Brian Holmes on 13 Sep 2000 16:48:40 -0000 |
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<nettime> corporate individualism |
It is really fantastic to read Brian Caroll's text. He successively reinvents: --The 19th-century Marxist critique of formal democracy and individual rights: "one person, a human being, who is a consumer, versus a transnational corporation as an all powerful meta-individual can be quite an imbalance between these individuals' rights, etc." --The 18th-century democratic public sphere: "a strategy, after defining concepts like the `private' corporation by de|con-structing the private language of individual wo|men, would be to establish a `public' identity for individuals, groups, and corporations based on the imperfect concept of humanity, as a heritage common to all." --The 20th century (post WWII) regulation of and partial socialization of the international economy: "if corporations were able to transform their business structure from private profit to public profitability, the ideology of the privatized corporate estate may no longer govern the state of the world, but the states of the world the corporations." Without going into the 18th, 19th and 20th, without using "the Marx word," or "the Habermas word," or "the Keynes word," Caroll argues the whole thing out crystal-clear, and then at the end makes the point that the very language in which we speak about politics and economics has to be reinvented, made new. It's like watching a language wake up from Thatcherism and the ideology that "society doesn't exist." Old books might really not be necessary at this point, but I would suggest Karl Polanyi's "The Great Transformation" and MacPherson's "The Political Philosophy of Possessive Individualism" if you want to see how other people put the same things two generations ago. Brian Holmes # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net