Brian Holmes on Sun, 15 Jan 2017 01:29:03 +0100 (CET) |
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Re: <nettime> The Meme Wars |
Thanks for this post, David. You bring up a lot of core issues! I am sure that many will already know that just over a month ago the writer and researcher Florian Cramer gave a lecture in which he shared his extensive research into little known factors influencing the rise of Alt.right. Well, I had no idea. Sounds important, bravo Florian. After the election I did spend some time on the alt-right blogs. Notably this disgusting text: http://www.dailystormer.com/a-normies-guide-to-the-alt-right The emergence of a twisted subculture from the anonymous and unrepressed dialogues of 4chan is painfully obvious. Along with the psychosexual dynamics of adolescent male domination. There is a kind of grotesque liberation happening there, or at least, an unleashing of vital energy. Like the attack dogs that were unleashed on the North Dakota water protectors. It's also clear that these energies have been spread through condensation into viral memes. All of this would be laughable if it had not been so successful. Moreover there is aparently no equivalent sub-cultural energy on the left.. where once memes such as the Anonymous V Victory -Guy Fawks, masks were everywhere, the anarchist/left has been strangely absent in the US meme wars of 2016, whilst alt.right has succeeded in transforming the spectacle of protest into the reality of power. The problem is, the alt.right holds a disempowering mirror to the anarchist/left. On the one hand they have adopted many of our favorite tactics, like networked organizing and cultural subversion. On the other, they are doing it explicitly in the name of, and with the implicit backing of, the President of the United States. To top it off, this is an anti-statist movement whose members, like most of the Tea Party affiliates, want to "blow up Washington." Never mind the incoherencies, they have never troubled any kind of populism. The alt-right manages to fuse the energy of libertarian anti-statism with the hypnotics of authoritarian submission. The radical fringes of liberal society in the Twenties and early Thirties could not stand up to that sort of thing. I see the anarchist/left as a radical fringe of contemporary liberal society, and I think it/we are structurally unable to generate a countervailing power to the current libertarian-authoritarian surge. Through the Nineties and the early Naughts I could already see that to be effective, our movements - and the artist-tricksters in particular - actually *needed* the democratic frameworks (individual rights, free press, rule of law) that many of their adherents sought to abolish outright. Well, that was pretty naive. Pure anti-statism doesn't cut it anymore. Yet there is no way for even the most populist left to imitate the delusional fusion of contraries that is currently sweeping the right. There are going to be lots of fights ahead, at all levels including the streets. We have to use them to move democratic society beyond its current liberal-free trade-tacit racist-active extractivist-"accept the power of the bankers and the military" format. I think people are going to need to develop radically political relationships to movements and charismatic leaders seeking to transform the state. "Radically political" means agreeing to disagree, cultivating and maintaining the critique of your own side as a constructive power rather than a continual incitement to splinter and break. "Movements and charismatic leaders" means organized and disciplined formations that seek elected office but are no longer conventionally liberal, because they recognize that the rule of today's law can be wrong, and they take the risk of changing it through personal and partisan action. In the States we already have people like Jill Stein of the Green Party who will take principled direct action. Bernie and the people around him should do this too, and actively support those who are already doing it. Then I think the tricksters and meme-makers of the left could do some surprising and powerful things. Getting back to the subject, I want to say don't kid yourself about the alt-right transforming the spectacle of protest into the reality of power. They did not do that as a subculture, rather they were integrated into a hegemonic bloc, along with lots of existing mainstream baggage. Subcultures don't take power, by definition. But they do change the mainstream culture to certain degrees. Occupy and Black Lives Matter did a lot to improve the Obama administration, which from the get-go was a liberal expression of the civil rights movements of the Sixties (already not so bad, I mean). Now the limits of Democratic Party style liberalism are a lot more clear. So if we don't just cling to old ways, we radical subculturalists can potentially go a lot further under current abysmal conditions. solidarity, Brian # 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: http://mx.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org # @nettime_bot tweets mail w/ sender unless #ANON is in Subject: