the unlikely guitar god of the punk era, playing not rapid-fire bursts but, in counterpoint with his band mate Richard Lloyd's guitar, sharp, sinuous improvisations more akin to free jazz than the Ramones. Patti Smith once described his sound as "like a thousand bluebirds screaming." 



I remember how the darkness doubled
I recall lightning struck itself
I was listening, listening to the rain
I was hearing, hearing something else

Life in the hive puckered up my night
The kiss of death, the embrace of life
There I stand 'neath the Marquee Moon 
Just waiting

I spoke to a man down at the tracks
And I asked him how he don't go mad
He said "Look here junior, don't you be so happy
And for Heaven's sake, don't you be so sad"

Life in the hive puckered up my night,
The kiss of death, the embrace of life.
There I stand neath the Marquee Moon
Hesitating

Well a Cadillac, i
t pulled out of the graveyard
Pulled up to me, all they said,  "Get in"
Then the Cadillac, it puttered back into the graveyard
Me, I got out again

Life in the hive puckered up my night,
The kiss of death, the embrace of life.
There I stand neath the Marquee Moon
I ain't waiting

I remember how the darkness doubled
I recall lightning struck itself
I was listening, listening to the rain
I was hearing, hearing something else

Monday 20 October 2014

Shaun Tan: Our Tuesday afternoon reading group





Reading can bring us together as a shared passion, but also reveal how highly individual we are. I could think of no better way to represent this than painting an oddball reading group comprised of very different creatures, who likely have very different perspectives, tastes and opinions. Yet they are bound together by the kind of universal ideas and feelings that books can offer; here taking advantage of the last of the afternoon light in outer suburbia. 

Thursday 16 October 2014

Ray K. Metzker: City Whispers


Ray K. Metzker 


[In] Metzker's early 1980's series City Whispers [...] anonymous urban dwellers glide through contrasting beams of brilliant light and impenetrable shadow. His 1983 image from Philadelphia of a walking man followed closely by a woman, adjacent but never together, demonstrates Metzker's exquisite ability to caress with light while dividing with shadow.

In City Whispers, people often sit, stand and move in areas of extreme light and extreme darkness. Often Metzker will use light to barely illuminate a figure in the darkness, much the way a cinematographer like John Alton would create a film noir. Other times, a group of riders waiting for a bus will stand near an awning and be completely bathed in a square of light, as though they were on a stage. Even in groups, Metzker’s Philadelphians are isolated, remote, sculptural figures.