1
This is an un-copy edited draft of an article to be published in Theory, Culture, Society in 2016.
Deleuze Against Control: Fictioning to Myth-Science
Simon O’Sullivan, Goldsmiths College
Our ability to resist control, or our submission to it, has to be assessed at the level of our
every move. We need both creativity and a people. (Deleuze, 1995a: 176)
Introduction: Deleuze and Control Societies
The complexity and heterogeneity of subjectivity is being increasingly reduced and standardized
through various economic and political constraints, but also via accompanying images, narratives
and other forms of control. The last ten years in particular – especially with the arrival of web 2.0 –
have seen an acceleration (in terms of both production and dissemination) of these dominant
representations: put bluntly, even our unconscious is being colonized by a mediascape that
masquerades as participatory. In such a homogenized ‘post-internet’ context contemporary art’s
ability to produce different images and narratives – its power of fictioning – can take on a political
character. Indeed, in our current moment, when alternative and resistant strategies for life and living
can be stymied, art (and aesthetic practices more broadly) can offer up other resources – other
models for an increasingly hemmed in existence.
In what follows I attempt to stake out some of the conceptual terrain of these kinds of expanded art
practice – what I call (following Sun Ra and the artist Mike Kelley) myth-science – through
recourse to Gilles Deleuze’s short polemical essay ‘Postscript on Control Societies’ and the
accompanying interview (in the book Negotiations) on ‘Control and Becoming’.1 Although twenty
years old these two short pieces remain highly prescient in terms of their diagnosis of our
contemporary moment, whilst also offering up a veritable armoury for any practice that might pitch
itself against control. The interview in particular contains a condensed version of many of the
inventive concepts of A Thousand Plateaus as well as an overview of Deleuzian thought in general.
That said, in the Postscript we also encounter a Deleuze more sober, and at times pessimistic, than
the one of the Capitalism and Schizophrenia books. The joy and affirmative tone of the
collaborations with Felix Guattari gives way to a polemic that, if not a lament, certainly has
something of the Frankfurt School diagnostic about it, especially in its attention to the increasingly
technologically determined nature of society and how such advances, although at first an apparent
positive move away from previous, harsher, regimes, have brought their own more insidious and
intricate issues and problems.
For Deleuze it is William Burroughs who first identifies and names this new kind of society that is
‘knocking on the door’ of those Disciplinary ones analyzed by Michel Foucault. Control Societies
1
In relation to Sun Ra (and Afrofuturism more generally) see Kodwo Eshun’s More Brilliant than the Sun
(Eshun, 1998), especially Chapter 9 ‘Synthesizing the Omniverse’, pp. 154-63. Mike Kelley, in an essay on
Olaf Fahlstrom, links the term more particularly to the fictioning aspect of contemporary art practice,
especially in its expanded form (Kelley, 1995).
2
are characterized by modulation rather than confinement: continuous monitoring and ongoing
assessment replace discrete temporal segmentation – and, in terms of the proliferation of image
worlds I mentioned above, there is the superseding of the analogical by the digital with the
emergence of different kinds of cybernetic machine leading to the computer. In fact, one gets the
feeling that Deleuze’s short essay is itself a letter to the future; certainly the sense is that it will be
the generations after his own, which is to say ours, that will have to fully attend to the various twists
and turns, the feints and bluffs – the snakes as Deleuze calls them – which, in some parts of the
world, are increasingly replacing the more straightforward strategies of power of previous
societies.2
Indeed, Deleuze’s predictions, have, by and large, been accurate and Control Society – at least in
the First World – is now at least one definition of our own networked present. ‘Big Data’ is enabling
ever more sophisticated pattern recognition which is resulting in pre-emptive politics and marketing
strategies that determine our behavior and our ‘choices’ (see Savat 2009). Social Media has further
tightened the coils of the snake. In fact, web 2.0 – with its stock of images and narratives (and the
employment of algorithmic logics ‘behind the scenes’) – is an especially insidious example of the
snake’s forked tongue insofar as it dictates the very terms of our participation (despite its claims we
remain, as Guy Debord might say, spectators on our lives). Nevertheless, despite this pessimism we
also find in Deleuze’s essay something else that does hark back to a book like A Thousand Plateaus:
a call to look to what has been opened up by these ‘new’ developments – or, at least, to the
possibilities of resistance that, for Deleuze, will always and everywhere accompany control,
understood as our latest form of capitalism. As he remarks towards the end of the Postscript – in a
counterpoint to resignation and any melancholic paralysis: ‘It’s not a question of worrying or
hoping for the best, but of finding new weapons’ (Deleuze, 1995a: 178).
My own essay ends with a case study – of Burroughs’ ‘cut-up’ technique – but ahead of this follows
a more abstract and technical programme of connecting certain concepts extracted from the above
mentioned interview (each section begins with a quote taken from there) alongside further
references to other works by Deleuze and Guattari. The intention is to map out the contours of an
artistic war machine (the new weapons) that might also play a role in the more ethico-political
function of the constitution of a people (or, what Deleuze in the interview calls ‘subjectification’).3
2
In fact, it might be more accurate to say that we are living in societies that operate by both Discipline and
Control (with the former playing the preeminent role in more repressive regimes, the latter in more
‘democratic’ ones). David Savat has convincingly argued that these two modes of power not only use the
same ‘writing machines’ (databases) but that Deleuze’s ‘dividual’ – understood less as object, than as
‘objectile’ – is itself a ‘product’ of the two modes of power in combination (treated as both form and flow as
it were) (Savat, 2009). Savat’s essay concerns itself specifically with the modes of operation (and
instruments) of Control Societies, but it also gestures towards a parallel project which would be concerned
with those forms of subjectivity (or, the ‘superject’) that might live against control. It is here that I would
situate my own essay insofar as it attempts to move from diagnosis to strategy.
3
In fact, Deleuze suggests that this subjectification might be operative without a subject as such (when the
latter is understood as a particular – static – configuration) and more akin to the irruption of an event
(Deleuze, 1995: 176). Deleuze also suggests that this subjectification as event is what constitutes the brain –
understood as itself a set of machinic processes that cannot be simply reduced to the object of typical science
(being more like an extended – rhizomatic – network that extends out into the world). Subjectification, in this
sense, is the experimentation with different kinds of connections and leaps, different kinds of thought that,
3
The New Weapons
In reflecting on our contemporary moment – in ‘Control and Becoming’ – Deleuze turns to Marx
and to the Marxist analysis of capitalism, but is also very much concerned with the terrain and
terminology of A Thousand Plateaus, introducing three new conceptual categories (which are also
found there) that might be said to determine, for Deleuze, the operating protocols of any new
weapons. These are as follows:
i. Lines of flight
You see we think any society is defined not so much by its contradictions as by its lines of
flight, it flees all over the place, and its very interesting to try and follow the lines of flight
taking shape at some particular moment or other. (Deleuze, 1995a: 171)
Lines of flight are the cutting edge of any given assemblage (broadly understood as a collection of
heterogeneous elements in relation with one another), and, in this sense, are as much a name for
capitalism’s own advanced operating probes as they for anything straightforwardly resistant to the
latter. They are to do with experimentation – with invention and innovation – and thus also with the
overcoming of limits and boundaries. More generally they imply a move out of a given territory,
and, as such, we might also call these lines of flight deterritorialisations. In fact, for Deleuze and
Guattari, capitalism names two moments or movements: a primary one of deterritorialisation and
then a secondary one of reterritorialisation that captures and siphons off surplus value from this
prior moment (see Deleuze and Guattari, 1984: 222-40). This, we might say, is the ontological
terrain of any new form of control, but also of any ‘resistance’ to it (Hardt and Negri make this
explicit in their suggestion that hitherto – within Critical Theory – it was the second moment that
was critiqued (as in ideology or institutional critique), but that now it might be more a question,
following Deleuze, of strategically affirming the first moment (of ontological production and
creativity) (see Hardt and Negri, 2000, pp. 69-90).
Lines of flight then foreground a logic of movement and speed. In Deleuze and Guattari’s terms
the first of these is extensive (to do with objects in space: ‘Movement designates the relative
character of a body considered as “one”, and which goes from point to point’ (Deleuze and Guattari,
1988: 381)), the second intensive (involving a register of the subjective: ‘speed, on the contrary,
constitutes the absolute character of a body whose irreducible parts (atoms) occupy or fill a smooth
space in the manner of a vortex’ (Deleuze and Guattari, 1988: 381)). This twin definition is found
in A Thousand Plateaus where, in fact, it is really speed – alongside the idea of an ‘imperceptible
movement’ (beneath or above a given perceptual threshold) – that is characteristic of the line of
we might say, produce different thought-subjects (and not the single, cohesive and centered-subject favoured
by control – or, indeed, a more fluid subject that nevertheless remains tied to the typical and dogmatic image
of thought (and prevailing market)). I lay out the mechanics of this – and other Deleuze-Guattarian ideas on
subjectivity – in more detail in Chapter 5, ‘Desiring-Machines, Chaoids, Probe-heads: Towards a Speculative
Subjectivity (Deleuze and Guattari)’, of my book On the Production of Subjectivity (O’Sullivan, 2012: 169202)
4
flight. In Anti-Oedipus on the other hand, and in relation to capitalism per se, a more
straightforward idea of extensive movement is still determining of these experimental probes.
In terms of some recent debates in continental philosophy and politics we might suggest that lines
of flight operate through acceleration (with the caveat that some accelerationist thinkers pitch their
understanding of this latter term against any Deleuzian concept of speed).4 Certainly the important
passage from Anti-Oedipus that to a certain extent initiated what has become known as
‘accelerationism’ refers precisely to this particular topography of capitalism, and to the idea that
rather than resisting the latter it might be a question of going in the opposite direction: ‘To go still
further, that is, in the movement of the market, of decoding and deterritorialisation’ (Deleuze and
Guattari, 1984: 239). ‘For perhaps the flows are not deterritorialised enough, not decoded enough
… not to withdraw from the process, but … to “accelerate the process,” as Nietzsche put it: in this
matter, the truth is that we haven’t seen anything yet’ (Deleuze and Guattari, 1984: 239-40). I will
be returning – briefly – to accelerationism at the end of my essay, but it is worth remarking here that
art practice might also orientate itself in this forward direction: not as withdrawal or critique (at
least as its primary moment) but on – or as – an experimental line of flight.
ii. Minorities
A minority, on the other hand, has no model, it’s a becoming, a process. One might say the
majority is nobody. Everbody’s caught, one way or another, in a minority becoming that
would lead them into unknown paths if they opted to follow it through. (Deleuze, 1995a:
173)
Minorities are not based on identity (as, for example, with class (at least when this is thought as
stable and molar)), but, as it were, on a common lacking of (molar) identity. A minority is not then
to do with number (it is not necessarily smaller), but to do with a model – the major – that it refuses,
departs from or, more simply, cannot live up to. We are all minorities in this sense. But the minor
also names a strategic operation – as in the becoming-minor of a major language. In Deleuze and
Guattari’s Kafka: Towards a Minor Literature, written between Anti-Oedipus and A Thousand
Plateaus, this operation involves three interconnected aspects or procedures (see Deleuze and
Guattari, 1986: 16-18): 1. The foregrounding of the affective character of language (or a stuttering
and stammering of the major and an undoing of typical sense); 2. The connecting to a non-oedipal
4
See, for example, Alex Williams’ discussion of the difference between speed and acceleration in his
‘Escape Velocities’ (Williams, 2014). Speed, for Williams, is tied to capitalist axiomatics (as is the case,
Williams argues, in Nick Land’s writings (that Follow Deleuze and Guattari)); acceleration, on the other
hand, involves new forms of conceptual navigation (as in Reza Negarestani’s work) and new images of the
human as hyper-rational being (as in Ray Brassier’s). There is more to be teased out here insofar as it is not
clear whether the more intensive character of speed – the ‘stationary voyage’ – has been factored into this
distinction: the question, it seems to me, is whether rational thought generally, and new forms of conceptual
navigation more specifically, are characterized by movement or by speed (in the terms I have laid out above)
(Williams’ comments on the specifically geometric character of conceptual navigation would suggest the
former). I attend in more detail to some of the accelerationist writing of Brassier and Negarestani – in
relation to myth-science and what I call mythotechnesis – in my forthcoming essay ‘Accelerationism,
Prometheanism and Mythotechnesis (O’Sullivan, 2016a).
5
and non-domestic outside (a principal of collectivity and alliance); and 3. A future-orientation (a
minor literature is for a people-yet-to-come).
In terms of 2. and 3., a minor literature is always already political (any individual therein is always
connected to larger social assemblages) and always a collective enunciation (insofar as a minor
literature expresses ‘another possible community’ and forges ‘the means for another consciousness
and another sensibility’ (Deleuze and Guattari, 1986: 17).5 Indeed, the literary – or more generally
artistic – machine is, in this sense, also a revolutionary machine. 6 Art, we might say, is like the
forward hurled pre-cursor of politics – again, a line of flight – but also one that deterritotialises the
major. This is to use the ‘what is’ in a different and experimental manner. It links to what Deleuze
says in the interview about the ‘untimely’ nature of an event that is concerned with becomings that
are irreducible to past configurations (or any given historical conditions).7 Becomings are an
irruption of the new in this sense.8
Minorities then foreground a stuttering and becoming of the major. Indeed, we might make the
claim here that a line of flight that is not minor – that does not stutter and stammer, does not depart
from the major – is just the typical operating fringe of more majoritarian assemblages and
territories. A caveat to this – following my remarks above – is the more complex and insidious idea
(the snakes once again) that capitalism – at its furthest reaches, its sharpest points – is also
minoritarian, or, at least, utilizes certain logics of the minor, for example in the capacity to abandon
models (of, for example, the typical commodity-object or, indeed, the usual consumer-subject). We
might make the more specific claim then – again, following my remarks above – that the minor is
that which foregrounds becomings (and, as such, a certain intensive speed) that in themselves
operate against reterritorialisations (the more regulative speeds of the market) when these are
attempts to fix and extract surplus value from deterritorialisations. Art involves the production of
the new, but only when this is also a stuttering and stammering of the given.
iii. War machines
5
In terms of the first of these aspects – the stuttering and stammering character of a minor literature and the
relation of this to art practice – see Ola Stahl’s essay in this issue and also Chapter 2, ‘Art and the Political:
Minor Literature, the War Machine and the Production of Subjectivity’, of my book Art Encounters Deleuze
and Guattari (O’Sullivan, 2009: 69-97). This book also contains the beginnings of my thoughts about art as
myth-science (144-53), and, more generally, tracks through the implications of Deleuze (and Deleuze and
Guattari’s) thought for contemporary art practice.
6
Although there is not the space to go into this here, Deleuze’s idea of a minor – third-world –cinema (that
‘contributes to the invention of a people’) might be said to operate as a connector between the artistic and
political machine – and, as such, might also contribute to the idea of fictioning or myth-science as an
expanded art practice (see Deleuze, 1989: 217). (Thanks to Ola Stahl for this point).
7
To quote Deleuze:
What history grasps in an event is the ways it’s actualized in particular circumstances; the event’s
becoming is beyond the scope of history. History isn’t experimental, it’s just the set of more or less
negative preconditions that make it possible to experiment with something beyond history. (Deleuze,
1995: 170)
8
For a more detailed discussion of becoming – in relation to fictioning – see my forthcoming essay
‘Memories of a Deleuzian: To Think is Always to Follow the Witches Flight’ (O’Sullivan, 2016b).
6
…finding a characterization of ‘war machines’ that’s nothing to do with war but to do with a
particular way of occupying, taking up, space-time, or inventing new space-times:
revolutionary moments … artistic movements too, are war-machines in this sense. (Deleuze,
1995a: 172)
The concept of the war machine involves both a spatio-temporal aspect (the occupying of a
different space-time) and an organizational aspect (the actual composition of the machine, with its
own particular speeds and slownesses). A war machine is then to do with both duration and
composition: it operates on – or as – a line of flight, but it is also a processual work of construction.
As such, and as Deleuze remarks, art movements – and could we also add specific art practices? –
might be war machines (Deleuze and Guattari, 1995a, 172). War is only the concern of these
machines insofar as they inevitably clash with a state machine that is intent on striating the smooth
space that is the war machine’s milieu (one thinks here, for example, of the increasing privatization
of public space and the responses to this (or, indeed, the ‘enclosure’ of a once wild web)). How has
a particular space-time been composed and then how is it deployed – or pitched – within and
against the world as given (or more dominant space-time)? These are the key determining factors of
an ‘engaged’ art practice.
In A Thousand Plateaus Deleuze and Guattari go into more detail about the composition of these
machines and their complex relation to both war and the state. Indeed, the state, although wary,
often appropriates – or ‘employs’– a radically exterior war machine (it does not have such machines
of its own). In these moments war becomes the machine’s object and a line of abolition is drawn.
However, it is always an uneasy marriage insofar as a war machine, in its essence, involves
something different: the ‘drawing of a creative line of flight, the composition of a smooth space and
… the movement of people in that space’ (Deleuze and Guattari, 1988: 422). Any critique – ‘against
the state and against the worldwide axiomatic expressed by States’– is an important, but secondary
effect of this prior creative impulse (Deleuze and Guattari, 1988: 422).
For Deleuze and Guattari, and in terms of actual composition, it is Kleist’s writing machine (and in
particular Penthesilea) that most accurately depicts the different speeds – and impersonal affects –
of the war machine involving as it does ‘a succession of flights of madness and catatonic freezes in
which no subjective interiority remains’ (Deleuze and Guattari, 1988: 356). In the war machine
everything is always already exterior, involving a different kind of rhythm – a composition of
becomings – to the state machine (and, indeed, to those forms of life produced by the latter). The
war machine is also necessarily collective in character involving decentralized bands or packs,
‘groups of the rhizome type’ which are ‘formally distinct from all state apparatuses or their
equivalents which are instead what structure centralized societies’ (Deleuze and Guattari, 1988:
358). But here pack also applies to the molecularity on the other side as it were, to the multiplicity
of different speeds and affects that constitute any given ‘individual’. A single artist might be a pack
in this sense.
In the plateau on the war machine Deleuze and Guattari also write about a nomad – or minor –
science that is ‘nourished’ by this machine (and involved in more hydraulic and non-hylomorphic
models of matter), as well as to a more general nomadology that opposes state knowledge. Indeed,
they go further, pitching a more nomadic form of thought against the dominant image of thought (or
7
its state form). Once again Kleist, alongside Nietzsche and Artaud are the crucial figures of this
stammering ‘counterthought’ that both destroys previous images but also connects with an exterior
– or the forces of the outside (see Deleuze and Guattari, 1988: 376-78).9 Could this nomadic
thought be characterized as a kind of myth-science insofar as it also often involves recourse to, and
a mobilization of, those images and narratives – fictions – overlooked and occluded by dominant
state forms?10 I will return to this idea below.
Although not specifically linked to the idea of new weapons, Deleuze introduces two further
concepts towards the end of the interview that are also useful in providing a more focused idea of
myth-science as a kind of fictioning:
iv. Fabulation
Art is resistance: it resists death, slavery, infamy, shame. But a people can’t worry about art.
How is a people created, through what terrible sufferings? When a people’s created, it’s
through its own resources, but in a way that links up with something in art … or links up art
to what it lacked. Utopia isn’t the right concept: it’s more a question of ‘fabulation’ in which
a people and art both share. (Deleuze, 1995a: 174)
Another name for this fabulation, I want to suggest here (and have developed elsewhere) is mythscience.11 This is the imagining and imaging of alternatives, but also their insertion into reality –
to augment or disrupt the latter. As Deleuze remarks, this is not the same as utopia – that can work
to defer the production of a new people (always the receding horizon), but something more
pragmatic. It is linked to the idea of a minor literature (of giving voice to a people-yet-to-come)
insofar as it is a collective enunciation (even if there is just one author). Art, we might say, calls
forth the production of another world that is appropriate and adequate to its own depictions
(however ‘abstract’ these might be).12
On the face of it there cannot but be a representational aspect to this kind of fictioning – a picturing
and a story (at least of some kind) – but there is also a tendency to produce something different to
those more standardized (and market driven) image-worlds typically on offer. Myth-science, in this
sense, is not simply an escape from prevailing conditions insofar as it impacts back on reality,
setting up further conditions – or contours and coordination points – for the production of a people
(and how they might live). In fact, any production of subjectivity necessarily involves narratives
and images and, as such, we might say, more specifically, that fictioning – as myth-science – offers
up a different sequence and script (once again, Burroughs’ artistic practice is a good case study of
9
See also Jon K. Shaw’s essay in this issue.
I will be returning to this idea of the mobilization of aspects of the past in and against the present in a
further essay on ‘Myth-Science as Residual Culture and Magical Thinking’ (in relation to the writings of
Raymond Williams and Gilbert Simondon).
11
See especially O’Sullivan, 2014b, but also O’Sullivan 2014a, 2015 and 2016a; and also Burrows and
O’Sullivan, 2014.
12
I briefly attend to this world-building character of contemporary art (especially in relation to the increasing
ubiquity of digital imaging and editing technologies) in my essay ‘Art Practice as Fictioning (or, MythScience)’ (O’Sullivan, 2014b).
10
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this). It is also in this way that this fictioning also demonstrates – as a refraction – the fictional
nature of any and all so-called reality.
v. Vacuoles of noncommunication
Maybe speech and communication have been corrupted. They’re thoroughly permeated by
money – and not by accident but by their very nature. We’ve got to hijack speech. Creating
has always been something different from communication. The key thing is to create
vacuoles of noncommunication, circuit breakers, so we can elude control. (Deleuze, 1995a:
175)
To a certain extent this fifth concept is the opposite to the line of flight – at least apparently –
insofar as it involves a kind of deceleration (circuit breakers). But, crucially, a slowing down on one
register (in terms of perceptible movement) is the necessary precondition for allowing a different
kind of speed at another (something more imperceptible). In fact, it seems to me – strategically -–
that it is always a question of mobilizing different speeds at different times (and especially, again, of
resisting a certain regulative speed determined by the market). A slowing down of extensive
movement can allow/be the cover for the increase in an intensive speed of thought (when this is also
understood as a material practice).13
These vacuoles also involve turning away from dominant regimes of communication (they are not
concerned with typical ‘meaning’) and their attendant profit driven logics. This refusal to participate
in the dissemination of ‘information’ can in and of itself release the creative impulse (see Deleuze,
2006). Here, art can be a name for the pinnacle of these dominant regimes (the art market), but also,
in its radical form, a name for that which resists them. It might also be the case that vacuoles of
non-communication are not always completely mute. Dada for example was an extreme example of
the refusal to mean – or, indeed, to sell – but was certainly not silent. A vacuole is selective in what
it allows through – both in and out. What Dada did let through was precisely non-sense when this
was also the germ of a new kind of sense and thus of new kind of subject appropriate to it. Adding
this component to our myth-science concept foregrounds its noncommunicative and creative
aspect. It stops making sense which means it can start doing something else.
To recap: myth-science, at least as I have attempted to define it as a particular practice of fictioning,
is a projecting and pitching of fabulation against dominant reality (the imagining and imaging of
alternatives). It operates as, or on, a line of flight, as a deterritorialisation (it involves a specific kind
of movement and speed), but also concerns the deployment of narratives for minorities (a
stuttering and becoming of the major). It is characterized by a different logic of duration and
composition from the state which in itself implies the occupation of a different space-time (it is a
13
As Deleuze and Guattari suggest in A Thousand Plateaus:
The nomad knows how to wait, he has infinite patience. Immobility and speed, catatonia and
rush, a ‘stationary process’, station as process … (It is therefore not surprising that reference
has been made to spiritual voyages effected without relative movement, but in intensity, in
one place: these are part of nomadism). (Deleuze and Guattari, 1988 381)
9
war machine). It is not to do with dominant signifying regimes – it refuses to mean in this sense –
but is noncomunicative and creative (operating as a vacuole).
Conclusion: Belief in the World
What we most lack is a belief in the world, we’ve quite lost the world, its been taken from
us. If you believe in the world you precipitate events, however inconspicuous, that elude
control, you engender new space-times, however small their surface or volume. (Deleuze,
1995a: 176)
What would it mean to believe in the world? It seems to me that it would be to believe that another
world is indeed possible (besides the one of ‘Capitalist Realism’ as Mark Fisher puts it (Fisher,
2012)). It would be to maintain a kind of Spinozist faith in the potential of a body – understood in
its most expanded (and compound) form – and thus, following Spinoza, also of the potential of
thought itself (again, understood as a creative practice). And that both – body and thought – are
always capable of more than the reductive account given of them by common sense and typical
consciousness – or indeed social media and neoliberal marketing strategies (the locus of these last
two defining contemporary mechanisms of control).
Ultimately this is what fictioning as myth-science proclaims: a belief that something else is possible
– and that, as such, we are capable of more. More specifically it suggests that in art practice – in its
most expanded forms – we also have a practical elaboration of this belief. 14 This is not exactly the
production of this other world (as Deleuze remarks this is the business of politics), but a kind of
preview of this other place. In the above I suggested that art might operate as a pre-cursor of
politics, but we might also characterize it as a backward hurled fragment of a possible future. Again,
as Deleuze suggest in the quote above, utopia is not quite the right word as it suggests something
too far off, too far removed from the world as it is. 15 Fictioning as myth-science is rather a practice
that, although future-orientated, instantiates a difference here and now.16
In a present in which our dreamtimes are co-opted to sell commodities and lifestyles, this
production of new and different kinds of narratives and images, as I mentioned in my introduction,
can become in and of itself politically charged. Here art’s ability to produce that which was
previously unseen and unheard, untimely images that speak back to us – as if they came from an
elsewhere – is especially important and, again, takes on a militant character. These other, perhaps
stranger, image-worlds and fictions – intended but also not intended – call forth a different kind of
subjectivity (one masked, we might say, by more dominant – and standardized – models). They
14
MacKay and Avaneissen make a similar call – in their Introduction to ♯Accelerate – for ‘new sciencefictional practices, if not necessarily in literary form’ (MacKay and Avaneissen, 2014: 37).
15
For more philosophical detail on this critique of utopia – as well as an intriguing footnote to the work of
Ernst Bloch as a thinker of a more immanent concept of utopia – see Deleuze and Guattari, 1994: 99-100.
16
I attend to a case study of this kind of time-loop – the Cybernetic Culture Research Unit’s concept of
‘hyperstition’ – in this essay’s companion piece, ‘Hyperstition, Accelerationism and Myth-Science’
(O’Sullivan, 2015).
10
speak not to us, but to something within us (or, to the collectivity that we are ‘behind’ any molar
identity).17
Again, these practices will maintain a critical edge against ‘reality’ insofar as in the very offering of
an alternative they cannot but refuse more dominant parameters and protocols. Indeed, fictioning in
this sense is a kind of ‘weaponisation’ of fiction per se. It is no longer simply an escape from, or
panacea for, the existing conditions, but something sharper: the material exploration of other
imaginary possibilities in the here and now. As far as this goes fictioning as myth-science is just the
latest incarnation of Dada, echoed by the Situationists, then by Burroughs. Its opening gambit – that
I have attempted to conceptually elaborate in this short essay – might simply be: Nothing is true,
everything is permitted.
Coda: Burroughs and the Cut-Up
When you cut in to the present the future leaks out. (Burroughs, 2014)
Deleuze was at the infamous ‘Schizo-Culture’ conference at Columbia University in 1975 – an
encounter between French desiring-thought and American counter-culture – and no doubt heard
Burroughs’ talk on ‘The Limits of Control’, which, along with Burroughs’ other writings no doubt
influenced his own thesis on Societies of Control. Burroughs makes the key claim in that talk that it
is through words that control is exercised – as a form of persuasion, often involving concession
giving, but also deceit, or, we might say, fictions that are passed off as ‘real’. For Burroughs,
although its hard to identify who, precisely, is doing the controlling, it is the mass media – itself a
kind of fictioning machine – that he sees as especially culpable. Fiction – in the guise of typical
communication and the dissemination of information – operates here as a strategy of control.
Burroughs’ own technique of the cut-up was then an operation against control, a stuttering and
stammering – a deterritorialisation – of typical representation, pitched against the dominant
fictioning-machine and its productions or what Jean-Francois Lyotard once called the ‘reality
effect’. Indeed, Lyotard was also at the Schizo-Culture event. Did he also have Burroughs and the
cut-up in mind (alongside more canonical art practices) when writing about the avant-garde
function of art as that which disrupts this production of reality? Certainly, this reality effect, for
Lyotard, was produced by a certain logical syntax and sequencing of both words and images (see
Lyotard, 1984: 74). The cut-up, precisely, disrupts – and re-arranges – this consensual world.
In fact, in so far as typical grammar and syntax produces a certain linearity and temporal
progression, then the cut-up invents very different durations – a stuttering of homogenous and
standardized capitalist time. Indeed, the breaks and jumps – but also the repetitions and layering –
of the cut-up novels produce a very different kind of space-time (following Bryan Gysin, we might
also say the cut-up is a form of space-time travel in this sense). In Deleuzian terms, the cut-up
operates as a kind of vacuole, but also opens up a smooth space within the striated. It functions as a
war machine.
17
This understanding of art practice – as a kind of holding pattern (giving consistency and cohesion) for
points of collapse – is laid out in more detail in my co-written essay (with David Burrows) ‘S/Z or Art as
Non-Schizoanalysis’ (Burrows and O’Sullivan, 2014).
11
The cut-up also produces different images – often startling – that appear to come from somewhere
else (and that then speak back to their progenitor).18 This is a side stepping of typical authorship
(the mobilization of chance – a contact with an outside to the subject – alongside processes of
selection and editing) and the insertion of the writer into the more inhuman semiotic chain of the
unconscious (when this is both signifying and asignifying). What it means is that one produces
something that has not been wholly intended. Is this not the goal of all art? To produce something
that is by the self, but not of the self at the same time? Insofar as the key element of reality – as
produced by the dominant fictioning-machines – is the constituted subject who lives and reproduces
that reality, then this circumnavigation of the self opens up a new world and a new kind of subject
appropriate to that world. J. G. Ballard (himself a master of myth-science) once remarked that with
the ‘Nova Trilogy’ Burroughs was producing a new mythography – and, indeed, Burroughs himself
refers to the later ‘Cities of the Red Night’ trilogy as a ‘mythography for the space age’. It seems to
me that Burroughs was indeed involved in a kind of myth-science: intent on breaking dominant –
major – myths, but also producing new minor myths for a people-yet-to-come.
I mentioned the important contemporary debates around accelerationism towards the beginning of
my essay, and, indeed, it seems to me that someone like Burroughs operates as a key corrective to
any over emphasis on reason and rationality as progenitors of any new kind of human for a postcapitalist world. The Promethean impulse – if it really is to produce something new – will need to
take account of these other space-time explorations – these different fictionings that have an impact
beyond the realm of art per se. 19 In relation to this, and as a final note to this Coda, we might point
to Genesis P. Orridge’s interest in ‘behavioral cut-ups’ that take Burroughs principles out of the
literary form and into lived life (see Orridge, 1992). For Orridge this cut-up as strategy for life was
precisely a form of magick when this, again, names both a disruption of consensual reality and the
production of alternatives (including an alternative production of subjectivity). This is to live
against control – or, at least, to probe its limits. For Orridge it is ritual and performance art – as with
his own COUM Transmissions and later Psychic TV – that is able to navigate this terrain insofar as
both involve the deployment of these alternative narratives alongside experimental actions in the
world. Myth-science is a war machine, but also a kind of ‘performance fiction’ in this sense. 20 It
18
And, in this sense, the cut-up has something in common with Francis Bacon’s painting, at least as Deleuze
writes about it, in the careful utilization of chance and collapse (or chaos) so as to scramble the given (the
figurative) and allow another world to emerge (the figural) (see especially Deleuze, 2003: 99-110) (Thanks
to Jon K. Shaw for this connection).
19
In terms of the contemporary instantiation of this rational Prometheanism see especially the essays by
Negarestani and Brassier in Mackay and Avaneissen, 2014: 425-66 and 467-88. For more detail on my
particular rejoinder – in relation to myth-science – see my extended critical review of that book (O’Sullivan,
2014a).
20
The term ‘Performance Fictions’ was coined by David Burrows to describe a number of recent
contemporary art practices in London (see Burrows, 2011). See also the writings of John Russell that also
develop a concept of fictioning in relation to art writing and contemporary art practice – especially his own
(an indicative example is ‘Autonomy is Not Worth the Paper it is Written On’ (Russell, 2012). The present
essay owes much to my own ongoing collaboration (and performance fiction) with Burrows, Plastique
Fantastique (see www.plastiquefantastique.org). I am indebted more directly to Burrows for turning me
towards Burroughs.
12
has left the written page (or indeed the gallery and studio) to become a way of life: a mode of
aesthetic existence against control.
References:
Burroughs W (2014) The Limits of Control. In: Lotringer S (ed) Schizo-Culture: The Book. New
York: Semiotext(e).
Burrows D (2011) Performance Fictions. In: Burrows D (ed) Art‐Writing‐Research: Vol. 3.
Birmingham: Article Press.
Burrows D and O’Sullivan S (2014) S/Z or Art as Non-Schizoanalysis. In: Buchanan I and Simpson
L (eds) Schizoanalysis and Art. London: Bloomsbury.
Deleuze G (1989) Cinema 2: The Time-Image. Tomlinson H and Galeta H (trans). London: Athlone
Press.
Deleuze G (1995) Negotiations: 1972-1990. Joughin M (trans). New York: Columbia University
Press.
Deleuze G (2003) Francis Bacon: The Logic of Sensation. Smith D-W (trans). London: Continuum.
Deleuze G (2006) What is a Creative Act?. In: Lapoujade D (ed) Two Regimes of Madness: Texts
and Interviews 1975-1995. Hodges A and Taormina M (trans). New York: Semiotext(e).
Deleuze G and F Guattari (1984) Anti-Oedipus: Capitalism and Schizophrenia. Hurley R, Seem M
and Lane H-R (trans). London: Athlone Press.
Deleuze G and F Guattari (1986) Kafka: Towards a Minor Literature. Polan D (trans). Minneapolis:
University of Minnesota Press.
Deleuze G and F Guattari (1988) A Thousand Plateaus. Massumi B (trans). London: Athlone Press.
Eshun K (1995) More Brilliant than the Sun: Adventures in Sonic Fiction. London: Quartet, 1998.
Fisher M (2009) Capitalist Realism: Is There no Alternative?. London: Zero.
Hardt M and A Negri (2000) Empire. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
Kelley M (1995) Myth Science. In: Oyvind Fahlstrom: The Installations. Ostfildern: Hatje Cantz,
1995).
Lyotard J-F (1984) The Postmodern Condition: A Report on Knowledge. Bennington G and
Massumi B (trans). Manchester: Manchester University Press.
13
Mackay R and Avaneissen A (eds) (2014) ♯Accelerate: The Accelerationism Reader.
Falmouth/Berlin: Urbanomic/Sequence.
Orridge G-P (1992) Behavioural Cut-Ups and Magick. In: Dwyer S (ed) Rapid Eye 2. London:
Annihilation Press.
O’Sullivan S (2009) Art Encounters Deleuze and Guattari: Thought Beyond Representation.
Basingstoke: Palgrave.
O’Sullivan S (2012) On the Production of Subjectivity: Five Diagrams of the Finite-Infinite
Relation. Basingstoke: Palgrave.
O’Sullivan S (2014a) The Missing Subject of Accelerationism. Mute: np. Available at:
www.metamute.org/editorial/articles/missing-subject-accelerationism (accessed 10 June 2014).
O’Sullivan S (2014b) Art Practice as Fictioning (or, Myth-Science). diakron 1: np. Available at:
www.diakron.dk (accessed 10 June 2014).
O’Sullivan S (2015) Accelerationism, Hyperstition and Myth-Science. In:, Matts T, Noys B and
Sutherland D (eds) Accelerationism and the Occult. New York: Punctum Books.
O’Sullivan S (2016a (forthcoming)) Accelerationism, Prometheanism and Mythotechnesis. In
Ireland A, Brits B and Gibson P (ed) Aesthetics After Finitude. Melbourne: re:press.
O’Sullivan S (2016b (forthcoming)) Memories of a Deleuzian: To Think is Always to Follow the
Witches Flight). In: Somers-Hall H, Bell J and Williams J (eds.) A Thousand Plateaus and
Philosophy. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.
Russell J (2012) Autonomy is Not Worth the Paper it is Written On: Writing. Written. Art-Writing.
Art. Writing. In: Everall G and Rolo J (eds) Again, A Time Machine: From Distribution to Archive.
London: Bookworks.
Savat D (2009) Deleuze’s Objectile: From Discipline to Modulation. In: Savat D and Poster M (eds)
Deleuze and New Technology. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.
Williams A (2014) Escape Velocities. e-flux 46: np . Available at: www.e-flux.com/journal/escapevelocities (accessed 10 June 2014).
Deterritorializing Deleuze 2
Deleuze Against
Control: Fictioning
to Myth-Science
Theory, Culture & Society
2016, Vol. 33(7–8) 205–220
! The Author(s) 2016
Reprints and permissions:
sagepub.co.uk/journalsPermissions.nav
DOI: 10.1177/0263276416645154
tcs.sagepub.com
Simon O’Sullivan
Goldsmiths, University of London
Abstract
Through recourse to Gilles Deleuze’s short polemical essay ‘Postscript on Control
Societies’ and the accompanying interview (in Negotiations) on ‘Control and
Becoming’, this article attempts to map out the conceptual contours of an artistic
war machine (Deleuze’s ‘new weapons’) that might be pitched against control and
also play a role in the more ethico-political function of the constitution of a people
(or, what Deleuze calls subjectification). Along the way a series of other Deleuzian
concepts are introduced and outlined – with an eye to their pertinence for art
practice and, indeed, for any more general ‘thought’ against control. At stake here
is the development of a concept of fictioning – the production of alternative narratives and image-worlds – and also the idea of art practice as a form of myth-science,
exemplified by Burroughs’ cut-up method. It is argued that these aesthetic strategies
might offer alternative models for a subjectivity that is increasingly standardized and
hemmed in by neoliberalism.
Keywords
Burroughs, contemporary art, control, Deleuze, fictioning, Guattari, myth-science
Our ability to resist control, or our submission to it, has to be
assessed at the level of our every move. We need both creativity
and a people. (Deleuze, 1995: 176)
Introduction: Deleuze and Control Societies
The complexity and heterogeneity of subjectivity is being increasingly
reduced and standardized through various economic and political
constraints, but also via accompanying images, narratives and other
Corresponding author: Simon O’Sullivan. Email: hss01so@gold.ac.uk
Extra material: http://theoryculturesociety.org/
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Theory, Culture & Society 33(7–8)
forms of control. The last ten years in particular – especially with the
arrival of Web 2.0 – have seen an acceleration (in terms of both production
and dissemination) of these dominant representations: put bluntly, even
our unconscious is being colonized by a mediascape that masquerades as
participatory. In such a homogenized ‘post-internet’ context contemporary art’s ability to produce different images and narratives – its power of
fictioning – can take on a political character. Indeed, in our current
moment, when alternative and resistant strategies for life and living can
be stymied, art (and aesthetic practices more broadly) can offer up other
resources – other models for an increasingly hemmed in existence.
In what follows I attempt to stake out some of the conceptual terrain of
these kinds of expanded art practice – what I call, in a nod to both Sun Ra
and Mike Kelley, ‘myth-science’ – through recourse to Gilles Deleuze’s
short polemical essay ‘Postscript on Control Societies’ and the accompanying interview (in the book Negotiations) on ‘Control and Becoming’.1
Although 20 years old, these two short pieces remain highly prescient in
terms of their diagnosis of our contemporary moment, whilst also offering
up a veritable arsenal for any practice that might pitch itself against control. The interview in particular contains a condensed version of many of
the inventive concepts of A Thousand Plateaus as well as an overview of
Deleuzian thought in general. That said, in the Postscript we also encounter a Deleuze more sober, and at times pessimistic, than the one of the
Capitalism and Schizophrenia books. The joy and affirmative tone of the
collaborations with Félix Guattari gives way to a polemic that, if not
a lament, certainly has something of the Frankfurt School diagnostic
about it, especially in its attention to the increasingly technologically determined nature of society and how such advances, although at first an
apparent positive move away from previous, harsher, regimes, have
brought their own more insidious and intricate issues and problems.
For Deleuze it is William Burroughs who first identifies and names this
new kind of society that is ‘knocking on the door’ of those disciplinary
ones analysed by Michel Foucault. Control societies are characterized by
modulation rather than confinement: continuous monitoring and
ongoing assessment replace discrete temporal segmentation – and, in
terms of the proliferation of image worlds I mentioned above, there is
the superseding of the analogical by the digital with the emergence of
different kinds of cybernetic machine leading to the computer. In fact,
one gets the feeling that Deleuze’s short essay is itself a letter to the
future; certainly the sense is that it will be the generations after his
own, which is to say ours, that will have to fully attend to the various
twists and turns, the feints and bluffs – or snakes, as Deleuze calls them –
which, in some parts of the world, are increasingly replacing the more
straightforward strategies of power of previous societies.2
Indeed, Deleuze’s predictions have, by and large, been accurate and
control society – at least in the First World – is now at least one
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definition of our own networked present. ‘Big Data’ is enabling ever
more sophisticated pattern recognition which is resulting in pre-emptive
politics and marketing strategies that determine our behavior and our
‘choices’ (see Savat, 2009). Social media has further tightened the coils of
the snake. In fact, Web 2.0 – with its stock of images and narratives (and
the employment of algorithmic logics ‘behind the scenes’) – is an especially insidious example of the snake’s forked tongue insofar as it dictates
the very terms of our participation (despite its claims we remain, as Guy
Debord might say, spectators on our lives). Nevertheless, despite this
pessimism we also find in Deleuze’s essay something else that does
hark back to a book like A Thousand Plateaus: a call to look to what
has been opened up by these ‘new’ developments – or, at least, to the
possibilities of resistance that, for Deleuze, will always and everywhere
accompany control, understood as our latest form of capitalism. As he
remarks towards the end of the Postscript – in a counterpoint to resignation and any melancholic paralysis: ‘It’s not a question of worrying or
hoping for the best, but of finding new weapons’ (Deleuze, 1995: 178).
The present article ends with a case study – of Burroughs’ ‘cut-up’
technique – but ahead of this follows a more abstract and technical
programme of connecting certain concepts extracted from the above
mentioned interview (each section begins with a quote taken from
there) alongside further references to other works by Deleuze and
Guattari. The intention is to map out the contours of an artistic war
machine (the ‘new weapons’) that might also play a role in the more
ethico-political function of the constitution of a people (or, what
Deleuze in the interview calls ‘subjectification’).3
The New Weapons
In reflecting on our contemporary moment – in ‘Control and Becoming’ –
Deleuze turns to Marx and to the Marxist analysis of capitalism, but is
also very much concerned with the terrain and terminology of A
Thousand Plateaus, introducing three new conceptual categories (which
are also found there) that might be said to determine, for Deleuze, the
operating protocols of any new weapons. These are as follows:
Lines of flight
You see we think any society is defined not so much by its contradictions as by its lines of flight, it flees all over the place, and it’s
very interesting to try and follow the lines of flight taking shape at
some particular moment or other. (Deleuze, 1995: 171)
Lines of flight are the cutting edge of any given assemblage (itself understood as a collection of heterogeneous elements in relation with
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Theory, Culture & Society 33(7–8)
one another), and, in this sense, are as much a name for capitalism’s own
advanced operating probes as they are for anything straightforwardly
resistant to the latter. They are to do with experimentation – with invention and innovation – and thus also with the overcoming of limits and
boundaries. More generally they imply a move out of a given territory,
and, as such, we might also call these lines of flight deterritorializations.
In fact, for Deleuze and Guattari, capitalism names two moments or
movements: a primary one of deterritorialization and then a secondary
one of reterritorialization that captures and siphons off surplus value
from this prior moment (see Deleuze and Guattari, 1984: 222–40).
This, we might say, is the ontological terrain of any new form of control,
but also of any ‘resistance’ to it. Michael Hardt and Antonio Negri make
this explicit in their suggestion that hitherto – within Critical Theory – it
was the second moment that was critiqued (as in ideology or institutional
critique), but that now it might be more a question, following Deleuze, of
strategically affirming the first moment (of ontological production and
creativity) (see Hardt and Negri, 2000: 69–90).
Lines of flight then foreground a logic of movement and speed.
In Deleuze and Guattari’s terms the first of these is extensive (to do
with objects in space: ‘Movement designates the relative character of a
body considered as “one”, and which goes from point to point’; Deleuze
and Guattari, 1988: 381), the second intensive (involving a register of the
subjective: ‘speed, on the contrary, constitutes the absolute character of a
body whose irreducible parts (atoms) occupy or fill a smooth space in
the manner of a vortex’; Deleuze and Guattari, 1988: 381). This twin
definition is found in A Thousand Plateaus where, in fact, it is really
speed – alongside the idea of an ‘imperceptible movement’ (beneath or
above a given perceptual threshold) – that is characteristic of the line of
flight. In Anti-Oedipus, on the other hand, and in relation to capitalism per
se, a more straightforward idea of extensive movement is still determining
of these experimental probes.
In terms of some recent debates in continental philosophy and politics
we might suggest that lines of flight operate through acceleration (with the
caveat that some accelerationist thinkers pitch their understanding of this
latter term against any Deleuzian concept of speed).4 Certainly the important passage from Anti-Oedipus that to a certain extent initiated what has
become known as ‘accelerationism’ refers precisely to this particular topography of capitalism, and to the idea that rather than resisting the latter it
might be a question of going in the opposite direction: ‘To go still further,
that is, in the movement of the market, of decoding and deterritorialisation’ (Deleuze and Guattari, 1984: 239). ‘For perhaps the flows are not
deterritorialised enough, not decoded enough . . . not to withdraw from the
process, but . . . to “accelerate the process,” as Nietzsche put it: in this
matter, the truth is that we haven’t seen anything yet’ (Deleuze and
Guattari, 1984: 239–40). I will be returning – briefly – to accelerationism
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at the end of my essay, but it is worth remarking here that art practice
might also orientate itself in this forward direction: not as withdrawal or
critique (at least as its primary moment) but on – or as – an experimental
line of flight.
Minorities
A minority, on the other hand, has no model, it’s a becoming, a
process. One might say the majority is nobody. Everbody’s caught,
one way or another, in a minority becoming that would lead them
into unknown paths if they opted to follow it through. (Deleuze,
1995: 173)
Minorities, for Deleuze, are not based on identity (as, for example, with
class – at least when this is thought as stable and molar), but, as it were,
on a common lacking of (molar) identity. A minority is not then to do
with number (it is not necessarily smaller), but to do with a model – the
major – that it refuses, departs from, or, more simply, cannot live up
to. We are all minorities in this sense. But the minor also names a strategic operation – as in the becoming-minor of a major language.
In Deleuze and Guattari’s Kafka: Towards a Minor Literature, written
between Anti-Oedipus and A Thousand Plateaus, this operation involves
three interconnected aspects or procedures (see Deleuze and Guattari,
1986: 16–18): (1) The foregrounding of the affective character of language (or a stuttering and stammering of the major and an undoing of
typical sense); (2) The connection to a non-Oedipal and non-domestic
outside (a principal of collectivity and alliance); and (3) A futureorientation (a minor literature is for a people-yet-to-come).
In terms of (2) and (3), a minor literature is always already political
(any individual therein is necessarily connected to larger social assemblages) and always a collective enunciation (insofar as a minor literature
expresses ‘another possible community’ and forges ‘the means for
another consciousness and another sensibility’; Deleuze and Guattari,
1986: 17).5 Indeed, the literary – or more generally artistic – machine
is, in this sense, also a revolutionary machine.6 Art, we might say, is like
the forward hurled pre-cursor of politics – again, a line of flight – but also
one that deterritorializes the major (it utilizes the ‘what is’ in a different
and experimental manner). This links to what Deleuze says in the interview about the ‘untimely’ nature of an event that is concerned with
becomings that are irreducible to past configurations (or any given historical conditions).7 Becomings are an irruption of the new in this sense.8
Minorities then foreground a stuttering and becoming of the major.
Indeed, we might make the claim here that a line of flight that is not
minor – that does not stutter and stammer, does not depart from the
major – is just the typical operating fringe of more majoritarian
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assemblages and territories. A caveat to this – following my remarks
above – is the more complex and insidious idea (the snakes once
again) that capitalism – at its furthest reaches, its sharpest points – is
also minoritarian, or, at least, utilizes certain logics of the minor, for
example in the capacity to abandon models (of, for example, the typical
commodity-object or, indeed, the usual consumer-subject). We might
make the more specific claim then – again, following my remarks
above – that the minor is that which foregrounds becomings (and, as
such, a certain intensive speed) that in themselves operate against reterritorializations (the more regulative speeds of the market) when these are
attempts to fix and extract surplus value from deterritorializations. Art
involves the production of the new, but only when this is also a stuttering
and stammering of the given.
War machines
. . . finding a characterization of ‘war machines’ that’s nothing to do
with war but to do with a particular way of occupying, taking up,
space-time, or inventing new space-times: revolutionary
moments . . . artistic movements too, are war-machines in this
sense. (Deleuze, 1995: 172)
The concept of the war machine involves both a spatio-temporal aspect
(the occupying of a different space-time) and an organizational aspect
(the actual composition of the machine, with its own particular speeds
and slownesses). A war machine is then to do with both duration and
composition: it operates on – or as – a line of flight, but it is also a
processual work of construction.
As such, and as Deleuze remarks, art movements – and could we also
add specific art practices? – might be war machines (Deleuze and
Guattari, 1995: 172). War is only the concern of these machines insofar
as they inevitably clash with a state machine that is intent on striating the
smooth space that is the war machine’s milieu (one thinks here, for
example, of the increasing privatization of public space and the responses
to this – or, indeed, the ‘enclosure’ of a once wild web). How has a
particular space-time been composed and then how is it deployed – or
pitched – within and against the world as given (or more dominant spacetime)? These are the key determining factors of an ‘engaged’ art practice.
In A Thousand Plateaus Deleuze and Guattari go into more detail
about the composition of these machines and their complex relation to
both war and the state. Indeed, the state, although wary, often appropriates – or ‘employs’– a radically exterior war machine (it does not have
such machines of its own). In these moments war becomes the machine’s
object and a line of abolition is drawn. However, it is always an uneasy
marriage insofar as a war machine, in its essence, involves something
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different: the ‘drawing of a creative line of flight, the composition of a
smooth space and . . . the movement of people in that space’ (Deleuze
and Guattari, 1988: 422). Any critique – ‘against the state and
against the worldwide axiomatic expressed by States’– is an important,
but secondary, effect of this prior creative impulse (Deleuze and
Guattari, 1988: 422).
For Deleuze and Guattari, and in terms of actual composition, it is
Kleist’s writing machine (and in particular Penthesilea) that most accurately depicts the different speeds – and impersonal affects – of the war
machine, involving as it does ‘a succession of flights of madness and
catatonic freezes in which no subjective interiority remains’ (Deleuze
and Guattari, 1988: 356). In the war machine everything is always
already exterior, involving a different kind of rhythm – a composition
of becomings – to the state machine (and, indeed, to those forms of life
produced by the latter). The war machine is also necessarily collective in
character, involving decentralized bands or packs, ‘groups of the rhizome
type’ which are ‘formally distinct from all state apparatuses or their
equivalents which are instead what structure centralized societies’
(Deleuze and Guattari, 1988: 358). But here pack also applies to the
molecularity on the other side, as it were, to the multiplicity of different
speeds and affects that constitute any given ‘individual’. A single artist
might be a pack in this sense.
In the plateau on the war machine Deleuze and Guattari also write
about a nomad – or minor – science that is ‘nourished’ by this machine
(and involved in more hydraulic and non-hylomorphic models of
matter), as well as to a more general nomadology that opposes state
knowledge. Indeed, they go further, pitching a more nomadic form of
thought against the dominant image of thought (or its state form). Once
again Kleist, alongside Nietzsche and Artaud, are the crucial figures of
this stammering ‘counterthought’ that both destroys previous images but
also connects with an exterior – or the forces of the outside (see Deleuze
and Guattari, 1988: 376–8).9 Could this nomadic thought be characterized as a kind of ‘fictioning’ of reality insofar as it also often involves
recourse to, and a mobilization of, those images and narratives – fictions
– overlooked and occluded by dominant state forms?10 I will return to
this idea below.
Although not specifically linked to the idea of new weapons, Deleuze
introduces two further concepts towards the end of the interview that are
also useful in providing a more focused idea of art practice as fictioning.
Fabulation
Art is resistance: it resists death, slavery, infamy, shame. But a
people can’t worry about art. How is a people created, through
what terrible sufferings? When a people’s created, it’s through its
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own resources, but in a way that links up with something in
art . . . or links up art to what it lacked. Utopia isn’t the right concept: it’s more a question of ‘fabulation’ in which a people and art
both share. (Deleuze, 1995: 174)
Another name for this fabulation, I want to suggest here (and have
developed elsewhere), is myth-science.11 This is the imagining and imaging
of alternatives, but also their insertion into reality – to augment or disrupt the latter. As Deleuze remarks, this is not the same as utopia – that
can work to defer the production of a new people (always the receding
horizon) – but something more pragmatic. It is linked to the idea of a
minor literature (of giving voice to a people-yet-to-come) insofar as it is a
collective enunciation (even if there is just one author). Art, we might say,
calls forth the production of another world that is appropriate and adequate to its own depictions (however ‘abstract’ these might be).12
On the face of it, there cannot but be a representational aspect to this
kind of fictioning – a picturing and a story (at least of some kind) – but
there is also a tendency to produce something different to those more
standardized (and market driven) image-worlds typically on offer. Mythscience, in this sense, is not simply an escape from prevailing conditions
insofar as it impacts back on reality, setting up further conditions – or
contours and coordination points – for the production of a people (and
how they might live). In fact, any production of subjectivity necessarily
involves narratives and images and, as such, we might say, more specifically, that fictioning – as myth-science – offers up a different sequence and
script (once again, Burroughs’ artistic practice is a good case study of this).
It is in this way that this fictioning also demonstrates – as a refraction – the
fictional nature of any and all so-called reality.
Vacuoles of noncommunication
Maybe speech and communication have been corrupted. They’re
thoroughly permeated by money – and not by accident but by
their very nature. We’ve got to hijack speech. Creating has always
been something different from communication. The key thing is to
create vacuoles of noncommunication, circuit breakers, so we can
elude control. (Deleuze, 1995: 175)
To a certain extent this fifth concept is the opposite to the line of flight
– at least apparently – insofar as it involves a kind of deceleration (the
‘circuit breakers’). But, crucially, a slowing down on one register (in
terms of perceptible movement) can be the necessary precondition for
allowing a different kind of speed at another (something more imperceptible). In fact, it seems to me that it is always a question of – strategically –
mobilizing different speeds at different times (and especially, again,
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of resisting a certain regulative speed determined by the market).
A slowing down of extensive movement can allow/be the cover for the
increase in an intensive speed of thought (when the latter is also understood as a constructive practice).13
These vacuoles also involve turning away from dominant regimes of
communication (they are not concerned with typical ‘meaning’) and their
attendant profit-driven logics. This refusal to participate in the dissemination of ‘information’ can in and of itself release the creative impulse
(see Deleuze, 2006). Here, art can be a name for the pinnacle of these
dominant regimes (the art market), but also, in its radical form, a name
for that which resists them. It might also be the case that vacuoles of
noncommunication are not always completely mute. Dada, for example,
was an extreme example of the refusal to mean – or, indeed, to sell – but
was certainly not silent. A vacuole is selective in what it allows through –
both in and out. What Dada did let through was precisely non-sense
when this was also the germ of a new kind of sense and thus of a new
kind of subject appropriate to it. Adding this component to our concept
of myth-science foregrounds its noncommunicative and creative aspect.
It stops making sense, which means it can start doing something else.
To recap: myth-science, at least as I have attempted to define it as a
particular practice of fictioning, is a projecting and pitching of fabulation
against dominant reality (the imagining and imaging of alternatives).
It operates as, or on, a line of flight, as a deterritorialization (it involves
a specific kind of movement and speed), but also concerns the deployment
of narratives for minorities (a stuttering and becoming of the major). It is
characterized by a different logic of duration and composition from the
state which in itself implies the occupation of a different space-time (it is
a war machine). It is not to do with dominant signifying regimes – it
refuses to mean in this sense – but is noncomunicative and creative (operating as a vacuole).
Conclusion: Belief in the World
What we most lack is a belief in the world, we’ve quite lost the
world, it’s been taken from us. If you believe in the world you
precipitate events, however inconspicuous, that elude control, you
engender new space-times, however small their surface or volume.
(Deleuze, 1995: 176)
What would it mean to believe in the world? It seems to me that it would
be to believe that another world is indeed possible (besides the one
of ‘capitalist realism’ as Mark Fisher (2009) puts it). It would be to
maintain a kind of Spinozist faith in the potential of a body – understood
in its most expanded (and compound) form – and thus, following
Spinoza, also of the potential of thought itself (again, understood as
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a creative practice). And that both – body and thought – are always
capable of more than the reductive account given of them by common
sense and typical consciousness – or indeed social media and neoliberal
marketing strategies (the locus of these last two defining contemporary
mechanisms of control).
Ultimately this is what fictioning as myth-science proclaims: a belief
that something else is possible – and that, as such, we are capable of
more. More specifically it suggests that in art practice – in its most
expanded forms – we also have a practical elaboration of this belief.14
This is not exactly the production of this other world (as Deleuze
remarks this is the business of politics), but a kind of embodied preview
of this other place. In the above I suggested that art might operate as a
pre-cursor of politics, but we might also characterize it as a backward
hurled fragment of a possible future. Again, as Deleuze suggests in the
quote above, utopia is not quite the right word as it implies something
too far off, too far removed from the world as it is.15 Fictioning as mythscience is rather a practice that, although future-orientated, instantiates a
difference here and now.16
In a present in which our dreamtimes are co-opted to sell commodities
and lifestyles, this production of new and different kinds of narratives and
images, as I mentioned in my introduction, can become in and of itself
politically charged. Here art’s ability to produce that which was previously unseen and unheard, untimely images that speak back to us – as if
they came from an elsewhere – is especially important and, again, takes on
a militant character. These other, perhaps stranger, image-worlds and
fictions – intended but also not intended – call forth a different kind of
subjectivity (one masked, we might say, by more dominant – and standardized – models). They speak not to us, but to something within us (or,
to the collectivity that we are ‘behind’ any molar identity).17
Again, these practices will maintain a critical edge against ‘reality’
insofar as in the very offering of an alternative they cannot but refuse
more dominant parameters and protocols. Indeed, fictioning in this sense
is a kind of ‘weaponization’ of fiction per se. It is no longer simply an
escape from, or panacea for, the existing conditions, but something sharper: the material exploration of other imaginary possibilities in our contemporary moment. As far as this goes, fictioning as myth-science is just
the latest incarnation of Dada, echoed by the Situationists, then by
Burroughs. Its opening gambit – that I have attempted to conceptually
elaborate in this short article – might simply be: Nothing is true, everything is permitted.
Coda: Burroughs and the Cut-Up
When you cut in to the present the future leaks out. (Burroughs,
2001)
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Deleuze was at the infamous ‘Schizo-Culture’ conference at Columbia
University in 1975 – an encounter between French desiring-thought and
American counter-culture – and no doubt heard Burroughs’ talk on ‘The
Limits of Control’, which, along with Burroughs’ other writings no
doubt influenced his own thesis on ‘Societies of Control’. Burroughs
makes the key claim in that talk that it is through words that control
is exercised – as a form of persuasion, often involving concession giving,
but also deceit, or, we might say, fictions that are passed off as ‘real’
(Burroughs, 2014). For Burroughs, although it’s hard to identify who,
precisely, is doing the controlling, it is the mass media – itself a kind of
fictioning machine – that he sees as especially culpable. Fiction – in the
guise of typical communication and the dissemination of information –
operates here as a strategy of control.
Burroughs’ own technique of the cut-up was then an operation against
control, a stuttering and stammering – a deterritorialization – of typical
representation, pitched against the dominant fictioning-machine and its
productions, or what Jean-François Lyotard once called the ‘fantasies of
realism’ (Lyotard, 1984: 74). Indeed, Lyotard was also at the SchizoCulture event. Did he also have Burroughs and the cut-up in mind (alongside more canonical art practices) when writing about the avant-garde
function of art as that which disrupts this production of reality?
Certainly, this reality effect, for Lyotard, was produced by a certain logical
syntax and sequencing of both words and images (see Lyotard, 1984: 74).
The cut-up, precisely, disrupts – and re-arranges – this consensual world.
In fact, in so far as typical grammar and syntax produces a certain
linearity and temporal progression, then the cut-up invents very different
durations – a stuttering of homogeneous and standardized capitalist time.
Indeed, the breaks and jumps – but also the repetitions and layering – of
the cut-up novels produce a very different kind of space-time (following
Brion Gysin, we might also say the cut-up is a form of space-time travel in
this sense). In Deleuzian terms, the cut-up operates as a kind of vacuole,
but also opens up a smooth space within the striated. It functions as a
war machine.
The cut-up also produces different images – often startling – that
appear to come from somewhere else (and that then speak back to their
progenitor).18 This is a side-stepping of typical authorship (the mobilization of chance – a contact with an outside to the subject – alongside
processes of selection and editing) and the insertion of the writer into
the more inhuman semiotic chain of the unconscious (when this is both
signifying and asignifying). What it means is that one produces something
that has not been wholly intended. Is this not the goal of all art? To
produce something that is by the self, but not of the self at the same
time? Insofar as the key element of reality – as produced by the dominant
fictioning-machines – is the constituted subject who lives and reproduces
that reality, then this circumnavigation of the self opens up a new world
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and a new kind of subject appropriate to that world. J. G. Ballard (himself
a master of myth-science) once remarked that with the ‘Nova Trilogy’
Burroughs was producing a new mythography – and, indeed, Burroughs
himself refers to the later ‘Cities of the Red Night’ trilogy as a ‘mythography for the space age’. It seems to me that Burroughs was indeed
involved in a kind of myth-science: intent on breaking dominant –
major – myths, but also producing new minor myths for a people-yetto-come.
I mentioned the important contemporary debates around accelerationism towards the beginning of this article, and, indeed, it seems to me that
someone like Burroughs operates as a key corrective to any overemphasis
on reason and rationality as progenitors of any new kind of human for a
post-capitalist world. The Promethean impulse – if it really is to produce
something new – will need to take account of these other space-time
explorations – these different fictionings that have an impact beyond the
realm of art per se.19 In relation to this, and as a final note to this Coda, we
might point to Genesis P-Orridge’s interest in ‘behavioural cut-ups’ that
take Burroughs’ principles out of the literary form and into lived life (see
Orridge, 1992). For Orridge this cut-up as strategy for life was precisely a
form of magick when this, again, names both a disruption of consensual
reality and the production of alternatives (including an alternative production of subjectivity). This is to live against control – or, at least, to probe its
limits. For Orridge it is ritual and performance art – as with his own
COUM Transmissions and later Psychic TV – that is able to navigate
this terrain insofar as both involve the deployment of these alternative
narratives alongside experimental actions in the world. Myth-science is a
war machine, but also a kind of ‘performance fiction’ in this sense.20 It has
left the written page (or indeed the gallery and studio) to become a way of
life: a mode of aesthetic existence against control.
Notes
1. For a discussion of myth-science in relation to Sun Ra (and Afrofuturism
more generally), see Kodwo Eshun’s More Brilliant than the Sun (1998), especially Chapter 9, ‘Synthesizing the Omniverse’. Mike Kelley, in an essay on
Öyvind Fahlstrom, links the term more particularly to the fictioning aspect of
contemporary art practice, especially in its expanded form (Kelley, 1995).
2. In fact, it might be more accurate to say that we are living in societies that
operate by both discipline and control (with the former playing the preeminent
role in more repressive regimes, the latter in more ‘democratic’ ones).
David Savat has convincingly argued that these two modes of power not
only use the same ‘writing machines’ (databases) but that Deleuze’s ‘dividual’
– understood less as object than as ‘objectile’ – is itself a ‘product’ of the two
modes of power in combination (treated as both form and flow, as it were;
Savat, 2009). Savat’s essay concerns itself specifically with the modes of operation (and instruments) of control societies, but it also gestures towards a
parallel project which would be concerned with those forms of subjectivity
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3.
4.
5.
6.
217
(or the ‘superject’) that might live against control. It is here that I would situate
my own article insofar as it attempts to move from diagnosis to strategy.
In fact, Deleuze suggests that this subjectification might be operative without a
subject as such (when the latter is understood as a particular – static – configuration) and more akin to the irruption of an event (Deleuze, 1995: 176).
Deleuze also suggests that this subjectification as event is what constitutes
the brain – understood as itself a set of machinic processes that cannot be
simply reduced to the object of typical science (being more like an extended
– rhizomatic – network that extends out into the world). Subjectification, in
this sense, is the experimentation with different kinds of connections and leaps,
different kinds of thought that, we might say, produce different thought-subjects
(and not the single, cohesive and centred-subject favoured by control – or,
indeed, a more fluid subject that nevertheless remains tied to the typical and
dogmatic image of thought (and prevailing market)). I lay out the mechanics
of this – and other Deleuze-Guattarian ideas on subjectivity – in more detail
in Chapter 5, ‘Desiring-Machines, Chaoids, Probe-heads: Towards a
Speculative Subjectivity’ (Deleuze and Guattari)’, of my book On the
Production of Subjectivity (O’Sullivan, 2012: 169–202)
See, for example, Alex Williams’ discussion of the difference between speed
and acceleration in his ‘Escape Velocities’ (Williams, 2014). Speed, for
Williams, is tied to capitalist axiomatics (as is the case, Williams argues, in
Nick Land’s writings, that follow Deleuze and Guattari); acceleration, on the
other hand, involves new forms of conceptual navigation (as in Reza
Negarestani’s work) and new images of the human as hyper-rational being
(as in Ray Brassier’s). There is more to be teased out here insofar as it is not
clear whether the more intensive character of speed – the ‘stationary voyage’
– has been factored into this distinction: the question, it seems to me, is
whether rational thought generally, and new forms of conceptual navigation
more specifically, are characterized by movement or by speed (in the terms I
have laid out above). (Williams’ comments on the specifically geometric character of conceptual navigation would suggest the former.) I attend in more
detail to some of the accelerationist writing of Brassier and Negarestani – in
relation to myth-science – in my essay ‘Accelerationism, Prometheanism and
Mythotechnesis’ (O’Sullivan, 2016a).
In terms of the first of these aspects – the stuttering and stammering character
of a minor literature and the relation of this to art practice – see Ola Ståhl’s
essay in this ‘Deterritorializing Deleuze 2’ section of TCS and also Chapter 2,
‘Art and the Political: Minor Literature, the War Machine and the
Production of Subjectivity’, of my book Art Encounters Deleuze and
Guattari (O’Sullivan, 2006: 69–97). The latter also contains the beginnings
of my thoughts about art as myth-science (pp. 144–53), and, more generally,
tracks through the implications of Deleuze’s (and Deleuze and Guattari’s)
thought for contemporary art practice.
Although there is not the space to go into this here, Deleuze’s idea of a minor
– third-world – cinema (that ‘contributes to the invention of a people’) might
be said to operate as a connector between the artistic and political machine –
and, as such, might also contribute to the idea of fictioning or myth-science as
an expanded art practice (see Deleuze, 1989: 217). (Thanks to Ola Ståhl for
this point.)
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7. To quote Deleuze: ‘What history grasps in an event is the ways it’s actualized in particular circumstances; the event’s becoming is beyond the scope
of history. History isn’t experimental, it’s just the set of more or less negative
preconditions that make it possible to experiment with something beyond
history’ (Deleuze, 1995: 170).
8. For a more detailed discussion of becoming – in relation to fictioning – see
my essay ‘Memories of a Deleuzian: To Think Is Always to Follow the
Witches Flight’ (O’Sullivan, 2016b).
9. See also Jon K. Shaw’s essay in this ‘Deterritorializing Deleuze 2’ section
of TCS.
10. I will be returning to this idea of the mobilization of aspects of the past in
and against the present in a further essay on ‘Myth-Science as Residual
Culture and Magical Thinking’ (in relation to the writings of Raymond
Williams and Gilbert Simondon).
11. See especially O’Sullivan (2014b), but also O’Sullivan (2014a, 2015, 2016a)
and Burrows and O’Sullivan (2014).
12. I briefly attend to this world-building character of contemporary art (especially in relation to the increasing ubiquity of digital imaging and editing
technologies) in my essay ‘Art Practice as Fictioning (or, Myth-Science)’
(O’Sullivan, 2014b).
13. As Deleuze and Guattari suggest in A Thousand Plateaus: ‘The nomad
knows how to wait, he has infinite patience. Immobility and speed, catatonia
and rush, a “stationary process”, station as process . . . (It is therefore not
surprising that reference has been made to spiritual voyages effected without
relative movement, but in intensity, in one place: these are part of nomadism)’ (Deleuze and Guattari, 1988: 381).
14. Robin Mackay and Armen Avanessian make a similar call – in their
Introduction to ]Accelerate – for ‘new science-fictional practices, if not
necessarily in literary form’ (Mackay and Avanessian, 2014: 37).
15. For more philosophical detail on this critique of utopia – as well as an
intriguing footnote to the work of Ernst Bloch as a thinker of a more immanent concept of utopia – see Deleuze and Guattari (1994: 99–100).
16. I attend to a case study of this kind of time-loop – the Cybernetic Culture
Research Unit’s concept of ‘hyperstition’ – in this essay’s companion piece,
‘Accelerationism, Hyperstition and Myth-Science’ (O’Sullivan, 2015).
17. This understanding of art practice – as a kind of holding pattern (giving a
minimum consistency) for points of collapse – is laid out in more detail in
my co-written essay (with David Burrows), ‘S/Z or Art as NonSchizoanalysis’ (Burrows and O’Sullivan, 2014).
18. And, in this sense, the cut-up has something in common with Francis
Bacon’s painting, at least as Deleuze writes about it, in the careful utilization
of chance and collapse (or chaos) so as to scramble the given (the figurative)
and allow another world to emerge (the figural) (see especially Deleuze,
2003: 99–110). (Thanks to Jon K. Shaw for this connection.)
19. In terms of the contemporary instantiation of this rational Prometheanism
see especially the essays by Negarestani and Brassier in Mackay and
Avaneissen (2014: 425–66, 467–88). For more detail on my particular rejoinder – in relation to myth-science – see my extended critical review of that
book (O’Sullivan, 2014a).
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20. The term ‘performance fictions’ was coined by David Burrows to describe a
number of recent contemporary art practices in London (see Burrows,
2011). See also the writings of John Russell that develop a concept of fictioning in relation to art writing and contemporary art practice – especially
his own (an indicative example is ‘Autonomy is not worth the paper it is not
written on’; Russell, 2012). The present essay owes much to my own ongoing
collaboration (and performance fiction) with Burrows, Plastique
Fantastique (see www.plastiquefantastique.org). I am indebted more directly to Burrows for turning me towards Burroughs.
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Simon O’Sullivan is Reader in Art Theory and Practice in the
Department of Visual Cultures at Goldsmiths, University of London.
He has published two monographs with Palgrave, Art Encounters
Deleuze and Guattari: Thought Beyond Representation (2006) and On
the Production of Subjectivity: Five Diagrams of the Finite-Infinite
Relation (2012), and is the editor, with Stephen Zepke, of both
Deleuze, Guattari and the Production of the New (Continuum, 2008)
and Deleuze and Contemporary Art (Edinburgh University Press, 2010).
He also makes art, with David Burrows and others, under the name
Plastique Fantastique and is currently working on a collaborative
volume of writings, with Burrows, on Mythopoesis–Myth-Science–
Mythotechnesis: Fictioning and the Posthuman in Contemporary Art.
This article is part of a Theory, Culture & Society special section,
‘Deterritorializing Deleuze 2’, edited by Simon O’Sullivan.
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