1. The document discusses Moishe Postone's work in relation to the Neue Marx Lektüre movement and the Frankfurt School. Postone was initially influenced by the young Marx's theory of alienation but came to understand Marx's mature critique of political economy differently after encountering the Grundrisse.
2. Postone argues that the Frankfurt School retained some of Marxism's fundamental presuppositions around private property and the market, limiting their analysis of capitalism. While they recognized issues with concepts like the proletariat, they did not fully rethink the categories of capitalism.
3. Habermas attempted to move beyond the theoretical dead end Critical Theory reached, but Postone disagrees
1. The document discusses Moishe Postone's work in relation to the Neue Marx Lektüre movement and the Frankfurt School. Postone was initially influenced by the young Marx's theory of alienation but came to understand Marx's mature critique of political economy differently after encountering the Grundrisse.
2. Postone argues that the Frankfurt School retained some of Marxism's fundamental presuppositions around private property and the market, limiting their analysis of capitalism. While they recognized issues with concepts like the proletariat, they did not fully rethink the categories of capitalism.
3. Habermas attempted to move beyond the theoretical dead end Critical Theory reached, but Postone disagrees
Original Title
In Conversation With Moishe Postone Silvia l Lopez 2012
1. The document discusses Moishe Postone's work in relation to the Neue Marx Lektüre movement and the Frankfurt School. Postone was initially influenced by the young Marx's theory of alienation but came to understand Marx's mature critique of political economy differently after encountering the Grundrisse.
2. Postone argues that the Frankfurt School retained some of Marxism's fundamental presuppositions around private property and the market, limiting their analysis of capitalism. While they recognized issues with concepts like the proletariat, they did not fully rethink the categories of capitalism.
3. Habermas attempted to move beyond the theoretical dead end Critical Theory reached, but Postone disagrees
1. The document discusses Moishe Postone's work in relation to the Neue Marx Lektüre movement and the Frankfurt School. Postone was initially influenced by the young Marx's theory of alienation but came to understand Marx's mature critique of political economy differently after encountering the Grundrisse.
2. Postone argues that the Frankfurt School retained some of Marxism's fundamental presuppositions around private property and the market, limiting their analysis of capitalism. While they recognized issues with concepts like the proletariat, they did not fully rethink the categories of capitalism.
3. Habermas attempted to move beyond the theoretical dead end Critical Theory reached, but Postone disagrees
Conducted at the Carleton Idea Lab on September 12, 2012 via Skype.
Silvia L. Lopez (S) : The first set of questions have to do with the Neue Marx Lektre. Your book has been translated into Spain relatively recently (2007) and has gotten a lot of attention, although in Europe, in general, the discussion of a new reading of Marx has been going on since the sixties. Would you care to situate your own work in relationship to the Neue Marx Lektre, especially in relation to the work of contemporaries of yours, like Michael Heinrich or the late Robert Kurz? How do you see your contribution as being different and what sets it apart from theirs? What were the concrete social-political circumstances that led you to read and theorize Marx anew?
Moishe Postone : When I first encountered Marx in the 1960s, I was very positively impressed by the young Marx, the Marx of the theory of alienation. I regarded his later critique of political economy as being hopelessly Victorian, a positivist tract against the exploitation of workers. Like many people, including many Marxists, I thought that Marx simply had worked out classical political economy more consistently to demonstrate the existence and centrality of exploitation. While I sympathized with this politically, it seemed to me to be too narrow to grasp the central problems of contemporary society in a full and rich manner. I found the work of the young Marx to be more adequate as a critique, but since I hadnt fully understood the theory of alienation, regarded him mainly as a cultural critic. In that sense, I viewed him as one of several important cultural critics, the difference being that he was progressive while many of the others were conservative. What fundamentally changed my understanding and proved to be a breakthrough,
2 conceptually, was my encounter with the Grundrisse. I was particularly struck by the well known sections of the manuscript that make it very clear that, for Marx, the category of value is a historically specific category. That, for me, had enormous implications. It was a key to understanding the mature Marx, a lever with which I sought to lift the traditional understanding of Marx out of its moorings. I now concluded that Marxs theory was fundamentally different than its traditional Marxist understanding. For example, the idea that value is historically specific meant, that overcoming capitalism did not mean the realization of value, as many people had argued. Many understood value in a Left-Ricardian manner, that is, as a category that demonstrates that the working class is the sole source of the creation of social wealth (whereby wealth is understood transhistorically). A just society, then, would be one in which that social wealth would belong to the class that produces it. Such a society would represent the realization of value. However, Marxs argument, that overcoming capitalism entails the abolition of value, implies not only that the most fundamental issue is not that of the level remuneration of workers for what they produce -- although this does remain an issue that certainly has become significant again today -- but that it also cannot adequately be conceptualized as the abolition of private ownership of the means of production. Rather, the Grundrisse indicates that post-capitalism for Marx is post-proletarian. This, however, renders the relation between reform and revolution even more problematic. It no longer can be understood as one between reforms that seek to ameliorate the condition of workers within capitalism and revolution that seeks to overthrow capitalism by abolishing the bourgeoisie. Rather, the abolition of capitalism requires as its sine qua non the abolition of proletarian labor. Reform, then, must move in the direction of that goal. This opens up many new ways of conceptualizing our current historical situation, including the rise of post- proletarian movements. Nevertheless, it also poses serious political and conceptual
3 difficulties, because there no longer is linear continuity between workers defending their interests as workers and overcoming capitalism. The issue of the self- abolition of the proletariat has become placed on the agenda historically. Yet, at the same time, the gains achieved during the past 150 years by workers as workers are being undermined.
S: Yes, if we think about the Frankfurt School in the 30s, they had already discarded that third section of Lukcs' History and Class Consciousness about the agency of the proletariat as a result of their confrontation with the social realities of their time While they in someway retained Lukacs' enormous theoretical contribution about rationalization and social mediation, they did not continue with the idea of the proletariat as world historical subject. I would argue that already prior to the 60s, and before the new readings of Marx came along, there was already a serious question about the proletariat.
Moishe Postone : I agree. Members of the Frankfurt School sought to reformulate the critical theory of capitalism so that it would be more adequate to the changed conditions of the 20 th century. Yet, I would argue, in trying to get beyond the limitations of traditional Marxism, they retained some of its fundamental presuppositions. As a result, although their approaches are crucially important, they represent a kind of half-way house, theoretically. I argue that none of them, really, accepted Lukcs notion of the proletariat as the world historical subject. However, Horkheimer and Pollock, in trying to come to terms with the newer, state-centric configuration of capitalism, continued to understand the most basic contradiction of capitalism as one between the market and private property, on the one hand, and labor, on the other. They then argued that the market and private property had been, in effect, abolished with the rise of state capitalism. In other
4 words, the contradiction of capitalism had been overcome. However, the consequence was further domination rather than emancipation. Once that happened, the universe became closed, for them. They no longer could see any sort of contradiction pointing to capitalisms determinate negation. It seems to me that the pessimism, on a fundamental level, of the Frankfurt School was not only a function of the terrible circumstances that fascism was dominant in the 30s and 40s; nor was it simply a matter of losing faith in the proletariat. Rather, it was rooted in an understanding of the changed structure of capitalism, as a result of which, theoretically, they no longer could see a way forward. So they moved from an analysis based on notions of immanent contradiction and determinate negation to the argument that the object no longer could be completely grasped by the subject, but exceeded its grasp. This understanding of the categories expressed their view that they were not (or no longer) contradictory; the totality and the categories grasping it had become one-dimensional. But this idea of an excess that exceeds the concept, the idea of that which cannot be subsumed, doesnt point to any idea of determinate negation. So I think that they had a theoretical foot in each camp; they attempted to get beyond traditional Marxism, but remained trapped by its presuppositions. I think theyre enormously important and Ive learned a great deal from them as well as from Lukcs, but I think they never completely shed or broke the conceptual shackles of understanding capitalism in terms of private property in the market and or of understanding the commodity form as one- dimensional, in terms of its value dimension alone. My work has sought to reestablish the contradictory character of the categories without doing so in terms of the market and private property.
S: That makes sense. They retained a concept of capitalism, while at the same time they had understood that Lukcs formulations couldnt hold completely and that
5 was in light, not only of the emergence of state capitalism, but also in light of the rise of fascism and the rise of mass culture. In their social and cultural theory they came to terms with that, but not in their theory of capitalism.
Moishe Postone : I think thats true. In some respects, Habermass work can be seen as an attempt to get beyond what he also regarded as a theoretical dead end that Critical Theory had reached. I dont agree with the path Habermas took in attempting to get beyond that theoretical impasse. However, he was responding to a real problem. Critical Theory was characterized by two central, interwoven, dimensions. One was to come to grips theoretically with a changed world in ways that were more adequate than orthodox Marxists attempts. At the same time they emphasized Marxs idea that a critical theory has to be reflexive, that is, it has to be able to account for the conditions of its own possibility. I think Habermas correctly saw that, with its theoretical turn in the late 1930s, the Frankfurt School no longer could account reflexively for critical theory itself. It could be argued that Habermas developed his evolutionary theory of communicative action in order to overcome the theoretical deficit and ground reflexivity. (I happen to think that returning to Marx would have allowed for a more satisfactory response to this theoretical dilemma.)
S: Yes, or perhaps he dispensed with it and transposed it to the realm of intersubjective relations to avoid the apparent aporetic relationship between subject and object that he perceived as a dead end. The ground shifted in philosophically and in social-theoretical terms to simply an intersubjective realm. It is in this sense that it is questionable to agree that he really was capable of accounting for his own position. In some way, it was completely relative to that intersubjective realm. The concept of ideology, for example, no longer played a role
6 in Habermas because everything was based on that particular relationship between subject and subject.
Moishe Postone: Im not saying that he successfully reestablished the grounds for critique, but I think he was trying to do so with his notion of communicative action, of intersubjectivity, as a realm separate from the systemic world. One of the many problems I have with Habermas is with his insistence that critical theories before him were bound to a subject-object paradigm, which he displaced with one that focused on subject-subject relations. Marxs theory, however, as a theory of social mediation, is also concerned with the subject-subject dimension. His category of abstract labor refers to a historically unique function of labor in capitalism as a socially mediating activity. When Marx argues that commodity-determined labor is both abstract labor and concrete labor, he is arguing that labor in capitalism uniquely mediates relations among people (abstract) as well as the relations of people to nature (concrete). Habermass understanding of labor in Marxist theory, however, misses this complex character, for it is a very orthodox Marxist understanding of labor. Its really just concrete labor. (I am suggesting, in other words, that returning to Marx would have allowed for a more satisfactory response to the theoretical dilemma of reflexivity in critical theory.)
S: Eventually, he will have to develop some kind of normative grounds for it or all his students will look for those normative grounds for a critical theoretical intervention, but in terms of a theory of capitalism, he doesnt make progress in any way.
Moishe Postone : No, not at all. Habermas doesnt help elucidate what happened in the last four decades, since the crisis of the early 1970s. Interestingly enough, I
7 think none of the major theorists of the 1970s and 1980s (who are very different from one another) Habermas, Derrida, Foucault really illuminate what has happened since the 1970s. It could be argued that they all were fixated on what we could call Fordist capitalism, that is, on the large scale, bureaucratic structures and technocratic ethos that characterized that configuration of capital. I find none of them are illuminating today, which is one of the reasons its worthwhile to go back to Marx.
S: Should we go back to the late 60s, early 70s, your discovery of the Grundrisse, and your thinking about value?
Moishe Postone : My intention was to help reconstitute a critical theory of capitalist modernity. As an aside, let me note that with regard to the issue of modernity, I disagree with someone like Michael Heinrich, and agree much more with Lukcs, Adorno, and Horkheimer. Capitalism isnt simply a mode of production, narrowly understood, but structures a form of life that we sometimes characterize as modernity, both in its subjective and objective dimensions. Habermas also doesnt seem to grasp this. He seems to regard intersubjective communication in modernity as self-grounding, while considering such communication in pre- capitalist society as structural by political or religious forms. That is, he understands the social molding of structures of communication when it takes the overt forms it does in pre-capitalist societies. But he loses Marxs brilliant insight that the form of social constitution in capitalism is such that what is socially constituted -- for example, the individual doesnt appear social but, rather, appears natural in the sense of being self-grounded and apparently decontextualized. That is, Habermas doesnt see that its precisely the appearance of being decontextualized that marks capitalist contextualization. In that sense,
8 Habermass understanding of communicative rationality falls prey to a fetish form. I think that Heinrich, too, views the critique of political economy much too narrowly, as being just about production and economics. He loses the subjective, cultural dimension of the categories. I think that is unsatisfying and unsatisfactory. It is not the kind of theory we need.
S: Yes. In a way its almost a step back from Lukcs, who was already trying to read Marx along with some kind of understanding of modernity. What about someone like Robert Kurz? He became in the last decade someone who represented the critique of value in similar ways to you, at least on a theoretical level. What do you think about his contribution? And then there are a number of other people who followed in his steps, in the groups Exit! and Krisis .
Moishe Postone : I think Kurzs untimely death is a serious loss. When I first encountered the Krisis group I hadnt known about them and I dont think they had known about me. And, yet, our work overlapped strongly, particularly with regard to the critique of value and the critique of labor. I didnt fully agree with the way in which Kurz posed the idea of crisis, that either one maintains capitalism will collapse or one thinks that capitalism can continue indefinitely. I was not happy with what I took to be a stark dichotomy. I also think my work is more open to, and concerned with, issues of ideology, subjectivity, and consciousness than is Kurzs.
S: Could you elaborate a little bit on that?
Moishe Postone : Yes. I dont think his concern was as much to try to understand changes in subjectivities that occur with changes in capital, with the ways one could analyze them with reference to capital itself. I began to try to work this out
9 with my work on anti-Semitism, where I tried to develop a non-functionalist theory of that worldview in ways that are different from most so-called materialist theories of subjectivity. My approach is much more related to Marxs theory of fetish forms. Im not sure that the Krisis group, or Krisis and Exit!, are as concerned with issues of subjectivity and fetish as I am, but this might be unfair on my part. Certainly of all of the Neue Marx Lektre, there are the most parallels and overlaps between their work and mine.
S: What was exciting for me as a Latin American when we discovered your work and the work of Kurz and his followers, was that you were both independently coming to similar conclusions about value in Marx. It corroborated for me a rigorous reading of the late Marx on value. Orthodox Marxism was something that was not going to contribute to that understanding. Perhaps it is not that these readings of Marx coming out of Germany are not interested so much in ideology, subjectivity, and consciousness, but I think the theoretical work is at such a level of abstraction that there is really very little room to come up with a critical social theory.
Moishe Postone : Im not sure about this. There was a period after I left Germany that I had a much more developed sense of what was going on in Germany, so I am not sure about this, but what could be the case is that many on the Left in Germany who are most concerned with subjectivity remain fairly orthodox followers of the Frankfurt school, particularly of Adorno. And I think that, like me, the Krisis and Exit! people think that, for example, Adornos understanding of the critique of political economy, as rich as it was, didnt go far enough. So it could be that within the specific German context, they stayed further away from issues of subjectivity
10 because the more orthodox Adorno followers were very concerned precisely with that.
S: Yes, thats fair enough. Perhaps in some circles that was the case. But going back to Adorno, in spite of its lateness or its historicity, Adorno was concerned with a theory of subjectivity in mass culture.
Moishe Postone : Absolutely.
S: His attempts at coming up with a critical social theory very much resided at the level of subjectivity, and there were reflections that departed very strongly from more orthodox understandings of ideology and consciousness and emancipation and in some way, maybe we can talk a little bit about not only just the limits of that tradition, but where could it be taken from now. Would you go back to some of the Frankfurt School, or is it something that is pretty much a historical moment in the history of social and cultural theory and now we have to invent new ways of understanding critical social theory? How do we think about subjectivity? My impression from being in Germany recently is that many people on the left are very much indebted to Foucault when it comes to thinking about subjectivity. I think post-structuralism has made its way to Germany via the United States. I see very little Frankfurt School left in Germany today. I am interested in hearing what you think about these Adornian attempts that Habermas dismissed. In Theory of Communicative Action he talks about the aporetic nature of Adornos standing with regard to theorizing critical theory. It wasnt really even a critique of his understanding of subjectivity. It was a critique basically of the incapacity to give an account of his own position. But with that I think that the baby gets thrown out with the bath water in terms of the attempts
11
Moishe Postone : I agree completely, thats exactly the phrase that I was going to use.
S: the attempts at on the ground working towards a critical social theory. So how do you see your work, your rigorous work on Marx, related to the development of a critical social theory today?
Moishe Postone : Im gathering from what youve just said that perhaps what I said earlier could be subject to misunderstanding. I very much value the brilliant attempts by people like Lukcs and Adorno -- with all of their differences -- to see subjectivity as intrinsically related to social objectivity, as two dimensions of the same thing, which cannot be grasped in terms of the base/superstructure model, much less in terms of interests. For them, to use a different vocabulary, critical cultural theory and critical social theory are intrinsically related. I think that is a tremendously important insight that we shouldnt lose. As far as Foucault is concerned, Ive never understood why people think Foucault had a theory of subjectivity- there is no real subjectivity in Foucault. Moreover, Foucault certainly did not account theoretically for the possibility of his own theory. That is, like structuralism, post structuralism fails in terms of the issue of self-reflexivity. Of course, those who adhere to such an approach will deny thats even an important question. For me, however, the absence of self-reflexivity renders the theory incoherent. I find it unfortunate that poststructuralism has spread in Germany as well. In France, at least, one could argue that the dominant Marxism known was the Marxism of the French Communist Party, which was, possibly, the most orthodox party in the West. And, as far as I know, thats where Foucault learned his Marx.
12
S: Yes. I think some of the more inadequate aspects of Foucault are that he cant really account for the big historical changes and transformations he treats in his writings.
Moishe Postone : There is not. I agree completely with you. Therefore, Im much more sympathetic to Adorno and Lukcs. However, what I was trying to point toward, also with my work on anti-Semitism, was an attempt to appropriate their crucial insights about the interrelatedness of subjective forms and objective forms, but to do so within a framework that rethought the nature of the objective forms themselves. I wanted to appropriate the insights of Lukcs and Adorno and yet put them on a different footing on the basis of a different reading of Marx. Does that make sense?
S: Yes.
Moishe Postone : You raised something that I want to come back to, although it will take us a little away from questions of subjectivity, Foucault, and Adorno. You mentioned, with regard to Foucault, that he cant explain historical change. I find that the question of history is one of the most performatively self-contradictory aspects of Foucaults thought. On the one hand, he claims that history is contingent, which is why he uses the word genealogy. Nevertheless, he writes book after book that indicates a massive transformation occurring at roughly the main time, during the early modern period of European history. Nevertheless, he does not problematize the transformations he outlines. So what he says he is going to do and what he does are two very different things. For me, one of the central arguments of Marxs analysis is that what truly distinguishes capitalism is that it has an intrinsic
13 historical dynamic. This is one of the reasons I disagree with those who focus too much on circulation, which is, arguably, what Heinrich also does. It loses sight of capitalisms non-teleological, complex, directional dynamic. Marx, in his mature works, renders historically specific, not just categories like value and labor, but history itself, in the sense of an intrinsic directional dynamic. If history, understood as such a dynamic, is a historically specific feature of capitalism, it no longer applies to the human species as a whole or to all societies, only to capitalism. But that signifies that you no longer can take that dynamic for granted and, on that basis, continue to argue questions of free will and determinism -- theological arguments that are dressed up in the modern language of agency and structure. Rather, the first question should be how can we explain, how can we ground, the extraordinary dynamic of capital, a dynamic that generates a complex trajectory. It seems to me that post-structuralism cant come close to addressing such issues.
S: Yes, there is no theory of capitalism but rather structural descriptions of the workings of different institutions, whether its the prison or the mental asylum that control and dominate populations, but theres no explanation those social structures or institutions to the basic reality of capitalism at each particular moment, since he seems to intervene at different moments in history, but theres never a theory of why that happens, or what it relates to.
Moishe Postone : Right. And that in part is because theories of capitalism remain implicitly understood as theories of exploitation and theories of property and theories of unequal distribution of power and wealth. And the historical dynamic of capitalism is seen as being a metaphysical assumption that comes from philosophy, from Hegel, but isnt really part of the theory.
14
S: Yes. That is a very interesting point. You bring up the question of wealth. I understand perfectly the distinction between wealth and value. However, the concern that emerges is about what kind of notion of political praxis would you advance in light of this theorization, when wealth is still created, and wealth is still unequally distributed. This does not take away from the theoretical understanding or distinction between wealth and value, but there are implications for the understanding of political praxis in your theoretical reflections. Would you comment on that?
Moishe Postone : Thats a gigantic question, and I think it touches upon a gigantic problem. I wish I had a very clear answer, which I dont think I have. But here again there is overlap between myself and Kurz. If one goes back forty years, one of the tacit assumptions made by many identity movements that developed, for example, around issues of race, and gender, was that the kind of economic growth that characterized the post-war decades would just continue. To use an American metaphor, there was an expanding pie, and different groups demanded their share. Those demands were not only economic and, in that sense, objective, but also subjective: groups demanded recognition. I think one of the ways to view the ongoing crises of the last forty years is that it no longer is clear that wage labor is growing. This has modified the effects and consequences of many identity movements who find themselves involved in struggles for a pie that no longer is growing and, at times, is even shrinking. I know there are people who think that wage labor continues to expand, elsewhere -- in China, for example, in India and Bangladeshthat the jobs lost here have simply been displaced, moved elsewhere. This is partially true. My understanding, however, is that technological change has played a much more important role, and that, even in China, the growth of wage
15 labor has leveled off. The epoch of accumulation, entailing the ongoing expansion of proletarian labor might be drawing to an end. And we dont have imaginaries for dealing with such a situation --- imaginaries in the sense of what another post- capitalist society might look like, as well as in the sense of the politics required to move in that direction. Earlier, it was conceptually easier to be a socialist in the sense that the nature of the goal seemed relatively clear, that if we abolish private property and had rational planning the result would be a much better society. And it was thought that a radicalized working class would strive to realize that goal. At issue were considerations such as the nature of extant power relations, and questions as to how to help motivate workers to move in the direction of socialism. If it is the case that capitalist society is coming into crisis today because its basis in proletarian labor is being undermined, one is faced with very different problems. And it raises the question of what it would mean to have a society no longer based on labor. To use a not very good historical analogy: it used to be that the difference between the Roman proletariat and the modern proletariat was that the modern proletariat was a working class, unlike the Roman proletariat, who had to somehow get by and who had to be pacified by bread and circuses. In a way, were entering a situation where the proletariat is becoming more Roman, where superfluous work is becoming structurally redefined as superfluous people. The precariat is one example; I think gigantic slums in much of the world is another example. Perhaps some anthropologist, studying people who eke out a living by picking garbage in the dumps of Rio, might show us how such people manage to survive and also show us that they have their own systems of meaning. But that sidesteps the major question of the crisis of working society, for which we dont have an answer.
S: Yes, I think for one in every three persons in the world live in a slum, I mean, live in a marginal community
16
Moishe Postone : Im surprised its that low. I would have expected that its even higher than that.
S: So thats that surplus population that cannot be incorporated into the production process, although, you know, anthropologists have a way of connecting these populations. I mean in Brazil in particular the connection between the slums and the city is dynamic, people live in the slums but they work in the hotel service industry, so the economies are tied in very particular ways
Moishe Postone : Yes. They are. Nevertheless, the situation is not like that in Europe during an earlier phase of capitalism, when surplus population from the land either went abroad or was absorbed into expanded factories. We do, of course, have mass migration today, but its of a very different kind. I think the xenophobic reactions to migrants on the part of so many people in metropolitan countries is, among other things, not only a sign that these populations are hopelessly racist, but is also a sign that theyre threatened precisely because they sense that there no longer is the sort of expansion of the recent past.
S: Yes there isnt, if we look at unemployment figures in Spain for example, you know close 45% of people between 18 and 25 are unemployed
Moishe Postone : Yes, the Spanish figures are unbelievable.
S: or a 23% general unemployment rate among working adults. How these populations get reincorporated into a market economy in Spain remains a central aspect of the crisis. If we look at the different European economies, Germany
17 included, we see a process of disciplining populations into becoming a thousand euro a month earners or to accept working for German programs at the rate of an euro an hour while you collect unemployment, for example - these are all ways of impoverishing populations who can no longer be incorporated into the labor force in the ways in which they were when there was growth. If we look at the European population in general, not just into the very concrete macroeconomic analysis of the situation, we could think that the situation in Europe is in a way a small laboratory, which confirms your own understanding of capitalism, in the sense that value cannot continue to be valorized in the way it once was.
Moishe Postone : On that level, yes, absolutely. Its complicated on the surface by the very peculiar structure of national sovereignty and common currency in Europe. But underneath it, I think youre right. And although the newspapers, at least in the United States, only refer to the prosperous north and the declining south, there is a crisis in Germany as well, for example, for older people. The cutbacks in Germany began decades ago with education. Education had been expanded enormously in the late sixties the same thing happened in France -- and then, with the crisis of the early 1970s, they stopped funding it. That was one of the first things they cut, so that they could continue funding other social programs. But recently the turn has been much more severe; there are many Germans who are facing an old age of penury, which I think was unthinkable a generation ago.
S: Yes. Pension plans are being privatized so there will not be enough money, there is no minimum wage in Germany, only in a few industrial different sectors they have minimum wages, everything else is negotiated, so this sort of neoliberal discipline that is being imposed by the troika now in other European countries, happened in Germany willingly ten years ago. It is a country that has been
18 subjected to those kinds of policies, which brings me to what you were talking about before in terms of politics and economics in Europe and sovereignty and nations where there is a subsumption of the political to the economic in Europe. Governments no longer represent the will of the people in strictly formal terms, in terms of their democracy definition, but they represent the interest of finance capital, and in the last months, the crisis that has unfolded regarding the European Central Bank and the buying of bonds in terms of making them general European bonds that collectivize the debt, this is also a process of this moment of capitalism in Europe, where there is not only an economic crisis but a political crisis in which the political and the models of social democracy that Europe has enjoyed for the last sixty years are being completely undermined by this subsumption. And I dont know if you want to say something about that.
Moishe Postone : I agree with you. However, I think one of the problems is that configuration of capitalism based on the primacy of the political turns out to have been a phase of capitalism, rather than a long-term reformist solution. It lasted longer in Europe than elsewhere, but I doubt whether we can return to that configuration. At its high point, that configuration was tied to very strong national organizations of economies that related to one another internationally. Today, however, capital is increasingly supranational rather than international. It is above the level of the nation-state. The nation state as a socio-economic-political unit has become transformed and, as a national unit, has been in decline -- certainly in the United States and in the UK -- for decades. That crisis is now hitting Europe in increasingly manifest ways. It hit Europe later, because social democracy was that much stronger in Europe. But even earlier, social democracy was being hollowed out in ways that werent quite as evident as in the programs of Thatcher and Reagan. But the crisis seems to be overtly general now and Europe seems to be
19 caught in a political economic double bind. The only way European countries can operate effectively on the world stage is as Europe. Increasingly --even more than during the Cold War national units such as France, Germany or Holland, would be ineffectually small on the world stage. And yet, the politics of Europe seems unable to move forward or backward right now.
S: I think it is as of now unclear what will happen. In these moments of crisis, the rise of xenophobia and racism in general, targeting populations violently in Europe seems to be on the rise, which brings me to your analysis of anti-Semitism and its historical specificity in terms of a moment in capitalism during the period of National Socialism. I would like to talk about your contribution to the study of anti- Semitism and then to extrapolate in some way the ways in which methodologically you went about that and how can we deal today with similar forms of xenophobia on the basis of an analysis of capitalism.
Moishe Postone : OK. Where should we start?
S: Lets start with Adorno and Horkheimers chapter Elements of Anti-Semitism in Dialectic of Enlightenment and go from there, since that seems to be such a foundational text and also it inherits some of the objections that have been made over decades to Dialectic of Enlightenment as a sort of trans-historical, universal anthropological text that couldnt pass the test of time in terms of the specificity of its historical analysis.
Moishe Postone : I think that Horkheimer and Adorno were completely correct to put their finger on anti-Semitism as an ideology of world historical significance. As I recall, their notion of anti-Semitism is very much tied to their idea that, with the
20 rise of the post-liberal state, of state capitalism, the sphere of circulation becomes less and less important. As a horizontal sphere, it is superseded by a vertical one, a command economy, which becomes fused with the sphere of production, and mediates itself. The Jews were associated with that sphere of circulation, which is being superseded. I think there is an element of truth in their approach -- and I hope Im not being unfair -- that is related to Hannah Arendts approach: the Jews became superfluous, and as they became superfluous, they increasingly became vulnerable and the object of hate. This approach basically takes Tocquevilles account of the aristocracy and French Revolution and applies it to the Jews rather than the nobility. Although I appreciate the attempts by Horkheimer and Adorno to relate anti-Semitism to capitalism, I tried to present it in a somewhat different way by using Marxs categories. I briefly analyzed the double character of the social form Marx terms commodity and capital; they simultaneously are characterized by an abstract dimension and a concrete dimension. This doubled character appears externalized, as a material dimension (goods, labor) and as an abstract dimension (money, the abstract imperatives and constraints of capital). Both dimensions and their interactions are functions of the commodity and capital forms, but this does not appear to be the case. The concrete dimension doesnt seem to be part of the mediation. It seems to be something natural and material that is mediated by something else, by money, for example, by the abstract dimension. The abstract dimension appears to be completely separable from the material dimension although they are intrinsically related. On the basis of this analysis I tried to explain how it was that, in anti-Semitic ideology, workers and industrial capitalists are seen as being in the same category. Both of them are considered producers; that is, they are on the concrete side of the equation. The object of such critique, then, becomes the abstract dimension money, finance capital which is considered parasitic on the concrete dimension. The Jews became
21 identified with the abstract dimension; they even are deemed responsible for it. The reactionary ideal of the Volksgemeinschaft, of the healthy peoples community, is that it can emerge if you get rid of the parasites, of the abstract dimension. In a sense, the organic notion of the nation as well as of labor converge at this point. On the basis of this analysis, I claimed that unlike many forms of racism and xenophobia, anti-Semitism poses a danger for the Left, because it is apparently anti-hegemonic. Ideas such as that Jews control and manipulate the world, indicate that anti-Semitism is different from other forms of race hatred. Usually, racism is directed against those who are deemed too concrete, not civilized enough, whereas the Jews are too civilized. Theyre abstract and sap the vitality of nations. Within the framework of this form of reactionary anti-capitalism, the world could become a healthy place if only one could get rid of the Jews. In other words, anti-Semitism is tied to an apparently emancipatory ideal: it becomes a displaced form of revolution. I think thats what gives it great appeal and power. With this approach, I tried to explain how one could possibly account for a program of complete extermination. This is not a quantitative issue. The Nazis killed many people. For example, they killed more Russians than Jews. But there was never a program to kill all Russians. There were programs to kill as many Russian or Polish leaders as possible, around whom resistance could crystallize. The rest were to be treated as slaves. But the program with regard to the Jews was to exterminate everybody. Whether they were labor slaves or not, ultimately they had to be exterminated. I suggested this implied that the Jews must have been considered inordinately dangerous, not inferior. My analysis of anti-Semitism, then, seeks to tie the program of extermination to a particular form of reactionary anti-capitalism.
S: Is there a relationship with the way in which the extermination was carried out? I mean there has been a lot written about the mechanical and industrial way in
22 which the Jews were disposed of and exterminated. Is that in any way related to your understanding of their personification of value? Or how does it relate to the state of industrial capitalism at the time?
Moishe Postone : The extermination camps are often treated as perverse institutions of capitalist production. I suggested they were its obverse. If a capitalist factory is a site for the production of value (the abstract) that, however, necessarily has to appear in concrete form, the camps like Auschwitz or Treblinka were anti- factories they were sites that sought to destroy the abstract and recover the concrete.
S: I see.
Moishe Postone : They sought to extract whatever use value they could from the Jews: gold from their mouths, their hair for mattresses, for example. They attempted to eradicate the abstract, the numbered individuals, while mining their concrete bodies for use-value. It should also be noted, however, that, although the death camps were an extremely important part of the exterminating machine, they were only one form the program took. In the East about two million Jews were shot by the Einsatzgruppen. They were not sent to camps. Although these two forms of killing are quite different -- the anti-capitalist factory and the killing fields, what they have in common is the idea of complete extermination. And I have tried to argue that there are important differences between mass murder and extermination; they require different explanations.
S: You mentioned earlier when talking about this, the danger for the left in terms of understanding anti-Semitism and that historical moment, or its historical
23 specificity, as an anti-capitalist revolt so to speak. And in the current crisis, there are a number of anti-systemic revolts, anti-capitalist revolts going on in the world, and I wonder if you have any comments to make with regard to the rise of those revolts and the relationship that they could have to xenophobia or to other reactionary forms of ideology.
Moishe Postone : I think many of them are nationalist, of course, in ways that are both xenophobic and anti-Semitic. The reason I am using the word and is that the two are not identical. On the one hand, many are xenophobic, as expressed, for example, by "Islamophobia". Theyre xenophobic against the concrete other who is entering their space, and in a sense, polluting society. The response is to raise the walls, close the gates, keep them out. And at the same time, however, you have variants that are also anti-Semitic in the sense that they are against mysterious abstract forces that are undermining the nation. What makes it complicated is that, sometimes, this takes the form of anti-Americanism. While the United States does many things that are very bad, theres a difference between having a grounded critique of what America does or identifying America with global capital. Theyre not the same. And its become easy for a certain kind of reactionary anti- globalization to simply identify America, or sometimes it is America and the Jews, with globalization. I think this is true also of some forms of third-world nationalism that I consider reactionary. I think the western Left, certainly the anti-Imperialist Left, has been insensitive to this problem and has too frequently served to legitimate reactionary regimes and movements as progressive.
S: I think in your analysis of anti-Semitism, by making the analysis of anti-Semitism so grounded in the specific form of capitalism at a specific moment in time, it leaves us with the question about the conditions that allow for the personification and
24 identification of the abstract value today with other groups, not just Jews. I guess what Im trying to say is, if I am faithful to the historicizing of your own theorization in the 30s, how do I extrapolate to today? I mean, we couldnt really read anti-Semitism in the same way, granted there is no extermination project going on, so thats not being theorized today. But if the categories of discrimination and xenophobia were insufficient to give an account of the extermination of the Jews in Germany in the 30s, are they not useful categories today? How do we recuperate some way of understanding the significant mechanisms that are unfolding in Europe towards the personification and identification of minority groups that are being targeted? How do we theorize xenophobia today?
Moishe Postone : I agree that xenophobia is a significant problem today and have suggested that, in its current form, it is related to the general crisis of work-based society. In general, I think competition (or perceived competition) especially for jobs often has been an important factor in generating xenophobia. I also think, however, that there is a resurgent anti-Semitism in the world today toward which many also on the Left are indifferent or oblivious. I am suggesting, then, that we should distinguish between xenophobia and anti-Semitism and be alert to both. I dont distinguish them because I think one is worse than the other. Both are bad, but they are bad in different ways. Even in the 1920s and 1930s, during the tidal wave of anti-Semitism in Europe, there were very strong xenophobic reactions, also against Jews. This is not identical with anti-Semitism; Im trying to distinguish the two analytically. During this period nations began closing themselves off. The United States, for example, which had welcomed immigrants for decades (which is why there are so many millions of Italians, Eastern Europeans, and Jews in the United States) closed access for such immigrants in 1923. This xenophobic and racist reaction was one of the indirect conditions for the Holocaust: Jews could no
25 longer get out of Europe unless they were prestigious migrs. At the same time, especially in the successor states to the Hapsburg and Romanov empires in Central and Eastern Europe, there were nationalist/xenophobic battles among Ukrainians, Poles, and Jews, Czechs and Germans, White Russians, Poles, and Ukrainians, each group demanding their own exclusive community. So, given this background situation, massive ethnic cleansing was, in addition to the Holocaust, among the consequences of WWII. It has largely been forgotten in the West that over 20 million people were ethnically cleansed in Central and Eastern Europe in 1945- 1946, to make these nations more homogeneous. Interwar Poland was less than 50% ethnically Polish; there were very large Jewish and Ukrainian minorities. The Jews were killed during the war and millions of Ukrainians and Poles were driven from one area to another, as were the Germans. So, this exceedingly bloody period was characterized both by murderous anti-Semitism and nationalist xenophobia. With all the differences between then and now, it seems to me that today we are witnessing an increase in both xenophobia and anti-Semitism. As in the interwar period, xenophobia itself should be internally differentiated. On the one hand, there is European xenophobia which, like the American variant after World War I, blames immigrants and foreigners for undermining the nation. On the other hand, what we are witnessing in Syria and Iraq is very similar to struggles in interwar Poland, Czechoslovakia and, more recent Yugoslavia. In these cases, successor states to multi-ethnic and multi-religious empires (Hapsburg, Romanov, Ottoman) are torn apart by nationalist xenophobia. On the other hand, there has been a great increase in anti-Semitism, as expressed, for example, by the notion that the United States is in the hands of the Jews, both politically and economically, as well as in the spread of forms of anti-Zionism that are essentially anti-Semitic. (Certainly not all forms of anti-Zionism are anti-Semitic. This, however, does not obviate the fact that some are indeed anti=Semitic.) In both cases, we are dealing with fetishized responses to
26 globalizing forces that seem to be beyond the control, not just of individuals, but also of states and of parties.
S: This brings us back to the issue of the subsumption of the political to the economic, where states serve the interests of finance capital, and they cease to represent their populations and become political representatives of the interests of capital.
Moishe Postone : I agree, but one of the many questions that we, as leftists, have to understand is the demise of the Fordist-Keynesian synthesis in the West and the command economies in the East. For a while it looked as if states had become the states of their populations. We need to understand better what the limits of that configuration were, because I do not think that we can return to it historically. A great deal of literature in the 1950s and 1960s claimed that the basic social and economic problems had been solved or were on their way to being solved; the key had been found. This was spoken about differently in the West than in the Communist world, but in both cases they were sure they had the key. If we dont understand the crisis of the 1970s, which undermined that configuration in both East and West, we wont understand what our options are now. I think we can never go back to the United States in the decades following Roosevelt or Spain as people dreamt it could be after Franco, or social-democratic Germany, for that matter. But I am not a prophet, I can only call for more theoretical-political work.
S: Dont you think that materialist theories of the state I am thinking here of Poulantzas, for example, were rethinking the state not as just a set of institutions that stand autonomous from society, but as some kind of social relation needs to be rethought again?
27
Moishe Postone : Yes, but I think that, retrospectively, there are some things that can be seen more clearly than during the 1970s. What became clear in terms of the long-range responses of states to the crises of the 1970s is that if they have to choose between capital accumulation and the social welfare of their populations, they will choose capital accumulation because otherwise they are going to collapse. I think that we have to continue rethinking the relationship between capital and the state. What the 1970s made very clear is that the state is not an independent entity.
S : Exactly. So what forms, I know youre not a prophet, but what forms of political imagination or political praxis do you envision, do you wish for, or would you put your bets on in terms of
Moishe Postone : Well I wouldnt put my bets on any, to be honest. But there are many different small initiatives, trying various approaches, that are important because we are going to have to discover through peoples initiatives what works, what unexpected limits are reached, etc. -- which then can provide us with ideas of where we can go. One possibility, and this is going to sound very traditional, is that even though there is a crisis of the laboring society, we can only really begin to work out the contours of future possibilities by means of organizations that try to move against or at least seek to diminish the enormous global discrepancies in labor conditions, labor laws, and labor remuneration. China and Vietnam come to mind, as do places like Bangladesh that basically has become a huge factory for the production of clothes for the West under terrible conditions. And here we see how nationalist ideologies that might have had a progressive dimension a generation ago have become increasingly reactionary. The insistence on cultural specificity has
28 been used by Third-World elites to justify political repression and cover up extreme levels of exploitation. It could be that Im right or Kurz is right about the end of the laboring society, but nevertheless the only way we will know is through labor organizing itself. One promising beginning in the United States in the 1990s, for example, was the anti-sweatshop movement, that highlighted working conditions in various Third World countries. They would, for example, expose conditions in factories producing for the American athletic shoe company, Nike, which were located in Indonesia and Vietnam. The movement avoided falling into a Cold War dichotomy according to which conditions in Indonesia were bad and those in Vietnam were either ignored or justified. I think we have to recover a kind of internationalism that was lost with World War I. The putative recovery of Internationalism with the Third International was ideological; internationalism really meant siding with one camp, which is different than internationalism. One camp became immune from criticism, which had disastrous effects on critical politics and thought. I think that some forms of anti-Imperialism recapitulate this and have become ideologies of legitimation for repressive regimes and reactionary movements. Among the things we have to fight against are forms of anti- Imperialism that are becoming reactionary; we have to fight against them in the name of progressive internationalism. I also think that we have to do so within a framework that rethinks labor. I dont think we can glorify the miserable condition of the precariat, and it seems to me that the way people try to create new communities, in and of themselves that isnt going to be the solution. Nevertheless it could begin to give us insight into how things could be different. I dont know what it is like in Spain with regard to countercultural ideas, but in the United States, certainly in the 1960s, along with the rise of an overtly political New Left, there were also people who experimented with new forms of living. But for the most part
29 their imaginary was a new form of living that separated itself from society. It wasnt a model for the rest of society; it didnt try to be.
S: Yes, what I think is interesting with regard to Spain in terms of this new imaginary that is different from the 60s, lets say, industrialized countries like the United States, is that there is a self-reflexive awareness about the limits of labor and this is not just because people have read, lets say Manifest gegen die Arbeit, or you, or Kurz, but I think people in Spain, for example, have recourse to some of the anarchist traditions and other forms of political praxis. In Spain today there are barter communities, alternative currencies dozens of alternative currencies that function in communities time banks, where unemployed people have come together, start a bank of hours, people deposit hours. So if you grow vegetables, in exchange, I take care of your elderly parents, whereby all activities are equal in the exchange process. They are not private communes like they were in Germany or they were in the United States, but they really function in the realm of the social, at a local level, in small cities. These are conjectural forms of imagining a world without money, a world without labor, because of the conditions where every 1 in 4 Spaniards is unemployed and they have to survive. Are these experimental forms of living beyond labor?
Moishe Postone : Yes, I agree. For me, I hope that at least some people, looking at these experiments, will also try to think of what might be viable on a larger scale. Even if the world becomes divided into giant global blocks, which is a possibility (in which case well be on the verge of World War III) we must attempt to find new forms. Your examples show that the local level seems to be more promising. But the real problem is how the local can be tied to the global. I dont mean that as criticism. I mean it, however, as a problem that should be kept in mind.
30
S: Yes. Moving back a little bit to the theoretical reflection, it has been a while since your book came out in English; in Spain reading your work its a more recent phenomenon work. Has there been time for you to reflect upon your contribution to the reading of Marx since book was published? What would you see as the theoretical challenges for the future, what would be some key elements towards the reconstruction of a critical social theory on the basis of this new reading of Marx?
Moishe Postone : One thing that I think is happening already, and I think it has to happen more, is that we must focus more on capital and less on trying to find the revolutionary subject. The project of locating a revolutionary subject first focused on the working class and then became displaced by many onto various forms of Third Worldism. I think that it would be important to leave that behind and try to recover critical internationalism rather than the highly ideological forms of nationalism that declare themselves internationalist. And this new internationalism must try to deal with global capital in ways that soberly tries to understand capitals development and the possibilities it generates (even if it undermines the possible realization of those possibilities) rather than simply demonize it. I think is extremely important, because although the Left is very sensitive to xenophobia, and correctly so, it is less sensitive to reactionary forms of anti-finance or anti- American or anti-Semitic ideologies. Those three are related to one another. I think such fetishized forms of opposition ultimately weaken the Left and move it in the direction of a fusion with movements I regard as being reactionary. We should expunge from our political unconscious the notion of socialism in one country or in one post-colony that has masqueraded as internationalism, and recover a form of real internationalism that also seeks to wrestle with the end of laboring society.
31 This is very modest on my part, because what I am trying to suggest is that the theory gives us a guideline as to what we shouldnt do more readily than it gives us a guideline as to what we should do. But avoiding what we shouldnt do is already an important step in trying to wrestle with what we should do.
S: In terms of a cultural and social theory project for the left, we know the limitations of the early Frankfurt School, but a tremendous part of their contribution was to try to think mass culture and society in really concrete terms by developing categories to come to terms with the social world under new conditions. How do you see that being reconceptualized today, or what aspects of the social-cultural theory of the Frankfurt School can be reactivated, if not with the same vocabulary, with the same impetus and the same belief in the need to develop a categorial apparatus to understand capitalist cultures and societies today?
Moishe Postone : When I reread the debate between Benjamin and Adorno on mass culture in the 1930s, I find unfortunate the diremption between Benjamins overly optimistic Brechtian understanding of mass culture as being the culture of the masses and Adornos overly pessimistic reading of it entailing the total subsumption of everything under value. People criticize Adorno because of his attitude towards jazz and then mistakenly call him an elitist. I do think, however, that there is a rational core to that criticism. What neither Adorno nor Benjamin worked out was the double-sided character of mass culture. If, in the Work of Art essay, Benjamin identified art form and class form in a manner that was too affirmative, Adornos brilliant analysis of the structuring of mass culture by the commodity form understood that form in terms of its value dimension alone. Marxs analysis of the commodity and of capital, however, insists on their double- sidedness. Capital isnt only something negative that has befallen human beings,
32 but is at the same time enormously generative of possibilities that it itself constrains. So its both very generative and very deforming. Frequently, it is difficult for us to keep both moments in our mind. Too frequently in recent decades we have witnessed a split between those who hypostatize popular culture and regard every television show as a site of resistance, and those who regard anything that is mediated electronically as being yet another example of domination. Yet, it seems to me that we are going to have to try to understand the double sidedness of, for example, the Internet. Again you either have people who hypostatize it as being decentered and truly democratic, with no one controlling it the harbinger of an emergent global civil society, and those who point out that everything is extremely fractured, that there is no common discourse, that it is an echo chamber, and that increasingly it is commercialized and used by corporations for their own ends. Our task, in this case, is to analyze the emancipatory potential of these new forms of electronic communication while, at the same time, uncovering the ways in which they are not emancipatory. On that basis, we could consider if it were possible to appropriate that emancipatory potential in ways that might separate it from its extant form. The problem with capital is that it is double-sided. I think we have a great deal of difficulty grasping it as both. But it seems to me that if we want to know what the possibilities of the present really are, it has to be on the basis of the present. The quasi-anarchists collectives or institutions in Spain that are springing up that you mentioned can be regarded as signs of the growing superfluity of a lot of people and, at the same time, as attempts by people to think beyond the present. They are both at the same time. They cant be glorified as an alternative to capitalism on the one hand; neither, however, should they simply be dismissed as a symptom of capitalism.
33 S: I agree with you, and I think it brings us to that central contribution of the double-sided character of the commodity that you so well elaborate in your book, and that if we were to extrapolate, perhaps this double-sided character of the commodity and of capital to our own cultural and social analysis maybe we can start somewhere. It has been wonderful to have the opportunity to be in conversation with you. Is there anything else youd like to add?
Moishe Postone : Not that I can think of offhand. Such conversations are always only beginnings. But it is good if they are beginnings. I thank you for this.
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