July 16, 2008

History and history


This will not be a post about a specific chapter or even about Capital itself. Instead I want to contribute a few passages from Althusser's Reading Capital that might help or at least provoke the ongoing discussion about history in Marx that Max has mentioned in his posts.

Is Marx an empiricist, how can he access history, how does see the relationship between the present and past, how does he envision the passage of time and movements through it?

I recently finished the first of Althusser's essays, entitled "From Capital to Marx's Philosophy." Although I have heard/read that Althusser will say more about this in other essays - he seems very concerned with history in his philosophy - I can only provide a few passages from this latest one. The following do not seem unrelated to what Max has written about:


And while we are here, let us be clear: Marxism cannot for one moment discover or rediscover itself along the path of this empiricism, whether it claims to be materialist or sublimates itself in an idealism of the ante-predicative, of the 'original ground' or of 'praxis' -- in this idealism and in the concepts it has manufactured to play the star roles in its theatre. The concepts of origin, 'original ground', genesis and mediation should be regarded as suspect a priori : not only because they always more or less induce the ideology which has produced them, but because, produced solely for the use of this ideology, they are its nomads, always more or less carrying it with them. It is no accident that Sartre, and all those with none of his ability who feel a need to fill in the emptiness between 'abstract ' categories and the 'concrete ', abuse the terms origin, genesis and mediations so much. The function of the concept of origin, as in original sin, is to summarize in one word what has not to be thought in order to be able to think what one wants to think. The concept of genesis is charged with taking charge of, and masking, a production or mutation whose recognition would threaten the vital continuity of the empiricist schema of history. The concept of mediation is invested with one last role: the magical provision of post-stations in the empty space between theoretical principles and the 'concrete', as bricklayers make a chain to pass bricks. In every case, the functions are those of masks and theoretical impostures -- functions which may witness both to a real embarrassment and a real good will, and to the desire not to lose theoretical control over events, but even in the best of cases, these functions are more or less dangerous theoretical fictions. Applied to our question, these concepts ensure us a cheap solution on every occasion: they make a chain between an original knowledge effect and current knowledge effects -- giving us the mere posing, or rather non-posing of the problem as its solution. (63)

When Marx studied modern bourgeois society, he adopted a paradoxical attitude. He first conceived that existing society as a historical result, i.e., as a result produced by a history. Naturally, this seems to commit us to a Hegelian conception in which the result is conceived as a result inseparable from its genesis, to the point where it is necessary to conceive it as 'the result of its becoming'. In fact, at the same time Marx takes a quite different direction! 'It is not a matter of the connexion established historically between the economic relations in the succession of different forms of society. Still less of their order of succession "in the Idea " (Proudhon ) (a nebulous conception of historical movement ). But of their articulated combination (Gliederung) within modern bourgeois society ' (Grundrisse, p. 28). The same idea was already rigorously expressed in The Poverty of Philosophy : 'How, indeed, could the single logical formula of movement, of sequence, of time, explain the body of society, in which all relations coexist simultaneously (gleichzeitig) and support one another ' (The Poverty of Philosophy, New York, 1963, pp. 110-11). The object of Marx's study is therefore contemporary bourgeois society, which is thought as a historical result : but the understanding of this society, far from being obtained from the theory of the genesis of this result, is, on the contrary, obtained exclusively from the theory of the 'body ', i.e., of the contemporary structure of society, without its genesis intervening in any way whatsoever. This attitude may be paradoxical, but Marx insists on it in categorical terms as the absolute condition of possibility of his theory of history; it reveals the existence of two problems, distinct in their disjoint unity. There is a theoretical problem which must be posed and resolved in order to explain the mechanism by which history has produced as its result the contemporary capitalist mode of production. But at the same time there is another absolutely distinct problem which must be posed and resolved, in order to understand that this result is indeed a social mode of production, that this result is precisely a form of social existence and not just any form of existence: this second problem is the object of the theory in Capital -- and not for one moment is it ever confused with the first problem. (64 to 65)
Eat up.

2 comments:

Max said...

A few additional thoughts….
(From the Athusser quote that Andy posted here) “it reveals the existence of two problems, distinct in their disjoint unity. There is a theoretical problem which must be posed and resolved in order to explain the mechanism by which history has produced as its result the contemporary capitalist mode of production. But at the same time there is another absolutely distinct problem which must be posed and resolved, in order to understand that this result is indeed a social mode of production, that this result is precisely a form of social existence and not just any form of existence: this second problem is the object of the theory in Capital -- and not for one moment is it ever confused with the first problem. (64 to 65)”

I think that this is the best way to approach the texts – to separate the analysis of capitalism as a social mode of production from the question that seeks to answer “the mechanism by which history has produced” this formation (i.e., history). The ‘problem’ of history in Althusser is its own special case as well – not only does history come back with a vengence in his discussion of overdetermination (the accumulation of multiple ‘superstructural’ contradictions so that even though the Capital-Labour contradiction is the general determinant contradiction of modern society – the historical ‘last instance’ of the economic never actually arrives, as the case of Russia ‘proves’!!) but also, more generally, the question of temporality in structuralism is its own theoretical quagmire (case in point, when Balibar, in his essay on ‘transition’ from Reading Capital, attempts to answer structural transition by making ‘transition’ another structure! To hell with the ‘event’, Lefebvre’s ‘moment’, or Debord’s ‘situation’!).

But anyhoo – if we follow this second approach that Althusser distinguishes above, then these instances that Marx is working through might be seen as something akin to Capital’s own memory expressed at the level of its conceptual forms? Direct exchange in its ‘pure form’ probably has never (empirically) occurred (or can I even make that claim non-empirically?!), and Marx himself qualifies his argument that commodity production has always – historically – existed alongside other forms of production/exchange (enter Lukacs claim that Capitalism is when the commodity form becomes the universal structuring agent of society).

Last thing is, how the hell does Andy have time to read Althusser as well? Come on man! I’m like 10 chapters behind schedule now!

andy said...

Slowly and slowly.

I am also, of course, intrigued by the idea that history has to be thought about in the terms set forth by capital rather than a naive empiricism. However, I am a little hesitant about going too far with this formula simply because it seems too positivistic, or in the words of many a critic, deterministic.

Namely, while Althusser does not name the specific ways in which capital shapes historical representation, there is the assumption that capital has a positive content that is the underlying foundation of historical writing. I'd like to ease up on this idea, since as history (ugh) has proven, capital is anything if not freely changing, self-revolutionizing, adaptatble, etc. Perhaps what some would call "an empty universalism."

It reminds me of a formulation in Anti-Oedipus (only the chapter on the history of capitalism, which is all I've read) where D/G seem to suggest capitalism is a sort of negative ontological condition. Ontological in the sense that it lurks behind every economic structure as the flipside to social hierarchy, fixed relations, etc. Negative in the sense that it really just represents the destruction of said things in the process of freeing up resources, labor, markets for exploitative consumption. In other words, capital simply represents the always-already (ugh) possibility throughout history of transition ITSELF. So perhaps Balibar is onto something (I haven't re-read that piece yet, will need to later) to say transition is a structure, but he should take it further to say that it is a structure that does not simply lie between other structures but rather is the all-encompassing structure within which historical change must occur.

SPECULATIVE BULLSHIT ALERT