Volume 25, Number 2, Winter 2011 • Marx or Spinoza
Justin Rogers-Cooper. “Crowds and Spinoza’s Concept of the Political.” Mediations 25.2 (Winter 2011) 37-59.
www.mediationsjournal.org/articles/crowds-and-spinozas-concept-of-the-political
Crowds and Spinoza’s Concept of the Political
Justin Rogers-Cooper
he relatively recent theoretical returns to Benedict de Spinoza in Marxist studies
by thinkers as diverse as Gilles Deleuze, Antonio Negri, Warren Montag, and Étienne
Balibar has paralleled an interdisciplinary shit in scholarship vaguely called “the
afective turn.” Much of the scholarship working within this afective turn shares a
common sensitivity about the primary position of human bodies within discussions
of literature, culture, and politics. his scholarship argues that passions, feelings,
and emotions of the body have become constituent categories of individual identity,
and also socially circulate to form and transform bodies collectively. It is hard to
picture the Egyptian crowds in Tahrir Square succeeding, for example, if the collective
feelings of the crowds were not present to motivate and sustain the bodies gathered
there. he so-called contagion of Middle East protest movements from Tunisia to
Yemen, however, does not mean that the same rage is present in all the crowds.
Passions are always historically and culturally speciic, even though the phenomenon
of bodies feeling sadness, rage, euphoria, or fear is transhistorical and transcultural.
hese emotions and feelings can be called “afects” to the extent that bodies produce,
transmit, circulate, and receive them socially through physical contact or through
various media.
he movement of afects through this socioeconomic scale of production and
distribution is interactive. Rage in Egypt can produce feelings of anxiety in Washington,
D.C., for example. Afects can involve precognitive and embodied sensations that
precede self-conscious decision making; President Obama’s advisors don’t choose to
feel anxiety about Egypt, but experience it in their bodies as a quality of what Brian
Massumi has in another context called the “autonomy of afect.”1 Afect, then, is not
self-contained. Crucially, individuals or groups can also purposely produce afects,
and can spread and atach afective sensations through others in order to motivate
them to act.
When describing these crowds, commentators and intellectuals almost always
render them as collective emotions. An emotional vocabulary appears to describe the
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way afects become coded at the scale of bodies. Spinoza understood these afects to be
the primary motivations for bodies, and extended his political philosophy from this
thesis. he Marxist returns to Spinoza have made considerable use of this political
philosophy, especially since he naturalizes his politics as an extension of his preDarwinian, uniied ield theory of evolutionary life in his Ethics. heoretical atraction
to his political treatises comes from the possibilities stemming from his concept
of “multitude” as a powerful agent of change, and one immanent within political
societies.
his essay is an intervention into Marxist appropriations of Spinoza. First, I
challenge eforts to re-read Spinoza for his subversive elements only, and critique
Antonio Negri’s and Michael Hardt’s conception of a subversive Multitude in
particular. Instead, I argue that Spinoza’s multitude its much more comfortably inside
Ernesto Laclau’s political theory, in which various groups within states compete for
power against one another. hese antagonistic collectivities make demands through
rhetorical and psychological strategies that first of all depend upon affectively
engaged and motivated bodies. It is important for my argument that we imagine the
most powerful expressions of these collectivities as crowds, and that furthermore
we understand these crowds as singular expressions of Spinoza’s multitude. As with
Laclau’s populism, however, these crowds do not know any one political party, and we
must retain Spinoza’s own personal fears of them, however historical and personal
his reasons, because the power of crowds can intersect with the power of violence.
Crowds have a capacity for violence, and the state’s capacity to act violently to repress
them comes from their “real” physical presence as bodies that can directly challenge
the state’s monopoly of force, and thereby challenge the legitimacy of state power. It
is this capacity to “really” challenge power that should interest contemporary Marxist
theory, even as it potentially revises the revolutionary subject as one rooted in an
economic class to one emerging from bodies temporally united by common afective
postures in crowds.
he life and death stakes raised by crowds points to another important intersection
with Laclau’s theory of politics. Along with his collaborator Chantal Moufe, Laclau
contends that the antagonistic collectivities competing for political dominance act as
examples of Carl Schmit’s theory of political cultures that depend on friend-enemy
distinctions; Schmit puts this thesis at the center of his theory of political power.
he irrepressible presence of friend-enemy groups is what led Schmit to his theory
of strong states that could both monopolize violence and dictate those friend-enemy
distinctions for the purpose of state power and political order. To be efective, states
would maintain this order through the biopolitical management of life, but states
could only achieve this management by inspiring bodies to kill or die for the state.
his is Schmit’s concept of the political. I argue that in Spinoza’s political theory we
can also see a state-centered political order, but one where the state’s biopolitical
monopoly on inspiring life and death politics can be challenged by multitudes.
Crowds and Spinoza’s Concept of the Political
Although I contend that we must imagine these multitudes as crowds, we must also
extend Schmit’s concept of the political to them. We must imagine both sacriicial
crowds and potentially violent ones, and further imagine that the legitimation of state
power can radically depend not on the state’s ability to inspire bodies to kill or die for
it, but on the ability of crowds to kill or die for the multitude — and even when the
rhetoric of a multitude insists that the crowd is dying on behalf of a state corrupted
by its present leadership.
Multitude and Collectivities
In Negri’s published lecture “he Labor of the Multitude and the Fabric of Biopolitics”
in the Spring 2008 issue of Mediations, he iterated the assertions he made with Hardt
in their Empire/Multitude/Commonwealth trilogy that “the” Multitude is a relatively
new revolutionary subject of post-Fordist capitalism. Negri argues that capitalism was
“in the past capable of reducing the multiplicities of singularities to something close
to the organic and unitary — a class, a people, a mass, a set.”2 Yet today, Negri writes,
the multitude “should thus be necessarily thought of as a disorganized, diferential,
and powerful multiplicity.”3 his difuse and disorganized multitude that converges
into resistance against capital has been criticized as inefficacious and utopian,
particularly by those with very diferent conceptions of how political action works
and by whom. In his 2001 review of Empire in diacritics, for instance, Laclau claimed
that one of the weaknesses of the multitude conceived by Hardt and Negri was that
“the universality of the proletariat fully depends on its immanence within an objective
social order which is entirely the product of capitalism.”4 Laclau stresses the utopian
and contradictory dimension of a universal multitude composed by “spontaneously”
converging political actors.
hese two positions are not totally irreconcilable, however. Negri’s understanding
of the multiplicities within his concept of Multitude can be bent to connect with
Laclau’s own emphasis on collaborating and antagonistic collectives competing for
power within institutions, parties, movements, public space, as well as by atempts
to control strategic symbols of supposedly universal signiiers, such as lags.5 In
other words, Laclau’s deinition of struggles between diferent social collectivities
that variously converge or diverge can describe multiplicities that operate within
individual states. Rather than necessarily uniting, multiplicities also compete for
hegemony and leverage over each other, spontaneously or not. his essay will develop
that premise further by situating Laclau’s politics within a Spinozist trajectory.
I’ll pursue this premise in order to establish Spinoza’s conception of politics and
multitude within an alternate trajectory of contemporary Marxism — namely,
one informed by Laclau’s and Moufe’s discussions of “the democratic tradition of
popular sovereignty.”6 For Laclau and Moufe, popular sovereignty and democracy are
concepts that can describe competing political collectivities that operate within what
they call the “pluralism” of a democratic tradition. his notion of pluralism stresses
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the “conlict and division” between collectivities.7 his conlict and division occurs
in part because these collectivities are constructed through “diference,” wherein
also “every identity becomes purely contingent.”8 By stressing the contingency of
various collectivities competing within a state for power, Laclau and Moufe’s concept
of diference speaks irst to the Spinozist concept of self-preservation, where bodies
compete against other bodies for power. his constitutes, for Spinoza and arguably
for Schmit, the material basis for politics within states. In Ethics, Spinoza traces this
self-preservation as an extension from the evolving “substance” of nature and natural
bodies, conatus, which acts as the underlying evolutionary force that propels all life.
He argues that conatus expresses itself as the desires and appetites of the human
body, called cupiditas.
For Spinoza, the human body strives toward power as an expression of the afect
joy. Other afects or passions, such as anger or fear, are like felt directions that
inform bodies about their relative position in relation to joy. Political discussions
should consider bodily afections. Laclau and Moufe argue against the rational
and consensus-driven liberal pluralism of John Rawls, for example, because in his
ideas “passions are erased from the realm of politics.”9 However divisive, passions
inluence and motivate political cultures. Following Schmit, Laclau and Moufe reject
the notion that a “non-coercive consensus” is possible within liberal democracy,
and instead claim that the lack of consensus and presence of afective passions in
collectivities is what assures that “the dynamics of the democratic process will be kept
alive.”10 hey imagine a dynamic democratic process where passionate collectivities
compete to exclude others from power. he power within this democratic competition
lends itself to Spinoza’s contention that bodies, whether individual or collective, are
constantly seeking to expand their power to act. his power to act occurs by natural
right, and is coextensive with the actual capacity of bodies to successfully maximize
power. his concept naturalizes the power to act without naturalizing explicit forms
of domination.
he dynamics of passionate politics in Laclau and Moufe furthers the possibility
that Spinoza can deepen our understanding of a constitutively afective politics, and
also the way Spinozist “multitudes” might materialize within states. his means
examining how the passions work in a multitude, and also means deining when a
collectivity materializes into a multitude. I argue that a collectivity materializes into
a multitude when it becomes a physical crowd of bodies, and when it tries to coerce
power from the state itself. Spinoza complements Laclau and Moufe’s position, too,
in another critical respect. His emphasis on the interactive role of afects circulating
among individual and collective bodies is critical to his conception that politics extend
from the human body, and thus how singular multitudes intervene in state power.
I contend that Laclau’s own conception of populism and “populist reason,” with its
emphasis on collective bodies excited to “excessive” positions on the let and the right,
can be productively situated next to Spinoza’s descriptions of multitudes. Stripped of
Crowds and Spinoza’s Concept of the Political
its universal and spontaneous character, “the” multitude Hardt and Negri describe
might still usefully describe smaller-scale qualities of revolutionary collectives — or
singular multitudes — that Laclau conceives as “short-term” and “autonomous.”11 he
temporality of these multitudes, which act in “short-term” bursts of afective passion,
is also consistent with other inluential positions within contemporary Marxist
thought — notably, in interpretations of Spinoza’s multitudes as crowds, such as in
Warren Montag’s Bodies, Masses, Power and Étienne Balibar’s Masses, Classes, Ideas.
Crowds and Populism
Instead of a universal multitude evolving within empire in the post-Fordist era,
Spinoza’s multitude is much more a temporally contingent and localized phenomenon.
Its contingency stems from its composition in space; bodies must gather together
and act. For Spinoza, bodies are excited together by the afects. Spinoza begins his
Political Treatise, for example, by announcing that the “passions” are the constituent
category of the political. In order to “understand human actions,” he proposes,
we must look upon the passions such as “love, hatred, anger, envy, ambition,
pity, and other perturbations of the mind, not in light of vices of human nature,
but as properties, just as pertinent to it, as are heat, cold, storm, thunder.” 12 he
“phenomena” of these afects are “inconvenient,” he writes, but “are yet necessary,
and have ixed causes.”13 He refers to the Ethics to conirm that “men are of necessity
liable to passions,” and soon airms that the “steep” road to reason means anyone
believing that “the multitude of men distracted by politics can ever be induced to live
according to the bare dictate of reason, [sic] must be dreaming of the poetic golden
age, or of a stage-play.”14 Here, Spinoza would seem to anticipate arguments about
a necessarily communist multitude. What maters to Spinoza is that human nature
tends to produce similar afects across similar situations: wealth produces envy, illness
produces pity. hese afects of envy and pity excite bodies, and that excitement forms
the basis for collectivities.
he notion of the crowd as singular multitude cements Étienne Balibar’s own
notion of the Spinozist multitude as crowd. Balibar sets his own discussion of Spinoza’s
multitude in the context of mass movements. In his reading of Spinoza, “the masses
become an explicit theoretical object, because in the last analysis it is their diferent
modalities of existence, according to the historical conjunctures and according to the
economies or regimes of passion, that determine the chances of orienting a political
science toward a given solution.”15 Balibar’s concept of a mass acting as a regime of
passion at a historical conjuncture deines the politically decisive crowd and recalls
the contingency of conjunctures that deine Laclau’s and Moufe’s own politics. It is
interesting that Balibar assigns his reading, in part, to Negri’s insistence in he Savage
Anomaly that Spinoza adopted the “standpoint of the mass” even as he positioned
himself in ways that showed he feared it.16 In this way, Balibar’s atention to the crowd
also becomes an apparent connection between Negri and Laclau.
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his excitement is arguably similar to what Laclau understands as “populist
reason.” In On Populist Reason, Laclau opens his deinition of populism from a reading
of Peter Worsley, who claimed that understanding populism meant understanding
its “performative dimensions.” 17 Populism does not reflect a particular type or
organization of political culture of ideology, but is instead an expression of politically
excited bodies that describes collective behavior beyond the scope of self-contained,
rational individuals. Laclau traces this behavior through crowd psychology as
it developed in transatlantic nineteenth- and early twentieth-century thought,
particularly through Gustave Le Bon’s he Crowd and Sigmund Freud’s Group Psychology
and the Analysis of the Ego, among others.18 Le Bon believed crowds corrupted the
reasoning capacity of individuals, and infected the social and political sphere with
degenerate socialist mass movements. Le Bon especially blamed the “contagion” of
“pathological transmissions” among retrograde populations for socialist movements.19
His cynical manifesto infamously became a potent source for future fascists and
psychologists alike, including Hitler, Mussolini, and Freud. 20 Within Le Bon’s
scientiic discourse and elite fears, however, Laclau is able to ind “some crucially
important aspects in the construction of social and political identities…[such as] the
relationship between words and images, the predominance of the ‘emotive’ over the
‘rational’, the sense of omnipotence, the suggestibility and identiication with leaders,
and so on.”21 he elevation of the emotive above the rational here immediately recalls
Spinoza’s own belief that the passions play a larger role in politics than reason, for
beter or worse. For his part, Laclau extends this notion of the “emotive” to the early
sociologist William McDougall. He summarizes how McDougall distinguished crowds
from other social bodies by emphasizing that the “crowd requires the exaltation and
intensiication of emotions.”22 More speciically, he asserts that McDougall’s idea of
“self-regarding sentiment,” or the sentiment of self-identity, can be extended toward
and cathected to images and objects beyond the self. his idea merges with Freud’s
notion in Group Psychology that the emotional bond of groups requires an identiication
from one body to another. his identiication, for Freud, takes the form of a libidinal
investment in an object.
From Freud, Laclau derives a cue for his deinition of populism. Rather than
dismissing populism as a “political phenomenon,” it should be considered “in its
speciicity as one legitimate way among others of constructing the political bond.”23
Since Laclau is as interested in the discursive construction of this “political bond”
as the bond itself, he pays more particular atention to how linguistic signiiers
function actually to organize collectivities than he does the role of the affects
speciically. His atention to the rhetoric and discourse of varying populisms, with
their discourses of “vagueness and indeterminacy,” in particular, speaks back to
Spinoza’s own arguments about afects and politics. Populist rhetoric irst depends
upon constituting the collectivities that it purports to represent. In particular, its use
of “empty signiiers” works out for politics the poststructuralist arguments about how
Crowds and Spinoza’s Concept of the Political
language functions at the level of the signiier: namely, that words are distinct from
the objects they represent, and cannot ever fully denote their meaning. he means
by which language expresses something it can’t Laclau calls catachresis.24 Populist
rhetoric is a discourse of demands and claims that works “at a very incipient level…to
constitute the ‘people’ as a potential historical actor.”25 he vagueness of the “people”
becomes the catachresis that crystallizes collectivities into larger formations. he very
“indeterminacy” of the rhetoric allows it to unify several diferent kinds of demands
and claims made by diferent groups, or what Laclau calls “equivalential chains.”26
his process of uniication suggests how local collectivities might materialize into
national multitudes.
It is through the function of these equivalential chains of indeterminate signiiers
that Laclau explains the “contagion” of apparently spontaneous crowd actions
observed by so many crowd theorists. Laclau turns to crowd scholar George Rudé
and his discussion of eighteenth- century food riots for an example of how a “mixed”
discourse of populist rhetoric allowed those riots to lourish by exciting several
diferent collectivities to act as crowds with seeming simultaneity. Quoting from
Rudé, Laclau cites how “the crowd may riot because it is hungry or fears to be so,
because it has some deep social grievance, because it seeks an immediate reform or
the millennium, or because it wants to destroy an enemy or acclaim a ‘hero’; but it is
seldom for any single one of these reasons alone.”27 Rudé’s slip here between a hungry
crowd and one that fears hunger is important: the sense of potential catastrophe
can help animate the crowd as much as immediate bodily needs. For Rudé, though,
all of the possible motives combine to perform a “leveling instinct.” Laclau is quick
to point out that for a leveling instinct to mean all of that, “it cannot, in itself, have a
content of its own.” It is consequential here that to explain populism, Laclau turns
again to crowd theory. he food-riot crowd mentioned in Rudé’s example does more
than present the way populist rhetoric might function to consolidate social bonds. It
makes visible how a multiplicity of collectivities can act against a centralized power,
even seemingly spontaneously, in the way Negri might insist is possible for a global
Multitude. More essentially, the leveling instinct Laclau cites itself depends upon a
variety of afects felt in the bodies of the various collectivities that acted as crowds,
whether those afects were fear, resentment, envy, or pride. he afects are necessary
to make the rhetoric vital; inversely, the rhetoric lives, or becomes embodied, by
coinciding with and also producing speciic bodily states. In each case, no mater
the particular afect or how the rhetoric functions, what maters is that the bodies
become excited and energized by the afects themselves. Afects stimulate bodies and
intensify excitement to produce and sustain crowds.
Spinoza might feel ambivalent about the power of this intensity, and excitement,
to create the kind of dynamism that unites collectivities to act against power. It also
potentially undermines unity among diferent collectivities: “In so far as men are
tormented by anger, envy, or any passion implying hatred, they are drawn asunder
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and made contrary to one another…and because men are in the highest degree possible
liable to these passions, therefore men are naturally enemies.”28 he potential for
dissolution as a result of competition among collectivities and their accompanying
populisms marks a divergence from Schmit in the work of Laclau and Moufe. hey
write that the political possibility of dissolution “also entails that the existence of
such a unity is itself a contingent fact which requires political construction.”29 Both
unity and dissolution turn, here, upon particular situations where populism generates
centrifugal or centripetal afects. Managing the body’s liability to passions that make
them enemies and friends to other bodies would obviously be important. Exciting
afects in bodies “from above,” as it were, should signal a warning, but, for Laclau,
this danger inherent to populism is one innate in all political cultures. Spinoza admits
that “because as we are treating here of the universal power or right of nature, we
cannot here recognize any distinction between desires, which are engendered in
us by reason, and those which are engendered by other causes.”30 His admission is
useful here because it deepens our understanding of Marxist ideology, particularly
the Althusserian idea of interpellation that informs Laclau’s discussion of fascism in
Politics and Ideology in Marxist heory.31 Just as ideological interpellation “is practice
[of] producing subjects” that can think and act “all by themselves,” Spinoza claims
that bodies cannot “recognize any distinction between desires” which are engendered
by reason or from other causes.32 Interpellation works because of afect, and this felt
politics reveals another depth to the way populism works to produce crowds.
he relation between interpellation and afect also sheds light on Spinoza’s own
awareness of his ambivalence about the human nature of political ethics. For him,
bodies cannot always determine the causes of their passions. his indeterminacy
occludes their ability to use reason, but it also allows those same bodies to act together.
It is not just that what seems “ridiculous, absurd, or evil” arises from a “partial
knowledge of things,” and a misrecognition of the “coherence of nature as a whole.”33
For him, it follows that since “everyone is so far rightfully dependent on another,” it
holds true that “he is under that other’s authority.” his intersection of authorities
occurs between bodies of unequal power and right, and so some with authority “holds
but his body” while others have been “made dependent” in both “mind as the body of
the other.”34 Crucially, Spinoza argues, this dependency and shared feeling of body
and mind occurs “only as long as the fear or hope lasts, for upon removal of the feeling
the other is let independent.”35 Problematically, the independence from an authority
that Spinoza alludes to here would seemingly foreclose the possibility of forming
larger collectivities, crowds, or multitudes. Dependency on other bodies in mind and
body seems necessary for both state power and for multitudes. Afect is constitutive
for all political groups.
Ironically, perhaps, Spinoza will later argue that “without mutual help men
can hardly support life,” and moreover “men in the state of nature can hardly be
independent.”36 Spinoza deines this mutual help as protecting themselves, defending
Crowds and Spinoza’s Concept of the Political
cultivated land, and repelling violence. He claims that bodies combined together
possess these general rights, and that this “state” is a “dominion.” his dominion,
whatever its form as democracy or monarchy, “is determined by the power of a
multitude.”37 he determining power of the multitude here is what allows Montag
to champion Spinoza’s atention to the “decisive role of the masses,” and even “their
insurrections, for any regime or form of government.”38 Montag is keen to note that
Spinoza frequently refers to these decisive masses commiting insurrections using
Latin terminology that emphasized masses as crowds, and in particular the terms
vulgus, turba, and multitudo. he names “oten described entities composed of plebs
organized for the purpose of engaging in threatening or openly violent behavior
against their supporters.”39 At the same time, Spinoza insists that subjects who atempt
to “seize sovereign power, or to place it in diferent hands,” are commiting treason.40
He also claims that “the state must be preserved and directed by the sole authority
of the sovereign.”41 And yet Spinoza allows for the condition that if punishment for
individual treason “were not to overtake him till he had succeeded, it would have oten
come too late, [since] the sovereign rights would have been acquired or transferred
already.”42 A populist insurrection, then, is treason except when it’s successful. For
Spinoza, the ethics of power ultimately depends on the efectiveness of revolution.
I maintain that the efective insurrection is physically a crowd. he crowd can be
a violent mob or a non-violent one; it is always a question of tactics, and what afects
are most productive to generate. Crowds can act in the name of a state or party, or
as a social movement. he force of the crowd, however, comes from the immediate
assemblage of bodies, and the power of those bodies in the present. In this way, the
crowd can form spontaneously or by choice, acting immediately or by planning to act.
his notion dispels the long-running fear of crowds as mobs, present at times even in
Spinoza, as irrational and unthinking. he afectively driven crowd is not irrational;
rather, irrationality is a term of derision that one applies to crowds that act for an idea
one does not agree with. here are not rational and irrational crowds or multitudes;
one crowd is not pathological and another healthy. A crowd can be excited to act for
various purposes. While crowds can appear in various non-political contexts, such
as rock concerts or soccer games, politicized crowds mobilize for political ends.
Mass movements and political campaigns can spread and enact change through
media, such as the Internet today or the telegraph yesterday, but a spatially dispersed
movement must come together as bodies in “real” space in order to occupy, contest,
or remake the distribution of power in a state. he politicized crowd is solely capable
of immediately making institutions adapt to demands, act with urgency, or repress
those demands in the present. he crowd can act outside the checks and balances of
democratic institutions. For this reason, the crowd is uniquely capable of becoming
a revolutionary collective: it has the physical power to overthrow governments,
block transportation lows, perform general strikes. hey enact Laclau’s political
idea of populist groups articulating demands as autonomous agents and acting in
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the short term. Following Laclau and Moufe, crowds are the afective expressions of
political groups competing to represent the symbolic and political space of an already
heterogeneous and antagonistic public sphere. his competition occurs in both the
symbolic and afective ield. Both states and political groups seek control of symbols
that unite bodies, but also those symbols that can excite those bodies to act.
he inevitable antagonism between opposite populist positions within states
further recalls the primary importance of friend-enemy distinctions that Laclau
and Moufe extend from Carl Schmit’s concept of the political. Schmit’s concept of
the political understands politics as an arbiter of life and death. For Schmit, political
cultures depend on conlict. “For as long as a people exists in the political sphere,” he
writes, “this people must…determine by itself the distinction of friend and enemy.
herein lies the essence of its political existence.”43 he state must inspire an ultimate
willingness to die or kill for it among its constituents. Underlying Schmit’s concept
here is an afective state that excites bodies to sacriice themselves or destroy others.
When Spinoza considers a multitude that can overthrow the state in revolution,
however tepid and contradictory Spinoza could feel at such a prospect, he also implies
the prospect of such a state. “It is clear that the right of the supreme authorities,”
Spinoza writes, “is nothing else than simple natural right, limited, indeed, by the
power, not of every individual, but of the multitude, which is guided, as it were, by one
mind.”44 his “one mind” spread through many bodies explains the group psychology
of Laclau’s populism. It explains the capacity of crowds to act as real oppositions to
state regimes under the sign of “the people.” And it expresses the aspiration of state
power to inspire in its citizens the passions that it needs. hese passions are delimited
by a passion to die or kill. Groups must compete to control the leveling instinct of
crowds.
The State and Multitudes: Affects, Bodies, and Sovereignty
he project to incorporate what Negri calls a “subversive” Spinoza into contemporary
discussions of post-Marxism requires us to reconsider the role of the state as a
mediating power between collectives competing for hegemonic inluence, and also
as the power of “last resort” among them — that is, the largest power with the most
sovereignty, and thus the entity most able to employ the use of force. he sovereignty
of the state in regard to this use of force is seemingly at odds with a multitude that
must, in turn, claim the right potentially to overthrow the state using its own force.
In Subversive Spinoza, Negri asserts that Spinoza’s general claims in the heologicalPolitical Treatise are in fact claims about early capitalism and modernity, and that “the
fabric of the problem is that of a mass society in which individuals are equal from the
viewpoint of right and unequal from the viewpoint of power.”45 It is noteworthy that
this could be one of several moments where Negri might move Spinoza’s discussions
about the relationship between multitudes and the state into a Marxist discourse
about class conlict. Negri’s argument rests here, however, on a discourse of rights
Crowds and Spinoza’s Concept of the Political
and equality indebted to constitutional liberalism and social contract theory. Negri
continues this line of argument when he writes that the “revolutionary character” of
Spinoza’s “political proposal consists in the conjuncture of the concept of democracy
and a radical and constructive theory of natural right.”46 he natural right he refers
to here is a fulcrum for the idea of an immanent multitude in his project with Hardt
because it focuses on Spinoza’s insistence that individual and collective bodies
naturally have the power to act; it is an immanent power. Further, a multitude’s power
to act is in direct proportion to its ability to do so.
his is consistent with Spinoza’s articulation of political power. In the heologicalPolitical Treatise, Spinoza writes that we must conceive “every individual to be
conditioned by nature, so as to live and act in a certain way.”47 Using the example
of ish, Spinoza writes that the greater ish “devour the less by sovereign natural
right.”48 Returning to his idea of nature more generally, Spinoza explains that “her
right is co-extensive with her power.”49 In the Political Treatise, Spinoza complements
his discussion of right and power by theorizing the power of political collectives.
“If two come together and unite their strength,” he writes, “they have jointly more
power, and consequently more right over nature than both of them separately, and
the more there are that have so joined in alliance, the more right they all collectively
will possess.”50As Montag is keen to gloss, Spinoza insists that any understanding
of sovereign power and natural right concern itself with the ways bodies combine
together. “Inasmuch as the power of nature is simply the aggregate of the powers of
all her individual components,” Spinoza writes in heological-Political Treatise, “it
follows that every individual has sovereign right to do all that he can.”51 From this
passage we can conidently assert that bodies can always act with force, and thus
always contain a modicum of sovereignty. For Spinoza, the ability to act with force
multiplies as bodies unite into ever-greater formations and collectives: the larger
the body, as a collective of many bodies, the more power those bodies have. Montag
follows Pierre Macherey and Pierre-François Moreau in arguing that the combined
power of bodies — what Macherey calls “assemblages” — form collectivities that
“themselves comprise individuals, or singularities, that are no less real than human
individuals.”52 he “speciic character” of these singular collectivities, the “ingenium”
Moreau emphasizes from Spinoza, “are what makes them what they are and no
other.”53 his ingenium can deine a crowd or a nation.
Varying, unique collectivities in turn assert power according to their strength.
heir sovereignty and natural right is coextensive with their power, yet with every
potential for a singular multitude, or crowd, to advance its own desires, there is
still no guarantee that those desires correspond to the desires of other collectivities.
With Schmit in mind, it is worth noting that Montag resists any reading that would
legitimize, for example, a clerical regime that forces its way into power and thus claim
its right to do so based retrospectively on the success of that force. “While a regime
may ‘possess’ absolute right to do all that it pleases by law or in theory,” Montag infers,
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“no regime actually exercises absolute power.”54 In other words, since there is no such
thing as unlimited natural right in Spinozist politics, no government can claim to be
completely legitimate. his argument airms the horizon of Spinoza’s natural right,
but it doesn’t negate that the clerical coup Montag exempliies is more legitimate
than not, given that it did successfully claim power. Montag continues by declaring
that “absolute power can be nothing more than a juridical iction,” and “one more
example of a legal right that can never be actualized.”55 True to his interpretation,
Montag then claims that the right to property is another example of a legal right
that can never be actualized. Indeed, Spinoza himself maintains that “contracts or
laws, whereby the multitude transfers its right to one council or one man, should
without doubt be broken, when it is expedient for the general welfare to do so.”56
he instability Montag assigns to the mythical clerical regime and the state’s ictive
claims to protect property both rest here, though, on any one state or regime’s claim
to “absolute power.” Short of achieving that impossible strength, the relative power
of the state and its legal ictions could nonetheless be abjectly muscular. So when
Montag turns to Spinoza’s arguments in the Political Treatise that tyrannical regimes
cannot by nature last long because they will produce indignation in their populations,
the example is still one that depends upon the most extreme form of absolute power:
tyranny. Yet it is somewhere between absolute power and a spontaneously convergent
Multitude where Spinozist politics would seemingly appear. his tension would also
suggest that positive feelings for state power, whether for a regime or democracy, play
a not-insigniicant role in sustaining power over time.
Montag’s qualiication about the ultimate instability of tyrannical regimes points
to the same basic ambiguity found in Spinozist natural right that deies Negri’s
contention about Multitude. Spinoza understands the notion of right and power
as “perfection” in Ethics, which again pivots on the idea that right is coextensive
with power, period. his right of power is inherently un-ethical in Ethics: power is,
as opposed to should be. he clerical coup Montag imagines has every right to seize
power as an ambitious crowd does to, say, storm the Bastille or form a Paris commune.
Even as this idea of natural right embeds the notion of sovereignty into all bodies, it
does not imply that any one collectivity might act towards a teleological end, such
as communism, or lead to a “withering away of the state” famously formulated by
Marx. Indeed, for beter or worse, Spinoza never imagines a political culture without
the state.
he tension in Negri’s dual assertion of Spinoza’s “constructive theory of natural
right” on one hand and his “unequal” individuals from the viewpoint of power on
the other speaks, in fact, to the profound ambiguity in Spinoza about the politics of
liberation and what we might today imagine as a politics free from capital — namely,
a post-capitalist communism. Spinoza’s notion of right coextensive with power,
by contrast, could arguably apply to corporations and transnational irms. Contra
Negri, the inequality of power in Spinoza’s political project is a function of what he
Crowds and Spinoza’s Concept of the Political
calls “human bondage” in Ethics (to be atended to in the inal section of this essay).
His theory of natural right is much more ambivalent than constructive. True, this
ambivalence rests upon Spinoza’s conception of the multitude as a potential agent of
force for or against the state. his is the immanent collective subject nestled in Hardt
and Negri’s Multitude, and recalls the power in Spinoza that Negri translates in he
Savage Anomaly as potentia. For Negri, power as potentia arises from the natural right
of multitudes, to which he opposes Potestas, or the power of the state and “command.”
Following the discussion of natural right above, though, this potentia — like populism
— is as ambiguous as the politics of any given multitude. As an immanent possibility
within the state (or potentially within capitalism), it does denote the power of bodies
to act together. Yet Spinoza’s multitude much more resembles the war machine
of Deleuze and Guatari’s A housand Plateaus that moves in packs than it does a
revolutionary Multitude composed of multiplied and converging networks acting
in resistance to Potestas (not incidentally, Deleuze and Guatari refer back to Elias
Caneti’s Crowds and Power as a model text for the war machine). Potentia can create
and sustain Potestas as oten as not.
his ambivalence in Spinoza is what allowed Leo Strauss, for one, to ind so much
commonality in his reading of Carl Schmit and Spinoza, even as Schmit was writing
during the rise of the Nazi party. Schmit’s notorious association with fascism also
coincides with his assertion that the state must manage its sovereignty through the
explicit production of enemies within and outside the state in order to unify the
largest collective possible. Yet the production of the enemy depended upon creating
a love for the state, too, that solidiied its power. Strauss found this idea in Spinoza’s
critique of religion in heological-Political Treatise, and was able to merge that critique
with Schmit because the “religion of the state” would replace religion per se. he
ability to manufacture this reading from Spinoza cannot be so easily disavowed, in
part because it speaks directly to the ambiguous populism that extends from natural
right and the necessity of a strong state in Spinozist politics. Granted, Spinoza believes
that the object of the state is human freedom. In part, the state must secure that
freedom for bodies because of the conlicts naturally occurring among bodies all
seeking out their own joy, which Spinoza proposes is the natural desire of bodies in
Ethics. he state, in that reading, must produce afects of love and hate in order to
best manage bodies who might become afectively excited by other agents, whether
religious or political, and which might pull the state apart and thereby inlict harm
on the state’s ability to manage life.
he strong state in Schmit might be one extreme point of potential for politically
excited bodies that can arise from a Spinozist politics. he fascist structure of the
state is the ultimate populist state of “one mind.” In his own arguments about fascism
in Politics and Ideology in Marxist heory, Laclau poses this same interdependency
between populism and fascism in his review of Ortega y Gasset’s relections on
fascism: “It asserts authoritarianism and organizes rebellion…It seems to pose itself
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as the forge of a strong State, and uses means most conducive to its dissolution.”57 In
contrast to theories of fascism that emphasize its authoritarian character, Laclau’s
discussion focuses on “mass mobilization” required for fascism to come to power
and its character as a “mass regime” aterwards.58 In Spinozist terms, the excess of
afectively excited bodies would be fully captured for a state channeling that surplus
into its own structures and symbols. his authoritarian threat of fascism is present
in the privileged role that the sovereign plays in Spinoza’s imagination of monarchy,
which Spinoza conceives alongside democracy and aristocracy. More generally,
the sovereign’s individual body as a locus of state power is extremely inluential in
Spinoza’s imagination of political power.
he fascist potential in Spinoza’s state deepens the mark of ambivalence about
natural right and the necessity of state power, and delimits the ultimate expression
of the multitude as populist: the mass mobilization of fascism, too, derives from
populist reason. Laclau appeals to this in Politics and Ideology when he argues that the
populist concept of “the people” provides a catachresis “for the ensemble of political
and ideological relations of domination and not just the relations of production.”59
While for Laclau the class struggle overdetermines the hegemonic competition
operating among collectivities claiming to represent “the people,” the class struggle is
nonetheless given “coherence” by “presenting its class objectives as the consummation
of popular objectives.”60 Laclau argues that the mass mobilization of fascism depended
on interpellating bodies so that they would “remain disconnected from any socialist
perspective….the German pety-bourgeoisie which was experiencing in a confused
way the post-war crisis, the iniquity of the Versailles Treaty, inflation, foreign
occupation, etc., was interpellated by nazism [sic] as a race.”61 From his interpretation,
we might in turn summarize the multitude’s potential to become fascist as one when
the friend-enemy distinction has intensiied to the maximum extent possible — in
this case, the racial purities of the hird Reich.
he multitude’s connection to fascism as a populist horizon is possible because the
multitude’s capacity to act stems from the intensities of afects circulating among
bodies. Afects spread by economic cycles or material scarcity could overdetermine
that circulation at times. his is audible in Laclau’s reference to inlation and the
general economic crisis of postwar Germany, which hit the working class hardest. It is
here that, among many potential places, Spinoza intersects Marx, though triangulated
through Laclau. he fascism of the 1920s and 1930s evolved from a volatile and sad
postwar period. he depression was unprecedented, in economic and historical terms,
and so was the German response. It isn’t simply that the “lack of articulation of popular
interpellations with socialist discourse let [the working class] lank increasingly
exposed to the ideological inluence of fascism.”62 he interpellation of ideology by
subjects must be understood as a phenomenon of Spinozist afects that intensiied
the potential for multitudes. It was the multitude’s ambiguity, its capacity to become
excited by the let or right, that allowed the German working class to fall under the
Crowds and Spinoza’s Concept of the Political
“inluence” of fascism. he multitude here became a war machine for the state: its
potentia formed into Potestas. his ideological inluence occurred in the body through
the friend-enemy distinction. he success of seizing power by the Nazi party extended
the power of the bodies under its “inluence” and increased, in turn, their natural
right. It gave them, at irst, joy. In his book Political Afect, John Protevi calls this
“fascist joy.”63 Ideology isn’t false consciousness so much as the coincidence of a real
material power intersecting with excited afects. In this case, the excited afects that
produced Nazi joy were, in part, disgust and hatred for the Jews and pride in Aryan
bodies. And true to Spinoza’s formulation of sad afects in Ethics, these states of the
body ultimately proved destructive to the bodies excited to them.
We can theorize that the Nazi bodies acting within fascist Germany did so within
the framework of Spinozist natural right. he production of power that arose from
those bodies was situational and historically speciic, but all the same depended
on a deinite relationship to the circulation of positive and negative afects. his
incredibly profound relationship to afects depended more than anything else on
their felt intensity, on the methods by which that intensity could be sustained and
reproduced through media and other bodies, and by the larger economic reality that
overdetermined the joy or sadness of the state. his point of convergence between
Spinozist afect and Marxism’s insistence on the primary role of the economic in
bodily life positions the Spinozist multitude closer to Laclau’s “people” than to Marx’s
proleteriat. Bodies that exist in poverty might not be ready collectivities for Marxiststyle liberation because the circulation of afects might create a love for the state,
as in Nazi Germany, or a love for a particular collective, such as a political party. he
multitude that might act out a revolutionary campaign against the state, or capitalism,
might be simply the collectivity where the circulation of negative afects about the
state excites those bodies to act against it.
As ambiguous as the multitude might be in Spinoza, because it can be excited against
the state it potentially has the power to overturn government. And because it is a
contingent multiplicity and not simply a particular kind of laboring class, like the
proletariat in traditional Marxism, it ofers a beter way to explain the formation of
real revolutionary collectives. A revolution would thus take place when the natural
right of a particular collective coincides with its ability to actually give itself real joy.
To achieve immediate power in a revolutionary time, while the duration of the afects
are still intense and exciting, the multitude must take the form of a crowd. he excited
crowd that occupies the physical structures and spaces of power does so because it
believes it can be happier there, with the old bodies literally thrown out. here is not
reason to believe, though, that this crowd will be communist — or democratically
inclined. For Spinoza, it will be whatever makes its bodies most joyful, and that joy
is above all located in the body.
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The State and Revolution of Human Bondage
It should be persuasive now that the ambivalence surrounding bodies excited to
politics described in this essay — the singular multitudes called crowds — should
force us to re-examine it as a potential subject of liberation and emancipation, as Negri
and Hardt propose in their trilogy Empire, Multitude, and Commonwealth. he crowd
is not the Multitude. It is essential, too, that we understand this ambivalence about
natural right and state power as one rooted in the human body. his is because of the
primary role of afects in shaping individual and collective psychology. It is crucial
to contemplate, too, that this afectively excited body determines its expression of
natural right, and that this natural right can be channeled into any of various kinds
of collectives, including the state. But this afective excitement is what is immanent
in human bodies, whether it’s excited anger, joy, sadness, or disgust. By returning to
Spinoza, we may be able to illuminate efectively the internal conditions of Laclau’s
populism, and how they operate in and through bodies.
Politics works afectively. “Everyone is drawn away by his pleasures,” Spinoza
writes, “while avarice, ambition, envy, hatred, and the like so engross the mind that
reason has no place therein.”64 hese afects are central to the “laws of his desire”
that will determine how bodies order their lives.65 Likewise, in the Political Treatise
Spinoza acutely reveals that “men are more led by blind desire, than by reason.”66
Communism, for Spinoza, cannot depend upon any good will among bodies. hat good
will must have material beneits for those bodies, and bring them real joy. Communism
must be necessary. he multitude that acts as a crowd to overthrow a government
must excite bodies with the intensity of material joy. Almost by deinition, the logic of
the body insists that this would more likely occur in a period of relative deprivation.
Moreover, the time of the multitude is the present. he time joyful afects spend “in”
the body recalls the “short-term” duration of political actors mentioned in Laclau:
the time of revolution is not necessarily a time to come, as Negri writes, but a time of
coincidence between real power and intense excitement. Consequently, this power
and excitement are the locus of Spinoza’s political anthropology. For Spinoza, the
problems of the state and revolution are not problems that originate in the state’s
relation to bodies, but in the human body itself, and its capacity to be excited by the
afects.
Spinoza addresses this atention to the body in Ethics, which must be read alongside
the Political Treatise in order to relocate a practical politics out of the later. he reason
the body is so central to this project is because, as Negri himself argues, “human
passions [are] the sole efective reality upon which political analysis can operate.”67
hese bodily passions are of the afects, but Spinoza argues that the afects most
oten capture bodies in what he calls “human bondage.” It is only by using reason
within this bondage that a body can come to know and love “God,” and thus live
without injury to others. It is through Spinoza’s valorization of God that we can come
to understand that much of what is politically necessary for Spinoza, including the
Crowds and Spinoza’s Concept of the Political
state and sovereign, occurs because knowing God is so diicult and rare. Knowing
God produces the ultimate afects of blessedness and glory, which come from this
love for God. Knowing God is the achievement of the Ethics, and it is only when each
individual knows and loves God that natural right and equality become equivalent,
for it is only then that each participates in the general intellect, which is to say, it is
only when all feel blessedness and glory and intellectual love that the bodily afects
pale by comparison. It is at this point that the self-interest of each coincides with the
self-interest of all. Multitudes — crowds — in Spinoza are not liberating because they
cannot produce blessedness and glory.
Knowing God is Spinoza at his most utopian. He is quick to clarify that without
God the afects of bondage generally dominate. Loving God allows one to contemplate
the body from a vantage that acknowledges death and the transience of the body,
its afects, and its passions. he perception of the body’s mortality is one of the key
perceptions necessary to love and know God. Spinoza writes that for those that love
God, they “hardly fear death” and are afected less by “evil” afects.68 Even as one
recognizes that the body dies along with consciousness and memory, the mind can
contemplate its commonness with God “under a species of eternity.” his intellectual
love is not the same as those that come from bodily afects, because “only while the
body endures is the mind subject to afects which are related to the passions.”69 Since
they come from a knowledge that cannot change, the afects of blessedness, glory, and
intellectual love are permanently accessible afects. hey contrast with the transient
duration of the other bodily afects. It is important, irst, that the love of God lessens
the afects of fear that surround death. Second, this fearless atitude toward death
plays back into Spinoza’s multitude in surprising ways.
For now, let us reassess the bodily afects of human bondage. What distinguishes
these afects is their volatility, their movement, and their continuous lows — it is
these very qualities, ater all, that separate them from the “eternity” of God’s love.
Spinoza writes that “we live in continuous change,” where bodies are dependent upon
“external causes” for happiness.70 his continuous change corresponds to a lowing
economy of afects, against which bodies constantly strive for increased power and
more joy. Bodies strive toward increased power of action through the excitation of
joyful afects. In this bondage, exchanging joyful afects with other bodies is an end
for itself; one seeks out more power in one’s own self-interest to experience more
joy. “he more each one strives, and is able, to seek his own advantage, that is, to
preserve his being,” Spinoza writes, “the more he is endowed with virtue.”71 his
passage underlines the problem of constantly expanding desires due to constantly
expanding bodily constitutions, and suggests an ininite potential for human desires.
“If men lived according to the guidance of reason, everyone would want to possess this
right of his without injury to anyone else. But because they are subject to the afects,
which far surpass man’s power, or virtue, they are oten drawn in diferent directions
and are contrary to one another” (italics mine).72 his is Spinoza’s challenge to Marx:
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“Man’s lack of power to moderate and restrain afects,” he writes, “I call bondage” (italics
mine).73 his is the context for his aforementioned statement in the Political Treatise
that “men are more led by blind desire, than by reason.”74 his bondage works like
fascism itself: it is ultimately self-destructive to bodies, even as it may, for a time, be
expansively potent.
It is here that Spinoza makes a political intervention. he only afects stronger than
desire, besides blessedness and glory, are love and fear of the state. Spinoza writes
that the multitude believes that “they are free to the extent that they are permited
to yield to their lust,” and that they feel “bound to live according to the rule of divine
law. Morality, then, and religion, and absolutely everything related to strength of
character, they believe to be burdens.”75 If the multitude knew that there was no
reward to come in the aterlife, Spinoza writes, they would “prefer to govern all their
actions according to lust.”76 One can read here the necessity of the state. For Spinoza,
sovereign authority becomes the check on the lust that underwrites human desire.
“In order that men may be able to live harmoniously, it is necessary for them to give
up their natural right and make one another conident that they will do nothing
which could harm others.”77 Poignantly, the state is necessary not only because of
the diiculty of loving God, but because the state must produce ideologies that use
an anxiety around death to ofset a nightmare of existential decadence. “Society
has the power to prescribe a common life by [making] threats,” he writes.78 In other
words, the state must use fear and the threat of death to control the ininite desires
of bodies. In the Political Treatise, he writes that subjects are dependent upon the
commonwealth “as they fear its power or threats, or as they love the civil state.”79 he
state must produce stronger afects than those of lust and desire, whether through
fear or love. he purpose of multitudes is to make revolutions against bad states, but
not to extinguish them.
he production of these stronger afects by the state falls to the sovereign, whether
as the democratically elected head of state or as the monarch. Spinoza writes in
the Political Treatise that a free multitude is beter than one ruled by fear, however,
and thus a commonwealth must “direct afairs in the best way” by channeling the
multitude’s love of civil state. Since Spinoza believes “men’s natural passions are
everywhere the same,” a commonwealth where laws are broken must be a “bad state
of dominion,” and blamed on the state itself. he state must constantly evoke a love of
itself, then. his love must rely on bodily afects, and therefore the sovereign’s capacity
to produce joyful afects becomes essential to the preservation of the commonwealth.
he intense production of positive afects for the state seems to be a necessary project
for the sovereign.
he general problem of inspiring love of civil state as a preferable mode of power
over the multitude allows us to pause on the political relation of the multitude and the
sovereign. In short, the sovereignty of both the state and the multitude is a continuous
problem in Spinoza. If we acknowledge that a strong sovereignty of a free state might
Crowds and Spinoza’s Concept of the Political
be necessary to counter the bodily afects, even one that can “compel men by force,” we
also run into the problem of how sovereign power works to produce strong and joyful
afects: how it would create a state religion.80 hese problems don’t have solutions,
but they are extant within Spinozist ethics. If the sovereign’s body must inspire love
in order to capture a love of civil state, or even if a council of sovereign bodies must
do so, then what form should the commonwealth take?
he answers to such questions must always recall that the multitude’s power of
consent in any commonwealth depended on the multitude’s own ability to use force.
he ultimate sign of illegitimate power, then, is the presence of large crowds opposed
to the state. Even in a democracy, consent would come from the power of crowds or
their absence. “A commonwealth is always in greater danger from its citizens than
from its enemies,” Spinoza writes.81 his danger from citizens speaks both to the
power of the multitude’s capacity to wage a just war against the state. Even in the
commonwealth he imagines as a monarchy, Spinoza simultaneously argues that the
proper condition of the multitude is mandatory conscription in militias. All citizens
“are to be bound to have arms,” just as all citizens are to share public property.
he armed citizens must want to die for the state, Spinoza writes, as a condition of
monarchy: “the multitude may preserve under a king an ample enough liberty, if it
[is] preserved by the defense of the multitude itself.”82 he sovereign must inspire
the multitude to kill for him or her, and short of that the sovereign has failed the test
of civil love.
his domain of killing is what Carl Schmit saw as the concept of the political:
he claimed that the possibility of dying and the reality of death was the only way to
ensure civic responsibility. Like Spinoza, Schmit understood the intense role that
death must play as a concept that produces very strong afects. he most excited bodies
are those that are able to overcome the fear of death. To overcome this fear of death
without the use of reason implies a mass mobilization of bodies that would require
a most intense form of love for the state, or else a fear of other states. hese afects of
life and death would seemingly be related to the blessedness and glory of loving God,
since they both concern understanding the life and death of bodies. Either crowds
must be full of bodies that feel themselves as extensions of the sovereign, armies of
“one mind,” or they must somehow ind in the crowd itself afects that allow them
feel that the glory of “eternity” has arrived in the present. he sovereign crowd would
feel, in a sense, that they know God.
To do so, crowds must not feel afraid. When discussing the excited multitude,
Spinoza famously said, “he mob is terrifying, if unafraid.”83 his phrase interests me
here because of the idea of being “unafraid.” In his description of loving God, Spinoza
also said that knowledge meant fearing death less. In his discussion of how a single
sovereign could maintain civil love, the test, as we’ve heard, is also the willingness of
the multitude to die for the state. he afects that make death seem like a knowable
“species of eternity” must be produced when the multitude overthrows the sovereign.
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Let us imagine that killing is the domain of the political, as Carl Schmit claims, but
let us imagine that the sovereign and the state must be made into the enemy. Spinoza
does say the sovereign must fear the citizens the most. But he also says that “the king
can be deprived of the power of ruling, not by the civil law, but by the law of war, in
other words the subjects may resist his violence with violence.”84 I leave you here
with this thought: the consent of the multitude rests upon its ability not to die for the
sovereign, but to die for itself — that is, the “unafraid” multitude must be willing to
sacriice its bodies for another system. It seems the irst and best choice would be to
die because of sovereign violence, and thereby expose the lack of consent between
sovereignty and citizen. he next choice would be to decide whether one loved the
crowd enough to kill for it.
Crowds and Spinoza’s Concept of the Political
Notes
1.
“Afect is autonomous to the degree to which it escapes coninement in the particular body whose
vitality, or potential for interaction, it is” (35). Brian Massumi, Parables for the Virtual: Movement, Afect,
Sensation (Durham: Duke UP, 2002).
2.
Antonio Negri, “he Labor of the Multitude and the Fabric of Biopolitics,” trans. Sara Mayo and Peter
Grafe with Mark Coté; ed. Mark Coté. Mediations 23:2 (Spring 2008): 22. Negri’s claim is similar to Paolo
Virno’s Grammar of the Multitude. Both emphasize the productive potential of the general intellect,
new information technologies, and immaterial labor, in addition to networked communications and
globalization more generally.
3.
Negri, “he Labor of the Multitude” 22.
4.
Ernesto Laclau. “Can Immanence Explain Social Struggles?” diacritics 31:4 (Winter 2001): 5.
5.
Laclau, “Social Struggles” 7.
6.
Ernesto Laclau and Chantal Moufe, he Democratic Paradox. (London: Verso, 2005) 19.
7.
Laclau and Moufe, he Democratic Paradox 19.
8.
Laclau and Moufe, he Democratic Paradox 21.
9.
Laclau and Moufe, he Democratic Paradox 31.
10. Laclau and Moufe, he Democratic Paradox 32.
11.
Laclau, “Social Struggles” 10.
12. Benedict de Spinoza, A heological-Political Treatise and A Political Treatise, trans. R.H.M. Elwes (New York:
Dover, 1951) 288-89. See Benedict Spinoza, Spinoza: Complete Works, trans. Samuel Shirley (Indianapolis:
Hacket Publishing Company, Inc., 2002) 681.
13. Spinoza, Treatise 288. See Spinoza, Complete Works 681.
14. Spinoza, Treatise 289. See Spinoza, Complete Works 682.
15. Étienne Balibar, Masses, Classes, Ideas: Studies on Politics and Philosophy Before and Ater Marx (New York:
Routeldge, 1994) 4.
16. Balibar, Masses, Classes, Ideas 5.
17.
Ernesto Laclau, On Populist Reason (London: Verso, 2005) 14.
18. He also discusses the historian of the French revolution hostile to crowds, Hippolyte Taine, and the Italian
criminologist Cesare Lombroso, who believed crowd behavior originated in the physical malformations of
individual bodies. He also traces the idea of behavior imitation through the French psychologist Gabriel
Tarde, who clariied crowd behavior as “always present in the structuration of the social body” (42).
19. Laclau, Reason 28.
20. Laclau writes that “Le Bon saw the crowd as an inevitable part of the community, and devised some
kind of manipulative catechism to keep it within its limits” (Reason 61). Indeed, perhaps as a nod to
Machiavelli, even Spinoza admits in the Political Treatise that “public afairs are ordained and managed
by men of the utmost acuteness, or, if you like, of great cunning and crat” (Spinoza 288).
21. Laclau, Reason 39.
22. Laclau, Reason 48.
23. Laclau, Reason 63.
24. Laclau, Reason 71.
25. Laclau, Reason 74.
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Justin Rogers-Cooper
26. Laclau, Reason 74.
27. Laclau, Reason 75.
28. Spinoza, Treatise 296. See Spinoza, Complete Works 686.
29. Laclau and Moufe, he Democratic Paradox 54.
30. Spinoza, Treatise 292. See Spinoza, Complete Works 683.
31. Indeed, Casarino writes that no one has managed to combine Marx and Spinoza as well as Althusser.
32. Ernesto Laclau, Politics and Ideology in Marxist heory: Capitalism, Fascism, Populism (London: NLB, 1977)
108. chapter 2 #5
33. Spinoza, Treatise 295. See Spinoza, Complete Works 685.
34. Spinoza, Treatise 295. See Spinoza, Complete Works 686.
35. Spinoza, Treatise 295. See Spinoza, Complete Works 686.
36. Spinoza, Treatise 296-97. See Spinoza, Complete Works 687.
37. Spinoza, Treatise 297. See Spinoza, Complete Works 687.
38. Warren Montag, Bodies, Masses, Power: Spinoza and His Contemporaries (London: Verso, 1999) 80.
39. Montag, Bodies, Masses, Power 76.
40. Spinoza, Treatise 208. See Spinoza, Complete Works 533.
41. Spinoza, Treatise 208. See Spinoza, Complete Works 533.
42. Spinoza, Treatise 208. See Spinoza, Complete Works 533.
43. Carl Schmit, he Concept of the Political (Chicago: U Chicago P, 2007) 49.
44. Spinoza, Treatise 301. See Spinoza, Complete Works 690.
45. Antonio Negri, Subversive Spinoza, trans. Timothy S. Murphy, Michael Hardt, Ted Stolze, and Charles T.
Wolfe; ed. Timothy S. Murphy (Manchester: Manchester UP, 2004) 9.
46. Negri, Subversive Spinoza 9.
47. Spinoza, Treatise 200. See Spinoza, Complete Works 527.
48. Spinoza, Treatise 200. See Spinoza, Complete Works 526-527.
49. Spinoza, Treatise 200. See Spinoza, Complete Works 527.
50. Spinoza, Treatise 296. See Spinoza, Complete Works 686.
51. Spinoza, Treatise 206. See Spinoza, Complete Works 530.
52. Montag, Bodies, Masses, Power 69.
53. Montag, Bodies, Masses, Power 69.
54. Montag, Bodies, Masses, Power 66.
55. Montag, Bodies, Masses, Power 66.
56. Spinoza, Treatise 311. See Spinoza, Complete Works 698.
57. Laclau, Marxist heory 81.
58. Laclau, Marxist heory 88.
59. Laclau, Marxist heory 108.
60. Laclau, Marxist heory 109.
61. Laclau, Marxist heory 120.
62. Laclau, Marxist heory 128.
63. “he Nazis at the Nuremburg rallies were illed with joyous afect.” John Protevi, Political Afect: Connecting
the Social and the Somatic (Minneapolis: U Minnesota P, 2009) 50.
Crowds and Spinoza’s Concept of the Political
64. Spinoza, Treatise 204. In addition to framing modern politics, this statement seemingly works to
contextualize contemporary consumerism and the persistence of capitalism’s material comforts for
the privileged classes. See Spinoza, Complete Works 529
65. Spinoza, Treatise 201. See Spinoza, Complete Works 528.
66. Spinoza, Treatise 292. See Spinoza, Complete Works 683.
67. Negri, Subversive Spinoza 14.
68. Benedict Spinoza, Ethics, trans. Edwin Curley (New York: Penguin, 1996) 178. See Spinoza, Complete
Works 380.
69. Spinoza, Ethics 176. See Spinoza, Complete Works 378.
70. Spinoza, Ethics 178. See Spinoza, Complete Works 380.
71. Spinoza, Ethics 126. See Spinoza, Complete Works 331.
72. Spinoza, Ethics 136. See Spinoza, Complete Works 340.
73. Spinoza, Ethics 113. See Spinoza, Complete Works 320.
74. Spinoza, Treatise 292. See Spinoza, Complete Works 683.
75. Spinoza, Ethics 180. See Spinoza, Complete Works 381.
76. Spinoza, Ethics 180. See Spinoza, Complete Works 381-382.
77. Spinoza, Ethics 136. See Spinoza, Complete Works 340.
78. Spinoza, Ethics 136. See Spinoza, Complete Works 341.
79. Spinoza, Treatise 304. See Spinoza, Complete Works 692.
80. Spinoza, Treatise 204. See Spinoza, Complete Works 529.
81. See Spinoza, Complete Works 702.
82. Spinoza, Treatise 344. See Spinoza, Complete Works 722.
83. Spinoza, Ethics 144. See Spinoza, Complete Works 348.
84. Spinoza, Treatise 343. See Spinoza, Complete Works 722.
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